Study Guide
The Aeneid
Capsule Summary
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Book 1: Aeneas encounters a storm and is cast ashore
at Carthage.
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Book 2: The hero tells Dido of his escape from Troy.
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Book 3: The wanderings of Aeneas: Harpies, meeting
with Helenus. Death of Anchises.
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Book 4: Dido's passion for Aeneas. At Jupiter's command,
Aeneas departs. Dido kills herself.
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Book 5: Aeneas reaches Sicily. Funeral games for
Anchises.
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Book 6: Aeneas with the Sibyl at Cumae. He meets
Anchises in the Underworld.
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Book 7: Aeneas lands in Latium. Latinus promises
Lavinia. Juno and Allecto stir up war. Catalogue of Italian heroes.
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Book 8: Aeneas secures the help of Evander and the
Etruscans. Story of Hercules and Cacus. Armor from Vulcan.
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Book 9: Turnus attacks the Trojan camp. Nisus and
Euryalus. The camp is hard pressed.
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Book 10: Council of gods. Tuscan catalogue. Turnus
kills Pallas. Juno saves Turnus from raging Aeneas. Aeneas kills Mezentius.
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Book 11: Burial of Pallas. Diomedes' refusal. Council:
Drances abuses Turnus. The Trojans attack. Death of Camilla.
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Book 12: Single combat arranged, but treachery provokes
a general engagement. Trojans attack the city. In single combat, Aeneas
kills Turnus.
Gods and Goddesses:
Roman Religion (curiously, to us!) took over wholesale many of the Greek
gods. They adopted most of the functions and characteristics, though usually
having also some Roman flavor to their divinity. Thus we can produce a
table of equivalences between the gods you're familiar with from Homer,
and those who turn up in the Aeneid.
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(Latin name :: Greek name)
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Jupiter ~ Zeus
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Juno ~ Hera
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Neptune ~ Poseidon
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Venus ~ Aphrodite (Aeneas is son of Venus and Anchises)
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Diana ~ Artemis
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Mars ~ Ares
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Mercury ~ Hermes
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Minerva ~ Athena (also called "Pallas" in both Greece and Rome)
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Vulcan ~ Hephaestus
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Apollo is still Apollo, but often (as also in Homer) called "Phoebus"
Also, two heroes have important changes of name:
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Ulysses (Ulixes) ~ Odysseus
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Hercules ~ Heracles
Book 1 Aeneas encounters a storm
and is cast ashore at Carthage.
Dryden's summary: The Trojans, after a seven years'
voyage, set sail for Italy, but are overtaken by a dreadful storm, which
Aeolus raises at Juno's request. The tempest sinks one ship, and scatters
the rest. Neptune drives off the winds, and calms the sea. Aeneas, with
his own ship, and six more, arrives safe at an African port. Venus complains
to Jupiter of her son's misfortunes. Jupiter comforts her, and sends Mercury
to procure him a kind reception among the Carthaginians. Aeneas, going
out to discover the country, meets his mother in the shape of a huntress,
who conveys him in a cloud to Carthage, where he sees his friends whom
he thought lost, and receives a kind entertainment from the queen. Dido,
by a device of Venus, begins to have a passion for him, and, after some
discourse with him, desires the history of his adventures since the siege
of Troy, which is the subject of the two following books. [Summaries
taken from book introductions to John Dryden's classic translation of the
Aeneid: spelling is regularized to modern conventions, and an occasional
phrase or piece of syntax as well.]
Principal episodes:
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The storm. Note the procession of focus from one god to the next: Juno,
then Aeolus, then Neptune, then Jupiter. What does this development suggest?
What prediction does it coincide with?
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Aeneas and companion (Achates) meets up with mother Venus in disguise.
What about the theme of the hunt? What associations do we have with hunting
and goddesses? does that fit Venus? why does Vergil do this? (Note esp.
the entrance of Dido: to which goddess is she compared?)
