lecture’12’vergil’s’aeneid4:dido’ · dido’and’aeneas’ •...

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Lecture 12 Vergil’s Aeneid 4: Dido The Ancient Roman World http://www.bridgemanart.com/asset/5960/Roman-4th-century-AD/Mosaic-pavement-from-the-Roman-villa-at-Low-Ham-i

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Lecture  12  Vergil’s  Aeneid  4:  Dido  

The  Ancient  Roman  World  

http://www.bridgemanart.com/asset/5960/Roman-4th-century-AD/Mosaic-pavement-from-the-Roman-villa-at-Low-Ham-i

Dido  and  Aeneas  •  love  story  in  epic  poetry  •  historical  •  poli@cal  •  amatory  –  passion  of  neoterics  •  tragedy  –  influence  of  Greek  (and  Roman)  

tragic  models  

Dido  as  tragic  vic@m  !!Tragic  love  affairs:  parallels  in  tragedy,    e.g.  Euripides  Hippolytus  

Dido  as  tragic  vic@m  !!‘So  heavy  was  the  cost  of  founding  the  Roman  race.’  

   Aeneid  1.33  

Other  vic@ms:  •  Turnus  •  Creusa  •  Pallas  •  Amata  

The  Mee&ng  of  Dido  and  Aeneas  by  Nathaniel  Dance-­‐Holland  (1766)  

 hWp://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpain@ngs/pain@ngs/the-­‐mee@ng-­‐of-­‐dido-­‐and-­‐aeneas-­‐117768  

Dido  and  Aeneas:  a  love  story  in  epic  poetry  

Dido  -­‐  historical  parallels:  Carthage,  Cleopatra  

http://ocw.nd.edu/classics/history-of-ancient-rome/lectures-1/the-last-days-of-the-republic-octavian-antony-and

Carthage  economic  control  of  the  Mediterranean  Carthage/Sicily/  Italy    

Three  Punic  Wars:  264-­‐241,  218-­‐201,  149-­‐146  BCE    

 

http://www.phoenician.org/carthage_hannibal_barca.htm

hWp://www.uncg.edu/cla/maps/mediterranean.htm  

Punic,  Sidonian,  Tyrian    =  Carthaginian    

Ancient  Phoenicia  =  Lebanon  

"Anna:    To  think…you  could  be  so  cruel  as  to  lay  yourself  down  here  to  die  without  me.  It  is  not  only  yourself  you  have  destroyed,  but  also  your  sister  and  your  people,  their  leaders  who  came  with  you  from  Sidon  and  the  city  you  have  built.      

         (Aen.  4.682-­‐5)  "!

Dido’s  death:  the  personal  dimension  

"!

Dido’s  death:  foreshadowing  history  

•  Dido’s  dying  curse  (Aen.  4.622-­‐29)    •  ‘You  must  pursue  with  hatred  the  whole  line  of  his  

descendants  in  @me  to  come.’  (4.622-­‐3)  [pp.100-­‐1)  •  ‘my  unknown  avenger’  =  Hannibal  

 •  Afermath:  panic  

‘It  was  as  though  the  enemy  were  within  the  gates  and  the  whole  of  Carthage  or  old  Tyre  were  falling  with  flames  raging  and  rolling  over  the  roofs  of  men  and  gods.’  (Aen.  4.  669-­‐71)  

Dido  and  Cleopatra,  Phoenicia  and  Egypt  

Mark  Antony  &  Cleopatra  VII  

http://ocw.nd.edu/classics/history-of-ancient-rome/lectures-1/the-last-days-of-the-republic-octavian-antony-and

Giovanni  Ba<sta  Tiepolo  The  banquet  of  Cleopatra  (1743–44)  

hWp://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/learn/schools-­‐resources/art-­‐start/image-­‐bank/giambahsta-­‐@epolo  

Na@onal  Gallery  of  Victoria    

Cleopatra’s  extravagance  

There  have  been  two  pearls  that  were  the  largest  in  the  whole  of  history;  both  were  owned  by  Cleopatra,  the  last  of  the  Queens  of  Egypt…  [Cleopatra  bets  Antony  that  she  can  spend  100,000  on  one  meal]…  In  accordance  with  previous  instruc@ons  the  servants  placed  in  front  of  her  only  a  single  vessel  containing  vinegar,  the  strong  rough  quality  of  which  can  melt  pearls.  She  was  at  the  moment  wearing  in  her  ears  that  remarkable  and  truly  unique  work  of  nature.  Antony  was  full  of  curiosity  to  see  what  in  the  world  she  was  going  to  do.  She  took  one  earring  off  and  dropped  the  pearl  in  the  vinegar,  and  when  it  was  melted  swallowed  it....With  this  goes  the  story  that,  when  that  queen  who  had  won  on  this  important  issue  was  captured,  the  second  of  this  pair  of  pearls  was  cut  in  two  pieces,  so  that  half  a  helping  of  the  jewel  might  be  in  each  of  the  ears  of  Venus  in  the  Pantheon  at  Rome.  

