The Shield of Aeneas: Memory and History in Virgil’s
“Aeneid”
theimaginativeconservative.org/2019/10/shield-aeneas-memory-history-virgil-aeneid-paul-krause.html
Paul Krause
October 2,
2019
The “Aeneid” was only possible because the Roman people had the memory and
consciousness to make it possible. It is up to us to ensure that its living well of memory
doesn’t dry up. Without it, the “Aeneid” will pass into the dustbin of history like the corpses
of Priam and Pompey.
The grandest image of Virgil’s Aeneid is the
shield forged by the god Vulcan in the eighth
book of Aeneas’ adventure to “Lavinian
shores and Italian soil.” Virgil pays homage to
Homer, his master and mentor, who also
describes a grand image on a shield forged
by the gods for Achilles. But where Achilles’
shield is filled with the images of mythos and
pathos, Aeneas’ shield is filled with the
spectacle of history and triumph. In the two
shields from the two poets, we see the
supersession of mythos and pathos with
historical memory.
Poetry as a medium for history is quintessentially Roman and is the enduring invention of
Virgil. The Greeks had poetry and Homer wrote poetry. But Homer’s epic is not filled with
the memory of history as is Virgil’s Aeneid, and Greek poetry doesn’t rely on the recourse to
history to move the story forward as Virgil’s Aeneid does. The Aeneid, in many ways, is selfconscious of history. Even the supposed mythological stories that lay at the heart of the epic
are filled with the imagery of Roman memory and prefigure the memory of Roman history.
When Aeneas makes landfall in the safe harbors of Carthage and is introduced to the
erotically charged and voluptuous queen of the land, Dido, he sooths her with his voice in
retelling the destruction of Troy. When Aeneas weeps for Priam, “[T]he monarch who once
had ruled in all his glory the many lands of Asia, Asia’s many tribes. A powerful trunk lying
on the shore. The head wrenched from the shoulders. A corpse without a name,” (2.688692) Virgil recourses to imagery and memory of Pompey in describing the tragic fate of the
King of Troy. As the great classicist Bernard Knox says, “Any Roman who read these lines in
the years after Virgil’s poem was published or heard them recited would at once remember
a real and recent ruler over ‘the many lands of Asia,’ whose headless corpse lay on the
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shore. It was the corpse of Gnaeus Pompeius (Pompey), who had been ruler of all the lands
of Asia.”
Priam and Pompey are therefore associated together as tragic figures. Both men represent
the old, the past, hewn down by the fires of war and the birth of the new. Indeed, this
dynamic relationship between past and present, between old and new, is a major theme
throughout the poem. Both men situated themselves, at least in death, in the Orient. Both
men, at least in death, were cut down by warriors from the west. Of course, this OccidentalOriental tension is also played out through the epic just as it was playing out in the real lives
of the Roman readers and listeners of Virgil, which is somewhat ironic given Rome’s
geographic position in the Occident which adds to the sense of ironic tension in the minds
of Virgil’s Roman readers. (We’ll return to this subject in a bit.)
The relationship between Aeneas and Dido is heartbreaking, to say the least. Dido’s
previous husband had been killed which forced her, and her attendants, to flee across the
Mediterranean. Being a migratory people, she opens herself to fellow migrants. Aeneas is
enraptured by Dido and Dido by Aeneas. Had Aeneas not been the chosen vessel to “found
a city, bring [the] gods to Latium, source of the Latin race, the Alban lords and the high walls
of Rome,” he would have stayed in Carthage to consummate their love. But the gods, as we
know, had other intentions; and history, as we know, cannot stop.
Dido’s death is filled with the memory of the Punic Wars. Dido’s death-devoted heart thrusts
her atop a pyre to kill herself while cursing eternal vengeance on the children of Aeneas.
Dido’s curse, of course, provides a mytho-poetic justification for the three Punic Wars that
Carthage and Rome fought for supremacy over the Mediterranean and, as such, for the
future of Western civilization. Moreover, Dido’s death in an immolating flame would have
been something Virgil’s Roman audience knew well. The death of Dido in an all-consuming
fire evokes the memory of the burning of Carthage and Cato the Elder’s famous
proclamation “delendam esse Carthaginem.”
During the Third Punic War the Romans had laid siege to the once great city and jewel of the
Mediterranean. After a three year long siege the Romans stormed the city and put an end to
the Carthaginian threat once and for all. Scipio Africanus the Younger, the commanding
general of the Roman army, torched the city to prevent Carthage from ever being a thorn in
the side of Rome’s ambitions again. The city burned and burned leaving not a single stone
atop another.
