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VIRGIL – TOO GOOD A POET Bella’s Summary Points: Whilst parts of the Aeneid show his intentions to “whitewash a military dicatorship with plenty of blood on its hands as a new Golden Age,” its literary merit shows that was not his only motive nor aspiration o The desire to bring a peaceful age to Italy is made more understandable by the fact that Virgil was born in tumultuous times, and lived most of his life with the country in civil war Its a homeric epic, with a strong element of the divine and the supernatural and a human hero, subject to human passions and weaknesses but still larger than life. He chose Aeneas because there were previous epic stories with him being the founding father of the Romans, and the fact that he linked in with the Iliad with a prophecy that he would rule a great nation (he was a fighter second only to Hector). Virgil took inspiration from Homer, Greek dramas with fleshed out characters which were sometimes women and tried to talk about ethically grey areas and Latin epics talking about the history of Rome Catullus’ Medea is quite similar to Dido from Virgil Virgil himself deals with issues and his awareness of the cost of nationbuilding and of the need for a new kind of leadership, inspired by his sensitivity to nature and empathy for human aspiration and suffering Venus is Aeneas’ mum Aeneas’ affair with Dido is tragic, both are being manipulated by gods, Dido almost resonates with Cleopatra- both exotic queens, both passionate, both needing to be sacrificed to make things work This is the text of a talk given at a teachers’ conference. It is in three sections: 1. VIRGIL’S BACKGROUND 2. THE AENEID AS EPIC 3. THE NEW HERO, AENEAS VIRGIL’S BACKGROUND 1 VIRGIL – TOO GOOD A POET We all know that Virgil composed the Aeneid with the blessing of his patron Maecenas, who was a close advisor to Octavian, later known as Augustus. He appears to have read parts of the work to Augustus, and in fact was travelling back with Augustus from Greece to Italy when he sickened and died on arrival in Italy. The Aeneid was still unfinished, but Augustus overruled the poet’s dying wish to have it destroyed, so, despite its imperfections, we have the poem to enjoy today. Did Virgil write the Aeneid as propaganda for the regime, to whitewash a military dictatorship with plenty of blood on its hands as a new Golden Age? Parts of the poem certainly read as though he had, but to call the Aeneid propaganda is to oversimplify it unjustifiably – and would anyone but a Roman historian bother reading it today? Virgil was born in 70 BCE, a year after Crassus had crushed the slave rebellion of Spartacus that threatened the stability of Italy. When he was about seven, the state was threatened again by an aristocratic rebel this time, Catiline, whose faction was suppressed by the consul, the novus homo, Cicero. Through Virgil’s teenage years, Caesar, Pompey and Crassus were building their powerful armies and fuelling their ambitions, regardless of Cicero, the senate and the traditional institutions of Rome. Virgil was in his early twenties when civil war broke out between Caesar and Pompey, and he was 26 when Caesar, then dictator for life, was assassinated by his fellow senators. More than a decade of civil wars followed, at the end of which Caesar’s great-nephew, Octavian, emerged victorious over all other contenders for power. At the time of Actium in 31 BCE, Virgil would have been nearly 40 years old. He would never have known an Italy at peace with itself. If Octavian, soon to be known as Augustus, the revered one, could bring peace and stability to Italy, is it surprising that Virgil, with his deep love for the beautiful countryside, should have embraced the new era as a Golden Age? So it seems very likely that Virgil was sincere in welcoming the rule of Augustus. This does not make him a sycophantic court poet, nor does it mean that he was unaware of, or condoned, the atrocities inflicted by Augustus – the proscriptions, for example, that marked the ascent of the Second Triumvirate. It does, however, mean that the Aeneid should be read as a very complex poem. 2 VIRGIL – TOO GOOD A POET 3 VIRGIL – TOO GOOD A POET THE AENEID AS EPIC The story of Rome – from village to empire – is certainly grand enough for us to use the word “epic” in the modern sense. But an epic poem in the Homeric tradition, containing as it does a strong element of the divine and the supernatural, still needs a hero at its centre – a human hero who, though larger than life in many respects, is subject to human passions and weaknesses. Virgil took as his hero the Trojan Aeneas. There were two clear reasons for doing so: first, there was already an Italian tradition that Aeneas was the founding father of the Roman people (pp images 6 and 7), written about in early Latin epics by Naevius and Ennius. Secondly, Aeneas provided a strong and honourable link to the epics of Homer – he is shown as a match for Achilles in Iliad 20. 