20 July 45 BCE: To Atticus (at Rome) from Cicero (at Tusculum)
Cicero asks Atticus to remove a mistake from a speech
What a delightful letter! Though the procession was odious, it is nevertheless not odious ‘to know everything’—even about Cotta. The people were splendid not to clap even the figure of Victory owing to its impious neighbour. Brutus has been to see me, and is very strongly in favour of my writing something to Caesar. I assented, but this procession puts me off it.*
Well, after all, did you venture to make the presentation to Varro? I am anxious for his opinion: but when will he read it through?
As to Attica, I quite approve: for it is something that her melancholy should be relieved both by taking part in the spectacle, as well as by the feeling of its sacred associations and the general talk about it.
Please send me a Cotta; I have got a Libo with me, and I had already possessed a Casca.* Brutus brought me a message from Titus Ligarius that the mention of L. Corfidius in my speech for Ligarius was a mistake of mine. But it was only what is called ‘a lapse of memory.’ I knew that Corfidius was very closely connected with the Ligarii, but I see now that he was already dead. Please therefore instruct Pharnaces, Antaeus, and Salvius to erase that name from all the copies.*
Read Ad Atticum 13.44 in Latin here | Check the glossary here
Notes from the translator, E.S. Shuckburgh:
this procession puts me off it—The ludi Circenses (at the feast of Apollo) were opened by a procession carrying the figures of the gods. Caesar's bust was carried on a tensa and fircula next to that of Victory. Cotta is L. Cotta, one of the quindecemviri, who, having with his colleagues the charge of the Sibylline books, was reported to have said that they contained an oracle declaring that the Parthians could only be conquered by a Roman king, and to have expressed an intention of proposing that Caesar should have that title (Suet. Iul. 76-79). L. Cotta was consul in B.C. 65. See de Divin. 2.110, ante, p.263.
I had already possessed a Casca—These are books, which Cicero apparently wanted for reference in writing his treatise to Caesar, which, however, was never written. L. Scribonius Libo wrote annals; the others are not known.
Please therefore instruct Pharnaces, Antaeus, and Salvius to erase that name from all the copies—These were Atticus's librarii. The mistake still remains in the text (pro Lig. § 33).