Marius the Epicurean : his sensations and ideas

by Walter Pater

Other authorsIan Small
Paper Book, 1986

Status

Available

Call number

823/.8

Collection

Publication

Oxford [Oxfordshire] ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1986.

Description

Walter Pater (1839-94) was the foremost Victorian writer on art and on aesthetic experience. He brought his extensive knowledge of the history of art to bear on the new problem of how to explain the very personal affective response to beauty, and raised this into a central concern of aesthetic and philosophical thought. His ideas still shape modern assumptions about how art plays on our feelings and intellectual responses. This edition of Pater's complete works was published in 1900-1 in a limited edition of 775 copies. It comprises eight volumes of his major works with an additional volume of critical essays first published in The Guardian. The collection of Pater's articles on ancient Greek thought, poetry, sculpture and architecture presented in this volume had previously been published in 1895 under the editorship of Pater's friend and literary executor C. L. Shadwell.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member wirkman
A lovely reverie of a novel, elegiac, almost a dream. And yet it is philosophy and religion that is the focus of this historical romance, a romance of ideas. There aren't many books like this one. Hard to describe. Easy to recommend.
LibraryThing member antiquary
A bit slow in places, but overall effective in a low-key way. Confirms Valla's argument that Epicureanism has more in common with Christianity than Stoicism does. A mildly irritating tendency to cite modern examples which break the (otherwise well-created) ancient mood
LibraryThing member jwhenderson
Marius the Epicurean is a story about the intellectual and spiritual development of Marius, a young Italian acting as an amanuensis to the great emperor Marcus Aurelius, set in the second century A.D. against the backdrop of a Roman Empire on the edge of ruin. Marius travels through several
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philosophical systems in search of an illusive image of love, passing through Epicureanism, Cyrenaicism, and finally Stoicism until discovering what he was looking for in the dreadful beauty of Christian sacrifice. Marius the Epicurean is a rare novel in which the style is as important as the plot. Marius became a major impact on writers of the late Victorian era's Aesthetic and Decadent movements, because of Pater's elegant and poetic prose.
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Language

Original publication date

1885

Physical description

xxx, 292 p.; 19 cm

ISBN

0192817051 / 9780192817051
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