Comparing Dreams In Virgil's Aeneid, Dido, And Turnus

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Virgil’s Aeneid, one of the masterpieces of Roman literature and the founding epic of the greatest empire in the Classical world, showcases many techniques of typical Roman poetry. The poetic traditions handed down from the Homeric epics are clearly shown throughout the epic, and one aspect of this literary tradition is the use of dreams throughout the epic. Three of the central characters in the epic - Aeneas, Dido, and Turnus - were all chronologically first introduced in a dream. These dream sequences allow Vergil to introduce characters from a different perspective, but dreams also serve as a method for Vergil to make prophecies and admonish characters for their actions without breaking the realism of the epic. The most prominent dream …show more content…

For example, Dido fled Tyre and founded Carthage because of a dream. Her husband, Sychaeus, warned her that his brother Pygmalion became greedy and murdered him for the gold in the altar and was looking to kill her too. Helpfully, Sychaeus also informs Dido about the location of the treasure that she can use in her journey to escape Tyre and found a new colony. Her prior history of love and her distrust in other men was a prominent section of her personality before she met Aeneas, and their romantic relationship, caused by the scheming of Venus and Juno, demonstrates the futility of the efforts of men in the face of the power of gods and that the mortals are merely pawns in the great game of the gods. Another example of character development from dreams occurs at the beginning of Book 8 when Aeneas dreams of Tiberinus, the river god of the Tiber. The god first tells Aeneas about the future site of Alba, a city which his son Ascanius will found. Then, Tiberinus informs Aeneas about the Arcadians and their king Evander who continuously fights against the Latins, and recommends that he allies with them although they are Greek colonists. Thus, the relationship between Aeneas and Evander was initiated, which would become vital to the war effort between the Trojans and the Latins. In addition to this advice from Tiberinus, he prophesies about a white sow suckling thirty young piglets marking the site for Alba, Ascanius’ future city. Prophecies are a common theme in dreams in the Aeneid, and it also appears in Dido’s story and Aeneas’ vision of Hector. The involvement of the divine in dreams to advise characters is omnipresent throughout the Aeneid, and an example of that occurs in Book 3, when the Trojan colonists arrived on Crete, set up a new colony, but it started failing due to starvation and disease. During this failure, the penates appear to Aeneas and clarify

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