The death of Dido by fiery immolation as she thrust Aeneas’ blade (a symbol of war) into her
breast only to collapse in the engulfing flames is nothing more or less than the haunting
memory of the Punic Wars which nearly laid waste to Rome and the violent destruction of
the North African city by sword and fire. Carthage became for Rome what Sodom and
Gomorrah was to Abraham and Lot. Carthage was laid waste and became a city of burnt ash
and salt just as the image of Dido’s death reminds us.
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The culminating battle between Aeneas and the Latins, led by Turnus, is also filled with the
repository of Roman history and consciousness. Rome, we must recall, started out as a
single city among many cities in the Italian Peninsula. The Latin race was not yet united
under a single political banner. The Latins were diverse and the peninsula reminiscent of
Hellenic Greece in being a collection of city-states and colonies. As Rome expanded outside
of her seven hills she came into a series of deadly conflicts with the neighboring peoples.
And the war between the Trojans and the Latin shepherds and hunters, who formed a
substantial portion of Turnus’ army, reminds the Roman reader of the three centuries of the
Latin Wars fought to bring unification to the Italian peninsula under those “high walls of
Rome.”
Additionally, the fact that Turnus is the leader of the Latin armies also represents the
complicated legacy of Greek colonization and the Roman-Hellenic Wars where Rome
eventually triumphed over the sons of Achilles and Alexander. Prior to the Latin Wars, the
Greeks were the most powerful and advanced people on the Italian peninsula. The
Etruscans may have been tyrannical, but the Greek colonies on the southern portion of the
peninsula were always a mark of embarrassment for the Romans. They were not Greek. And
they took no pride in Greek subversion of Roman culture. Cato the Elder went as far as to
expel the Greek playwrights and intellectuals for subverting the martial and manly virtues
and values of the Roman people.
It is fitting that the triumph of Rome comes at the expense of a great warrior who has Greek
blood coursing through his veins. Turnus is the Achilles of the West. Like his Greek forebear,
Turnus is a man who cannot control his passions. Enraged that Lavinia is now promised to
Aeneas, he gathers his allies and armies to make war in the name of Eros and Thanatos. Yet
this image is also reminiscent of another man who brought the world to war because of his
lust for a woman, a man who would appear in the culminating image of the shield of
Achilles, though on the losing side. Turnus is not only the Achilles of the West and the
specter of Greece over Italy, he is also Mark Antony and the specter of his passion which
brought Rome further down the hole of war.
In fact, the conflict between laboring and dutiful Aeneas with erotic and pathological Turnus
is the great clash of civilizations. Cato the Elder wrote the first Latin history of the Romans
and, as mentioned, was famous for his anti-Greek views. Cato believed that Greek softness
would destroy the traditional values of the Roman people. The pathological nature of the
Greeks, especially as contained in their literature, led Cato to conclude that if Greek ideas
infiltrated Roman culture they would lead to the moral degeneration of the Romans. Hence
why he expelled the Greek playwrights and intellectuals when he was consul. Cato defended
the laboring nature of the Romans and their dedication to filial piety against the erotic and
self-centered conceit of the Greeks. This is recapitulated in Aeneas as the model Roman,
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hard-working and dutiful to the gods and his father, and Turnus, the model Greek (as
imagined by Cato), who is pathological and moved by emotion more than duty or
rationality.
The real reason that Turnus is slayed by Aeneas is because Rome had emerged victorious in
the unification of Italy, expelled the Greeks from the peninsula, and defeated the Greeks in
the Roman-Greek wars. Turnus—who “track[ed] down [his] roots [to] Inachus and Acrisius,
Mycenae to the core!”—had to die at the hand of the founding father of Rome because
Aeneas’ killing of Turnus prefigures the Roman subjugation of the Greeks and the
extirpation of the Mycenaean counterweight to Rome. The slaying of the Achilles of the
West reminds the Roman reader of the long and arduous struggle against Greece.
In killing Turnus, Aeneas throws off the dark specter of Greece haunting Rome and
vindicates Cato the Elder. (We mustn’t forget that the enemies and murderers of Julius
Caesar took refuge in Greece and were assailed as Greeks rather than as Romans.)
But before Aeneas could slay Turnus, Vulcan had to forge a shield so that Aeneas could
wield it into battle. The shield is composed of many of the great images of Roman history.
As Virgil describes the shield forged in the laboring fire of Vulcan’s forge:
There is the story of Italy,
Rome in all her triumphs. There the fire-god forged them,
well aware of the seers and schooled in times to come . . .
the mother wolf stretched out in the green grotto of Mars,
twin boys at her dugs, who hung there, frisky, suckling
without a fear as she with her lithe neck bent back,
stroking each in turn, licked her wolf pups
into shape with a mother’s tongue.
