Wanderlino
Arruda
Of
all the hallowed names of universal art, I
believe that the greatest patron of nature
until the present day, has been the poet,
Vergilius, a Roman, native of Andes, near
Mantua, in the north of Italy. Even though
he is far from being our contemporary by date
of birth, it's true (seventy B.C.), he is
our contemporary by the actuality of his ideas,
of his intransigent defense of everything
that he deemed as belonging to the environment.
He had intimate disposition and political
knowledge worthy of an ecologist at the end
of the Twentieth Century. Everything about
Vergilius was of the firmest simplicity and
he lived for each musical sound and every
hue of all his auroras. A man of integrity,
he talked equally freely with kings and pastors,
able to share the company of the nobles in
their palaces as well as the children of the
fields and the soft and icy snowflakes of
the mountains. The stars and nightingales,
the tempests and morning dew, the flight of
birds and the fresh blooming of flowers...
everything, for him, was music from the depths
of the heart, joy to the eyes, and inspiration
to the soul. The beauty of the world and of
life itself was the best of raw materials
for his work, a life of poetic light. A light
so strong, that it would forever give brilliance
to his intelligence. Vergilius was only twenty-five
when he began his composition, "Eclogas".
At thirty, he produced the "Georgicas", a
didactic poem in four strophes, in which he
celebrated the joy of rural labor and life
closer to nature, in the countryside. A friend
of Otavia, sister to the emperor, he enchanted
her with the reading of the sixth strophe
of "Eneida", referring to the death of his
son, Marcelo. An enchantment of such scope,
it would render him fame and fortune, besides
the much-coveted royal protection of Mecenas
and of the Cesar, himself. With his poetry,
the young poet proclaimed the glory of Rome
and the Romans, living joyfully and helping
others to do so. An enemy of luxury, his verses
sung about the sweet harmony of family life
and declared that nothing was better than
keeping to the wilderness and solitude. Timid,
delicate, and of a tender heart, the clashing
turmoil of the empire's capital held no beckoning
for this sensitive young man. As incredible
as it may seem, the greatly impassioned bard
of Dido, one of the most beautiful pages of
universal poetry, never dedicated his tender,
solitary heart to marriage. Cult and melancholy,
he preferred to live apart from his fellows.
One of the absolute leading bestsellers in
Brazil, in the end of 1982, from the German
writer, Hermann Broch, curiously has it's
entire theme based on the last hours of the
life of Vergilius, who died in Brindisi, Calabria.
At the time, he was fifty years old and had
decided to travel to Greece, where he took
part in the committee of Augustus and unfortunately
fell sick during the festivities of Megara,
near Corinto. It is thought that during the
short course of the fatal illness, in the
year 19 B.C., that an entire life perspective
had come into his conscience, and that he
had spun of heart and soul, a bittersweet
inner examination of himself and of his contemporaries.
For the scope of an intelligence of the girth
of the author of "Eneida", the true creator
of "Eneas", life in itself must have been
the most monumental of all works of reality
and art. Now, would depart from the world
one of the cultist intellectuals of the time,
involved in all provinces of knowledge, from
Mathematics to Veterinary; from Philosophy
to Apiculture. A life, which, not unlike the
"Georgicas", was an epic of creativity and
meaningful work.
I become enthused when I hear my friend, Monsenhor
Murta, speak excitedly about the poetry of
Virgilio. Monsenhor Murta, who is the outstanding
authority on Vergilius in our part of the
world. What really enchants me is discovering
about the existence of people so intelligent
and sensitive as he and Professor Pedro Maciel
Vidigal, for searching so far back in time
to recapture the vanity of love and the glorification
of poetic rationality. I become even more
engrossed when I find that Vergilius was also
a graffiti artist, wall poet, landscape painter
and acclaimed sculptor. Influenced by Homer,
he was emulated by Dante, and by Camoens.
A Friend of Augustus and Mecenas, by the eternity
of his genius, he is still our immortal friend.
How good it would be if we could be then at
his time to read his last verses! They were
written for his tomb in Naples: "Mantua gave
me life; Brindisi gave me death; and Naples,
the grave. I sang of flocks, fields and warriors."
He died as he was born and lived his life:
in immortality!