The plague and the simulacra of social control in Lucretius's "De Rerum Natura"

In "De Rerum Natura", written during the republican era and rediscovered only in the fifteenth century, Lucretius stages the description of the Athens plague of 430 BC: the picture is deliberately bleak and bears the mythical features of the space-time indefiniteness that characterizes the crepuscular epochs. Once the subjects and the space-time horizons have definitively fallen, what remains is a gloomy picture of death with spectacular and macabre shapes, which the author nevertheless uses to convey an ethical criticism, making use of a solemnly rich lexicon of archaisms, capable of to probe unexplored places of the human soul and of the word itself.

Chronicles of the End: from Machen's β€œTerror” to Lovecraft's β€œColor”

On the occasion of the 83rd anniversary of the death of HP Lovecraft, which took place on March 15, 1937, and given the period of stasis we are experiencing, what better occasion to reread one of his most terrifying stories, "The Color came from Space", light the parallels with another apocalyptic novel released more than a century ago that today seems so prophetic, Arthur Machen's β€œThe Terror”?