MARCUS
TULLIUS CICERO
From Marcus Tullius Cicero: Seven
Orations, edited by Walter B. Gunnison and Walter S. Harley
(Silver, Burdett and
Company)(1912)
1. Early Life. - Marcus
Tullius Cicero, the foremost Roman orator and writer, was born Jan. 3,
106 B.C. His birthplace was Arpinum, a small
country town about seventy miles southeast of Rome, famous also as the birthplace
of
Marius. His father, a member of the equestrian order, was descended
from a
family of old standing. Quintus, a younger brother of Marcus, became a
praetor
at Rome, and afterwards won distinction
as one
of Caesar's lieutenants in Gaul. The
two
brothers were early taken to Rome
and placed under the care of the best instructors. One of these was
Archias,
the Greek poet, whose citizenship the orator defended in later years
before
Quintus, when the latter was presiding judge.
After a general training in grammar,
rhetoric, and the Greek
language, Marcus began the study of law under Mucius Scaevola, the
greatest
lawyer of his time. This study he supplemented by attending the courts
and the
Forum, listening to such advocates as Crassus and Antonius. Then at the
age of
eighteen a short military campaign under Pompeius Strabo, uncle of
Pompey the Great, gave Cicero
all the experience he desired as a soldier. Gladly he resumed his
studies, -
rhetoric, logic, philosophy, and oratory, - pursuing them for two
years, at Athens, in Asia Minor, and at
Rhodes.
At Athens
he
met Pomponius Atticus, who became his intimate friend and
correspondent. At Rhodes, he was
instructed by the celebrated rhetorician,
Apollonius Molo, who also taught Caesar. It was this instructor who
said, after
listening to the young orator, "You have my praise and admiration,
Cicero,
and' Greece my pity and commiseration, since those arts and that
eloquence,
which are the only glories that remain to her, will now be transferred
to
Rome."
2. Cicero as an Advocate. - Cicero's first appearance as an advocate was in 81 B.C., in a
civil suit in defense of Publius Quinctius, with the brilliant
Hortensius as
the opposing counsel. The following year he appeared in a criminal suit
defending Sextus Roscius against a plaintiff who was a favorite of
Sulla. His
success in winning the case was therefore a· special triumph. In
77, after his
return from foreign study, he resumed the practice of law, in which he
was
destined soon to take the leadership.
3. Cicero's Early Political Career. -It is
significant of Cicero's
qualifications that being a novus
homo, i.e., one whose ancestors had never
held office, he himself was elected to the four offices of the cursus
honorum at the earliest legal age:
quaestor at thirty, curule aedile at thirty-six, praetor at
thirty-nine, and
consul at forty-two. The quaestorship in 75 B.C.
was spent in the province of Sicily,
where his justice and
impartiality endeared him to the people, while he greatly increased his
popularity at home by sending grain from the province at a time of
great
scarcity. The holding of this office entitled Cicero to a seat in the Senate for
life. Five
years later the Sicilians appealed to Cicero
to prosecute their Roman governor Verres, for tyranny and extortion. He
conducted the impeachment with such skill that Hortensius, the
defendant's
counsel, gave up the case and Verres voluntarily went into exile.
In 69, as curule aedile, Cicero pleased
the people
by the public games which he furnished in good taste, though not with
the
lavish expenditure of his wealthier predecessors. His praetorship in 66
was
made memorable by the passing of the Manilian Law, conferring upon
Pompey
supreme command in the war with Mithridates. Cicero's speech in behalf of the bill
was the
first he delivered to the people from the Rostra, an oration noted for
its
perfect form (see p. 243). By means of it he won the favor of Pompey,
who was
soon to become an important political factor, and, while incurring the
opposition of the senatorial party, he secured the support of the
populace. It
paved the way to the consulship.
4. Cicero's Consulship. - Declining the
governorship of a province at the close of his term as
praetor, Cicero
devoted his attention to securing the highest prize, the consulship.
His name
was presented in 64 B.C., with
five other candidates, including Antonius and
Catiline. Cicero
owed his election to his clean record, which secured for him the solid
support
of the equites, his
own order, and of many patricians of the better
sort. He was the first novus homo to be
elected since Marius, his fellow Arpinate. Antonius, second in the
contest, became his colleague.
During his term he opposed
the agrarian law of Servilius Rullus, defended Rabirius, an aged
senator
falsely accused of murder, and also the consul-elect, Murena, charged
with
bribery. But the main event of his consulship, and indeed of his life,
was the
suppression of the conspiracy of Catiline (see p. 181). This task was
the more
difficult because his colleague was in sympathy with the conspirators,
and
Caesar and Crassus had supported Catiline in his candidacy.
