Framing The Aeneid HUM 2051: Civilization I Fall 2014 Dr. Perdigao October 27, 2014

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Transcript Framing The Aeneid HUM 2051: Civilization I Fall 2014 Dr. Perdigao October 27, 2014

Framing The Aeneid
HUM 2051: Civilization I
Fall 2014
Dr. Perdigao
October 27, 2014
New Love
• Venus and Juno as promoting affair—why?
• Dido: “Had I not set my face against remarriage / After my first love died
and failed me, left me / Barren and bereaved—and sick to death / At the
mere thought of torch and bridal bed— / I could perhaps give way in this
one case / To frailty” (975, L22-26)
• Effects on Carthage: Now, “Towers, half-built, rose / No farther” (977,
L121).
• New allegory of the cave
• Role of Rumor—two forms
• After King Iarbas pleas to Jupiter, Jupiter sends Mercury to visit Aeneas
because “He was to be the ruler of Italy” (981, L312). Here he had been
“Laying foundations for new towers and homes” (982, L354).
• Role of Lavinia introduced
Woman Scorned
• “Dear Dido” speech [984-985]; Dido’s response [985-986]
• Dido’s role in long line of female characters preceding her?
• Symbol from The Odyssey returns, with new meaning—final “peace” based
on this test, new context for Dido
• Pyre
• Mercury’s advice: “Woman’s a thing / Forever fitful and forever
changing” (991, L791-792).
• Dido’s “wish” for Aeneas, outcomes to story
• Elaborate death speech, end (994); patterns of 3s
Contexts
• Descent into the underworld—vital myth important from The Odyssey
onward. Descent as death, virtual death, gaining energy and coming back
to the task at hand
• Punic Wars between Carthage and Rome—forecast in poem—poem makes
Rome feel justified
• Past, Present, Future—tableau of Aeneas with father, son
• Dido—as both Penelope and Clytaemnestra
• Greeks—sense of character as being: Roman as becoming, sense of self as
learning, grows, develops—like the bildungsroman
• Empire itself has to “become”—takes 500 years
Descending
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Sibyl of Cumae as guide, her directive in relation to Circe’s guidance
Call to muse begins Book VI—cast in new role?
Styx, Lethe, Charon (his fear/distrust of Aeneas)
Palinurus—as new Elpenor?; Sibyl’s solution
Minos, Rhadamanthus (map for Dante)
Golden bough
The Fields of Mourning, Blessed Groves
Dido’s role—for pity (she as tragedy)
Helen’s story, told by Deïphobus (Menelaus, Ulysses): “Enjoy a better
destiny” (1003, L372)
Blessed Groves—Trojan heroes, Anchises
Reincarnation?
Entire prophecy retold by father: “Caesar Augustus, son of the deified, /
Who shall bring once again an Age of Gold / To Latium” (1010, L702-704).
Elegy to Marcellus (1013)
Aeneas in History
• Politics—monarchy: republic: empire
• Caesar—back to monarchy; Octavian Augustus (most revered one): Pax
Romana (Roman peace)—new order. Virgil’s day is celebrating that rule.
• Aeneas’s shield—rearmored—but Rome prophesized; hindsight because
Virgil knows what is happening
• Greek versus Roman sensibility
• Aeneas’s son kept out of battle, aside, as if King
• Aeneas is only beginning for Virgil, prepares for Augustus, not
replacement
Rearmoring
• Book VIII—Aeneas’ shield, made by Vulcan (Hephaestus), guardian of
fire
• “And finally the fabric of the shield / Beyond description . . . There the
Lord of Fire, / Knowing the prophets, knowing the age to come, / Had
wrought the future story of Italy, / The triumphs of the Romans.” (1015,
L24-30)
• Ekphrasis
• “Knowing nothing of the events themselves, / He felt joy in their pictures”
(1018, L168-169).
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Transitions
Pallas, killed by Turnus (corollary in The Iliad?)
Aeneas kills Etruscan Mezentius, then Turnus in single combat
Juno intervenes, has Turnus’s sister Juturna (river nymph) intervene,
Aeneas wounded; Juturna gives Turnus new sword when finally facing
Aeneas
http://www.reading.ac.uk/SerDepts/vl/classicsexhibition/shieldofaeneas.html
To Rage
• Book XII—The Death of Turnus
• Jupiter asks Juno to “put down this fit of rage” (1020, L61); Jupiter
concedes, agrees to “make them Latin, one in speech” (L68)
• At end, turns to universal: “Just as in dreams when the night-swoon of
sleep / Weighs in our eyes, it seems we try in vain / To keep on running,
try with all our might, / But in the midst of effort faint and fail; / Our
tongue is powerless, familiar strength / Will not hold up our body, not a
sound / Or word will come: just so with Turnus now.” (1022, L 164-170)
• Turnus asks for mercy, evoking image of Anchises, asks for his body to be
returned to his kin
• “Moment by moment now / What Turnus said began to bring him round
/ From indecision” (1023, L211-212) until he sees the swordbelt
• “Aeneas raged at the relic of his anguish / Worn by this man as trophy”
(1023, L220-221)