The Gods in The 'Aeneid'
The Gods in The 'Aeneid'
The Gods in The 'Aeneid'
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ROBERT
COLEMAN
Now the status conferred by the presence of gods, if not the actual
dramatic impact of the narrative, is obviously heightened if the reader
holds or can be persuaded temporarily to adopt4 some kind of belief
in their existence. Where the narrative is linked causally to actual
historical events that status may even be dependent on such belief.'
The claim that Mars was a founding father of the Roman race becomes
trivial if we cannot assent to any reality, even an abstract symbolic
one, behind the name Mars. That Vergil's educated contemporaries,
if they were disposed to religious belief at all, did interpret the gods
whom they publicly worshipped in a symbolic way can be inferred
from the demythologizing account of the traditional pantheon delivered
by the Stoic Balbus in Cicero's de Natura Deorum 2.63-9.6 There
the gods are represented as personified instances of the beneficent
divine order in Nature.' We cannot of course transpose Balbus's precise
equations into the Aeneid, but symbolic modes of interpretation were
open to poets as well as to philosophers.8
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At the surface level, however, poets continued to present the traditional mythology of anthropomorphic gods. 'induti specie humana
fabulas poetis suppeditauerunt', says Balbus (63) of his Jupiter-group.
But if these myths remained the most effective poetic way of portraying
a divine presence in human affairs, the use of anything more than a
fragmentary personification inevitably detracted from the remoteness
and sublimity of the gods.9 In fact poetry finds a close parallel in
popular piety, which in ancient as in modern times attributed favour,
hostility, anger to its gods; so it is not accidental that Balbus concludes the sentence just quoted 'hominum autem uitam superstitione
omni referserunt', implicitly distancing his theology from popular
religion. For as representatives of a universal beneficent order Balbus's
Jupiter, Juno etc. could never be hostile to mankind.10 Men may come
to harm through ignorance, neglect, or contempt of the divine plan
but there is no place for supplications or placatory offerings - indeed
for any of the multifarious rituals that abounded in Roman religion
and were the basis of the contractual pax deorum on which the prosperity of Rome depended.11 The reconciliation of polytheism with a
more rational theology, by the very act of demythologizing the anthropomorphic mythology, dissociated it at once from the conventional
piety and from the fabulae poetarum, for both of which a phrase like
saeuae Iunonis ob iram still had a valid meaning and a live reality.
It is therefore no mere coincidence that Vergil brings together in
the Aeneid the divine participation of earlier epic and the rites and
customs current in Augustan religious practice. Roman piety was prefigured in the heroic age by the piety of Latins and Arcadians12 and
above all of the exiled Trojans. Aeneas, custodian of Vesta and the
Penates of Troy, has a dual commission that is most un-Homeric: 'dum
conderet urbem/inferretque deos Latio'.13 The city is still not founded
at the end of the poem but at least the gods are brought into Latium.
As in earlier epic Vergil's gods intervene in two general ways: by
manipulating the external world and by influencing human reactions
and decisions internally. The reader may know that storms and plagues
are due to natural causes but will nevertheless accept and indeed
welcome the symbolic representation of them as the work of hostile
deities in the context of heroic events. Sudden storms and shipwrecks
were a familiar hazard of Mediterranean sea-travel. But Aeneas like
Odysseus was no ordinary seafarer; his fortunes have an importance
far beyond himself and his companions, and the storms that harass
him are no chance phenomena but the work of a deity. The same is
true of the miracles that occur in the story: fatal blows warded off,
a long-range spear guided unerringly to its target, a cloak of invisibility
that enables the hero to escape notice. What might be put down to
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who had fled to Latium from the conquering Olympians (8.320), are
both associated together at 7.180 and 8.357, where the Roman laniculum
is derived from lanus. The ceremony of opening and closing the gates
of the god's temple is already established in Latium (7.610) and at
12.198 Latinus addresses his prayer to him along with Apollo and
Diana.
The Italian gods show no hostility to the Trojan immigrants and
it is in fact the local river-god Tiberinus who appears in a dream
(8.30 ff.) to encourage Aeneas and announce the imminence of the
portent which had been foretold by the Trojan Helenus to his compatriots when they called at Buthrotum (3.388 ff.). This is, perhaps
significantly, one of the very few instances of an internal motivation
that is not attributed to an Olympian god.
The Trojans too have their own specific deities. Cybele the Phrygian
goddess is the recipient of Aeneas's prayer at 10.251-5, before he
renews battle with the Italians. In the previous book (9.77 ff.) she had
intervened to save the Trojan ships from arson, and a compliant Jupiter
had transformed them into sea-nymphs. Just before Aeneas's prayer
one of the nymphs, Cymodocea - the choice of name is emphatically
un-Latin - appears to him, bringing a prophecy and an omen
(10.225-249) which equally amaze and encourage him.
Far more important are Vesta and the Lares and Penates. For these
are the gods that Aeneas brought with him from Troy to Latium.17
Vesta first appears along with Fides in Jupiter's prophecy of the Roman
future (1.292) but her Trojan origin is explicit in 2.293-6, when she
and the Penates are entrusted to Aeneas by Hector's ghost.18 It is to
the canae penetralia Vestae and the Lar of Pergamum that Aeneas
sacrifices after the appearance of Anchises's ghost (5.744), to the canae
penetralia Vestae, magni Penates and the Lar of Assaracus that Ascanius
there was an ancient tradition about the origin of our race, to do with
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Dardanus ...' But in fact he does not. The change of plan is crucial
for the mission of the Trojans; but we are left to infer that, if they
had had nothing but their native wits to guide them, the Trojans would
have been incapable of extricating themselves from their plight and
the mission would have come to a premature and disastrous end. Not
only does the intervention of the Penates confer status on the event;
it also fills a gap in the aetiology of the heroes' decision-making.