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Aeneas and Achates see scenes of Troy on the temple of Juno which the Carthaginians
are constructing; Aeneas presents himself to Dido
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Think through what events in this book remind you of events in Homer, esp.
in the Odyssey
Principal new characters:
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Juno, wife of the head god Jupiter, Roman equivalent of Hera: hostile (still!)
to the Trojans
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Aeolus, god of the winds
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Neptune, god of the sea, Roman equivalent to Poseidon
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Venus, goddess of love, and mother of Aeneas, Roman equivalent to Aphrodite
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Aeneas, our hero, and son of Venus
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Cupid, another, very different son of Venus: inspires love in Dido
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Ascanius or Iulus, son of Aeneas, for whom Venus substitutes Cupid in the
meeting with Dido
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Dido, queen of Carthage, who falls in love with Aeneas
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Carthage: a city in North Africa, historically the great rival of Rome
in the critical period of the third and second centuries B.C.: defeat of
Carthage marked the end of serious opposition around the Mediterranean
to Roman power, and led to the consolidation of power we know as the "Roman
Empire"
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Troy, the home of Aeneas
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Tyre, the original home of Dido, before she fled her brother Pygmalion
(who murdered her husband Sychaeus)
Book 2 The hero tells Dido of his
escape from Troy
Dryden's summary: Aeneas relates how the city
of Troy was taken, after a ten years' siege, by the treachery of Sinon,
and the strategem of a wooden horse. He declares the fixed resolution he
had taken not to survive the ruins of his country, and the various adventures
he met with in the defense of it. At last, having been before advised by
Hector's ghost, and now by the appearance of his mother Venus, he is prevailed
upon to leave the town, and settle his household gods in another country.
In order to do this, he carries off his father on his shoulders, and leads
his little son by the hand, his wife following him behind. When he comes
to the place appointed for the general rendezvous, he finds a great confluence
of people, but misses his wife whose ghost afterwards appears to him, and
tells him the land which was designed for him.
Principal episodes:
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Story of the wooden horse. The actions of Laocoon; the story of Sinon;
Laocoon and the sea serpents.
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Hector appears to Aeneas as a ghost.
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The battle in Priam's palace: Cassandra dragged away; tale of Priam's death;
Helen.
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Aeneas flees Troy, carrying Father Anchises and with little Ascanius by
the hand; wife Creusa is lost along the way.
Principal new characters:
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Laocoon, priest of Neptune, killed by the serpents
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Sinon, the clever Greek
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Cassandra, daughter of Priam, prophetess who will never be believed
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Creusa, Aeneas' wife
Book 3 The Wanderings of Aeneas:
Harpies, meeting with Hellenus. Death of father Anchises.
Dryden's summary: Aeneas proceeds with his story:
he gives an account of the fleet with which he sailed, and the success
of his first voyage to Thrace. From thence he directs his course to Delos,
and asks the oracle what place the gods had appointed for his habitation.
By a mistake of the oracle's answer, he settles in Crete; his household
gods give him the true sense of the oracle, in a dream. He follows their
advice, and makes the best of his way to Italy. He is cast on several shores,
and meets with very surprising adventures, till at length he lands on Sicily,
where his father Anchises dies. This is the place which he was sailing
from, when the tempest rose, and threw him upon the Carthaginian coast.
Principal episodes:
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Polydorus in Thrace: bloody shoots from the spears that killed him.
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Encounter with the Harpies. (what does this tell us about Aeneas' journey?
how does it compare for "heroic" flavor with Odysseus' journey?)
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Visit with Helenus and Andromache in Epirus (Buthrotum) (what does this
tell us about the Trojan fate? what does the fact of the "Toy Troy" H.
builds imply about Aeneas' mission?)
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Aeneas and his men skirt Scylla and Charybdis, meet up with a lost companion
of Odysseus (Achaemenides) on the island of the Cyclops, and escape Polyphemus
(again, how does this compare with Odysseus' travels? why is Aeneas' journey
different in these ways?)
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Anchises dies in Sicily, at the land of Acestes.
Principal new characters:
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Polydorus, son of Priam murdered in Thrace
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Calaeno, Harpy who prophesies that the Trojans will starve to the point
that they eat their tables
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Helenus, Trojan seer and inheritor of the kingdom of Pyrrhus
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Andromache, former wife of Hector, then slave of Pyrrhus, now wife of Helenus
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Acestes, friendly king of a land in Sicily
Book 4 Dido's passion for Aeneas.
At Jupiter's command, Aeneas departs. Dido kills herself.
