Dido In Virgil's Aeneid Essay

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The Nature of Dido’s Furor and Fatum in Virgil's Aeneid
Driven to the brink of flaming madness, Dido, in Virgil's Aeneid, is seen as an icon for the "tragic lover" torn between her love for Aeneas and wanting what is best for her city. She struggles to find balance between love and fate. Virgil uses love as a force that acts upon his characters and drives them to the extremes of immense passion, or furor. Falling prey to the gods' schemes, Dido is consumed by her furor which ignites a faulty demise, similar to Aeneas's descent from piety in the encounter with Turnus, presenting the limits of divine intervention in free will. Virgil uses Dido and Aeneas as examples of vulnerability in furor, raising questions of Rome’s future.
Notably, Dido …show more content…

1.619-623). He leads our reading to note that Dido is a powerful Carthaginian queen who is capable of leadership, knowing it would raise the hairs of Virgil’s audience, the Romans, whose greatest enemy were the Carthaginians (Discussion Oct. 28). Venus takes note of Dido’s desirable position in order to convince Jupiter to have the Trojans be welcomed into Carthage and ultimately recover and regain necessary resources because of Juno’s previous inflicted rage at sea. Jupiter, therefore, “put aside their (the Phoenicians) fighting spirit” and Dido would welcome the Trojans into her city peacefully (Aen. 1.360-371). Because of the divine intervention, Dido is used in order to please the gods wishes unknowingly. Venus also takes advantage of Dido by having Cupid’s infectious arrow pierce her heart, spreading furious admiration and desire for Aeneas while “little by little..blot out Sychaeus” (Aen. 1.880-885). Venus does this in fear that Juno will use Dido and her forces to destroy …show more content…

However, when closely examining the text we can see that Dido’s suicide was not written in her fatum. Once Dido had chosen there was no life worth living in her diseased state of furor, she chose to pierce her chest hoping to welcome death, but failing to drift from her mortal clutches. Juno “pitying Dido’s long agony and hard death, sent Iris to free her struggling soul” because “her death was neither fated nor deserved” (Aen. 4.809-812). Dido took control of her fortuna in order to escape her pudor from obliterating her husband from her mind when she became immersed in uncontrollable passion toward Aeneas. Aeneas, nonetheless, did not have the same passions and took pride in his duty over staying in Carthage to be with Dido (Aen. 4.665-681). Needless to say, it was not Dido’s fatum to die in this way. Similarly, Aeneas fell victim to fortuna by killing Turnus. Aeneas was not fated to kill Turnus, but chose to, compelled by his rage (Discussion Nov. 2). Virgil influences our pathos and treatment of Dido by making her a victim of the gods, yet still, Dido’s quote is fault (Discussion Oct.28). Dido believes wholeheartedly that she and Aeneas are married after their union in the cave, but Aeneas counters this belief staying true to his duties (Aen. 4.350-361). In the poem, Virgil makes Aeneas seem pious for carrying out his

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