Furthermore, there
was no strong garrison in Rome at the
time, for
the legions were with Pompey in the East, and the nearest troops were
in Cisalpine Gaul. It was the
consul's prompt action that
made him pater patriae, and
honored him with a 8upplicatio, the
first given to a civilian.
5. Cicero in Exile. - Having passed the
goal of
his political ambition, Cicero
spent the next four years as an active member of the Senate. In 62 B.C. he
delivered his oration for the poet Archias, his former teacher (see p.
269). He
also defended P. Cornelius Sulla, who was charged with complicity in
the conspiracy
of Catiline. In private life there was much that added to the enjoyment
of the
honors he had earned. His house was on the Palatine Hill, the best
residential
section of Rome.
He had villas or country seats at Antium, Cumae,
Formiae, Pompeii, and Tusculum, with
their libraries and works of
art.
But a cloud hung over his
pleasures. On the last day of his consulship, as he ascended the Rostra
to give
an account of his administration, Metellus, the tribune, had tried to
prevent
him by declaring that a magistrate, who had put Roman citizens to death
without
trial, should not himself speak. The gathering storm of opposition
burst in the
tribuneship of Clodius, 58 B.C. This profligate patrician had become the personal
enemy of the orator because the latter had testified against his
character. As
the agent of the triumvirs whom Cicero
had offended, he proposed a bill that whoever had put to death a Roman
citizen
without trial should be outlawed. It was evident against whom it was
aimed.
Failing to receive assistance from Pompey and the consuls, Cicero went into
voluntary exile. Immediately
another bill of Clodius was passed, declaring Cicero a public enemy, confiscating
his
property, and prohibiting him from fire and water within four hundred
miles of
the city. Cicero fled to Southern
Italy, thence
to Greece
and Thessalonica. This was about the time of Caesar's battle with the
Helvetians. The rest of the year he remained crushed in spirit and
hopeless,
notwithstanding the consolation and kindness extended to him by the
provincials.
But in Rome opposition was turning to favor.
Clodius
had lost his hold. Pompey and the new consuls and tribunes of 57 urged
the
return of the exile. A month after the bill recalling him was passed in
the
assembly of the people, he reached Rome.
His homeward journey was marked with demonstrations of affection. His
entry
into the city was like a triumphal procession. Later his house on the Palatine and his villas were rebuilt at the
public
expense.
6. Cicero as Ex-consul. - Cicero resumed his place in the Senate and in the courts,
but his life was one of weakened influence. His friendship was sought
by
Caesar, and finally won, so that he wrote to Atticus, "The delightful
friendship with Caesar is the one plank saved from my shipwreck which
gives me
real pleasure." It was after his return from exile that Cicero began to
write upon rhetorical and
philosophical subjects (see sec. 10). In 53 B.C.,
he was honored with an
appointment to the college of augurs. In 52, while attempting to speak
in
behalf of Milo, who was clearly
guilty of the
murder of Clodius, he was humiliated by failure, breaking down "in the
presence of the drawn swords of the soldiers, and of the intense
excitement of
the bystanders." The oration, which was delivered only in part, was
afterwards written out, and is one of his best. The following year Cicero was made governor of Cilicia,
a province that had been grossly misruled by his predecessor. The new
governor
won the hearty gratitude of his subjects by his reforms in many ways,
and by
subduing their enemies with his legions. He was proclaimed imperator,
and on his return to Rome would probably have been awarded
a
triumph, had the citizens not been distracted by Caesar's crossing of
the
Rubicon.
7. Cicero and the Civil War. - Cicero's position between Caesar and Pompey was indeed
difficult. Both leaders had claims upon his friendship. Failing as a
peacemaker, he finally took the side of Pompey, following him to Greece.
After
Caesar's victory at Pharsalus,
he returned to Brundisium, awaiting for months the will of the
conqueror, until
the message came with a generous offer of pardon. This was in 47 B.C. With
but little interest in politics, Cicero
sought comfort in writing. Three busy years followed, in which he
produced four
works on rhetoric and oratory, three on ethics, two on philosophy,
besides
essays on other subjects. Domestic sorrows came. His wife Terentia was
estranged, and finally divorced. This was followed by the death of his
only
daughter Tullia, to whom he was devotedly attached.
Then came the
assassination of Caesar in 44 B.C., which in the course of events, Cicero was more than ready to
approve. Once
again, at the age of 63, he threw his energy into the struggle for the
freedom
of the republic. He became the life and soul of the senatorial party,
aiding
the young Octavianus in his claims against Antony. His last oratorical efforts
were
called forth in the fourteen" Philippics," hurled against Antony, in
which he declared the tyrant to be a public enemy, and called upon the
Romans
to maintain their liberty. But the voice of her greatest orator could
not save
the state.