Dryden's summary: Dido reveals to her sister her
passion for Aeneas, and her thoughts of marrying him. She prepares a hunting
match for his entertainment. Juno, by Venus's consent, raises a storm,
which separates the hunters, and drives Aeneas and Dido into the same cave,
where their marriage is supposed to be completed. Jupiter dispatches Mercury
to Aeneas, to warn him from Carthage. Aeneas secretly prepares for his
voyage. Dido finds out his design, and, to put a stop to it, makes use
of her own and her sister's entreaties, and reveals all the variety of
passions that are incident to a neglected lover. When nothing would prevail
upon him, she contrives her own death, with which this book concludes.
Principal episodes:
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Dido, inflamed by love for Aeneas, consults sister Anna, who advises her
of the advantages of marriage with Aeneas
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Juno and Venus plot to get the two together, and the "marriage" is consumated
in a cave in the midst of a hunt (note hunting imagery!)
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Jupiter sends Mercury to remind Aeneas of his duty, and the hero departs,
despite the passionate complaints of Dido (how much of Aeneas' emotions
do we see either in the "falling in love" section or in this section, where
he decides to leave? how much, in contrast, do we see of Dido's emotions?
why is there this difference?)
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Dido commits suicide, a death "neither fated nor deserved" (!).
Principal new characters:
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Anna, Dido's sister
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Mercury, messenger of Jupiter
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[Iarbas, African chieftain]
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Proserpina (=Persephone in Greek), queen of the Underworld
Book 5 Aeneas reaches Sicily. Funeral
games for Anchises.
Dryden's summary: Aeneas, setting sail from Africa,
is driven by a storm on the coasts of Sicily, where he is hopitably received
by his friend Acestes, king of part of the island, and born of Trojan parentage.
He applies himself to celebrate the memory of his father with divine honors,
and accordingly institutes funeral games, and appoints prizes for those
who should conquer in them. While the cremonies were performing, Juno sends
Iris to persuade the Trojan women to burn the ships, who, upon her instigation,
set fie to them; which burnt four, and would have consumed the rest, had
not Jupiter, by a miraculous shower, extinguished it. Upon this, Aeneas,
by the advice of one of his generals, and a vision of his father, builds
a city for the women, old men, and others, who were either unfit for war,
or weary of the voyage, and sails for Italy. Venus procures from Neptune
a safe voyage for him and all his men, excepting only his pilot Palilnurus,
who is unfortunately lost.
Principal episodes:
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As Aeneas and men sail away, a violent storm prevents their course for
Italy, and they land again in Sicily, where they are welcomed by Acestes
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Funeral games for Anchises: ship race, foot race (Nisus and Euryalus),
boxing (Dares and Entellus), archery contest; omen of Acestes' arrow, which
catches fire (note similarities -- and differences! -- between these and
the Homeric antecedents)
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Trojan women, inspired by Iris (who is sent by Juno), fire the Trojan ships
(why do they do this? how does the "divine motivation" work?
Principal new characters:
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Euryalus, young "toy boy" friend of Nisus
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Nisus, friend of Euryalus (you'll see this pair again!)
Book 6 Aeneas at Cumae. He meets
Anchises in the underworld.
Dryden's summary: The Sibyl foretells Aeneas the
adventures he should met with in Italy. She attends him to hell; describing
to him the various scenes of that place, and conducting him to his father
Anchises, who instructs him in those sublime mysteries of the soul of the
world, and the transmigration; and shows him that glorious race of heroes
which was to descend from him, and his posterity.
Principal episodes:
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Death of Palinurus
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Preparations for the descent into the Underworld: meeting with the Sibyl
at Cumae; search for golden bough (what are the pictures on the temple
doors? why these?)
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Journey into the Underworld: Rivers, Styx, the ferryman Charon, the dog
Cerberus; Limbo (the untimely dead: infants, unjustly condemned, unhappy
lovers-- where A. meets Dido-- and then the area for warriors -- where
A. meets Deiphobus); Tartarus, the place of everlasting sinners; the fields
of Elysium, for the blessed (where A. finds Anchises). Note esp. meetings
with Palinurus (what Odyssey character does this remind you of?) Dido (ditto:
why the reference to Ajax?) Deiphobus (note how this account differs from
that of either Helen or Menelaus in the Odyssey: why?).
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Revelation of the future: Anchises shows to Aeneas the waiting souls of
the future, who turn out to be kings and leaders of the Roman race, stretching
down to Vergil's day: note especially Romulus, Julius Caesar, "Caesar"
(that is, Augustus Caesar = Octavian), Marcellus.
