Saturday, April 19, 2025 : TES > Documents > Epic > Aeneid > Notes
The Epic
Aeneid
General Notes
Recounts events after the fall of Troy (9th century BCE), and written as a secondary, or literary, epic by Virgil in 14CE. Out of the destruction of Troy came an heroic figure who would found a new state. The Aeneid is a story of return that is providentially ruled by the gods. Aeneas story is one of founding and rebirth that is very different from the Homeric epics, but borrows from them in important ways.
Virgil uses the Greek tradition of the epic, but made it a Roman expression; he wanted to find a place in the Greek history without claiming kinshipto disassociate by association. Aeneas, having been saved by Poseidon from certain death at the hands of Achilles in book XX of the Iliad (it is destined that he shall be a survivor), provided Virgil (and the Romans) a link to the rich tradition begun by the Greeks.
Virgil wrote the Aeneid for Augustus, the first Emperor of Rome. He recast the traditional Roman foundation story in its enduring form in order to authenticate the Roman myth by tying it to the past. It presents the Roman ideals and their mission: to conquer the known world by a sense of duty to family, state, and the gods (pietas).
Pietas
Social and national heroism in the Aeneid. Pietas means a sense of duty to community that the Romans cherished above all values. Aeneas, unlike his Homeric predecessors, exemplifies the true hero: one who sacrifices his own desires in favor of the good of the community. Turnus represents the old ways of the Greeks that must be overcome (by violence) so that the new order may begin.
In the Underworld
Odyssey |
Aeneid |
Mother |
Father |
Vaguegeneral land of the dead. Visits known spirits: Achilles, Agamem-non, Anticleia, Tiresias |
Elysian Fieldsgraphic detail |
Crew Accompanies |
Sybil guides |
Prophecy (personal)father suffering; Sun gods flocks; Odysseus journey after the Odyssey |
Prophecy (social)told by father of the fu-ture greatness of Rome |
Some Characteristics of the Literary Epic
Difference in the condition of the composition leads to a difference in the character of the poetry. Because Homer composed for recitation, his composition is in some ways freer and looser than Virgils. Both of Homers poems have a majestic planless closely woven than the Aeneid; their episodes are more easily detached from the whole and may be enjoyed as separate poems. The Greek epic poet composes on a grand scale, and could not always expect to recite his poems in their entirety; therefore, Homers epics share looser methods of compositionthough they are not a collection of separate lays. They are single poems with single plans and consistency of language. Homers art is oralVirgils is written. Virgil writes for the readersi.e., he operates less with phrases and formulas than with single words; he fashions sentences carefully and individually; he takes care to avoid omissions, contradictions, and inconsistencies; he uses carefully planned poetic texture and exquisite choice of words and significance. Homers oral epic is characterized by it simplicity, strength and straightforwardness, movement of lines, splendid climax, singleness of effect, and unbroken maintenance of tragic or heroic mood. The real difference between primary and secondary epics results from distinctions of origins and characterwhether oral or written.
The difference in methods of epic composition coincides with another differencesocial and spiritual. Oral epics display the heroic spirit and societies that hold he-roic standards of conduct; literary epics have heroes, but a different conception of hero-ism and of human greatness and come from societies which cannot be called heroic. The heroic world values prowess and fame of the individual heroAchilles surpasses other sin strength and courage (which will win him honor and renown after death), and he is ruthless to any who frustrate or deride him. He is cut off from intercourse with common men and lacks allegiance except to his personal pridewhat matters is his prowess. Homers heroism is a reflection of mens desire to be in the last degree self-fulfilledto satisfy their own ambitions in life with much ado. Achilles lives mainly to win glory and assumes that it is right, but his life is darkened by suffering and he dies for his belief in heroic manhood. The doom of a short and glorious life hanging over Achilles is tragic for the most noble and gifted of Greek men.
The heroic ideal of personal prowess did not exist for the writers of literary epics. Virgil has a different conception of human worth and lived in a society from which Homers heroes were remote and alien. Hi work is traditional in form, but it is shaped by the present. The secondary epic is an attempt to use again in new circumstances what is already a complete and satisfying form of poetry. The fundamental difference between the literary epic and the oral epic is in the circumstances of their origins. The literary epic was born from a society where the unfettered individual had no place and where a different conception of heroism reigned. The hero of the literary epic sacrifices himself for his society, not individual prowess or happiness. A social ideal replaces the personal ideal which was anarchic and anti-social. The epic, in the hands of Virgil, became a national expression of the philosophy of Rome; Aeneas stands for Rome. The hero of the literary epic point to a moralrepresent the ideals of society and self-sacrifice. They, then, have a didactic purpose: to inspire, elevate, and instruct readersto appeal to their hearts and minds. They did not share the idea that poetry merely beguiles hours of leisure or stimulates to a refined enjoyment. They believed that their art was seriousa way to make humans better, but that stern moral task did not diminish their artistry. The literary epics primary concern is truth.
Sensual pleasures were alien to the spirit of the literary epic. Homers heroes enjoy food and drink, but they are interested more in their loot. The sordid and fantastic aspects of live-making are confined to gods who are free from limitations of human life and from its obligations to live nobly. But by heroic standards, men do not indulge their passions and appetitesthey keep them under control. In the one great love episode of the Aeneid, Didos passion for Aeneas is treated in a tragic spirit and takes its place in the poem as a fearful obstacle which the hero has to overcome in his moral progress and is the prelude of disasters to come in the political relations between Carthage and Rome.
Literary epic flourishes not in the heyday of a nation, but in its lost days or after-math. At such a time, a poet surveys the recent past with its record of dazzling successes and asks if they can last. Virgil wrote at a time when the Roman world turned with weariness and relief from vaulting ambitions of the Caesarean age to the rest and quiet promised by Augustus. He works the transition from the restless years of the Republic with its strong personalities and struggles, to the long peace when few men mattered.
Writers of the literary epic set themselves to adapt the personal heroic ideal to un-heroic times and to proclaim in poetry a new conception of mans grandeur and nobility in social and nationalistic terms.