Title: The Aeneid in Pictures Starring... Virgil Reciting Aeneid
1The Aeneid in Pictures
2Starring...
3Virgil Reciting Aeneid
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7The Prologue to The Aeneid
8Livius Codex
9Model of Troy
10Venus and Anchises
11Aeneas Entrusted to Nymphs
12Helen and Paris
13Hector Reproaches Paris
14The Dragging of Hector
15The Rape of Cassandra
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17The Wanderings of Aeneas
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19BOOK 1
- Trojans Arrive at Carthage "A Fateful Haven" "I
sing of warfare and a man at war" (1) Juno angry
at Trojans (9-130) Trojans in waters off Sicily
(50) Juno appeals to Aeolus "Blow the Trojans
off course" (90) We meet Aeneas (131) In Latin
text line 70. Neptune (Poseidon) saves Aeneas
(193) Latin text line 127 Great Simile
rioting city/calming the waters (201) Aeneas
lands on coast of Africa (234) Latin text 154
Aeneas hunts deer (252) Venus (Aphrodite)
appeals to Jupiter (Zeus) protect my child
Aeneas (312) Latin text line 210. Jupiter
reassures V. your Aeneas' fate is sealed, no
change (347) Jupiter enumerates Aeneas Roman
fate (348-410) Aeneas explores the coast of
Africa (411) meets his mother Venus disguised
(425) Aeneas and companions go into Carthage
disguised (563) Aeneas sees the art of Carthage
with story of Troy (616) Dido welcomes Trojans
(762) Latin text line 539. Aeneas appears
before Dido (799) Venus sends Cupid/inflame Dido
with love (895) Latin 650 Dido asks Aeneas tell
your story (1027)
20First 11 Lines, Dactylic Hexameter Scanned
21Judgment of Paris
22The Trojan Paris
23THE TEMPEST
24THE TEMPEST
25Neptune Calms the TempestHey, you winds get
back where you belong!
26Aeneas arrives at Carthage
27These people work like bees!
28Venus Disguised as Huntress
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30Banquet with Dido
31Book II Aeneas Tells of Fall of Troy "How They
Took the City"
- Aeneas tells his story "Sorrow too deep to
tell..." (1) The Trojan Horse (21) Latin line
15 beware of Greeks bearing gifts Sinon's
treachery (96) death of Laocoön (275) Latin
line 200 Hector appears to Aeneas in dream
(360) Aeneas recounts fate of Priam (659) Latin
505 Aeneas meets Helen (741) Latin 565 Great
Simile fall of Troy and ash tree (816) Aeneas
and his father Anchises (826) Latin 630 Aeneas
and wife Creusa (880) Aeneas escapes Troy (960)
Trojan refugees gather together (1035)
32Venus sends Cupid to Dido
33Dido Meets Ascanius
34Banquet with Dido at her Palace
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36Aeneas Relates his Story to Dido
37Sinon is Captured by Trojans
38 Oh, the Lies, Sinon
39The Fate of Laocoon Sons
40Laocoon and Sons
41Meanwhile, The Greeks return from Tenedos
42Hector Appears to Aeneas in a Dream Save
Yourself!
43Close-up
44Death of Priam at the hand of Pyrrhus
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47Nunc Morere! (Now Die!)
48Because they didnt believe Laocoon!
49Creusa and her Family
50Aeneas gets the Household Gods from Creusa
51Creusa tries to Restrain Aeneas
52Troy on fire!
53Trojans Head to the Shrine of Ceres
54Aeneas Gets his Family
55Anchises holds the household gods
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58Anchises, if you hadnt bragged about Venus,
Aeneas wouldnt have to carry you!
59City in Flames
60You follow behind, Woman
61Creusa, if you keep on dancing, youre going to
get lost!
62Keep up Creusa!
63Aeneas carries Anchises Oh, Father, you are so
heavy!
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68Hey, where are you Creusa?Gee, she was right
behind me!
69Trojan Refugees at the Shore
70Book III Aeneas Continues His Story "Sea
Wanderings and Strange Meetings"
- Proud Ilium lay smoking in the earth (1) Trojans
build a fleet (8) Aeneas meets Polydorus (63)
Aeneas at Delos (100) Aeneas at Crete (183) At
Strophadës with the Harpies (291) Latin 210
Trojans at Actium (scene of Octavian's triumph
over Mark Antony) notice Virgil attaches story
to important Roman history Games of Ilium "The
men, all naked, slippery with oil" (378) Aeneas
with Andromache who has survived the war (420)
Latin 310 Aeneas bids farewell to Andromache
Helenus (654) Latin 486 Aeneas arrives in
Sicily (758) Meet Achaemenides, story of
Polyphemus (812) Death of Aeneas' father
Anchises (938) Latin 708 Trojans arrive on
Carthaginian shore (948)
71Polydorus at Thrace
72The Tomb of Polydorus
73Delos
74The Trojans sail from Delos
75The Myth of Europa and the Bull at Crete
76Penates to AeneasLeave Crete, Its not the
Destined Land!
