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Aeneas Hero

Submitted by darushan on November 28, 2006

Category: History Other
Words: 959 | Pages: 4
Views: 250
Popularity Rank: 37,910
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

Aeneas, the Devoted Hero
In Virgil’s Aenied, he illustrates the hero and central character, Aeneas, as a man who
presents piety and duty. This human emotion piety, pietas in Latin, is duty towards family,
country, and gods. Aeneas always fulfills his duty to his family, his fated city, and his gods.
This piousness is what keeps him going through the grueling journeys and challenges, even
when things are not going perfectly. Pietas is the characteristic that makes Aeneas stronger
through each trial as he makes personal sacrifices and never wavers from his duties to his
family, his country, and most of all to the gods.
The complete devotion to Aeneas? family is a commendable trait of piety. Aeneas? love for
his kin is exemplified in his fleeing of falling Troy. He was recalling his story to Dido about
how when he realizes that there was no use fighting any longer, and that he must leave Troy;
he hurries off to find his family. Once he reaches his family, he has his father, Anchises, on
his shoulder, Iulus, his son?s little hand in his own, and Creusa, his wife close behind as they
head off for the ships. When he reaches his destination at the funeral mound, he realizes that
his wife was missing. Aeneas ?turn[s] back alone into the city? nothing for it but to run the
risks again ? comb of all Troy, and put [his] life in danger as before?(975-979 II). His
devotion to his wife was worth risking his life in order to bring her to safety. As he frantically
searches ?in endless quest from door to door?(1001 II) for Creusa, her ghost appeared to
him and told to him that she cannot go with him because she was longer living, but to go
back to the family and that a special mission is ahead of him. Personal loss is a tragedy that
Aeneas must face as he ventures on to reach is fate. His pious personality is the characteristic
...

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