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III. The Letters

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2016

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Extract

‘To read through the volumes [of Cicero’s letters] . . . is in itself an education.’ None the less it is primarily as rich sources of information—and problems—about Cicero’s life and times that the letters have concerned scholars. They also stand apart from Cicero’s other writings in the importance and fascination of the textual problems they present. Thus we have recently had Shackleton Bailey’s prolegomena, and volumes of a new Oxford text. The Budé edition, which, like Tyrrell and Purser, arranges the letters in chronological order, continues to progress.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1968

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References

page no 21 note 1 Tenney, Frank, Proc. Brit. Acad. xviii (1932), 111 ffGoogle Scholar.

page no 21 note 2 Bailey, D. R. Shackleton, Towards a Text of Cicero Ad Atticum (Cambridge, 1960)Google Scholar. The collections other than Ad Familiares are available in new Oxford Classical Texts by W. S. Watt and (for Ad Atticum ix-xvi) Shackleton Bailey. In addition, at the time of writing, four volumes (i, ii, v, vi) have appeared of Shackleton Bailey’s complete edition of Ad Atticum with introduction, lively facing translation, and commentary.

page no 21 note 3 Carcopino, J., Les Secrets de la correspondance de Cicéron (Paris, 1947)Google Scholar (Eng. trans. London, 1951). The fact that, of all that has been written about Cicero, this very idiosyncratic and prejudiced work so soon appeared in English, is the kind of thing that explains why I have indulged in a good deal of apologetics.

page no 21 note 4 JRS xl (1950), 134 ff.; CR N.S. ii (1952), 178 ff.

page no 21 note 5 Introduction to his edition of the letters, i. 59 ff.

page no 22 note 1 Fam. i. 9.

page no 22 note 2 Fam. v. 12.

page no 22 note 3 Cf.Guillemin, A., RÉL xvi (1938), 96 ff.Google Scholar, developed by Ullman, B. L., TAPA lxxiii (1942), 25 ffGoogle Scholar.

page no 22 note 4 Att. iv. 6. 4.

page no 22 note 5 In De Orat. ii. 62 ff. Cicero gives an admirable sketch of the historian’s task with especial stress on truthfulness.

page no 22 note 6 In 54, Ad Q. Fr. iii. 5. 7.

page no 22 note 7 Henderson, M. I., JRS xl (1950), 8 ff.Google Scholar; W. S. Watt in his edition of the letters to Quintus, etc., 8 ff.; Nisbet, R. G. M., JRS li (1961), 84 ffGoogle Scholar.

page no 23 note 1 Till, R., Historia xii (1962), 315 ffGoogle Scholar. See also Balsdon, J. P. V. D., CQ N.S. xiii (1963), 242 ffCrossRefGoogle Scholar.