8. Cicero's Assassination. - The formation of
the second triumvirate blasted all hopes of the
patriots. Once more the proscription lists were made, and to satisfy Antony, the young Octavianus consented to
sacrifice Cicero.
His brother
Quintus was also proscribed. Marcus might have made his escape, but was
overtaken by the assassins near his villa at Formiae, December 7, 43 B.C. His
faithful slaves would have fought to the end, but he permitted no
resistance. It
is recorded that his head and hands were taken to Rome
and in mockery nailed to the Rostra by order of Antony.
9. Cicero as an Orator. - " It happened many years after," writes Plutarch,”
that Augustus once found one of his grandsons with a work of Cicero’s
in his
hands. The boy was frightened and hid the book under his gown; but the
emperor
took it from him, and standing there motionless, read through a great
part of
the book; then he gave it back to the boy and said: 'This was a great
orator,
my child; a great orator, and a man who loved his country well."
Rome was a
nation of orators. Not only did Cicero hold the first
place among them, but his influence has been recognized by all men of
eloquence
since his day. To natural ability, a commanding voice and a pleasing
personality
were added long and careful discipline and experience. It is true that
he
argued chiefly as an advocate, often exaggerating or evading facts in
order to
emphasize. He was criticized for being verbose, but this defect he
partly corrected.
With his incisive wit, his keen sense of humor, his wonderful mastery
of words,
he swayed the people and the Senate at his will. Of one hundred and
seven
orations attributed to Cicero,
over fifty have been preserved entire, with fragments of twenty others.
Most of
these were revised for publication after being delivered.
10. Cicero as a Writer. - The name of Cicero
is the greatest in Roman
literature. Mackail says, "Cicero's
imperishable
glory is that he created a language which remained for sixteen
centuries that
of the civilized world, and used that language to create a style which
nineteen
centuries have not replaced, and in some respects have scarcely
altered. He
stands in prose, like Virgil in poetry, as the bridge between the
ancient and
the modem world." One can hardly understand how a. busy man could find
time to write so much upon so many subjects. His writings, as they have
come
down to us, fill ten volumes, about five thousand pages. Besides his
orations
and letters we have his works on rhetoric and philosophy. With his
broad experience
no one could write with more authority than he upon rhetoric and
oratory. In
his De Oratore, Brutus, and Orator,
he treats of the ideal orator, his
education and training, and the history of oratory down to his own
time.
The treatises in
philosophy were written in the last years of his life. In 46-44 B.C. he
produced fifteen works, including De Republica,
De Legibus, De Officiis, De Amicitia, De
Senectute, De
Finibus, De Natura Deorum, and the Tusculan
Disputations. He had studied Greek
philosophy from his youth. But very little had been written in Latin on
this
subject. To reproduce the thoughts of the Greeks without aiming to be
original,
to teach the lessons of philosophy to his countrymen in their own
tongue, this
was his task. Of the Tusculan Disputations it was Erasmus who said: "I
cannot doubt that the mind from which such teachings flowed was in some
sense
inspired by divinity. I always feel a better man for reading Cicero."
11. Cicero's Letters. - To the modern world most interesting are the
letters of Cicero.
Of these we have over eight hundred, written to his family and friends (Ad
Familiares), to his intimate friend and
publisher, 'T. Pomponius Atticus (Ad Atticum), to his brother Quintus (Ad Q. Fratrem),
and to Marcus Brutus (Ad M.
Brutum). They cover a period of twenty-five years,
68 to 43 B.C., and
are a priceless source of information of the times of Cicero, the last
days of the republic. And
yet as we read these charming and natural expressions of the great
Roman, we
are impressed with their modem tone and our common civilization.
12. The Character of Cicero. - Historians vary greatly in their estimate of Cicero. Perhaps
it is
nearest the truth to say that he had many weaknesses but much strength.
He was
emotional, vain, sensitive. As a statesman he made many mistakes. He
failed to
grasp the supreme problems of his time. He lacked force, will, and aim.
He was
vacillating in the civil war, but his choice of affiliation had to be
made
between two evils. That he was a patriot there can be no doubt. His
greatest
desire was to save and free the republic. That he was honest and
incorruptible
is shown in his provincial administration. He was a man of peace and
honor,
pure in life and purpose, and sympathetic with the oppressed. A
biographer well
says: "His fidelity to his prudent friend Atticus, his affection to his
loyal freedman Tiro, his unfailing courtesy toward his wife Terentia,
the love
he lavished upon his daughter
Tullia, his unworthy son Marcus, and his
sturdy brother Quintus, stand forth in striking contrast to the
coldness of the
typical Roman of his day!'