Not far from there
he had forged Rome as well and the Sabine women
brutally dragged from the crowded bowl . . .
And here in the heart
of the shield: the bronze ships, the Battle of Actium,
you could see it all, the world drawn up for war,
Leucata Headland seething, the breakers molten gold.
On one flank, Caesar Augustus leading Italy into battle,
the Senate and people too, the gods of hearth and home
and the great gods themselves. . . .
And opposing them comes Antony leading on
the riches of the Orient, troops of every stripe—
victory over the nations of the Dawn and blood-red shores
and in his retinue, Egypt, all the might of the East
and Bactra, the end of the earth, and trailing
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in his wake, that outrage, that Egyptian wife! (8.743-808)
The very shield that Aeneas carries into battle bears the stamp of Rome’s mastery of the
world. There is no mistaking that Aeneas will prevail as the victor over his rivals. The central
masterpiece of Vulcan’s laborious effort is the great battle of Actium, the final victory of
Rome over the Oriental barbarians (or so conceived in the mind of the Romans) and the
Romanization of the world. The Battle of Actium, on the shield Aeneas carries with him into
battle, is presented as the culminating triumph of Rome, of civilization, of duty and labor
against the spirit of pathos and eros that enslaved the Orient (including the Greeks) and
needed slaying by its contrasting spirit of laborem and pietas (embodied by Aeneas and the
Romans).
That Aeneas marches off to war with a shield telling the story of Rome ensures that the
shield also reminds Roman readers of the hardship of civilization and the labor involved in
producing Romanitas. The story of Rome, which Virgil’s readers and listeners would have
known well, thus began with Aeneas and the story which Virgil was now telling. The
hardship of civilization is the very seed of Rome. Additionally, the unity between laborem
and pietas in the epic is bound up in the shield itself. The shield is a product of labor that
was forged through hard-work and is the instrument of Italy’s civilizing. Turnus, by contrast,
plunders and steals; after killing Pallas, Turnus takes his battle belt as a trophy. Aeneas’
duty, his laboring duty, is to bring civilization to Italy (and the world) through the sword and
shield.
The shield, then, bearing in it the labor of Vulcan and telling the story of Rome’s triumph
over the world, entirely foreshadows and prefigures the subsequent thousand years of
history up to the time of Virgil and Augustus Caesar. Aeneas’ battle against Turnus, the
Latins, and the barbarians who aid him, is nothing less than a mytho-poetic recapitulation of
the memories of Rome’s historical battles against the Latins to unify Italy, her conflicts with
the Greeks, and the final destruction “of the Orient” and its “troops of every stripe,” which
marked the triumph of civilization and the will of the gods. The triumph of Augustus Caesar
at the Battle of Actium and the restoration of order to a disordered world is, therefore, the
continuation of what Aeneas had begun in bringing order to the disordered world of Italy.
The war with Turnus and his allies calls to mind the very culminating battle for civilization
itself: The Battle of Actium with the forces of labor, duty, and order arrayed against the
forces of pathological eros and disorder. The “troops of every stripe” that constituted
Antony’s army are the same diverse multitude of troops who fight with Turnus. “Men in their
prime from Argos, ranks of Auruncans, Rutulians, Sicanian veterans on in years, Sacranians
in columns, Labicians bearing their painted shields . . . topping off the armies rides Camilla,
sprung from the Volscian people” (7.922-934). As Virgil described the brilliant and shining
gathering of the armies, and especially Turnus, “his build magnificent,” the Roman audience
would have been instantly reminded of that grand glittering of bronze ships and armies that
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is the central image on Aeneas’ shield of war, which also marked the end of Hellenism and
the beginning of Romanitas just as the death of Turnus symbolized the same throwing off of
the Greek specter over Rome and the world.
While Homer was providing a new poetic metaphysic in his epic, Virgil’s project was just as
ambitious if not grander in reaching into the wellspring of memory and Roman selfconsciousness to fill his epic with allusions and direct references to the very images and
stories which moved the Roman heart and soul; indeed, the soul of the West, precisely
because of Aeneas’ triumph over Turnus and his “troops of every stripe” was the victory of
Western civilization over its competitors. Virgil was interested in telling the story of Rome by
going back into its past and relating how the seed of the past will blossom into the flower of
the future. Instead of drawing on mythological consciousness and imagery, as Homer did,
Virgil tapped from the living memory of history and the personages that had moved history
forward to its bloody climax at Actium.
