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Sacrifice In The Aeneid

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The Aeneid by Virgil is a poem that explains the trip that Aeneas took in order to establish a new empire. Aeneas is a Trojan and was destined by the gods to go out and look for the land that would later become Rome. In order to found that land he had to give up many of his personal benefits. He also goes through a series of challenges through out the trip that were mainly caused by Juno, the queen of the gods. Through out his poem Virgil uses hyperboles and an emphasis on certain words to help give us an understanding about empire through achievement and cost. He does this to help us focus on how gods and the idea of fate and free will play a role in what Aeneas has to go through to found a city in Italy. Throughout this paper I will be focusing on the passage found in Book 4, lines 330-345. In the first body paragraph of this essay we will see how Aeneas has to sacrifice his love for Dido in order to continue his mission.
In The Aeneid, it seems as if the gods already have everything planned …show more content…

Juno always tries to go against the idea of fate because she cannot except the fact that Aeneas is destined to found Rome. She always tries to do something against Aeneas so that he cannot complete his mission. Virgil begins the poem by asking “…Why was Juno so enraged? What could wound the Queen of the Gods with all her power?” (47). We know that Juno holds a grudge towards the Trojans because a Trojan, Paris, picked Venus over her in a beauty contest. She uses this anger to make Aeneas’ task more difficult than what it already is. She also dislikes Aeneas because she knows that in the future Rome will fight three major wars that will destroy Carthage, her favorite city. In Book 1 we can observe how she goes to Aeolus, king of the winds, to begin a storm while Aeneas is passing by Sicily. Her goal is for Aeneas not to found the land he was sent to look

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