Caramuru (epic poem)
Title page from the first edition | |
Author | Santa Rita Durão |
---|---|
Country | Brazil |
Language | Portuguese |
Genre | Epic poem |
Publisher | Régia Oficina Tipográfica |
Publication date | 1781 |
Media type | Hardcover |
Caramuru is an epic poem written by Brazilian Augustinian friar Santa Rita Durão. It was published in 1781, and it is one of the most famous Indianist works of Brazilian Neoclassicism – the other being Basílio da Gama's O Uraguai.
Theme
Inspired by Luís de Camões' The Lusiads, it is divided in ten cantos.[1] The poem tells the story of the famous Portuguese sailor Diogo Álvares Correia,[2] also known as "Caramuru" (Old Tupi for "Son of the Thunder"), who shipwrecked on the shores of present-day Bahia and had to live among the Indians. The poem also alludes to Correia's wife, Catarina Paraguaçu, as a seer, being able to foresee the Dutch invasions of Brazil.
Form
The poem is written in ottava rima[3][4] (oitava rima in Portuguese).[5] Lines consist of ten syllables and the strophe rhymes according to the pattern abababcc. Here is the first stanza of the poem. The hero "Filho do Trovão" is introduced in it.
- De um varão em mil casos agitados,
- Que as praias discorrendo do Ocidente,
- Descobriu recôncavo afamado
- Da capital brasílica potente;
- Do Filho do Trovão denominado,
- Que o peito domar soube à fera gente,
- O valor cantarei na adversa sorte,
- Pois só conheço herói quem nela é forte.
Adaptations
- Caramuru: A Invenção do Brasil, a 2001 Brazilian film directed by Guel Arraes, is a loose, comedic adaptation of Durão's poem.
See also
References
- ↑ José de Santa Rita Durão.
- ↑ Mona Baker, Kirsten Malmkjær (ed.), Routledge Encyclopedia of Translation Studies, p. 327
- ↑ Ottava rima at Poetry Foundation.
- ↑ Ottava rima, poetic form
- ↑ Oitava rima at dicionarioinformal.com.br.
Portuguese Wikisource has original text related to this article: |
Criticism
- “The ancient Portugal reborn in the Brazil”: The myth of Portuguese - Brazilian Empire in the epic poem Caramuru by Santa Rita Durão.
- Belinda Mora García, The Aeneid of Brazil : Caramuru (1781).