Whoever wishes to know Cicero in full has to read by necessity his 880 preserved letters, written in the last twenty-five years of his life, and addressed to all kinds of people in Roman society, especially his friends. The letters that in this "Correspondence" are selected and translated are part of what we can call political letters and are - at least this is intended - the most significant in each epoch of Cicero's political life. Although with the brevity that these letters demand, M. Tulio presents plans and paintings in which at a glance the entire political situation of the State is projected at that time. He himself warns with these or similar words: "here you have the exact picture of the republic on this day." With this, as a whole, he presents in situ all the political life of those years, the historian C. Nepos being able to say with all truth that whoever reads these lett...read more