Lucius Varius Rufus (ca.
74 -
14 BC), Roman poet of the
Augustan age.
He was the 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. Horace speaks 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) regrets that he had hitherto produced nothing comparable to the work of Varius or
Helvius Cinna.
From
Macrobius (
Saturnalia, vi. I, 39; 2, 19) we learn 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 alludes to another epic, and, according to the scholiast on
Epistles, j. 16, 2 729, these three lines are taken bodily from a
panegyric of Varius on Augustus.
But his most famous literary production was the tragedy
Thyestes, which
Quintilian (
Inst. Orat. x. 1, 98) declares fit to rank with any of the Greek tragedies. The
didascalia (which is preserved in a Paris manuscript) informs us that it was produced at the games celebrated (
29 BC) by Augustus in honour of the
victory at Actium, and that Varius received a present of a million
sesterces from the emperor.
Fragments 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.