77Aeneas Encounters the Harpies in the Strophades
Islands
78Aeneas finds Andromache and the Trojan Priest
Helenus at Chaonia
Andromache trying to protect Astyanax at Troy
79Death of Astyanax as he is Hurled Over the Wall
of Troy
80Prophet Helenus says Look for a Snow White Sow
with 30 Suckling Pigs.
81The Cyclopes at Sicily
82Aeneas and Followers Flee Cyclopes
83Book IVThe Romance of Aeneas and Dido "Passion
of the Queen"
- Queen Dido in Love "the manhood of the man, his
pride of birth, came home to her time and again,
his looks...." (4) Dido talks with sister Anna
Great Simile Dido like a doe (95) Latin 69
Dido mad with love, embraces his empty couch
(115) Latin 83 This is the most powerful
depiction of sexual passion in Western literature
to this date, a model for all Medieval evocations
of the subject, every Medieval poet who writes
about power of passion knows Book IV of Aeneid)
Dido neglects the governing of Carthage (121)
Juno and Venus confer (131) Dido takes Aeneas
on hunt (168) Latin 119 The storm (221) Latin
160 Dido and Aeneas in the cave (226) Latin
165 "torches of lightning blazed" (230)
"prisoners of lust" (265) Latin 194 (another
trans. "enthralled by shameless passion')
Mercury goes to Aeneas, remind him of his duty
(325) Aeneas stirred by words, decides to leave
(380) Dido confronts Aeneas "False one! (exact
Latin) (417-18) Latin 305 Aeneas "Married?
Who said anything about marriage?" (468) Think
of the incredible ever-contemporary quality of
this male-female exchange. First sex then discuss
marriage and the guy says "Who said anything
about marriage" and you begin to understand why
everyone considers Virgil one of "us" in a way
Homer is not. Aeneas leaves (795) Latin
573Dido dies for love (906) Latin 652
84Dido Makes Sacrifice to the gods
85Dido Shows Carthage to Aeneas
86Scenes from the Year spent with Dido
87Aeneas and Achates Building Carthage
88Aeneas and Dido in their Marriage Cave
89A False Marriage
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91Dido and Aeneas
92Dido Burns with Love for Aeneas
93Dido, Aeneas, Ascanius, Anna
94Mercury Calls on Aeneas
95Dido confronts Aeneas and Begs Him to Stay
96Aeneas sails from Carthage
97Dido Watching Aeneas Leave
98Dido Abandoned
99Dido Prepares for Suicide
100Dido Commits Suicide
101The Funeral Pyre
102The People of Carthage Lament the Death of Dido
103Book V The Funeral Games of Anchises "Games and
Conflagration"
- Book V is an interlude between hot Book IV
important Book VI Virgil uses funeral games
exactly as Homer had done Aeneas sees flames of
Carthage from his ship (5) Trojans put in to
Sicily King Alcestes greets them Trojans stage
funeral games on one year anniversary of death of
Anchises Trojans embark for Italy
104Farewell to Dido
105Aeneas has Left Carthage
106Funeral Games for Anchises at Drepanum, Sicily
107The Boxing Contest
108The Last Four Ships, Rebuilt after the Trojan
Women Burned the Rest.
109Aeneas and AcestesThe New City Will Be Acesta
110Aeneas and Men Sail Past Scylla and Charybdis
111Venus Makes a Deal with Neptune Neptune will
only Take one More Life... Hmmm, How about ...
Palinurus???
112Book VI Aeneas' Journey to the Underworld "The
World Below"
- Book VI is most important in the whole of the
Aeneid. It is the keystone of structure both
literary and philosophical. Book VI holds past
and future together in Aeneid. It depicts the
transformation of Aeneas from inconstant
earthbound boy to history-making man. The last
of the Trojans is reborn as the first of the
Romans. It is based on Book XI of Odyssey where
Odysseus journeys to underworld. It is also the
most influential book in any classical work of
literature. Its evocation of the underworld
determines all later renditions. Most important
it gives Dante the model for his Divine Comedy.