One other detail is of interest here. For this is the only passage in
the poem in which these Trojan deities are assimilated to the other
gods and given an anthropomorphic embodiment; a detail not required
by the fact that they address words to the hero. Aeneas recognizes them
by their hair and faces (173-5).21
- to enlist
the aid of the Argive Diomedes, now settled at Argyripa, against these
same Trojans, who have followed him to Italy bringing with them their
uictos penatis. In 3.12 Aeneas sets forth disconsolate over the sea from
Troy 'cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis'. The central scene
on Aeneas's shield (8.679) shows Augustus sailing to victory at Actium
'cum patribus populoque penatibus et magnis dis'.22 The gods defeated
at Troy are to triumph in Italy before the poem is ended, and in the
distant future the inauguration of the pax Augusta will complete the
divinely ordained mission that began with Aeneas's journey into exile.
The gods whom we have considered thus far are all assigned specifically to either Italian or Trojan piety. Both groups were to be combined in the religion of the new city. Individually they may intervene
now and then in the narrative but none of them has a sustained role
in shaping events. In this respect they contrast with the Olympian
group, familiar from the Homeric tradition.
Of the Olympians Neptune appears only in Trojan contexts. The
Trojans are after all the seafarers of the story and Neptune's element
is the sea. Moreover, as the Latin equivalent23 of Poseidon he easily
assumes Poseidon's Homeric role of Trojan patron. Laocoon was his
priest at Troy (2.201) and, although his old anger at Laomedon's
treachery finally prompted him (2.610, 5.810-11) to overthrow the
walls he himself had built, he continues to be honoured by the Trojans
and favourable to their voyage. Thus he is one of the deities to whom
Anchises sacrifices on the receipt of Apollo's oracle at Delos (3.119)
and it is from his altar in Sicily (5.640) that the women draw the fire
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shooting Remulus (9.632-7) and is eager for the fight (661). But his
companions restrain him and he takes no further part in the battle.
Surely no divine initiative is needed to add to the protective concern
that they show for their absent leader's son. Yet Apollo appears to
Ascanius, disguised as Butes, only to be recognized by the Trojans
as he departs (659-60). This warning intervention adds nothing to the
motivation of events; what it does is to confer status on Ascanius's
first martial exploit. Furthermore Vergil chooses this moment for the
prophetic Olympian to reassert the glorious destiny of Ascanius's
descendants: 'macte noua uirtute, puer, sic itur ad astra, / dis genite
et geniture deos' (641-2).
It is by his prophetic guidance that the god helps the Trojans most
in their wanderings. The oracle at Delos is greeted by a sacrifice to
Apollo together with Neptune, Hiems, and the Zephyrs (3.119-20).
Dido mentions similar prophecies elsewhere (4.345-6) and Helenus,
having announced his own prophecy to the Trojans, concludes (3.395)
'fata uiam inuenient aderitque uocatus Apollo'. The only time that
Aeneas invokes the god's direct intervention is when he is about to
close with Mezentius (10.875), and to this we shall return.
In his representation of Diana Vergil draws on the whole complex
of Greek and Italian associations that she had acquired in the Latin
religious tradition. Thus in the famous simile at 1.498 ff. she is the
majestic Artemis; at the start of Dido's magic rite she is invoked as
the threefold Hecate, tria uirginis ora Dianae (4.511); the Trojan Nisus
prays to the nemorum Latonia custos in the form of Luna (9.403-5).
In the Italian half of the poem the specifically Latin title Triuia recurs:
it is to Triuiae lucos that Aeneas is led by the Sibyl (6.13), the temple
of Diana at Aricia is dedicated expressly to Trivia (7.764, 778),25 and
the Latin priest Haemonides serves Phoebus and Trivia (10.537).
Diana's only intervention is very Homeric in design and detail but
is given a thoroughly Italian context. Unable to save her Volscian
favourite Camilla fromfata acerba (11.587), she promises to spirit away
her body for burial in her native land (594) and to punish her killer
Arruns.26 In typical Olympian fashion she works through an agent,
the nymph Opis, who on the completion of the undertaking (867) 'ad
aetherium pennis aufertur Olympum'.
The Olympians who influence the course of events most of all are
Juno, Venus, and Jupiter, who are, appropriately, most fully characterized.
Juno's hatred of Trojans, conceived long ago (1.27-8), is aggravated
in the poem by the injury done by Trojans to her favourite city Carthage
(1.15-16).27 Mindful of this hostility, Aeneas is meticulous in observing
the advice to honour her that is given by Helenus at Buthrotum (3.437-
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151
While the funeral games for Anchises are taking place, the Trojan
women are absent, alone on the shore mourning the lost patriarch and
depressed at the thought of their never-ending sea-travel (5.604 ff.).
Juno seizes the opportunity to send Iris to them disguised as one of
them, and she inspires them to set fire to the ships. Nothing in their
character or even in their present dispirited mood has indicated the
possibility of such aggressive frenzy. Their behaviour is inexplicable
in terms of ordinary human motivation and some extraordinary cause
must be sought. A supernatural force has momentarily possessed them
and that force can be none other than the deity constantly opposing
Aeneas.28
In Book 7 Allecto's career of havoc begins with a vain attack on King
Latinus (341 ff.). She is more successful with his consort Amata
(373 ff.), who with her attendants is possessed by a seemingly Bacchant
madness, simulato numine Bacchi (385). The queen was of course more
promising material; for she had favoured Turnus as a prospective sonin-law (56-7), even though she must like Latinus have known the oracle
(104-6).
