Lucius Varius Rufus
Lucius Varius Rufus | |
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![]() Horace, Virgil and Varius at the house of Maecenas l.t.r. Virgil, Horace, Rufus (in the background) und Gaius Maecenas. Painting by Charles Jalabert (ca. 1846) | |
Born | c. 74 BC |
Died | 14 BC (aged about 60) |
Occupation | Poet |
Language | Latin |
Nationality | Roman |
Period | Augustan poetry |
Notable works | Thyestes, De Morte |
Lucius Varius Rufus (/ˈvɛəriəs, ˈvær-/; c. 74 – 14 BC) was a Roman poet of the early Augustan age.
He was a friend of Virgil, after whose death he and Plotius Tucca prepared the Aeneid for publication, and of Horace, for whom he and Virgil obtained an introduction to Maecenas.[1] Horace spoke of him as a master of epic and the only poet capable of celebrating the achievements of Vipsanius Agrippa (Odes, i.6); Virgil (under the name of Lycidas, Ecl. ix.35) regretted that he had hitherto produced nothing comparable to the work of Varius or Helvius Cinna.
Macrobius (Saturnalia, vi. I, 39; 2, 19) states that Varius composed an epic poem De Morte, some lines of which are quoted as having been imitated or appropriated by Virgil; Horace (Sat. i.10, 43) probably alluded to another epic, and, according to the scholiast on Epistles, i.16, 2 729, these three lines were taken bodily from a panegyric of Varius on Augustus.
Varius's most famous literary production was the tragedy Thyestes, which Quintilian (Inst. Orat. x.1, 98) declared fit to rank with any of the Greek tragedies. A didascalia on the play, preserved in a Paris manuscript, states that it was produced at the games celebrated in 29 BC by Octavian in honour of the victory at Actium, and that Varius received a present of a million sesterces from the Roman ruler.
Fragments of Varius's works are located in E. Bahrens, Frag. Poetarum Romanorum (1886); monographs by A. Weichert (1836) and R. Unger (1870, 1878, 1898); Martin Schanz, Geschichte der römischen Litteratur (1899), ii.1; Teuffel, Hist. of Roman Literature (Eng. trans., 1900), 223.
References
[edit]- public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Rufus, Lucius Varius". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 23 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 821. This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
External links
[edit] Media related to Lucius Varius Rufus at Wikimedia Commons
- ^ Conte, Gian Biagio (1994). Latin Literature: A History. Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 258. ISBN 0-8018-6253-1.