One of the world's most celebrated scholars, Stephen Greenblatt has
crafted both an innovative work of history and a thrilling story of
discovery, in which one manuscript, plucked from a thousand years of
neglect, changed the course of human thought and made possible the world
as we know it.
Nearly six hundred years ago, a short, genial, cannily alert man in his
late thirties took a very old manuscript off a library shelf, saw with
excitement what he had discovered, and ordered that it be copied. That
book was the last surviving manuscript of an ancient Roman philosophical
epic, On the Nature of Things, by Lucretius--a beautiful poem of the
most dangerous ideas: that the universe functioned without the aid of
gods, that religious fear was damaging to human life, and that matter
was made up of very small particles in eternal motion, colliding and
swerving in new directions.
The copying and translation of this ancient book-the greatest discovery
of the greatest book-hunter of his age-fueled the Renaissance, inspiring
artists such as Botticelli and thinkers such as Giordano Bruno; shaped
the thought of Galileo and Freud, Darwin and Einstein; and had a
revolutionary influence on writers such as Montaigne and Shakespeare and
even Thomas Jefferson.