Turnus himself might have seemed an easy target too. For like the
African chieftain larbas (4.196 ff.), he has good cause for anger when
an eligible bride has been snatched from him by an alien intruder.29
However, when Allecto comes to him disguised as the old priestess
Calybe, he dismisses her with a very Homeric - and very Roman retort: 'bella uiri pacemque gerent quis bella gerenda' (7.444). Finally,
assuming her own form, the Fury hurls her torch at him and he goes
berserk: 'arma amens fremit, arma toro tectisque requirit; / saeuit amor
ferri et scelerati insania belli, / ira super'. The war-hysteria is now
under way in earnest.
Would Turnus have reacted so violently without Allecto's goading?
We see too little of him before this to form much idea of his character30
but there is no hint that he would be given to outbreaks of furor
naturally, as Mezentius - and Aeneas - clearly are. In the speech rallying his terrified comrades after the metamorphosis of Aeneas's ships
even the defiant nil mefatalia terrent (9.133), if it is not simply rhetoric
for the occasion, can be read as the utterance of a man still not in
possession of himself. For it was Juno who through Iris31 inspired
him to attack the Trojan camp in Aeneas's absence. The idea was
reasonable enough strategically and Vergil could easily have motivated
it in purely human terms. Instead he assigns it to divine intervention,
implying that the goddess was constrained to keep up the pressure on
Turnus, who, if left to himself, might have reverted to a more circumspect attitude.
After the Council of the Gods in Book 10 Juno is as much preoccupied
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deserted (559 ff.). But the sight of Helen seeking sanctuary in Vesta's
temple distracts him to wild thoughts of vengeance.3s His mother
appears, to reproach him: 'quis indomitas tantus dolor excitat iras?/
quid furis?' (594-5), and to recall him to his proper concern for his
family, repeating Hector's exhortation (289-95) to flee. The implication
is clearly that, left to himself, he would have abandoned himself to
furor, as he does immediately after the death of Pallas in Book 10, when
he slaughters the suppliant Magus (521 ff.) and Haemonides, the priest
of Phoebus and Trivia, dressed in full ceremonial robes (537 ff.), and
exults over the death of young Lausus (786 ff.), and above all in the
final horrifying dismissal of Turnus's supplication at the end of the
poem. No divine guidance is at hand to save him from himself on these
occasions. But at Troy the divine intervention checks the furor that
lies close to the surface of his character.
Reverting to Carthage, we come next (1.657-756) to the ruse that
is Venus's response and the structural counterpart to Juno's initiative
in causing the storm. Jupiter has already despatched Mercury to
Carthage (297 ff.) to ensure a friendly reception for the Trojans, which
they could not otherwise have expected in a town dedicated to Juno.
But Venus, still suspicious of Tyrian treachery (661), decides to exploit
her departmental power by inspiring Dido to fall in love with Aeneas,
whom she has already (588-93) invested with a god-like beauty.
Now it is possible that, left alone, Dido would have fallen for Aeneas.
In her welcoming speech she remarked on the similarity of their
fortunes (628-9), and Anna at 4.39-44, by now preaching to the converted, advances good rational arguments in favour of Aeneas as a
consort. But in fact there is not the slightest hint in Dido's opening
speech or at any time before Venus's ruse that she is likely to fall in
love with him. The ruse itself, when demythologized, has obvious
psychological overtones. Cupid is sent to impersonate Ascanius. It is
while Dido caresses the child (717-21) that the goddess's poison does
its work and Aeneas's half-brother, disguised as his son, gradually overcomes her devotion to the memory of Sychaeus, the betrayal of which
she later (4.552) comes to blame upon herself. Now the real Ascanius,
image of his father (4.84-5), might well have had a powerful effect
upon the childless Dido,36 awakening her frustrated maternal instincts.
The details of Vergil's text thus show that he could have motivated
Dido in purely human terms. But while the attractions of the handsome
foreign prince, the fellow-feeling for a refugee, the advantages of a male
consort and the hope of children might explain why a queen could
fall in love, they cannot account for the utter disintegration in her
character that results from that love. The regal authority she had
exercised when Aeneas first saw her is now gone. The description of
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him in dreams (351-3) would have moved him to forsake his new-found
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157
Moreover the scenes depicted upon the great shield represent the
burden of destiny Aeneas must bear, famamque et fata nepotum culminating in the pax Augusta. Its importance both for the plot of the
poem and for its ideology demands a divine initiative.
Her later interventions are all external and conform to the more
Iliadic texture of the narrative in these books. Thus she protects Aeneas
from a shower of arrows (10.331-2), heals his wounded leg in the battle
(12.411 ff., though it still troubles in the final duel, 746-7) and releases
his spear from the wild olive where it has been fixed by Faunus in
response to Turnus's prayer (12.766-86), an instance of a superior deity
upstaging a lesser one that would have delighted Homer's audiences.
The frequency of these intrusions is proof of her mounting anxiety
over the ultimate success and indeed safety of her son (cf. 10.46-50).
On each occasion the incident can be demythologized very simply as
'a piece of unexpected and indeed inexplicable good luck'. But it is
given an explication, and one that confers status upon the hero and
his fortunes.
Finally Jupiter. Like Apollo and Juno he is worshipped universally.
He has shrines in North Africa (4.199) and is patron of Anxur in Italy
(7.799); the Arcadians believe in his presence on the Capitoline hill
(8.353) and Evander prays to him (572-3). In Carthage Dido invokes
him as a god of hospitality when she welcomes the Trojans (1.731).
But he is also the father of the Dardanian race, as Ilioneus's speech
to King Latinus relevantly recalls (7.219-20). Indeed he is the chief
recipient of Trojan piety, for instance at 2.689, 3.116 (Anchises), 3.21,
5.687, 12.496 (Aeneas), 9.624 (Ascanius). Both the Trojan and Italian
associations point forward to the Roman cult of Iuppiter Capitolinus,
alluded to on Aeneas's shield (8.640).