Just as part of the Roman understanding of themselves was bringing order to a disorderly
world, or at least that is how Augustus Caesar understood his place and role in history, the
story of Aeneas is very much of a princely warrior bringing order to a disordered world as
hitherto mentioned—an image that Virgil’s readers would have all too readily equated with
Augustus Caesar, whom is prophesied about during Aeneas’ descent into the underworld.
When Aeneas and the wayfaring Trojans make landfall in Italy we get a foreshadowing of
this long and arduous struggle for civilization: “That sight was bruited about as a sign of
wonder, terror: for Lavinia, prophets sang of a brilliant fame to come, for the people they
foretold a long, grueling war.” War is how order is brought about in the Roman psyche. And
war certainly dominated the recent memory of the Roman people. There was rarely a
decade without war, especially in the century leading up to the coronation of Augustus
Caesar. Thus, it isn’t surprising the climax and culminating chapters of the Aeneid deal with
war.
The war that Aeneas wages is necessary to bring us up to the present day (Virgil’s present
day) with Augustus Caesar as the new Aeneas. All history, Virgil informs us, had been
moving to the glorious victory of Augustus at Actium and the extension of those “high walls
of Rome” over Europe and Asia. As Virgil says, “How Fate compelled the worlds of Europe
and Asia to clash in war! All people know the story, all at the earth’s edge, cut off where the
rolling Ocean pounds them back and all whom the ruthless Sun in the torrid zone, arching
amidst the four cool zones of the earth sunders far from us” (7.255-261).
That clashing of Europe and Asia, so recent in the memory of Romans as men like Crassus,
Pompey, and Julius Caesar all ventured into the Orient, is thus placed back as the very
founding movement of Roman history. The clashing of Europe and Asia in the Aeneid evokes
the exotic adventures and “grueling war[s]” against Parthia, Egypt, and the Jews which had
recently transpired. Again, in reading or listening to these words the Roman reader would
have instantly known what Virgil was describing and deliberately evoking.
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Virgil’s ability to draw from such a diverse and extensive wellspring of memory and
consciousness testifies to his genius and the importance of story, memory, and
consciousness to the Roman people. Every sentence of Virgil’s grand epic touches the
memory of his readers. It awakens and enlightens the mind and moves the soul to pity,
compassion, and anger all the same.
This reaching into the wellspring of consciousness, of memory, of history, is the leitmotif that
Virgil employs to push his story forward. As he needs, he taps into the living memory of the
Roman mind to produce the grandest of imagery drawn from the reality of Roman history.
In fact, from Dido to Turnus—the Punic Wars to the Greek Wars—we see the progression of
the epic as contingently tied to the memory of Rome’s chronological history, culminating, of
course, with the Battle of Actium and the triumph of order and civilization. And that is
precisely how the epic ends, with a grand battle and the triumph of order and civilization in
a strange and disordered land. The closing of the Aeneid is the image of the Battle of Actium
and the defeat of Antony and Cleopatra.
In an age when other histories of Rome were being written, Virgil had the audacity to tap
into the living wellspring of the Roman psyche and tell a tale that T.S. Eliot rightly called “our
classic.” Virgil’s epic will remain the quintessential Western epic, so long as there is a West
whose patrimony runs through the same history and personages that moved the Aeneid
from start to finish. Virgil draws on the consciousness of memory and history to fill his story
with the particular consciousness of a particular people and their particular patrimony. Yet
it wasn’t until the 20th century that the memorialized historical consciousness which Virgil
drew on was the memorialized historical consciousness that the West taught and
romanticized in art, music, and poetry. The memorialized historical consciousness that Virgil
drew from was the same that Pascal drew from when he wrote in his Pensées, “How fine it is
to see, with the eyes of faith, Darius and Cyrus, Alexander, the Romans, Pompey
and Herod working, without knowing it, for the glory of the Gospel!”
To construct the past, the mystic seed of Rome’s origin, Virgil dipped into the living
consciousness of the present. In doing so he united past and present together. Indeed, he
offered a comforting future from this union of past and present in challenging and changing
times. The liveliness of the Aeneid, its blushing and passionate characters and their actions,
were drawn from the realities of history and Rome’s lived experience.
The Aeneid was only possible because the Roman people had the memory and
consciousness to make it possible. Virgil’s well of memory was living when he wrote his
masterpiece. It is up to us to ensure that its living well of memory doesn’t dry up. Without it,
the Aeneid will pass into the dustbin of history like the corpses of Priam and Pompey.
Author’s Note: All citations of the Aeneid are from the translation by Robert Fagles.
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Editor’s Note: The featured image is “Venus Receiving the Arms of Aeneas from Vulcan” (c. 1630)
by Anthony van Dyck (1599-1641), courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
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