Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Creator / Virgil

Go To

1[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/vergil1.png]]
2
3->''"Mantua bore me\
4Calabria stole me\
5Parthenope holds me now\
6I sang of meadows, fields, and kings."''
7->-- '''The inscription on Virgil's tomb'''
8
9Publius Vergilius Maro (October 15th, 70 BC - September 21st, 19 BC) was a Roman poet, contemporary of [[UsefulNotes/{{Augustus}} Augustus]] and Creator/{{Ovid}} and admirer of Creator/{{Catullus}}. He composed ''Literature/TheAeneid'', setting out how Trojan refugees founded the greatest Rome or, rather, founded the tribe that would later give birth to the founders. The poem itself is unfinished and as per legend, Virgil ordered the book to be burnt after his death, orders which were refused by his friends and Augustus.
10
11Vergilius was one of the few Roman poets that remained popular and greatly admired throughout the Christian Middle Ages, because one of his ''Eclogues'' was interpreted as a prophecy of the coming of [[UsefulNotes/JesusChrist Christ]]. Because of this, he was considered something of a {{seer|s}} and a mediator between pagan Antiquity and UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}}. In this function, he is famously featured in Dante's ''Literature/TheDivineComedy'', where he guides Dante through {{Hell}} and Purgatory.
12
13The Middle Ages also developed a habit of spelling his name V''i''rgilius.
14
15Not to be confused with [[VideoGame/DevilMayCry the other Vergil]]. [[VideoGame/DMCDevilMayCry Or that one]]. Though they ''were'' both named after him.
16----
17!! Virgil provides examples of:
18
19* AmbiguouslyGay: Virgil is believed to have been homosexual, as he created the tragic gay lovers Nisus and Euryalus in ''the Aeneid''. He never married and was said to have loved a man named Alexander whom he writes of as Alexis in ''the Eclogues'' which has numerous references to homosexuality. He also had a close relationship with Caius Cornelius Gallus who appears in ''The Georgics'' and for whom he writes a loving eulogy for in ''The Eclogues''.
20* BloodFromTheMouth: Virgil frequently suffered fevers and would cough up blood.
21* BiographyAClef: Virgil was described as a magician and seer in many [[https://web.eecs.utk.edu/~mclennan/BA/AV/index.html strange folkloric legends]] [[https://archive.org/details/unpublishedlegen00lelauoft in the middle ages]] due to some of his work being interpreted as prophetic. Very little is known of his actual life.
22* CallToAgriculture: ''Georgica'', a cycle of poems about agriculture and the pastoral life.
23* ToHellAndBack: His story of Orpheus and Eurydice in ''the Georgics'' is about a man going into the underworld to save his true love. His hero Aeneas also makes a trip to the underworld in ''The Aeneid'' guided by the Sybil. In [[Literature/TheDivineComedy The Divine Comedy]], Virgil himself guides [[Creator/DanteAlighieri Dante]] through Hell.
24* HistoricalDomainCharacter: Most famously he serves as the guide for Dante in the first two parts of ''Literature/TheDivineComedy''. He's also the protagonist of Hermann Broch's 1945 novel ''The Death of Virgil'' and the [[AlternateHistory Alternate History]] Fantasy book series ''Vergil Magus'' by Avram Davidson.
25* NatureLover: Virgil held a strong love for nature, the woodland, and animals (especially bees and oxen) which is obvious in reading any of his works, but especially so in the ''Georgics''. According to Warde Fowler, "there is no other Latin poet who felt in the same degree the beauty and the mystery of animals."
26* ThePerfectionist: His sense of perfectionism was extraordinary. He could spend a day writing ''one'' line of poetry, but his work has been called the stateliest measures ever moulded by the lips of man. His reason for wanting ''The Aeneid'' burned was because its' incompleteness did not live up to his standards.
27* ThePowerOfLove: ''"Love conquers all, let us all yield to love."''
28* PurityPersonified: He held the nickname "Parthenias" (meaning "Maiden" or "Virgin") which was said to have reflected the purity and morality of his character in a time where vice was extremely common.
29* ReclusiveArtist: He was extremely shy; that, coupled with his poor health and his love of his studies gave him the life of a recluse. Whenever he was recognized in public, he would attempt to hide.

Top