But it is in close association with Fate that Jupiter's role in the poem
is most clearly shown. The Vergilian concept of Fate is notoriously
difficult to define. The Parcae, traditionally equated with the Motpat,
manufacture all that is fated to be ('extremaque Lauso / Parcae fila
legunt' in 10.814-5), and both Juno (1.22-3) and Venus (5.796-7)
acknowledge their superior power. Hence, although Jupiter administers the operations of Fate, the fates cannot be understood as
emanating from him. It is true that in 3.375-6 Helenus declares that
'sic fata deum rex / sortitur uoluitque uices', apparently assigning to
Jupiter powers that belong to the Parcae (sic uoluere Parcas in 1.22).
But here as everywhere else it is important to distinguish the voice
of the created character from the voice of the creating narrator.
Helenus's exordium has a deliberate mood of 'impressive mystery'40
and cannot therefore be taken as the poet's view of the relation between
Jupiter and Fate. Moreover a clear counter-example is put into the
158
mouth of the god himself in the course of his angry outburst in 10.8-9:
'abnueram bello Italiam concurrere Teucris. / quae contra uetitum discordia?'41 For the war must have been fated - the implication of
Jupiter's own words in 1.261-3 is clear enough - and yet it is equally
clearly contrary to the god's wishes. This situation is admittedly
unusual. In general Jupiter's expressed will is in accord with Fate's
decrees and he himself is as bound by those decrees as any of the divine
or human characters in the story.
A phrase like Dido'sfata louis poscunt (4.614) is not conclusive even
for her own view of Jupiter and Fate. For it could mean the Fates
'ordained by Jupiter' or merely 'kept in his possession'. But most
probably, if we recall Aeneas's mandata in 357, it means simply 'the
decrees or pronouncements of Jupiter'. This last sense of fata (in fact
its oldest) is found frequently in the poem with a dependent subjective
genitive;42 e.g. fatisque deumdefensusiniquis (2.257) of the traitor Sinon
and fatis Iunonis iniquae (8.292) of Hercules's labours. In louis imperio
fatisque (5.784) from Venus's request to Neptune fatis could be either
'Fate' or 'the decrees of Jupiter'.
Sometimes Jupiter is represented as the active collaborator with Fate
or even as its agent, e.g. 'fata obstant placidasque uiri deus obstruit
auris' (4.440; cf. 651). But then so also is Juno, for instance in 1.30-2,
where her anger 'Troas ... / arcebat longe Latio multosque per annos /
errabant acti fatis maria omnia circum'. The wanderings are fated but
the precise course they take is due to Juno. Conversely while she is
responsible for the Trojans' presence in Africa, it is fated (299) that
they be received hospitably at Carthage. A close parallel to the coupling
of fata and deus in 4.440 is offered by Helenus's words at 3.379-80:
'prohibent nam cetera Parcae/ scire Helenum farique uetat Saturnia
Iuno'.43
Prophets like Helenus are vouchsafed rather more knowledge of what
has been and is to be than the rest of us. The inability to discern the
patterns of Fate leads men to ascribe what happens to chance.44 Hence
fata andfortuna or casus are closely associated on a number of occasions.
The Trojans who are actifatis (1.32) are said by Venus to be tot casibus
actos (1.240). Nautes at 5.709 advises Aeneas 'quo fata trahunt retrahuntque sequamur." quidquid erit superanda omnis fortuna ferendo
est'. Evander links Fortuna omnipotenswith ineluctabilefatum (8.334)
and Juno concludes her plea to Juturna with the words 'qua uisa est
Fortuna pati Parcaeque sinebant / cedere res Latio, Turnum et tua
moenia texi. / nunc iuuenem imparibus uideo concurrere fatis / Parcarumque dies et uis inimica propinquat.' (12.147-50). Even to a deity
the ways of Fate may at times seem whimsical.46
Jupiter's reassurance to Venus in 1.257-8 that 'manent immota
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tuorum / fata tibi' raises the question: how rigid is Fate? Jupiter himself,
this time reassuring Juno of his impartiality in a short speech in which
fortuna and fata both occur twice within six lines, declares that 'sua
quoique exorsa laborem / fortunamque ferent' (10.111-12). This suggests that an individual's initiative can at least be a contributory to
the nexus naturalium causarum47 that constitutes his fate. Not that the
initiative is free where the individual's judgement is distorted by divine
possession, as with Dido and Turnus, or driven by divine threat and
exhortation, as with Aeneas. But sua exorsa does seem to introduce
an element into the narrative that is not wholly laid down in advance.
Moreover, though the broad outline of events is certainly laid down,
their detailed course and tempo are not.48 Thus Vulcan in 8.398-9
can inform Venus that 'nec pater omnipotens Troiam nec fata uetabant
/ stare decemque alios Priamum superesse per annos'. In fact the interventions of Venus and Juno both have the effect of complicating and
delaying the working out of Fate, but they cannot alter its course, as
Juno recognizes in 1.21-2 and 10.67. Most of Jupiter's interventions
are directed to resolving these complications and speeding these delays.
Sometimes however he intervenes merely to keep Fate on course.
Thus at 2.687 ff. Anchises prays for a sign from the god to validate
the portent of Iulus's halo. A meteor appears and the old man is at
last persuaded, as it seems nothing else could have persuaded him,
to flee with his son and grandson from burning Troy. At 7.107 ff. the
Trojans, newly landed in Italy, are inspired by the god (monebat) to
use their wafers as plates, so fulfilling Celaeno's prophecy (3.255-7).49
In 11.901 'saeua louis sic numina poscunt' reveals that the furor that
is now manifest in 'his inability to organize his campaign rationally'50
is not only the work of the saeuae Iunonis numina unwittingly acting
as the agent of Fate but is also approved by Jupiter, whose divine will
assents to Fate's decrees.
