How does Virgil succeed in writing a poem in praise of Augustus when the story is not about Augustus at all.

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Duncan Spalding

How does Virgil succeed in writing a poem in praise of Augustus when the story is not about Augustus at all.

        At the time when Virgil was writing the Aeneid, Rome was going through a time of great political and social change, where Augustus Caesar had seized power through the destruction of the Roman Republic, and had himself installed as dictator and sole ruler of Rome. Virgil evidently through his writing is in praise of Augustus, and this characteristic is notable throughout the poem. Aeneas and Augustus when it came to politics thought along broadly the same lines. No one could have loved the ancient traditions of Rome more than Virgil did, and the qualities by which Rome in the past had grown great with. Virgil was also quite a close friend of Augustus. The Aeneid is a reflection of the governmental policies of Augustus in moral, social and religious ideas, which Virgil seems to have been in agreement over, resulting in a poem, which seems to be overwhelmingly positive about the future of Rome under Augustus.

        In writing the Aeneid, Virgil was creating a different sort of heroic figure to those created by the literary writers of the past such as Homer. In his poem, Virgil was essentially trying to make a social hero, who possessed the characteristics of ‘pietas’ or piety, where his concerns were less to do with his own honour, and instead for his own people in a very selfless manner. In his poem, Virgil presents the destiny of the roman race from the destruction of Troy through until the Augustan period and beyond. Virgil had to create in his hero a prototype of the Roman character, a person who showed by his behaviour the kind of qualities to be the ideal Roman with qualities of leadership and piety, in order to be a sort of model for Augustus and his successors. Virgil may also have been trying to depict as character upon which Romans of his day could model themselves.

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        The Aeneid starts with a firm statement of how Aeneas was destined by fate, and we are then given a description stating that Aeneas was destined through fate to leave Troy and found a new city in Latium, which would be transferred to Alba Longa and then to Rome. This is the prophecy made by Jupiter in book 1 of the Aeneid. Virgil then takes the reader through a list of successive leaders and a timeline of events leading up until the rule of Augustus. Virgil then refers to Augustus and says

        ‘From this noble stock there will be ...

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