303 – and there was even a prophetic line (Iliad 307-8) saying that Aeneas would survive the Trojan War and rule a great nation. So Virgil composed a poem in Latin following the epic tradition of Homer – a sort of sequel to a revered work, like the sequels to Jane Austen that have appeared in recent years. As everyone knows, the first six Books of the Aeneid are based on the Odyssey, a journey around the Mediterranean complete with Cyclops, shipwrecks and supernatural encounters, even conversations with the dead. The second half, with its battles for the right to settle in Italy, clearly draws from the Iliad , with the final Aeneas/Turnus duel strongly echoing the fight between Achilles and Hector. Now those of you who have read some of the sequels to Jane Austen will probably feel, as I do, that they don’t quite work. Try as the authors will to imitate Austen’s style, the prose sounds stilted, and the content of their plot is invariably too modern, containing sexual and other references which Jane Austen would never have made. It is extremely difficult, if not impossible, to reproduce the language and the ideas of a bygone age, and a wise author does not try too hard to do so. Virgil was writing in Latin; the epics of Homer were orally composed in Greek. Virgil could draw on 500 years of literary tradition since the time of Homer, in both Greek and Latin. There were the dramas of 5th century Athens, many of them with plots taken from the Trojan War saga, but with fleshed out characters, particularly the women. These dramas showed the interaction and 4 VIRGIL – TOO GOOD A POET sufferings of the characters and used the well-known plots to explore ethical dilemmas – a favoured pastime of 5th and 4th century Greek intellectuals. The Hellenistic period that followed Alexander the Great’s conquests gave rise to a flowering of Greek poetry written by well-educated, scholarly poets, many based in Alexandria. Some cultivated the shorter, more personal styles of poetry (that ultimately inspired Catullus) and others sought to emulate the Homeric epics with works of grand style, written in imitation of Homer’s archaic Greek language. The most notable work of the latter style is the Argonautica of Apollonius of Rhodes. The Argonautica seems to me to be like one of those sequels to Jane Austen that never quite works. It is written in self-consciously epic language; its hero, Jason, is no Achilles or Odysseus, but a team leader who got his position by default, and has to rely utterly on the special gifts of several members of his crew. But I believe this work influenced Virgil quite strongly. Apollonius introduced a tragic love-dynamic never found in Homer: Medea is made to fall in love with Jason by divine intervention so that she will help him survive his ordeal and obtain the Golden Fleece. He does not fall in love with her. Medea is not Dido, but there are a number of common features. Then Virgil had Latin epics to draw on. The poet Naevius (ca. 270 BC – 201 BC) had written an epic on the Punic War. In this he mentioned Anchises and his son Aeneas leaving Troy and arriving in Latium where Romulus, Aeneas’ grandson in this version, founded Rome. Ennius (239-169 BC) was another Latin poet who composed the Annales , a historical epic poem in the metre of Homer, the hexameter line. This poem began the history of Rome with Aeneas. Both these Latin poets survive only in fragments to us, but Virgil no doubt had access to them. Only a generation earlier than Virgil, the poet Catullus had departed from his usual practice of writing short personal poems to compose some mini-epics in hexameter verse. One of these (Poem 64) includes the abandonment of Ariadne by the hero Theseus. When Virgil included the tragedy of Dido in the Aeneid he was not following Homeric tradition, but the works of later Greek and Latin writers who had appeared in the seven hundred or so years that separated Virgil from Homer. 5 VIRGIL – TOO GOOD A POET The Aeneid as epic, then, draws from a number of literary elements. What saves it from being a tiresome amalgam of literary adaptations is the fact that it is very much a poem for Virgil’s own time, imbued with his own awareness of the tremendous cost of nation-building and of the need for a new kind of leadership, inspired by his own sensitivity to nature and empathy for human aspiration and suffering, and enabled by his mastery of the Latin language and the technicalities of hexameter verse. 6 VIRGIL – TOO GOOD A POET THE NEW HERO, AENEAS Central to the poem is the character of Aeneas, who is many things at once. He belongs to the age of Homeric heroes, appearing as a prominent, if not major, character in the Iliad , the second best fighter after Hector. His mother is the goddess Aphrodite/Venus, qualifying him as a semi-divine hero like Hercules, Achilles or Perseus. In Troy, he displays the Homeric hero’s code of “fight to the death – never flee”, but then has to reverse everything he has lived by to rescue his family and flee from Troy at the behest of the gods. He gradually learns that his destined homeland is in Italy, where he is to found a people that will rule the world. The journey to Italy takes seven years, during which Aeneas sheds several elements – his nostalgia for Troy and his commitment to rebuilding his homeland, his ties to the mythical world of Cyclops and Harpies, and his dependence on his father for moral and religious guidance. The greatest test is his affair with Dido. Taking aspects from Apollonius, Greek drama and Catullus 64, Virgil depicts a love-affair that cannot prosper, in which both partners are being manipulated by the gods. But Virgil infuses this tragic love story with a