Virgil
70 B.C. – 19 B.C.
Publius Vergilius Maro, greatest of Latin poets, was born at Andes near Mantua
on 15 October 70 B.C. Cisalpine Gaul was mainly Celtic in population, but was already permeated by the Latin language and
civilisation. The name Vergilius is apparently Celtic, and in Virgil’s Celtic blood modern critics have found the
origin of his romantic and melancholy temper and of his sense of the spiritual meaning of nature. His father owned
a small property; the boy was sent to school in Cremona and Milan, and at sixteen went to Rome and studied
rhetoric and philosophy. In 41 B.C. the victorious triumvirs were settling disbanded soldiers on confiscated lands throughout
Italy. Virgil’s farm was part of the confiscated territory; but by advice of the governor of the district,
Asinius Pollio, he went to Rome with special recommendations to Octavius; and though his own property was not
restored to him, he obtained ample compensation from the government, and became one of the endowed court-poets who
gathered round the prime minister Mæcenas. In 37 B.C his
Eclogues, ten pastorals modelled on those of Theocritus, were received with unexampled enthusiasm. Soon
afterwards Virgil withdrew from Rome to Campania. The munificence of
Mæcenas had placed him in affluent circumstances. He had a villa at Naples and a country house near
Nola. The Georgics or Art of Husbandry, in four books, dealing with tillage and pasturage, the vine and
olive, horses, cattle and bees, appeared in 30 B.C., and confirmed
Virgil’s position as the foremost poet of the age. The remaining eleven years of his life were
devoted to a larger task, undertaken at the urgent request of the emperor, the composition of a great
national epic on the story of Æneas the Trojan, legendry founder of the Roman nation and of the
Julian family, from the fall of Troy to his arrival in Italy, his wars and alliances with the native Italian races,
and his final establishment in his new kingdom. By 19 B.C. the Æneid was practically completed, and in that
year Virgil left Italy to travel to Greece and Asia; but at Athens he fell ill, and returned only to die at
Brundusium on 21 September. At his own wish he was buried in Naples, on the road to Pozzuoli, his tomb for
many years after, being worshipped as a sacred place. His sincerity and sweetness of temper won the
warm praise of Horace, and the fastidious purity of his life in an age of very lax morality gained
him the name of ‘the lady’ by which Milton was known at Cambridge. A few juvenile
pieces of more or less probable authenticity are extant under his name. These are the
Culex and the Moretum, both in hexameter verse; The
Copa, a short elegiac piece; and fourteen little poems in various meters, some serious and
others trivial. The Ciris is now agreed to be by a contemporary imitator. The supremacy of
Virgil in Latin poetry was immediate and almost unquestioned; in the
Eclogues, the Latin tongue assumed a richness, harmony and sweetness, until then, unknown. The promise shown in the
Eclogues was more than fulfilled in the Georgics. The workmanship of the
Aeneid is more unequal; but in its great passages there is the same beauty with an even fuller
strength and range. Virgil’s works were established classics even in his lifetime, and soon
after his death had become, as they still remain, the school-books of western Europe.