Letter 267

Marcus Tullius CiceroTitus Pomponius Atticus|c. 46 BC|Cicero|From Rome|To Rome/Athens|AI-assisted

Sicca writes that even if he settles nothing with Aulus Silius, he still intends to come on the tenth before the Kalends. I make allowances for your engagements, and I know them well. As to your willingness for us to be together, or rather your eagerness and desire for it, I have no doubt. [2] As for what you write about Nicias, if I were in such a state that I could enjoy his refinement, I would above all want to have him with me. But solitude and seclusion are my province now. And because Sicca bore this so easily, I miss him all the more. Besides, you know our Nicias's frail health, his softness, his accustomed way of living. Why, then, should I wish to be a burden to him, when he cannot be a pleasure to me? Still, his goodwill is welcome to me. You wrote to me about one matter, on which I have resolved to write you nothing in reply. For I hope I have obtained from you that you spare me that distress. My greetings to Pilia and Attica.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.

Latin / Greek Original

Sicca, ut scribit, etiam si nihil confecerit cum A. Silio, tamen se scribit x Kal. esse venturum. tuis occupationibus ignosco eaeque mihi sunt notae. de voluntate tua ut simul simus vel studio potius et cupiditate non dubito. [2] de Nicia quod scribis, si ita me haberem ut eius humanitate frui possem, in primis vellem illum mecum habere. sed mihi solitudo et recessus provincia est. quod quia facile ferebat Sicca, eo magis illum desidero. praeterea nosti Niciae nostri imbecillitatem, mollitiam, consuetudinem victus. cur ergo illi molestus esse velim, cum mihi ille iucundus esse non possit? voluntas tamen eius mihi grata est. unam rem ad me scripsisti; de qua decrevi nihil tibi rescribere. spero enim me a te impetrasse ut privares me ista molestia. Piliae et Atticae salutem.

Revision history

  1. 2026-05-27v2.2.34-import

    Initial corpus import from modern cicero atticus workflow v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/att12.shtml

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