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Two gates of Sleep, horn and ivory: Aeneas and the Sibyl exit by the ivory
gate (!). (what is the meaning of the horn and ivory gates?)
Principal new characters:
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Palinurus, the helmsman
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Sibyl, the priestess of Apollo at Cumae, who acts as Aeneas' guide down
into the Underworld
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Deiphobus, the Trojan who wed Helen after Paris' death, for which his body
was mutilated by the Greeks
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Styx, main river of the Underworld
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Lethe (means "forgetfulness" in Greek), river in the Underworld where souls
drink to forget their past lives before returning to the world above
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Romulus, legendary first king of Rome itself, nurtured with his brother
Remus by a she-wolf, and thus emblematic of Rome's hardy beginnings.
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Marcellus, nephew and presumed heir to Augustus, who died unexpectedly
in 23 BC, shortly before this passage was written.
Book 7 Aeneas lands in Latium. Latinus
promises Lavinia. Juno stirs up war. Catalogue of Italian heroes.
Dryden's summary: King Latinus entertains Aeneas,
and promises him his only daughter, Lavinia, the heiress of his crown.
Turnus, being in love with her, favored by her mother, and stirred up by
Juno and Allecto, breaks the treaty which was made, and engages in his
quarrel Mezentius, Camilla, Messapus, and many others of the neighboring
princes; whose forces, and the names of their commanders, are here related
in a catalogue.
Principal episodes:
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Story of Latinus and daughter Lavinia: omens of bees, fire in Lavinia's
hair (rather like a fairytale, isn't it? why?)
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The Trojans land and in their hunger "eat the table" (that is, the bread
they are using to hold the wild fruits and veggies they're devouring: Ascanius's
adolescent joke, but also the fulfillment of the prophecy by the harpy
Calaeno)-- the first Roman pizza!
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Latinus receives the Trojans, and offers his daughter, Lavinia (!) (Note
the importance of omens in determining the action here, and the frequency
of important omens generally in this part of the epic.)
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Allecto, a Fury sent by Juno, stirs madness in (1) Amata, (2) Turnus, (3)
the Italian farmers and folk. Note that the Italian folk are initially
stirred by, of all things, Iulus/Ascanius killing the tame deer of Silvia.
(Another hunting motif!)
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Catalogue of Italian warriors.
Principal new characters:
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Allecto, a Fury
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Latium, the kingdom of Latinus, where the Latins live, and where Aeneas
will eventually found Lavinium
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Latinus, king of Latium
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Lavinia, daughter of Latinus, and destined to be the wife of Aeneas, and
his fellow ruler over Lavinium (named after her)
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Turnus, ruler of the Rutulians, and principal foe of Aeneas
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Mezentius, godless ruler of the Etruscans, another principal foe (we'll
see more of him later, esp. book 10)
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Camilla, an Amazon-like female warrior, another of Turnus' principal allies
Book 8 Aeneas secures the help of
Evander and the Etruscans. Story of Hercules and Cacus. Armor from Vulcan.
Dryden's summary: The war being now begun, both
the generals make all possible preparations. Turnus sends to Diomedes.
Aeneas goes in person to beg aid from Evander and the Tuscans (=the Etruscans).
Evander receives him kindly, furnishes him with men, and sends his son
Pallas with him. Vulcan, at the request of Venus, makes arms for her son
Aeneas, and draws on his shield the most memorable actions of his posterity.
Principal episodes:
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Aeneas goes upstream with divine assistance and visits Evander. Evander
promises the help of the Etruscans.
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Evander tells the story of Hercules and Cacus.
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Venus asks Vulcan to make Aeneas armor. The shield contains images of the
many famous wars fought by Aeneas' descendants, culminating in the battle
of Octavian over Marc Antony at Actium (31 BC). (Note how Aeneas is linked
back to Hercules -- the earlier, heroic generation, and then forward to
the "present" time of Octavian/Augustus.)
Principal new characters:
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Evander, local king (of Pallanteum) who sides with Aeneas against the Latins,
and suggests the Etruscans as allies
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Pallas, the son of Evander (he will become a Patroclus-like figure: watch
for this!)
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Cacus, a man-eating, fire-breathing monster defeated and killed by Hercules
for stealing his cattle
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Vulcan, husband of Venus, maker of the arms
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Cyclops, helpers of Vulcan at the forge (note how different from Homer's
Cyclopes!)
