Haroldo,
The Baron of Grão Mogol
Wanderlino
Arruda
The
story in itself is in all quite common and in
keeping with the canons of modern commerce,
fruit of those eternal principles, offer and
demand. It’s a tale of give and take,
naturally involving costs and coins, common
to any given commercial transaction. But only
a poet can imbue such cut and dried dealings
of this nature with romance. Someone, who can
somehow see, with poetic eyes, some lingering
light… romantic traces of literary philosophy.
But mind you, let there rest no doubt, that
even in acts of pure bargaining, there is always
a way to be found of coloring them with fantasy,
quite elementary to those who live within the
arts and the written word.
The fact is that the plain and simple truth
alone can be interesting enough, my friends.
Haroldo Lívio, Brazilian citizen, native
of Brasilia de Minas, by birth, to Montes Claros
by heart, and now, signs a love-bond to the
city of Grão Mogol…signed, sold
and delivered. Sold with all the power wielded
by currency in today’s modern world of
commerce. Haroldo Lívio - it’s
prudent to say - has just completed a commercial
transaction of great value in the city of Grão
Mogol. He bought, paid and took possession of,
with register in government office, mediate
all clauses, including that of eviction, a 19th
century colonial mansion. Haroldo Lívio,
or better, dr. Haroldo Lívio de Oliveira,
Brazilian lawyer, married to the sociologist
Maria do Carmo, is today the legitimate owner,
lord and master of an ancient and exciting mansion
in the picturesque city of Grão Mogol.
A historic old mansion, great, spreading and
impressive, possibly built by the hands of slaves,
walls made of heavy cut stones, dug with sweat
from centuries past. Being a case of love at
first sight, Haroldo immediately immersed himself
in the noble atmosphere of his new acquisition,
absorbing it and was soon feeling himself in
the skin of a powerful land baron, owner of
a security worthy of a fortress, urban and historic.
He liked it and bought it. Brass tacks!
Haroldo’s house, my friends, is not a
common house, built of lowly bricks and mortar,
as stated in the deed. It is truly a monolithic
work of art with walls half a meter thick, sustaining
huge, wooden, colonial windows and gigantic
double doors furnished with heavy beams and
thick iron bolts, fruit of the famed Minas sense
of solid security as well as the competence
of sweat covered ironsmiths of old. The house
of Haroldo, with roof of massive ax-hewn beams
of wine colored aroeira wood, has grand rooms
with walls lined in parquet and the floors are
worthy of the steps of great nobles and commanders-at-arms.
The front of the mansion is endowed with superb
secular frontispieces, boasting resistant ornate
details, and evidencing the force of thoroughly
deliberated choices wrought by the architect,
owner builder, pride of the art of stonemasonry.
In the back of this noble estate, beyond generous
orchards of blushing fruits, we encounter the
crystal clear water and fine white sand of a
serene river, its bed formed of oval, polished
stones and banks carpeted with cool green grass
and “capim gordura,” a coveted bovine
delicacy. In the distance, but not very far,
lies the elegant profile of a secular forest,
framing the blue rust of the hills and celestial
grey of the horizon, an enchantment to the eyes
and a pleasure to the heart.
For all this, for love, for romantic leanings
in commercial decision, for poetry, for good
taste, for noble humility, and for the humble
nobility of healthy consciousness, wielding
a self proclaimed badge of authority, I have
no doubt, that the lofty title of Baron of Grão
Mogol, belongs to Haroldo Lívio, cult
and intellectual giant of my province, Minas
Gerais.