Only fragments of his works survive. His first known works are Bellum sequanicum,[3] a poem on Julius Caesar's campaign against Ariovistus, and some satires; these should not be confused with the Menippean Satires of the other Varro, of which some 600 fragments survive. He also wrote a geographical poem, Chorographia;[2]Ephemeris, a hexameter poem on weather-signs after Aratus, from which Virgil has borrowed;[2] and (late in life) elegies to his lover Leucadia.[3]
His translation of the Alexandrian poet Apollonius Rhodius' Argonautica into Latin has some fine surviving lines;[3] and was singled out for praise by Ovid: "Of Varro too what age will not be told/And Jason's Argo and the fleece of gold?".[4]Oskar Seyffert considered that the poem to have been "the most remarkable production in the domain of narrative epic poetry between the time of Ennius and that of Vergil".[5]
Of Varro's fragments, the epigram on "The Tombs of the Great" is well-known; whether or not it is truly Varro's is debatable:
Marmoreo Licinus tumulo iacet, at Cato nullo, Pompeius paruo: credimus esse deos?
Translation:
In a marble tomb [the freedman] Licinus lies; yet Cato lies in none
and Pompey in but a small: do we believe there are gods?
Patrons
Cicero as well as Caesar have been suggested as possible patrons of Varro's writings.[6]