|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Book I
Summary
I sing of warfare and a man at war.
. . . He came to Italy by destiny. Virgil opens his epic poem by declaring its subject, “warfare
and a man at war,” and asking a muse, or goddess of inspiration,
to explain the anger of Juno, queen of the gods (I.1).
The man in question is Aeneas, who is fleeing the ruins of his native
city, Troy, which has been ravaged in a war with Achilles and the
Greeks. The surviving Trojans accompany Aeneas on a perilous journey
to establish a new home in Italy, but they must contend with the
vindictive Juno.
Juno harbors anger toward Aeneas because Carthage is her favorite
city, and a prophecy holds that the race descended from the Trojans
will someday destroy Carthage.
Juno holds a permanent grudge against Troy because another Trojan,
Paris, judged Juno’s rival Venus fairest in a divine beauty contest.
Juno calls on Aeolus, the god of the winds, directing him to bring
a great storm down upon Aeneas as he sails south of Sicily in search
of a friendly harbor. Aeolus obeys, unleashing a fierce storm upon
the battle-weary Trojans.
Aeneas watches with horror as the storm approaches. Winds
and waves buffet the ships, knocking them off course and scattering them.
As the tempest intensifies, Neptune, the god of the sea, senses the
presence of the storm in his dominion. He tells the winds that Aeolus
has overstepped his bounds and calms the waters just as Aeneas’s
fleet seems doomed. Seven ships remain, and they head for the nearest
land in sight: the coast of Libya. When they reach the shore, before
setting out to hunt for food, a weary and worried Aeneas reminds
his companions of previous, more deadly adversities they have overcome
and the fated end toward which they strive.
Meanwhile, on Mount Olympus, the home of the gods, Aeneas’s mother,
Venus, observes the Trojans’ plight and begs Jupiter, king of the
gods, to end their suffering. Jupiter assures her that Aeneas will eventually
find his promised home in Italy and that two of Aeneas’s descendants,
Romulus and Remus, will found the mightiest empire in the world.
Jupiter then sends a god down to the people of Carthage to make
sure they behave hospitably to the Trojans.
Aeneas remains unaware of the divine machinations that
steer his course. While he is in the woods, Venus appears to him
in disguise and relates how Dido came to be queen of Carthage. Dido’s wealthy
husband, Sychaeus, who lived with her in Tyre (a city in Phoenicia,
now Syria), was murdered for his gold by Pygmalion, her brother.
Sychaeus appeared to Dido as a ghost and advised her to leave Tyre
with those who were opposed to the tyrant Pygmalion. She fled, and
the emigrant Phoenicians settled across the sea in Libya. They founded
Carthage, which has become a powerful city.
Venus advises Aeneas to go into the city and talk to
the queen, who will welcome him. Aeneas and his friend Achates approach Carthage,
shrouded in a cloud that Venus conjures to prevent them from being
seen. On the outskirts of the city, they encounter a shrine to Juno
and are amazed to behold a grand mural depicting the events of the
Trojan War. Their astonishment increases when they arrive in Dido’s
court to find many of their comrades who were lost and
scattered in the storm asking Dido for aid in rebuilding their fleet. Dido
gladly grants their request and says that she wishes she could meet their
leader. Achates remarks that he and Aeneas were clearly told the truth
regarding their warm welcome, and Aeneas steps forward out of the
cloud. Dido is awestruck and delighted to see the famous hero. She invites
the Trojan leaders to dine with her in her palace.
Venus worries that Juno will incite the Phoenicians against
her son. She sends down another of her sons, Cupid, the god of love, who
takes the form of Aeneas’s son, Ascanius. In this disguise, Cupid
inflames the queen’s heart with passion for Aeneas. With love in
her eyes, Dido begs Aeneas to tell the story of his adventures during
the war and the seven years since he left Troy. Analysis
Virgil adheres to the epic style that the ancient Greek
poet Homer established by invoking the muse at the opening of his
poem. A similar invocation begins both the Iliad and
the Odyssey, the Homeric epics that are the models
for Virgil’s epic, and the Aeneid picks up its subject
matter where Homer left off. The events described in the Aeneid form
a sequel to the Iliad and are contemporaneous with
the wanderings of Ulysses in the Odyssey.
Although Virgil alludes to Homer’s epics and self-consciously emulates
them, he also attempts to surpass and revise Homer, and the differences
between the two authors’ epics are important markers of literary
evolution. Whereas the Iliad and the Odyssey call
the muse in the first line, Virgil begins the Aeneid with
the words “I sing,” and waits a number of lines before making his
invocation. It is as though Virgil is invoking the muse out of obligation
rather than out of a genuine belief in divine inspiration. He emphasizes
his presence as a narrator and becomes more than a medium through
which the epic poem is channeled.
The hero at sea, buffeted by weather and impeded by unexpected encounters,
is another recurring motif in epic poetry. According to the Roman
worldview, which was derived from the Greeks, men’s actions and
fortunes are compelled by a unitary fate, and the specific events
of their lives are dictated by a host of competing supernatural forces.
Aeneas, sailing from the ruins of Troy toward Italy, is not completely
in control of his direction and progress. Fate has ordained,
we learn, that Aeneas and his people will found a new race in Italy
that will eventually become the Roman Empire. Jupiter ensures this
outcome, and none of the gods can prevent it from happening. They
can, however, affect the way in which it happens,
and the rivalries and private loyalties of the meddling gods fuel
the conflict in the poem.
The reasons for Juno’s hatred of the Trojans and her
enduring antagonism would have been well known to Virgil’s Roman
audience, which was familiar with the Greek tradition. Homer details the
background of Juno’s resentment against Troy in the Iliad. The goddess
of strife, Eris, threw a golden apple before the goddesses on Olympus
and said it was a prize for the most beautiful among them. Three
goddesses claimed it: Juno, Venus, and Minerva. They decided to
have Paris, a Trojan and the most handsome of mortal men, settle
the dispute. In secret, each goddess tried to bribe him, and in
the end, he gave the apple to Venus because she offered the most
tempting bribe: the fairest woman on Earth, Helen. That Helen was
already married to a Greek king named Menelaus only engendered further
conflict. When Paris took her away to Troy, her husband assembled
the bravest warriors of the Argives (Greeks)—including his brother
Agamemnon, Ulysses, and Achilles—and they set sail for Troy, initiating
the Trojan War. They laid siege to the city for ten years, and,
naturally, the goddesses took sides. Juno and Minerva aided the
Greeks, and Venus helped the Trojans, to whom she had an added loyalty
since the Trojan warrior Aeneas is her son.
This rivalry between the gods looms over the narrative
of the Aeneid so heavily that at times the story
seems to be less about the deeds of the mortal characters than about
the bickering of the gods, who continually disrupt and manipulate
events on Earth. One of the Aeneid’s main themes,
though, is that for both gods and mortals, fate always wins in the
end. Aeneas is destined to settle in Italy, and not even the unbridled
wrath of Juno, queen of the gods, can prevent this outcome. Jupiter,
whose inexorable will is closely identified with fate because he
is the highest of the gods, sees to it that his overall plan comes
to pass. When Juno has Aeolus torment Aeneas, it is necessary for
Jupiter to take sides, so he assists Venus. In fact, Jupiter’s occasional
intervention on Venus’s behalf, to Juno’s great frustration, sets
the general pattern for the Aeneid.
Whereas Juno attempts to defy fate to satisfy her own
anger, Aeneas reveals in his first speech in the epic, delivered
to his crew upon their landing in Libya, his ability to suppress
his own emotions and will in pursuit of his fated duty. Virgil tells
us that Aeneas has “contained his anguish” and “feigned hope” in
order to rally the morale of his crew by reminding them of past
hardships and future glory (I.285–286).
He is incapable of emotional self-indulgence. For Aeneas, fate,
although promised, demands certain actions and sacrifices. It requires
the virtue known as piety, which entails placing his service to
fate—his divine mission to found a new city in Italy—above all else
in his life. |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Terms and Conditions | About
©2006 SparkNotes LLC, All Rights Reserved.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||