One intervention in the later books is worth looking at in detail, since
unlike most of the other internal motivations exhibited in the poem
it is causally redundant."s At 10.689 ff. Jupiter inspires the Etruscan
Mezentius to enter the battle. The epithet ardens that is used of him
along with alacer and acer (cf. 729, 897) suggests that he needed no
divine monita to urge him on. However Jupiter's attention confers
special status on his entry at this point and its sequel. In the preceding
two books Mezentius has been the most prominent warrior on the
Italian side after Turnus. The contrast between the two is great. Unlike
the pious Turnus Mezentius is contemptordiuom (7.648; cf. 8.7), and
his quick temper and brutal arrogance (8.481-2, 569-71, 10.742) are
due not to any divine possession but to natural disposition. This is
to be his last appearance on the battlefield; after beholding his son's
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corpse he too will die at the hand of Aeneas, unmourned by his own
people (10.904-5). It seems then that Jupiter in summoning him to
battle is despatching him to the executioner who will put an end to
his career of savagery. But all these are minor interventions by Jupiter
compared with his efforts to counteract Venus and Juno.
He sends Mercury to Carthage, first in Book 1 to forestall further
hostile action by Juno, and then again in Book 4 to set Fate on course
after the distractions and delays brought about by the unholy alliance
of the goddesses. At 5.685 ff., when Juno acting through Iris inspires
the women to attack the ships, he sends a rainstorm to quench the
flames in answer to Aeneas's prayer. The good fortune of a sudden
shower is thus converted into an example of pietas rewarded and the
rescue of the ships given an appropriately magnified status. Later in
the same book imperio louis (5.726) Anchises appears to Aeneas in a
dream to urge him on his way, leaving the older members of his party
with Acestes in Sicily. Nautes had already advised just such a course
(704 ff.), but there is no suggestion that without the divine intervention
Aeneas would have heeded his prophetic advice.
At 9.77 ff., after Juno instigates the attack on the Trojan camp,
Jupiter intervenes in response to Cybele's entreaty, to save the ships
once again. The metamorphosis is a sign to both sides that even in
their leader's absence the Trojans can still trust in their destiny, and
Turnus's misconstruction of the portent provides a context for characterizing his defiant qualities of leadership. In Book 10 Jupiter allows
Juno one last intervention on Turnus's behalf (96 ff.).
After the Iliadic weighing of the fates of Aeneas and Turnus Jupiter
extracts Juno's final submission (12.807 ff.). He sends one of the Dirae
in the form of an owl to confront Turnus and his sister. The eerie
apparition alarms Turnus (867-8) in a way that Aeneas completely fails
to do (894-5) and drives Juturna from the battlefield that she has
hitherto stubbornly refused to quit. Turnus is left alone to fight it out
with Aeneas. He had been driven to furor first by the Dira Allecto
sent by Juno; now it is a Dira sent by Jupiter that heralds the disastrous
outcome of that furor.
From all this we can now infer a particular significance in the
ambiguous uses of fata noted earlier (p. 158): the decrees of one deity,
intended to impede the progress of Fatum, turn out to be its unwitting
vehicle, the decrees of another, intended to hasten its progress, may turn
out temporarily to delay it. But above all stands Jupiter ready to intervene if Fatum is too far off course or schedule.52
Now the idea of Fate as a mechanism that needs to be continually
tinkered with is decidedly odd; it is rather as if the 18th century Deists'
clock, having been wound up by the Creator, not only struck its
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appointed hours at unpredictable intervals but needed constant adjustment by the divine clock-maker to ensure that it would strike at all.
But such a conception of Fate was unavoidable if there was to be any
place for actions by men or gods that was not just part of the mechanism itself. Logically it would have been far simpler to return to the
more loosely structured Homeric theodicy, with its more rudimentary ideas of tot-oa and A o's fovA4, or else like Lucan to have retained
162
163
164
found anything alien in larbas's prayer and its sequel. Nevertheless the
notion of a divine superintendent of Fate who is not wholly selfdirecting but needs on occasion to be activated by human information
and entreaty does detract from a serious view of the theodicy of the poem.
In short the gods of the Hellenized literary-religious tradition, immortals of superhuman powers but with all the frailties of character
that belong to their human creators, were not capable of bearing the
serious burden of causation that Vergil placed upon them. Better to
have swept away all the divine personalities and replaced them with
more abstract beings, which could represent the mysterious forces
operating in the physical and mental world for and against the success
of Aeneas's mission, and above these, ultimately setting the limits to
their interaction and directing the overall course of events, Fate itself,
conceived in something like its Stoic form. This would have been a
revolutionary step in a genre where anthropomorphic gods and modes
of divine intervention in human affairs were so firmly installed; but
it would also have been a reversion to something like the older Latin
concepts of deity (see n. 6 below). The revolutionary step was in fact
taken by Lucan, and it may not have been just his Stoic convictions
or the incongruity of importing divine machinery into recent historical
events that led him, while filling his poem with sacrifices, portents,
and the sense of super-natural forces constantly pressing on human
events, to omit the conventional divine machinery altogether.
NOTES
1. In the proem to the Iliad the only explicit reference to divine forces is z6i 8'
rEAELETro
there is no
hint whatever that the human events in Apollonius's narrative are closely and continually linked
to divine actions and initiatives and the first reference to a deity, to Athena's role in the building
of the Argo (18-19), is almost casual.
2. In the Latin tradition there was ample precedent in Naevius (BP 13, 16, 21 Marmorale)
and Ennius (A 22, 175, 291, 457 Vahlen). See J. Perret, Virgile (Paris, 1965), p. 132. That the
status-conferring role of the gods was essential even to epic poems on recent historical subjects
is clear from Cicero's practice of introducing into his autobiographical epic pieces a concilium
deorumand a long address by Urania to the poet (ad Q. fr. 3.1.24, Div. 2.17). Serious doctrine
thus lies behind the satiric context of Eumolpus's assertions in Petron. Sat. 118: 'non enim res
gestae uersibus comprehendendae sunt, quod longe melius historici faciunt, sed per ambages
deorumque ministeria et fabulosum sententiarum tormentum praecipitandus est liber spiritus
ut potius furentis animi uaticinatio appareat quam religiosae orationis sub testibus fides'.
