On September 21, 19 BC, Virgil [Publius Vergilius Maro], Roman poet of the Augustan period (Aeneid), died at
the age of 50. From the article:
"Virgil
Publius Vergilius Maro (70-19 BCE), better known to most modern readers as Virgil, was one of the greatest poets of the early Roman Empire. His best-known work, the Aeneid, told of a Trojan prince, Aeneas, who escaped the burning of Troy in the final days of the Trojan War to eventually make his way across the Mediterranean Sea to Italy (Latium) where his descendants Romulus and Remus would ultimately found the city of Rome. He was so highly regarded by those authors who followed him that the early 14th-century CE Italian author Dante Alighieri chose Virgil as his guide through the nine levels of hell in The Inferno.
Early Life
Virgil, sometimes spelled Vergil, was born on October 15, 70 BCE in Andes, a small village near Mantua north of the Po River in Cisalpine Gaul. The 5th-century CE author and statesman Macrobius maintained Virgil was born of country parents among the shrubs and woods; the passion for the rural life would remain with him throughout his adult life. He was described as having the appearance of a countryman being tall but bulky with a dark complexion, 'changeable health,' and eating and drinking little; his poor health kept him away from the civil war that was brewing at the time. His father was a potter and courier who was lucky enough to marry the boss’ daughter.
Virgil's first collection of ten poems, the Eclogues, would make him the most celebrated poet of the day.
While his province of birth did not have citizenship rights (not until 51 BCE), his father, being of old Latin stock, was a citizen. Although some question his parents’ financial status, most agree they were affluent enough to provide him with a solid education. The future poet acquired his early schooling in Cremona and Milan (Mediolanum) where he obtained his toga virilis --- a symbol of both manhood and citizenship. This early education garnered him an appreciation for both Greek and Roman authors. He arrived in Rome with plans to study rhetoric (a subject he disliked) with Epidius whose school was where Octavian and Mark Antony would eventually study as well. Evidently, Virgil only spoke once in the law courts, but without distinction; apparently, he was too shy. Virgil soon left the city to study philosophy at the Epicurean school of Siron in Naples. The love of philosophy that brought him to the Epicurean community enabled him to meet his fellow poet Horace.
When he was around 30 years old, the Roman Republic was in crisis. Julius Caesar had been assassinated, and his adopted son and heir the future Emperor Augustus (aka Octavian) was embroiled in a civil war. In 42 BCE, after the defeat of the tyrannicides at the Battle of Philippi, attempts were made to settle army veterans on confiscated land, a subject for Virgil’s early poems. Unluckily for his family, in 41 BCE his father’s farm was seized. The young poet tried to use his influence in Rome to have it returned; however, there is no record whether or not he was successful.
Eclogues
By this time Virgil had met a fellow author and patron of the arts Gaius Cilnius Maecenas. This wealthy Roman, a personal friend and advisor to Augustus, gathered around him a circle of young poets like Virgil and Horace. Through him, the young poet would eventually become close friends with the emperor. According to historian Anthony Everitt in his biography Augustus, Maecenas "cultivated the finest poets of the age, ensuring that so far as possible and without application of censorship, geniuses such as Virgil and Horace stayed on message" (205). It was also at this time, c. 39-38 BCE, that Virgil would publish his first collection of ten poems in Rome, Eclogues. Its success would make him the most celebrated poet of the day. He would be awarded with a house on Esquiline Hill near the home of his benefactor Maecenas. It should be noted that poets of this period needed benefactors such as Maecenas in order to have financial security.
Virgil would find a friend and sponsor not only in Maecenas but also in Augustus. As with Horace, the emperor would nurture the two poets, believing they would help restore the fledgling empire to the ideals of the past. The emperor believed that Rome was suffering from moral decay and wanted a return to the values of old. Although a successful poet and the talk of Rome with a home on the hill, Virgil left the city for the quiet of rural Campania where he would spend the next seven years working on his collection of poems entitled the Georgics. After completing the work in 30 BCE, he would spend the remainder of his life, until his death in 19 BCE, working on his epic work, the Aeneid.
According to historian Nigel Rodgers, Virgil, Horace, and the exiled Ovid created a classical style of writing comparable to the great Greek authors. While he only produced three major works, Virgil stands above the others. His early works centered on his love of the rural life. His first collection Eclogues was set in an idealized Arcadia and depicts a shepherd’s life and loves. However, it also turns political with a reference to the turmoil of the civil war. Unfortunately, this quiet life is threatened by Octavian’s eviction notice after the Battle of Philippi. The poem makes reference to three individuals involved in the evictions and confiscation of land: the jurist and consul Publius Varus, the author and consul Gaius Pollio, and the poet Gaius Gallus.
