ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
The Aeneid 8309 Views
Share It!
Description:
Pious Aeneas goes from minor character in the Trojan War to founder of Rome, the city that conquered the world, meetin' ladies and experiencing major duty-induced guilt trips along the way. We wonder what Virgil could have done for Robin, Batman's perpetual sidekick...
Transcript
- 00:01
The Aeneid <<uh-nee-id>>, a la Shmoop. Without TV, the Internet, printed books, or
- 00:07
handheld video games, there was a whole lot of verbal storytelling going on in ancient
- 00:14
Rome.
- 00:14
[1]You could even say these recitations were epic…
- 00:16
…especially when talking about Virgil’s Aeneid.
Full Transcript
- 00:16
Here’s the opening line of the Aeneid:
- 00:18
I sing of arms and of a man.
- 00:22
So which is it? What exactly is the Aeneid about? Arms, or a man?
- 00:25
First, let's make one thing clear. We're not talking about arms… we're talking about
- 00:29
arms.
- 00:29
Like… more weapons than we can count.
- 00:32
So you could definitely argue that the Aeneid is about arms.
- 00:39
After all, this is a bloody story of war. In that way, it takes after Homer's Iliad.
- 00:50
For comparison, the opening line of Homer's Iliad is:
- 00:53
Sing, goddess, the anger of Peleus' <<peel-ee-us>>[2] son Achilles.
- 00:56
The anger in this case being, you guessed it… war.
- 00:59
Blood. Guts. Dismemberment. All the juiciest details of conflict.
- 01:01
But Virgil wasn’t inspired by the Iliad alone.
- 01:04
Ever heard of the Odyssey?
- 01:07
Just as the Odyssey was about Odysseus… The Aeneid is about Aeneas <<uh-NEE-iss>>.
- 01:14
A man.
- 01:14
In case you’ve misplaced your copy of the Odyssey, we’ll remind you of its first line,
- 01:22
too:
- 01:23
Tell me, Muse, of the man of many ways, who was driven.
- 01:26
That’s right… the man.
- 01:27
The Aeneid follows in these footsteps and tells the story of a dude on a quest who ends
- 01:35
up in some seriously sticky situations. But maybe the first line is deceiving. Is
- 01:41
it possible that the Aeneid is about neither arms nor a particular man?
- 01:47
It might just be about the whims of the gods and the founding of Rome.
- 01:55
And those gods are fickle. [3]
- 01:57
They’re just as likely to turn you into a sheep as they are to bless you with a bountiful
- 02:02
harvest.
- 02:03
You don’t ever want to be on their bad side.
- 02:09
Is the Aeneid about arms?
- 02:11
Is it about a man?
- 02:12
Is it just an origin story about the chosen city of the gods?[4]
- 02:18
Or is it all of the above? Shmoop amongst yourselves.
- 02:24
[1]This is utterly and completely not true. The epic was not sung. It was recited.
- 02:27
The only reason that the epic starts with "I sing" is because he was copying Homer.
- 02:32
There was really no singing in Rome. [2]This is wrong. It's PEEL-ee-us
- 02:35
[3]I mean…it really is about all of them…so, the question posed at the end doesn't really
- 02:38
have a lot of substance. [4]This is really only part of the story.
- 02:42
Because Aeneas is the son of a goddess, and Augustus, the first emperor, is supposedly
- 02:47
descended from the goddess and is therefore divine. So, although you could say that the
- 02:52
gods are fickle, the gods are actually pretty authoritative. And the whole point is that
- 03:00
the founding of Rome was divinely determined—it was fate—and so the city is basically the
- 03:08
chosen city of the gods.
Up Next
We may all be fools when it comes to love, but thankfully none of us will accidentally switch places with our twin brother and fall in love with ou...
Related Videos
They say that honesty is the best policy, but Jack lies about his identity and still gets the girl. Does that mean we should all lie to get what we...
Ever wish you could remember everything that you ever studied? How about everything that everyone has ever studied? Yeah, pretty sure our brains ju...
This video defines utopias and dystopias, and investigates how a utopia might become a dystopia. Can a seemingly perfect world actually be a dystop...
Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man is an American classic. Hope you're not expecting any exciting shower scenes though. It's not that kind of book.