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The Project Gutenberg eBook <strong>of</strong> ...<br />

few words about his philosophical opinions, are alone needed here. The first mention we have <strong>of</strong><br />

Varro in any <strong>of</strong> Cicero's writings is in itself sufficient to show his character and the impossibility<br />

<strong>of</strong> anything like friendship between the two. Varro had done the orator some service in the trying<br />

time which came before the exile. In writing to Atticus Cicero had eulogised Varro; and in the<br />

letter to which I refer he begs Atticus to send Varro the eulogy to read, adding "Mirabiliter<br />

moratus est, sicut nosti, e???ta ?a? ??de? [297] ." All the references to Varro in the letters to<br />

Atticus are in the same strain. Cicero had to be pressed to write Varro a letter <strong>of</strong> thanks for<br />

supposed exertions in his behalf, during his exile [298] . Several passages show that Cicero refused<br />

to believe in Varro's zeal, as reported by Atticus [299] . On Cicero's return from exile, he and<br />

Varro remained in the same semi-friendly state. About the year 54 B.C., as we have already seen,<br />

Atticus in vain urged his friend to dedicate some work to the great polymath. After the fall <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Pompeian cause, Cicero and Varro do seem to have been drawn a little closer together. Eight<br />

letters, written mostly in the year before the Academica was published, testify to this<br />

approximation [300] . Still they are all cold, forced and artificial; very different from the letters<br />

Cicero addressed to his real intimates, such for instance as Sulpicius, Caelius, Paetus, Plancus,<br />

and Trebatius. They all show a fear <strong>of</strong> giving <strong>of</strong>fence to the harsh temper <strong>of</strong> Varro, and a<br />

humility in presence <strong>of</strong> his vast learning which is by no means natural to Cicero. The negotiations<br />

between Atticus and Cicero with respect to the dedication <strong>of</strong> the second edition, as detailed<br />

already, show sufficiently that this slight increase in cordiality did not lead to friendship [301] .<br />

The philosophical views <strong>of</strong> Varro can be gathered with tolerable accuracy from Augustine, who<br />

quotes considerably from, the work <strong>of</strong> Varro De Philosophia [302] . Beyond doubt he was a<br />

follower <strong>of</strong> Antiochus and the so-called Old Academy. How he selected this school from, among<br />

the 288 philosophies which he considered possible, by an elaborate and pedantic process <strong>of</strong><br />

exhaustion, may be read by the curious in Augustine. My notes on the Academica Posteriora will<br />

show that there is no reason for accusing Cicero <strong>of</strong> having mistaken Varro's philosophical views.<br />

This supposition owes its currency to Müller, who, from Stoic phrases in the De Lingua Latina,<br />

concluded that Varro had passed over to the Stoics before that work was written. All that was<br />

Stoic in Varro came from Antiochus [303] .<br />

The exact specification <strong>of</strong> the changes in the arrangement <strong>of</strong> the subject-matter, necessitated by<br />

the dedication to Varro, will be more conveniently deferred till we come to the fragments <strong>of</strong> the<br />

second edition preserved by Nonius and others. Roughly speaking, the following were the<br />

contents <strong>of</strong> the four books. Book I.: the historico-philosophical exposition <strong>of</strong> Antiochus' views,<br />

formerly given by Hortensius, now by Varro; then the historical justification <strong>of</strong> the Philonian<br />

position, which Cicero had given in the first edition as an answer to Hortensius [304] . Book II.: an<br />

exposition by Cicero <strong>of</strong> Carneades' positive teaching, practically the same as that given by<br />

Catulus in ed. I.; to this was appended, probably, that foretaste <strong>of</strong> the negative arguments against<br />

dogmatism, which in ed. 1. had formed part <strong>of</strong> the answer made by Cicero to Hortensius. Book<br />

III.: a speech <strong>of</strong> Varro in reply to Cicero, closely corresponding to that <strong>of</strong> Lucullus in ed. 1. Book<br />

IV.: Cicero's answer, substantially the same as in ed. 1. Atticus must have been almost a ??f??<br />

p??s?p??.<br />

I may here notice a fact which might puzzle the student. In some old editions the Lucullus is<br />

marked throughout as Academicorum liber IV. This is an entire mistake, which arose from a<br />

wrong view <strong>of</strong> Nonius' quotations, which are always from the second edition, and can tell us<br />

nothing about the constitution <strong>of</strong> the first. One other thing is worth remark. Halm (as many before<br />

him had done) places the Academica Priora before the Posteriora. This seems to me an<br />

unnatural arrangement; the subject-matter <strong>of</strong> the Varro is certainly prior, logically, to that <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Lucullus.<br />

M. TULLII CICERONIS<br />

http://www.gutenberg.org/files/14970/14970-h/14970-h.htm[1/5/2010 10:31:57 AM]<br />

[lxi]<br />

[lxii]<br />

[lxiii]

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