According to Rodgers, the poem also foretells of the birth of a divine child who will restore the golden age of Rome; many Christians interpret this to be a foretelling of Jesus Christ. In Eclogue IV, Virgil wrote:
Now the last age by Cumae’s Sybil sung
Has come and gone, and the majestic roll
Of circling begins anew:
Justice returns, returns old Saturn’s reign:
With a new breed of men sent down from heaven
Only do thou, at the boy’s birth in whom
The iron shall cease, the golden race arise.
(Virgil, 14)
Georgics
The next collection of poems, the Georgics, was written after Octavian’s victory over Mark Anthony and the Egyptian queen Cleopatra at the Battle of Actium and was dedicated to Maecenas. The Georgics, like the previous Eclogues, praised the simple farm life, plowing, growing trees, tending cattle, and even keeping bees. In the opening lines to Georgic I, he wrote:
What makes the cornfield smile; beneath what star
Maecenas, it is meet to turn the sod
Or marry elm with vine; how end the steer;
What pains for cattle-keeping, or what proof
Of patient trail serves for thrifty bees;
Such are my themes.
(Virgil, 37)
Besides the confiscation of the land, one of the negative effects of the wars on Italy and its provinces was depopulation; many farmers had to abandon their land to fight in the war. In his poems, Virgil made a plea for the restoration of land and return to the agricultural life. By the time of their publication, Virgil had fully entrenched himself into the inner circle at the imperial palace. After Georgics was read to the emperor, the poet left the city. His mind was elsewhere, it was on the twelve books of his yet unwritten epic.
Aeneid
According to historian Mary Beard in her SPQR, the theme of the Aeneid was the where, when, and why of the founding of Rome by Romulus and his brother Remus. The poem tells of the Trojan prince and son of the goddess Venus, Aeneas, and his escape during the final moments of the Trojan War. Becoming aware of his destiny to found a grand city on the peninsula of Italy, the warrior and his family make their way across the sea - in a series of events similar to Homer’s Odyssey - eventually landing in Carthage, where he falls in love with Queen Dido. Unfortunately for the queen, Aeneas is reminded of his destiny and leaves Carthage. The forsaken queen grieves for her lost love and commits suicide.
Despite his desire to remain, Aeneas sails on to Latium, and he even makes a trip to the underworld where he meets his father and Queen Dido. Over time, his descendants would found Rome. He was the ideal model for the Roman way of life, both 'heroic' and 'Augustan.' Of course, one of the more confusing aspects of the poem is the time lapse between the supposed time of the Trojan War and the founding of Rome, the 12th century BCE to the 8th century BCE. In actuality, Aeneas does not actually fulfill his destiny and found Rome. That accomplishment was left to others. With the death of the queen, the poem also introduces the reader to the birth of the antagonism that developed between Rome and Carthage, a conflict that would evolve into the Punic Wars. The poem has, over the years, had its share of critics. Many are repelled by Aeneas’ cruelty against a defeated enemy as well as the suicide of his beloved Dido.
Although Virgil was not pleased with the epic, Augustus, who claimed to be a descendant of Aeneas, was ecstatic. It could be that the emperor believed that the poem demonstrated a final fulfillment of Rome’s destiny. Virgil himself believed that it was Rome’s fate to forgive the conquered and defeat the proud in war. The opening lines of the poem speak of Aeneas’ destiny:
Of arms I sing, and of the man who first
From Trojan shores beneath the ban of fate
To Italy and coasts Lavinian came,
Much tossed about on land and ocean he
By violence of the gods above, to sate
Relentless Juno’s ever-rankling ire,
In war, too, much enduring, till what time
A city he might found him, and bear safe
His gods to Latium, whence the Latin race
And Alba’s sires, and lofty-towering Rome.
(Virgil, 103)
Legacy
For eleven years Virgil worked on the poem but died before its final revision. He was not pleased with it, and asked his friend Lucius Varius Rufus to destroy it; however, the fellow poet refused. While on a trip to Greece, Virgil became ill at Megara, dying on September 21, 19 BCE before he could return home. He was buried at his villa in Naples. The emperor had the epic published despite the poet’s last wishes.
Virgil’s poems, especially the Aeneid, have lived on for over 2,000 years and are still being read and analyzed to this day. Excerpts of his poems were even found on the excavated walls of Pompeii. He was an inspiration to countless authors who followed him. Dante, the author of The Divine Comedy, chose Virgil as his guide through the Inferno’s nine levels of hell. The author Melinda Corey wrote a new introduction to a recent reissuing of Longfellow’s translation of The Divine Comedy. She believed Dante chose Virgil because the poet represented everything the author wanted to be: the greatest poet of his time."