3. On the divine ingredients in Livy's history see W. Liebeschuetz JRS 57 (1967), 45 ff.
4. As in our reaction to the ghost of Hamlet's father or to the statue of the Commendatore
in the final act of Don Giovanni. There is a clear contrast with the incidental use of divine activity
as a metaphor of physical events, e.g. Bibaculus's 'interea Oceani linquens Aurora cubile' and
'Iuppiter hibernas cana niue conspuit Alpes' (Macrob. Sat. 6.1.31, Quint. 8.6.17). Both the
dramatic effect and the status conferred by such images are independent of belief in the gods.
5. Otherwise the divine machinery merely ensures that the story is kept at a distance from
reality, within the region of fantasy. See K. F. Quinn Virgil's Aeneid: a critical description
(London, 1968), p. 305 for precisely this view of the gods here.
165
6. After a discussion of the heavenly bodies (54) and the deification of natural products Ceres, Liber (60), functional abstractions - Fides, Mens etc. (61), and human benefactors Hercules, Castor etc. (62). The Fides group has Greek parallels of course, but it was characteristic
of primitive Roman religion to proliferate such deities, defined precisely by their prouinciae (a
practice ridiculed in Aug. Civ. Dei 4.21) but otherwise quite vaguely conceived (cf. Varro ap.
Serv. in Georg. 3.1 on whether Pales was male or female). They were therefore unsuited to pictorial
or poetic elaboration, unless like Cupido or Fortuna they were personified in the Greek fashion.
7. Jupiter is the universal father who helps (iuuat) all his children; Juno also the 'helper',
the atmosphere between earth and heaven; Venus the procreative desire that comes (uenit) to
all creatures. The Penates dwell in the penetralia of the home, their name derived from the food
store (penus), etc. Etymologies were as important for the Stoics as for Plato and usually just
as fanciful.
8. Cf. Lucretius's explicit use of Bacchus and Ceres (2.655 ff.) and the introduction of Venus
into the proem, inspired by Empedocles's use of
for his creative principle ptAodr`T
'Appo8o&7r
(Simplic. Phys. 158.24), as the personification of the creative process by which concilia of atoms
are formed.
9. Protests to this effect were as old as Xenophanes (Sext. Math. 9.193), whose antianthropomorphism (Clem. Strom. 5.109.3) was, however, not total (Sext. ibid. 144, Simplic. Phys.
23.20).
10. Cicero elsewhere says explicitly 'at hoc quidem commune est omnium philosophorum ...
numquam nec irasci deum nec nocere' (Off. 3.102).
11. 'pietate ac religione atque hac sapientia quod deorum numine omnia regi gubernarique
perspeximus omnis gentis nationesque superauimus', Cicero boasted on a public occasion (Harusp.
Resp. 19); '... nostrae ciuitatis quae numquam profecto sine summa placatione deorum immortalium tanta esse potuisset', declares even the sceptical pontifex maximus Cotta in N.D. 3.5.
12. Especially topical for the Augustan reader were the ceremony of the temple gates of Janus
(7.601 ff.) and the ara maxima of Hercules (8.185 ff.).
13. No doubt a feature of Hellenistic KTUiTLepics; cf. Callim. Aet. 2.75-83 Pf on the religious
legends about the origin of Zancle. For Apollonius see J. U. Powell Coll. Alex. 4-8. But the
blend of secular and sacred was so fundamental to Roman political institutions that the combination of Homeric divine machinery and Roman cult must have been prominent already in
Naevius and Ennius.
14. Cic. N.D. 2.6; cf. Liv. 2.20.12.
15. The quasi-scientific rules governing divination, which enabled them to be assimilated to
more rationalized theologies like Stoicism, distinguished the two groups very sharply: portents
were interpreted by the highly systematized diuinatio artificiosa; dreams, which were significantly
grouped with furor uaticinantium and thus more closely related to the condition of ivovocaaaL6o,
were the subject of diuinatio naturalis (Cic. Div. 1.11, 34 etc., with A. S. Pease's commentary).
16. Lines 987-8; cf. Nisus's words to Euryalus (Aen. 9.184-5): 'dine hunc ardorem mentibus
addunt, /Euryale, an sua quoique deus fit dira cupido?', followed a couple of lines later by the
forthright 'mens agitat mihi'. This is not a clue to Vergil's concept of the gods' role in events but part
of his characterization of Nisus, to be set beside, for instance, the agnostic tone of 'Iuppiter aut
quicumque oculis haec aspicit aequis' (ibid. 209).
17. Equated in classical times with 'Eacra and the tLEydAOL
of Aegean religion (see nn. 21,
OEoL
22), they are more likely to be indigenous cognates than derivatives of these.
18. The incident illustrates the fragile boundary between internal and external phenomena.
Hector appears in a dream to Aeneas but the sacra that he passes to him belong to the external world
and are thereafter carried by the hero wherever he goes. By contrast the theophany of Venus,
'aetherios inter ... nimbos / dona ferens' (8.608 ff.), though private to Aeneas, is an external event,
the visit of a mother to her son. Hence the reality of the arms given to him poses less difficulty; but
the incident is correspondingly harder to demythologize than either the Hector-dream or even the
appearance of Venus to Aeneas at 1.314 ff.
19. Dido also has her Penates (1.704); so has Evander (8.123), and the early morning sacrifice
made jointly by Evander and Aeneas to the local Lar and Penates (8.543) underlines their
association with the intimate hospitality to strangers in the home. That their precise function was
uncertain is clear from Cicero's brief account of them (N.D. 2.68).
