De rerum natura (usually translated as On the Nature of Things) is a philosophical epic poem written by Lucretius in Latin around 55 BCE. The poem was lost during the Middle Ages, rediscovered in 1417, and first printed in 1473. Its earliest published translation into any language (French) did not occur until 1650; in English — although earlier partial or unpublished translations exist — the first complete translation to be published was that of Thomas Creech, in heroic couplets, in 1682. Only a few more English translations appeared over the next two centuries, but in the 20th century translations began appearing more frequently.
Only complete (or nearly complete) translations are listed. Notable translations of individual passages include the "invocation to Venus" by Edmund Spenser in The Faerie Queene IV.X.44-47; and five passages in John Dryden's Sylvae (1685).
Year | Translator | Publication | Source | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1600s* | Anonymous | In mss: Bodl. MS. Rawl. D. 314. | Gifanius (1595) | Prose. | |
1650s* | Hutchinson, Lucy | In mss until Lucy Hutchinson's translation of Lucretius: De rerum natura. ed. Hugh de Quehen (1996) | Pareus (1631) | Heroic couplets. | |
1656 | Evelyn, John | Book 1 only: An essay on the first book of T. Lucretius Carus De rerum natura (1656). Evelyn's complete extant translation (lacking Book 2) not published until John Evelyn's Translation of Titus Lucretius Carus: 'De rerum natura': An Old-Spelling Critical Edition ed Repetzki, (Peter Lang (2000)) | Lambinus (1570) | Heroic couplets. | |
1682 | Creech, Thomas | First edition published pseudonymously as "Daphnis"; subsequently under Creech's own name., often reprinted. | Heroic couplets. The first complete English translation published, and the standard translation of the 18th century. | ||
1743 | Anonymous | "Plates by Guernier." | Prose. Facing Latin text. | ||
1805 | Good, John Mason | The Nature of Things: A Didactic Poem:, . Reprinted in John Selby Watson's translation On the Nature of Things (1851) | Wakefield (1796–97) | Blank verse. Facing Latin text. | |
1813 | Busby, Thomas | The Nature of Things: A Didascalic Poem | Heroic couplets. | ||
1851 | Watson, John Selby | , often reprinted. | Forbiger (1828) | Prose. | |
1864 | Munro, H.A.J. | Text, commentary, and translation in volumes 1, 2, and 3, respectively. Often reprinted: . | Munro (1860) | Prose. | |
1872 | Johnson, Charles Frederick | Munro (1860) | Blank verse. The first American translation. | ||
1884 | Baring, Thomas Charles | Fourteener couplets. | |||
1910 | Bailey, Cyril | . Often reprinted. | Bailey (1898/1921) | Prose. | |
1916 | Leonard, William Ellery | . Reprinted in Everyman's Library. | Guissani (1896–98) | Blank verse. Facing Latin text. | |
1919 | Allison, Sir Robert | Munro (1866) | Blank verse. | ||
1924 | Rouse, W. H. D. | Lucretius: On the Nature of Things (Loeb revised edn.) | Rouse (Loeb 1924) | Prose. Facing Latin text. | |
1929 | Jackson, Thomas | Titus Lucretius Carus on the nature of things | Bailey (1921) | Rhythmic prose. | |
1933 | Way, Arthur S. | Lucretius on the problem of existence | 6-beat lines, rhymed couplets. | ||
1937 | Trevelyan, R. C. | De Rerum Natura. Selections published in 1920 as . | Bailey (1921) | Blank verse. | |
1946 | Bennett, Charles Ernest | On the nature of things | Blank verse. | ||
1950 | Brown, W. Hannaford | Lucretius on the Nature of Things | Imitative dactyllic hexameters. | ||
1951 | Latham, Ronald E. | On the Nature of the Universe (Penguin Classics rev. by John Godwin (1994)) | Prose. | ||
1956 | Winspear, Alban Dewes | De rerum natura, by Lucretius, the Roman poet of science | Bailey (1921) | Irregular iambics. | |
1963 | Johnson, L. L. | On the Nature of Things | Imitative dactyllic hexameters. | ||
1965 | Geer, Russel Mortimer | On nature | Prose. | ||
1965 | Mantinband, James H. | On the nature of the universe (De rerum natura) | 6-beat lines. | ||
1968 | Humphries, Rolfe | The Way Things Are | Rouse (Loeb 1924) | Blank verse. | |
1969 | Smith, Martin Ferguson | On the Nature of Things (revised edn. (2001)) | Prose. | ||
1973 | Wooby, Philip F. | Lucretius: about reality | Imitative dactyllic hexameters. | ||
1974 | Bovie, Palmer | Lucretius: On the nature of Things. De Rerum Natura. A Modern Verse Translation | Leonard & Smith | Verse. | |
1976 | Sisson, C. H. | The Poem on Nature | 6-beat lines. | ||
1977 | Copley, Frank O. | The Nature of Things (Norton rpt. (2011)) | Bailey (1962) | Loose blank verse. | |
1995 | Esolen, Anthony | On the Nature of Things | Loose blank verse. | ||
1997 | Melville, Ronald | On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World's Classics rpt.) | Rouse, rev. Smith (Loeb 1975) | Blank verse. | |
2003 | Englert, Walter | On the Nature of Things | "Rough five or six beat line." | ||
2007 | Stallings, Alicia | The Nature of Things (Penguin Classics) | Rouse, rev. Smith (Loeb 1975) | Fourteener rhymed couplets. | |
2008 | Slavitt, David R. | De Rerum Natura (The Nature of Things): A Poetic Translation | 6-beat lines. | ||
2010 | Johnston, Ian | On the Nature of Things | Munro (1900) | Blank verse. | |
2016 | Cobbold, G.B. | The Nature of the Universe | Prose. |