Trojans arrive in Italy (1) Aeneas goes to
Sanctuary of Apollo (15) Aeneas consults the
Sibyl (prophetress) Deiphobe Aeneas addresses
Apollo (92) Sibyl prophesy "wars ahead" (132)
Aeneas follows Sibyl's orders, goes to cavern
(331) Earth opens, Aeneas descends into
underworld (351) Aeneas and Charon (409) Latin
300 Charon rows Aeneas and Sibyl across Acheron
(520) Aeneas meets Dido (GREAT SCENE) (450)
Latin 606 ideas of punishment in underworld
(753) Latin 560 Aeneas comes to the Elysian
Fields (853) Latin 637 Aeneas meets his father
Anchises (918) Anchises explains the Virgilian
Metaphysic (73 ) Latin 724 The Prophecy of
Anchises Roman History (1014) Aeneas returns to
earth, joins men, re launches ships (1219)
113Passage to the Sibyls Cave
114Descent to the Underworld
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121Book VII The Trojans Settle in Latium "Juno
Served by a Fury"
- This Book begins the second half of the Aeneid.
Virgil signals this invoking the Muses again
line 47 as did in beginning.....so this another
beginning. First six books modeled on the
Odyssey second half on Iliad. Now that Trojans
arrive in Italy Virgil (an Italian who loves his
country-see Georgics/Eclogues) can now use all
his skill to describe the beautiful Italian
countryside. Latium where they arrive is of
course the area of Italy (now called Lazio) where
the Romans will build the beginnings of Rome,
thus King Latinus is early ancestor of the later
Romans. "Be with me, Muse of all Desire, Erato,
while I call up the kings, the early times,..."
(40) King Latinus (60) Trojans pause on
riverside, share meal (139) Aeneas remembers
father's prophecy (155) "Here is our home."
(160) Aeneas sends ambassadors to Latium (203)
Trojan Ilioneus speaks at Latin court (282)
Juno intervenes to provoke war (388) Juno's
agent (Allecto) inflames Queen Amata against
Trojans (467) - Juno's agent inflames Turnus against the Trojans
(580) Ascanius hunting kills tame stag of
Tyrrhus (Latinus' herdsman) (654) Provoke war
between Latins and Trojans The Gates of the
Temple of Janus (827) Juno blasts open the Gates
(for war) (851) Vigil enumerates Latin allies
gathering for war (880)
122Book VIII Alliance with Evander "Arcadian
Allies"
- Aeneas, worried about gathering clouds of war
Aeneas lays down and receives godly advice seek
out King Evander Evander King of Pallentum,
Greeks from Arcadia (70) Aeneas meets Evander
(138) Evander welcomes Aeneas (208) Venus
worried about Aeneas goes to Vulcan (Hephaestus)
Venus asks Vulcan make armor for Aeneas (491)
THE ARMOR OF AENEAS History of Italy (557)
Latin 425compare Armor of Aeneas to Shield of
Achilles, Iliad, Book XVIII compare scenes and
subjects presented.
123Book IX The Latins Attack the Trojans "A Night
Sortie, A Day Assault"
- While Aeneas away the Latins led by Turnus
attack the Trojans. Turnus dominates the book.
Turnus resembles the heroes of the Iliad. The
whole book is a book of battle resembling the
Iliad. Nisus-Euryalus resembles night patrol of
Odysseus and Diomedes in Book X of Iliad. Books
IX, X, XI are almost exclusively battle books and
since Virgil never experienced battle (as one can
assume Homer did) he fails to endow these three
books with all the excitement of some of the
other books. He includes them since he is openly
choosing the Homeric work as his model and
therefore must include battles, but one can see
that his pacifist heart isnt in them. They lack
the spark and originality of Book IV or Book VI.
( He obviously DID know something about love, sex
and death.)
124Book X The Battle Continues "The Death of
Princes"
- Book X opens with a Council of the Gods (1)
Jupiter (Zeus) orders other Gods to stay out of
the battle (141) The Trojans besieged Aeneas
arrives at mouth of Tiber, Trojans cheered (360)
Aeneas joins the fight Valiant fight of Pallas,
son of Evander the Arcadian Pallas killed by
Turnus (671) Aeneas battles and kills the old
Italian leader Mezentius (1097)
125Book XIThe Latins Debate War and Peace
"Debaters and a Warrior Girl"
- Body of Pallas taken in solemn procession to
palace of Evander The old king mourns death of
his son Aeneas meets with Latin ambassadors
(137) Aeneas proposes one to one combat himself
with Turnus Dissension in Laurentum among Latin
nobles Trojans advancing (622) exploits of
brave Camilla (726) death of Camilla (1110)
126Book XIIThe Duel Between Aeneas and Turnus
"The Fortunes of War"
- Turnus sees the Latins are losing announces war
will be decided between him and Aeneas the
victor will marry Lavinia and proclaim peace the
two men meet, Aeneas wins