20. The difficulty of reconciling in somnis (151) with nec sopor (173) already troubled ancient
166
readers, as Servius's note shows. Perhaps it is an indication that Aeneas himself, who is telling the
story, was uncertain.
21. That their identification was debated in classical times is clear from Macrobius (Sat.
3.4.6-13), who cites (1) Nigidius's opinion that they were Trojan versions of Apollo and Neptune,
both of whom appear independently in the Aeneid; (2) Varro's opinion that they were originally
from Samothrace and that 'qui diligentius eruunt ueritatem Penates esse dixerunt per quos penitus
spiramus, per quos . .. rationem animi possidemus'.
(3) Hyginus's
'gods of our ancestors' or 'of our fatherland' (cf. patriosque Penatis at 2.717). In the aedes deum
penatium on the Velia, which was restored by Augustus (R.G. 19, 36), they were depicted as two
seated youths in military dress, according to Dionysius of Halicarnassus (A.R. 1.68), who like Varro
identifies them with the Samothracian FLEydAoL
OEoL,i.e. the Kafrlpot. Moreover, there is evidence in
coinage of the 1st century B.C. to suggest that this iconography owed something at least to the
Dioscuri; see R. B. Lloyd, AJPh 77 (1956), 38 ff.
22. The line-ending magnisdis is Ennian (A 201 V). It is not clear whether the magni di are here
distinct from the Penates (cf. magnos... penatis at 9.258). Macrobius (loc. cit. n. 21) cites the view of
Cassius Hemina that the di magni were the Samothracian OEol
/iEydAoL and then adds 'eosdemque
Romanorum penates proprie dici OEobstLEydAovs', citing Aen. 3.12, which he presumably
understood as 'and with the Penates, the great gods'. It has been conjectured that dis magnis was
actually inscribed upon the statue of the Penates in the Velia temple. See R. D. Williams Aeneidos
Liber Tertius (Oxford, 1962), pp. 54-5.
23. The indigenous Neptunus was defined solely by his prouincia (cf. n. 6), as was Portunus 'deus portuum portarumque praeses' (Varro ap. Schol Ver. Aen. 5.241; cf. Cic. N.D. 2.66) - who is
also assigned to a Trojan context (5.241).
24. Nautes owes his skill as a counsellor explicitly to Tritonia Pallas (5.704).
25. This Italian cult is, however, carefully linked to the Greek Artemis by the strange tale of
Hippolytus's resurrection.
26. Hence her brother Apollo's rejection of the second part of Arruns's vow at 794-8.
27. Cf. Poseidon's hostility to the Greeks during and after the Trojan War, aggravated by
Odysseus's treatment of Polyphemus (Od. 1.68 ff.).
28. The Olympian action at a distance in both instances is typical, and it is an oversimplification
to interpret the two agents Allecto and Iris as 'scarcely more than a personification of Juno's
suffering' (Michael C. J. Putnam, The Poetry of the Aeneid (Cambridge, Mass., 1965), p. 88).
29. J. Perret, op. cit. p. 131, plausibly suggests that in the traditional version of the story Turnus
was indeed motivated by plain jealousy, as the Latins were by resentment towards the alien
usurpers.
30. An Italian Achilles, also born of a goddess (6.89-90; cf. 9.742, 10.76), with a distinguished
human pedigree (7.56), including an Argive connection (371-2). Subsequently we learn of his
outstanding physical prowess (783 ff.) and his piety (9.23-4, 10.620; cf. 7.438-9). Every detail
combines towards a re-creation of the Homeric ideal hero, to set against the Vergilian Roman ideal
embodied in Aeneas.
31. The line describing the actual intervention, 'Irim de caelo misit Saturnia Iuno' (9.2) echoes
- again significantly - the descent of Iris to the Trojan women at 5.606, from a context where the
goddess's machinations were frustrated.
32. It would be interesting to apply the external/internal interpretation of divine interventions
used in the present study to these and other passages in Homer.
33. Who later provides explicitly the content of the simile describing Aeneas's first glimpse of
Dido (498 ff.).
34. There is a precedent in the Odyssey, where Telemachus's despondency is abruptly ended by
his encounter with the disguised Athena (1.113 ff.) and he assumes a confidence and maturity that
amaze even his own mother (360-1) as well as the suitors (381-2).
35. 567-88 contain enough unusual features of style and language to justify the suspicion that
they are, as they stand, not Vergilian but rather the work of an early interpolator (presumably prior
to Lucan 10.59), one of the many (Suet. Vita = Donatus Praef. Buc. 41) who were unable to resist
the challenge of the uersusimperfectosin the poem. However, the content of the passage is surely an
astonishing choice for an interpolator to have made, unless he had some evidence of Vergil's
intentions. The whole of this section of the poem still awaited its final revision at Vergil's death, as
167
witness the half-lines at 468, 614, and 623, and it may reasonably be conjectured that Vergil had left
enough lines and fragments (there are many phrases that certainly sound authentic scattered
through the suspect passage) to leave his intentions clear. The disconcerting picture they gave of the
hero would have made Varius grateful to have the excuse of their fragmentary character for
excluding them from his edition. The same considerations would explain why the passage as we
have it, cobbled together from the poet's disiecta membra, was not admitted into the authorized
version that is reflected in the manuscript tradition of the poem itself and in the abundant citations
of the Aeneid in the grammarians, but surfaced only in Servius's preface to his commentary and in
the Servius Auctus note on 566. For a detailed discussion of the passage and a very different
conclusion see G. P. Goold, HSCP 74 (1970), 130-68. R. G. Austin's view of the passage,
AeneidosLiber Secundus(Oxford, 1964), pp. 217 ff., is close to the one proposed here, though not all
Austin's interpretations of detail are acceptable; e.g. sceleratas (576) is indeed 'a piece of selfcondemnation', the judgement of Aeneas the narrator on Aeneas furens (595).