Pliny  Natural  History  9.119-­‐121  

•  The  BaWle  of  Ac@um:  Aeneid  8.685-­‐8,  696-­‐708  

•  ‘the  greatest  outrage  of  all,  his  [Antony’s]  Egyp@an  wife’  (688)  

Cleopatra  in  the  Aeneid  

Eastern  queens:  Dido  and  Cleopatra    ‘But  the  queen  had  long  been  suffering  from  love’s  deadly  wound’  (4.1)  Dido  as  regina:  4.133,  283,  295,  334,  504,  586    Cleopatra:  ‘In  the  middle  of  all  this  the  queen  (regina)  summoned  her  warships’  (8.698)  

Dido  as  host  

•  fellow  refugee  -­‐  hospes  •  hospi:um  •  Dido’s  speech  to  the  Trojans:1.562-­‐79  

–  ‘safe  under  my  protec@on…do  you  wish  to  seWle  here  with  me  on  an  equal  foo@ng,’  

–  ‘Trojan  and  Tyrian  shall  be  as  one  in  my  eyes’  

Dido  as  host  

–  ‘safe  under  my  protec@on…do  you  wish  to  seWle  here  with  me  on  an  equal  foo@ng,’  

–  ‘Trojan  and  Tyrian  shall  be  as  one  in  my  eyes’  

–  Aeneas’  gra@tude:  1.597-­‐605  

–  Poli@cal  alliance?   http://www.theguardian.com/culture/2010/nov/08/ancient-world-rome

Dido  as  a  refugee  in  North  Africa  

•  Iarbas  •  -­‐>  rela@onship  with  Carthaginians  as  poli@cal  alliance:  4.198-­‐219  

•  Aeneas  ‘as  master’  breaks  alliance  

Dido  -­‐  pawn  of  the  gods?    

•  Cupid’s  visit:  1.558-­‐722  •  ‘he  began  gradually  to  erase  the  memory  of  Sychaeus,  

trying  to  turn  towards  a  living  love,  a  heart  that  had  long  been  at  peace  and  long  unused  to  passion.’  

•  univira  •  amor  and  furor  -­‐  ‘doomed  Dido’  (1.748)  •  Venus  and  Juno  plot  ‘marriage’  (4.90-­‐128)  •  primordial  wedding  -­‐>  Dido’s  culpa  •  loses  interest  in  pudor  and  fama     http://www.vroma.org/images/mcmanus_images/didomosaic5.jpg

Aeneas  the  city  builder  

•  Dido  creates  Carthage  

•  But  post-­‐coniugium  Dido  abandons  city  

•  Aeneas  as  consort  and  builder  (4.259-­‐65)  [N.B.  ‘Tyrian  purple’]  

Claude Lorrain Aeneas and Dido in Carthage (1675) http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Claude_Lorrain_-_Aeneas's_Farewell_to_Dido_in_Carthago_-_WGA05017.jpg

Dido  and  Aeneas  

•  who  can  deceive  a  lover?  (4.295)  •  ‘I  beg  you  by  our  union,  by  the  marriage  we  have  

begun’  (4.317)  •  ‘Nor  have  I  ever  offered  you  marriage’  •  ‘It  is  not  by  my  own  will  that  I  search  for  Italy’  •  4.393:  pius  Aeneas  •  4.441-­‐49  oak  tree  in  storm  simile  

hWp://www.bridgemanart.com/asset/497298/Roman-­‐4th-­‐century-­‐AD/Dido-­‐and-­‐Aeneas-­‐embracing-­‐from-­‐the-­‐mosaic-­‐pavemen?search_context=%7B%22url%22%3A%22%5C%2Fsearch%5C%2Far@st%5C%2FRoman-­‐4th-­‐century-­‐AD%5C%2F19026%3Fpage_num%3D2%22%2C%22num_results%22%3A%22123%22%2C%22search_type%22%3A%22creator_assets%22%2C%22creator_id%22%3A%2219026%22%2C%22item_index%22%3A122%7D  

Dido’s  passion  

• What  were  your  feelings,  Dido,  as  you  looked  at  this?  (4.409)  –  direct  address  in  epic  

•  4.459ff.  frenzy  –  visions,  hears  voices  –  ‘She  would  be  like  Pentheus  in  his  frenzy…or  like  Orestes…[with]  the  avenging  Furies’  

–  ‘overwhelmed  by  grief  and  possessed  by  madness’  (furor  4.501)  -­‐>  suicide  

http://www.vroma.org/images/mcmanus_images/didomosaic6.jpg

Dido’s  passion  

•  furor    –  91  &  101:  Juno  describes  Dido’s  amor  -­‐    ‘passion’,  ‘madness’  

–  433:  D.  begs  for  ‘respite  for  my  anguish’  

–  Witchcraf  (505-­‐21)  •  invokes  gods  of  Underworld:  Erebus,  Chaos,  Hecate  

 

 

Dido’s  rhetoric  and  deceit  

–  532-­‐53:  Weighing  up  op@ons:  leave  with  Aeneas,  pact  with  Numidians,  war  vs.  Trojans?  

–  vocabulary  of  betrayal:    •  A  betrayed  her  •  D  betrayed  Sychaeus    •  ends  with  curse  •  final  betrayal:  Anna  &  pyre  

Dido’s  death  

•  Final,  proud  speech  •  difficult  death    •  Anna’s  reproach  •  Juno’s  pity  (eventually)  -­‐  sends  Iris  

–  ‘since  she  was  not  dying  by  the  decree  of  Fate  or  by  her  own  deserts  but  pi@ably  and  before  her  @me’  (4.696-­‐7)  

•  Dido’s  death  c.f.  Turnus  (bk.12)  •  ‘Phoenician  Dido’  in  the  Underworld  (6.450-­‐76)  

–  c.f.  Ajax/Aias  in  Odyssey  11.543-­‐67  

Dido’s  suicide  from  5th  c.  edi@on  of  Aeneid  (Va@can)    

http://library.nd.edu/medieval/facsimiles/learnlat/vervat/39v40r.html