Basílio da Gama (born 1740, São José do Rio das Mortes, Braz.—died July 31, 1795, Lisbon, Port.) was a neoclassical poet and author of the Brazilian epic poem O Uraguai (1769), an account of the Portuguese-Spanish expedition against the Jesuit-controlled reservation Indians of the Uruguay River basin.
Gama completed his novitiate with the Jesuits in 1759. In that same year the order was expelled from Brazil and all other Portuguese possessions, and he eventually left Brazil for Rome. On his return to Brazil in 1767 he was sent by the Inquisition to Lisbon where, as a Jesuit, he faced deportation to Angola. He won his pardon from the chief minister of the realm, the marquês de Pombal, by composing a poem for Pombal’s daughter’s wedding; he subsequently became Pombal’s protégé. The original version of O Uraguai was openly pro-Jesuit; the anti-Jesuit theme of the published version—in which the Indian princess Lindóia commits suicide in order to avoid marriage to the illegitimate son of a Jesuit—was no doubt Gama’s supreme gesture to establish himself in the good graces of his new patrons.
In spite of its questionable historicity, the poem became the most important Brazilian work of the colonial period. Gama shows himself to be a sensitive and original poet in breaking away from the strict epic model established by Luis de Camões, Portugal’s great 16th-century poet, and creating a Brazilian epic in blank verse. He substitutes descriptions of indigenous animism and fetishism for the standard Classical mythology of the epic genre and elaborates vivid and moving scenes of Indian life and the Brazilian natural environment. His poem opened the way for the romantic nationalism that was to flower in 19th-century Brazilian literature.