36. infelix in 712, as elsewhere, probably has both the senses 'barren' and 'ill-fated'. Dido had
borne Sychaeus no children. At 4.327-30 she refers poignantly to the fact that, though she and
Aeneas have lived together as husband and wife, she is not pregnant. This is significantly rare, if not
unique, in classical myth and legend, where it is normal for even a single act of sexual intercourse to
produce offspring.
37. Iulus-Ascanius thus plays a crucial part in both the beginning and the end of the affair.
38. B. Otis, Virgil: a Study in Civilized Poetry (Oxford, 1964), p. 226, sees Jupiter's
interference as an external parallel to the stirring of Aeneas's conscience; but this reduction of
Vergil's divinities to something like their Apollonian role ignores the subtle detail of the Vergilian
narrative.
39. Otis op. cit. p. 94 rightly sees amorandfuror as threateningpietas andfatum, but in imposing
this antithesis on Dido and Aeneas respectively he reduces them to Morality personae and
diminishes the essential tragedy of their relationship.
40. See R. D. Williams, op. cit. p. 134.
41. Prompted by the continuing strife between the goddesses, it is a far cry from the serenity he
showed (1.254 ff.) in comforting the despairing Venus. V. P6schl, Die Dichtkunst Virgils: Bild und
Symbol in der Aeneis (Innsbruck, 19773), pp. 16 ff., makes altogether too much of that serenitas. For
it is only one facet of Jupiter's character, as it is of the Roman ideal that P6schl seems to regard the
god as symbolizing allegorically. Not for nothing did Jupiter wield the least serene of punitive
weapons (1.230); on occasion he could exhibit as much saeuitia as Juno (cf. 1.4 with 11.901).
42. By contrast in tuorumfata (1.257-8) and fatis contraria nostris/fata Phrygum (7.293-4) the
genitives and nostris are all 'objective', viz. 'the fate that has been assigned to your people' etc.
43. The construction of the sentence is odd. Helenus can hardly be forbidden by Juno to
divulge what he has been barred from knowing. So we must either understand something like etiam
si sciret withfari ('Juno forbids him to speak, even if he did know') or take -que twice over, first as
coordinating prohibent and uetat and then scire and fari ('The Fates prevent Helenus and Juno
prohibits him from knowing and speaking the rest.')
44. Cf. the Stoic definition of r-u'X as ~58,iAo
ivq
(Stob. Ecl. 1.7.9). A good
dvOpwrr
a'la
Aoytaaw?
illustration is Palinurus's use offorte (6.349) in describing
his own
death, which, he does not know
but we do, has been contrived by a god.
45. The classic Stoic posture of resignation; cf. Sen. Ben. 2.18.8: 'ducunt uolentem fata,
nolentem trahunt'.
46. In fact Fortuna represents the impact of Fate, for prosperity or the reverse, upon those who
are affected by it but cannot comprehend the broader providential plan.
47. The phrase is from Tac. Ann. 6.22, where a view of Fate (probably Stoic) is cited that leaves
us with electionemuitae but, once our choice is made, commits us to certumimminentiumordinem.We
may choose our role in the drama but the part is already written and we cannot conjecture much of
its content in advance.
48. Cf. the doctrine that magna di curant,parua negligunt(Cic. N.D. 2.167), where di is virtually
synonymous with Fatum. Unlike the more austere concepts of Fate this doctrine did leave some
freedom of action to the individual, provided of course that he was left unmolested by divine forces.
49. It is not clear whether Aeneas's attribution of the prophecy to Anchises (7.122-3) is a mark
of the unfinished state of the poem or a subtle indication from the poet that the hero's memory of his
early wanderings is still dominated by his father.
168
50. The phrase again is from R. D. Williams; The Aeneid of Virgil Books 7-12 (London, 1972),
p. 432.
51. More typical is the god's motivation of another Etruscan captain to attack Camilla's forces:
'Tarchonem in proelia saeua/ suscitat et stimulis haud mollibus inicit iras' (11.727-8). For here
there is no suggestion that if left to himself he would have joined the battle at this moment.
52. The ambiguity is very potent, for instance, in Venus's irate question to Jupiter (10.34-5):
'cur nunc tua quisquam/ uertere iussa potest aut cur noua condere fata'?
53. Perret, op. cit. p. 130, follows Boissier in seeing ira lunonis as causing all the important
incidents in the poem, but this ignores the love affair at Carthage. P6schl, op. cit., regards Juno first
(p. 14) as the mythological personification of the historical power of Carthage. This could certainly
apply to Ennius's Juno (see A. 291 V, cited by Servius on 1.281). But it accords ill with Vergil's
account of Juno's reconciliation to Rome's illustrious future (12.827), which would leave the other
addressees of Dido's famous prayer (4.607-10) with the task of implementing its demands (622-9).
Nor does Jupiter's reference to the future wars with Carthage (10.11-15) necessarily imply Juno's
involvement. Later (p. 17) P6schl converts the goddess into a divine symbol of the demonic forces
of violence and destruction. But the violence she is responsible for comes from her opposition to
Fate and is far from being her monopoly in the poem. For Otis, op. cit., p. 309, Juno is the external
stimulus corresponding to and exciting the inner response; this seems once again to reduce the deity
to Apollonian redundancy.
54. Likewise Vergil's contemporaries the elegists continued to fill the gap in the aetiology of
love with the traditional gods of erotic literature: the lover who acts unpredictably and out of
character is afflicted with dementia, insania, the result of being vanquished and possessed by Venus
or Amor.
55. The view that the gods of the Aeneid were allegorical figures of psychological phenomena,
symbols that the reader decodes as he goes along, was first and most influentially elaborated by R.
Heinze, Virgils epische Technik (Stuttgart, 19143), pp. 291-318.
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS