Fire, Furor and Internal War

1187 Words3 Pages

Psappo’s poetry was the model from which ancient cultures defined love. Her views on love have influenced many works of literature, including The Aeneid of Virgil. Love is an uncontrollable force that strikes an individual from the outside and can occur suddenly as well as unexpectedly. Love is often depicted as a positive emotion that causes people to feel blissful, but this can easily turn into furor; furor is the aspect of love associated with violence and insanity. Dido’s love for Aeneas exemplifies the internal turmoil that afflicts individuals when they are deprived of the love that they crave so ardently. Virgil accomplishes this through the incorporation of the symbol of fire and through the platonic metaphor of the war between reason and appetite in his work.

Virgil uses the dual nature of fire to depict the change in the disposition of Dido’s relationship with Aeneas. Fire is a common literary symbol for the erotic and passionate attribute of love yet; it can also be an extremely destructive force in nature. The text confirms that Dido is completely enamored with Aeneas when it says, “ The queen is caught between love’s pain and press. She feeds the wound withing her veins; she is eaten by a secret flame. Aeneas’ high name, all he has done, again, again come like a flood. His face, his words hold fast her breast.” (pg 79, lines 1-6). In this quote, fire is used to illustrate the intensity of her feelings for Aeneas. Her desire to have him is so fervent that her body and mind are being figuratively consumed by fire. Virgil describes Dido’s realization of her love for Aeneas when he writes, “Aneas is the only man to move my feelings, to overturn my shifting heart. I know too well the signs of the old flame.” (page 80, l...

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...Aeneas we can see that it also lures out the destructive forces that are rooted within the human soul. This then causes an individual’s upper and lower soul to engage in a platonic battle until the internal suffering experience by the individual is so great they can no longer cope. All of these traits caused Dido’s love to be transformed into furor. Her madness did not allow her to understand that Aeneas was not leaving of his own free will, and was only leaving to fulfill his preordained destiny. Her emotional instability did not allow her to successfully manage the internal war raging within her. It is because of her inability to handle these emotions that she turned against herself and violently ended her life when she realized that her lover was no longer go to be with her forever. Just as Dido’s love began in flames, so too did her love and life end.

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