Hadrian: Love, life, regrets of an emperor

Memoirs of Hadrian by Marguerite Yourcenar
This book by Yourcenar I had read earlier, during an unripe age and I had not paid much attention to it. Recently I read it again and found it interesting, well-written, touching. Having studied the written sources, the author creates a monologue of the Roman emperor, as a memoir or legacy addressed to his successor, Marcus Aurelius.
Hadrian (76-138 AD) is already old and recounts his life, from his childhood to his war successes, his rise to the highest office and his great love for Antinoos of Bithynia. He describes his relatives, his opponents, his circle in general, his loyal advisers and friends, as well as his wife Sabina and the wife of his predecessor Trajan’s, Plotina, who played an important role in his life.

Wise, modest, educated, intelligent, brave, full of virtues that almost make him a divinity for his own subjects, seems to the reader this Hadrian. At the same time he is a man who commits crimes and falls in love as only mortals can. His childhood in Spain, the wars against the Sarmatians and the Dacians, his view of Trajan, his love for Athens and everything Greek, is not some fictional invention of the writer.
All of these elements arise from a careful study of the relevant historical texts. Where perhaps we can distinguish a poetic freedom is in the description of Hadrian’s feelings towards Antinoos, the beautiful young man from Bithynia whom the emperor passionately loved and deified after his premature death. Anyone who has ever found himself in a Greek museum or in other museums around the world knows the face and the body of Hadrian's lover, knows his story.
"My young shepherd was turning into a young prince. He was no longer a mere boy, eager to jump down from his horse at the halts to offer spring water cupped in his palms. The donor knew now the immense worth of his gifts. "
When Antinoos dies so young, Hadrian sinks in despair and in his mourning he becomes creative. He orders the construction of temples and statues for the dead one, builds a city that bears his name, urges a new religion to be founded around him. But the life of a leader of such an empire can not stop no matter how great his sadness. Enemies lurk in East and West, wars, revolts continue, and a successor must be found because Hadrian is childless.
First, he chooses Lucius, who proves to be inferior to the circumstances. "I had leaned for support upon a ruined wall," he writes bitterly. Lucius dies, he too was young. The successor must be found urgently, as Hadrian himself has grown old, he is ill and sees the end approaching.
This time his choice will prove - as far as we know from History at least - right. It is Marcus Aurelius, the recipient of these thoughts written by Yourcenar’s Hadrian.
"I have known you from your cradle, young Annius Verus, who by my provision, now call yourself Marcus Aurelius. (…) I have seen you read with passion the writings of the philosophers, and clothe yourself in harsh wool, sleeping on the bare floor and forcing your somewhat frail body to all the mortifications of the Stoics".

Exotic names, religions, folks, tribes, places, dreams are mentioned in the pages of this book which can attract both the friends of literature and those of history. Hadrian saw it all, Hadrian experienced it all and thanks to his insight and education, he could judge and describe them in a unique, wise way. In the twentieth century the author Marguerite Yourcenar gave him a new voice in order to narrate all this.

Lito Seizani
First published on 
https://leipglo.com/2018/06/17/hadrian-love-life-regrets-emperor/