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Actium, 31 BC, the critical victory of Octavian (soon to be Augustus) Caesar
over the opposing forces of Marc Antony (=Antonius in your text) and Cleopatra:
this is the central scene in Aeneas' shield
Book 9 Turnus attacks the Trojan
camp. Nisus and Euryalus. The camp is hard pressed.
Dryden's summary: Turnus takes advantage of Aeneas's
absence, fires some of his ships (which are transformed into sea nymphs),
and assaults his camp. The Trojans, reduced to the last extremities, send
Nisus and Euryalus to recall Aeneas; which furnishes the poet with that
admirable episode of their friendship, generosity, and the conclusion of
their adventures.
Principal episodes:
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Turnus and allies attack the Trojan camp (which is remarkably like a Roman
fortification of the first century!) and try to fire the ships, but Cybele
descends and turns the ships into sea nymphs (why this crazy, surreal image
here? what does it do to our interpretation of the divine intrusions into
the conflict?)
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Nisus and Euryalus go forth on a raiding expedition (what sort of warrior
and warrior relationship is this striking episode a model of?)
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The "aristeia" of Turnus: like a lion let loose in the sheep fold, he rages
within the Trojan camp before finally being pushed out by overwhelming
numbers
Principal new characters:
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Nisus and Euryalus revisited: review their appearance earlier, in book
5
Book 10 Fight continues. Tuscan
catalogue. Turnus kills Pallas. Juno saves Turnus from raging Aeneas. Aeneas
kills Mezentius.
Dryden's summary: Jupiter, calling a council of
the gods, forbids them to engage in either party. At Aeneas' return there
is a bloody battle: Turnus killing Pallas; Aeneas, Lausus and Mezentius.
Mezentius is described as an atheist; Lausus as a pious and virtuous youth.
The different actions and death of these two are the subject of a noble
episode.
Principal episodes:
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Council of the gods (what do we find here about who is responsible for
what has happened to the Trojans? what does Juno say? what does Jupiter
say?)
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Death of Pallas (what does Turnus take as a prize?)
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Deaths of Lausus and Mezentius (why the contrast between this father-son
pair, the one pious, the other impious?)
Principal new characters:
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Pallas, son of Evander (to what Iliadic figure does he seem to compare?)
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Lausus, the virtuous son of Mezentius
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Mezentius, former king of the Etruscans (=Tuscans), so evil that the Etruscans
drove him out and fight against him alongside Aeneas; a godless man
Book 11 Burial of Pallas. Diomedes'
refusal. Council: Drances abuses Turnus. The Trojans attack. Death of Camilla.
Dryden's summary: Aeneas erects a trophy of the
spoils of Mezentius, grants a truce for burying the dead, and sends home
the body of Pallas with great solemnity. Latinus calls a council, to propose
offers of peace to Aeneas; which occasions great animosity betwixt Turnus
and Drances. In the meantime there is a sharp engagement of the horse;
wherein Camilla shows herself remarkable; is killed; and the Latin troops
are entirely defeated.
Principal episodes:
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Council of the Latins (what exactly is Drances' argument against Turnus?
what is Turnus' reply?)
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Aristeia and death of Camilla, an Amazon-like maiden warrior (why this
female figure here?)
Principal new characters:
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Drances, Latin elder who does not fight, but is an enemy of Turnus and
an advocate of peace with the Trojans
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Camilla, an Amazon-like Volscian maiden warrior, ally of Turnus
Book 12 Single combat arranged,
but treachery provokes a general engagement. Trojans attack the city. In
single combat, Aeneas kills Turnus.
Dryden's summary: Turnus challenges Aeneas to
a single combat: articles are agreed on, but broken by the Rutuli, who
wound Aeneas. He is miraculously cured by Venus, forces Turnus to a duel,
and concludes the poem with his death.
Principal episodes:
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Single Duel between Aeneas and Turnus; Breaking of the truce; Wounding
and miraculous cure of Aeneas (what book in the Iliad does this resemble?
[Book 3, duel between Menelaus and Paris: thus what roles do Aeneas and
Turnus play?])
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Death of Turnus (in what ways is this like, in what ways different from
Achilles' slaying of Hector?)
Principal new characters:
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