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Lucretius
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Lucretius (Titus Lucretius Carus, b. c. 94–d. c. 55 or 51 bce) was one of the most important Latin poets of Antiquity. He was a predecessor of Virgil, who was profoundly influenced by him. His only known work is his poem De rerum natura (On the nature of the universe, or On the nature of things; frequently referred to as DRN), a didactic work of six books in epic hexameter verse in which he expounds the philosophical system of Epicurus. Lucretius has been an important source for Epicureanism and has been profoundly influential on progressive thinking from Antiquity to the modern world. Often accused of atheism, Lucretius was in fact a deeply religious poet who strove to combat what he saw as the religious errors of his day, to convince his readers that they should not fear the gods or fear death. If they can free themselves from these fears, Lucretius tells them, there is nothing to prevent them from living a life equal to that of the gods.
Title: Lucretius
Description:
Lucretius (Titus Lucretius Carus, b.
c.
94–d.
c.
55 or 51 bce) was one of the most important Latin poets of Antiquity.
He was a predecessor of Virgil, who was profoundly influenced by him.
His only known work is his poem De rerum natura (On the nature of the universe, or On the nature of things; frequently referred to as DRN), a didactic work of six books in epic hexameter verse in which he expounds the philosophical system of Epicurus.
Lucretius has been an important source for Epicureanism and has been profoundly influential on progressive thinking from Antiquity to the modern world.
Often accused of atheism, Lucretius was in fact a deeply religious poet who strove to combat what he saw as the religious errors of his day, to convince his readers that they should not fear the gods or fear death.
If they can free themselves from these fears, Lucretius tells them, there is nothing to prevent them from living a life equal to that of the gods.
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Lucretius on the Ennian Cosmos
Lucretius on the Ennian Cosmos
This chapter approaches Lucretius’ engagement with Ennius on Lucretius’ own terms and explores how the Annales serves Lucretius as a model (or a foil, rather) for poetry about the ...
Ennian Poetology and Literary Affiliation in Lucretius
Ennian Poetology and Literary Affiliation in Lucretius
This chapter adduces Ennius’ own metaphors for literary tradition and affiliation, specifically metempsychosis and the heart, in order to suggest that one of Lucretius’ central aim...
The Alexandrian Footnote in Lucretius’ De Rerum Natura
The Alexandrian Footnote in Lucretius’ De Rerum Natura
Abstract
This paper contributes evidence to support the widely accepted view that Lucretius may justly be regarded by the reader as a Callimachean poet by synthesizing and analyzin...
Lucretius Renaissance Thought
Lucretius Renaissance Thought
Even before its celebrated rediscovery by Poggio Bracciolini in 1417, Lucretius’s didactic Epicurean epic De rerum natura was famous as a Roman masterpiece celebrated by Virgil and...
The English Voices of Lucretius, from Lucy Hutchinson to John Mason Good
The English Voices of Lucretius, from Lucy Hutchinson to John Mason Good
Abstract
This chapter considers the ways in which writers from the mid-seventeenth to the late eighteenth century sought to give the Roman poet Lucretius an English ...
Ennian Historiography in Lucretius
Ennian Historiography in Lucretius
This chapter meets the Annales on its own narrative terms, arguing that Lucretius responds to the Annales’ conceptualization of history and time in a comprehensively revisionist wa...
Lucretius (Titus Lucretius Carus, ca. 94–ca. 55/51 BCE)
Lucretius (Titus Lucretius Carus, ca. 94–ca. 55/51 BCE)
Abstract
Lucretius, a Roman poet, set forth a complete account of the Epicurean philosophy in epic verse, in a poem entitled
De rerum natura
...

