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Comparing Dido And Aeneas

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Don’t you just hate it when your mom makes the queen of Carthage fall in love with you? Yeah, so did Aeneas. Just kidding. He didn’t actually hate it. Aeneas just has better things to do, like discover the great city of Rome. Aeneas’ decision to leave his love, Dido, is completely justified due to his great sense of pietas and their uncertain relationship status.
As a direct offspring of Venus, one of the more powerful gods, Aeneas is a man who values the gods’ powers deeply. His sense of pietas is intense throughout the epic, especially in book four, when he has to leave Dido in order to fulfill his duty to the gods. Dido’s furor, or passion, is a great contrast to Aeneas’ sense of duty. When Dido and Aeneas publically come out as couple, both of their work falls to the wayside. However, when Jupiter discovers Aeneas isn’t fulfilling his destiny, he sends Mercury to reignite his pietas. …show more content…

After Dido discovers his upcoming departure, Virgil describes Aeneas’ behavior as “[he], loyal and true, yearns to comfort her, soothe her grief, and say the words that will turn aside her sorrow” (Virgil, Aeneid 4.455-457). This increases Aeneas’ strong sense of obligation to his duty, because it pains him to leave Dido in such negative emotions. This is a painful decision for Aeneas; he has to try to “suppress the love in his heart” (4.377). Virgil continues on and says “although great love has shaken his soul, he obeys the gods’ will and returns to the fleet” (4.458-459). This emphasis on how Aeneas must obey the gods further justifies his leaving of the city of Carthage and his

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