particularly Roman political resonance: Dido’s city is Carthage, destined to be Rome’s arch-enemy, and Dido herself is a passionate and exotic queen, a foreign temptress that readers would surely identify with the recently vanquished Cleopatra. Such a woman, kindly and innocent, beautiful, resourceful and talented as she is, must be sacrificed to fulfil Aeneas’ destiny as the founding father of the Romans. Aeneas’ great attribute is pietas –that untranslatable Roman virtue that sounds in English like the Scout or Guide promise: duty to gods, people and family, a quality very different from the heroic bravado, physical supremacy, cunning persuasiveness, and overwhelming self-centredness that mark the well-known Homeric figures. (Only Hector comes close – and he sacrifices himself, and the future of his people, to his code of honour.) Pietas is a virtue that keeps a civil society functioning; it is a quality for peace, not war. Pietas fits in with the new Rome of Augustus – its goal is obedience to the gods and the welfare of significant others, not personal glory. It is pietas that drives Aeneas to abandon Dido at the command of the gods (Virgil tells us that he suppressed the love in his heart.) Pietas compels him to 7 VIRGIL – TOO GOOD A POET make the journey to the Underworld to visit his father. When his ally, old King Evander, entrusts his son Pallas to Aeneas for his first experience of battle, pietas demands that Aeneas protect the youth. And in the big picture, pietas compels Aeneas to establish a safe home in Italy for his son and his followers, and to do whatever is necessary to bring this about. In the last three Books of the Aeneid, Virgil thoroughly explores the complexities of pietas. In Book 10, by contriving the temporary removal of Turnus, Aeneas’ great rival, Virgil brings to prominence the colourful, odious Mezentius as the principal enemy figure. Mezentius is the archetypal vicious tyrant, expelled by his own people, the Etruscans, for his unspeakable cruelty. He has joined with Turnus, while the Etruscans support Aeneas. Mezentius, however, has a softer side. He is accompanied by his son, Lausus, a charming, valiant youth, the counterpart to Aeneas’s protege, Pallas. Lausus intervenes as Aeneas is about to kill Mezentius, and is killed instead by the hero, a far superior warrior to the young man. A poignant demonstration of pietas, indeed, by someone on the “wrong” side. The death of Lausus at the hands of Aeneas is paralleled to the death of young Pallas at the hands of Turnus. The boastful Turnus took Pallas’ belt as a wartrophy and gloated over him and his absent father, much as Achilles would have done. Aeneas’ behaviour at the death of Lausus is shown as more complex. When he confronts Lausus, who has cheated him of his victory over Mezentius, Aeneas goes into a rage (furit Aeneas) and berates Lausus for his pietas, This from Aeneas! He kills the youth in a moment made poignant by Virgil’s description of Lausus’ tunic, hand-embroidered by his mother and now stained with blood. But as soon as Lausus is dead, Aeneas is remorseful. Pietas comes to the forefront of his mind and he refrains from despoiling the body which he returns to Lausus’ comrades. There remains the inevitable death of Mezentius. This horrible tyrant, now wounded and worried sick about his son, is shown as a lonely old man with no friend but his horse. He bravely faces Aeneas, and his manner of death redeems him. His love for Lausus (pietas) is to be his memorial. After a number of suspense-causing delays, Aeneas and Turnus finally meet in a duel that is to decide the future ruler of Latium. Virgil makes it clear that 8 VIRGIL – TOO GOOD A POET destiny is on the side of Aeneas, and that Juno, the goddess that has opposed him all the way, is finally brought to accept this, on condition that the hated name of “Trojans” will be subsumed into Italian, Latin and Romans. Aeneas, unaware of these divine machinations, subdues Turnus and wins the supremacy. Turnus submits. There is no need for the death of Turnus. Aeneas wavers, but then sees the belt Turnus is wearing, his trophy torn from the body of Pallas. Overcome by a rush of fury, he kills Turnus. What was Virgil telling us in this last act? That killing Turnus was an act of pietas – the just revenge for the death of Aeneas’ protege, Pallas? Or that Aeneas, the leader, was still a man prone to uncontrolled emotions? That statesmanship and clemency have to be learned, and Aeneas is still a leader in training? That victory is inseparable from tragedy? Aeneas, the hero of the epic, and the founding father of the Romans, existed in legend and literature well before Virgil, but it was Virgil who brought him into the complex world of the Augustan Age, when not only imperial success but public order were the product of undisguised military power, and when many individuals, both distinguished and obscure, were relentlessly suppressed, dispossessed and killed in the interests of the victorious regime. Virgil may have longed for peace and order and prosperity in Italy, but he was very conscious that they came at a heavy price in his time. The Aeneid’s opening lines declare a song about a heroic quest and the founding of a great nation, but the triumphant marching song constantly modulates to a minor key – “so heavy a task it was to found the Roman race.” 9