I share your admiration for the Dido and Aeneas story as treated both by
V and by Purcell, but I think we should be careful about the
Cleopatra/Dido analogy in V.  It's clearly there, but what
does it imply?  Much, much more than a dig at Antony.

Dido isn't perfect but the portrait of her (as later with Camilla,
another Beloved Enemy figure) is pretty positive.  She is beautiful
despite her cares and exertions, has a strong personality, is fair-minded
enough to see the Trojan side of the story (heretical as this is for one
educated in Junonian teachings), is generous to those in trouble and
loves Aeneas sincerely.  One of her political problems is that she cannot
take her own Tyrian people with her in her increasing favour to the
Trojan exiles.  She stands in the way of Trojan-Roman destiny, but
unwittingly and with no malevolent intention.

Damien Neilis (V's Aen. and the Argonautica, 2001) draws attention to the
V/Apollonius links, and Apollonius' Medea is surely one of the models for
V's Dido.   Within limits: Dido entirely lacks Medea's ruthlessness, at
least until she is driven to complete despair, and Medea would never have
committed suicide. This model would lead us to expect co-operation between
hero and heroine (who is culturally ambiguous, torn between East and West)
to the point where the interests of the heroine's people are disregarded.
Dido and Cleopatra are alike in not betraying or abandoning their own
country and people, unless one counts putting them on the losing side in
a war.

All this would show some understanding for the position taken by Antony
and then by Gallus, V's closest friend, in seeking some modus vivendi with
Egypt -  perhaps more generally with the peoples and cultures of the East.
Augustus chose to regard both A and G as traitors, but perhaps even he
took a version of their point that the Eastern world should not just be
confronted, but should to some degree be conciliated and find its ideas
taken seriously.  V may have contributed something here.

The overriding message of Aen.IV, presumably representing V's
long-standing convictions, is surely that the day on which the seeds of
genocidal war are sown is a very bad day for all concerned
and for their descendants.  However, Augustus' efforts at conciliation
were perhaps directed at the Jews rather than the Egyptians.  For the
traditional Eastern figure of a mysterious, fierce and seductive woman,
typified by Cleopatra, he subsituted the mysterious, fierce and
patriarchal figure of Herod the Great. It's hard to think that A never
discussed Egyptian and Jewish cultures with V, who had shown great
interest in both and who must surely have been drawn into the Gallus
problem, whether or not he agreed to remove Laudes Galli from the final
version of Geo. IV.

V's Dido does surely echo the historical Cleopatra, political and
personal partner of Antony, but the overall effect is not sheer scorn for
Antonian policy but some understanding of why it was plausible, even if
it was, as A and his circle believed it was, entirely mistaken.

- Martin Hughes


On Mon, 19 Jan 2004, Helen South wrote:

> Oh I LOVE the suggestion about the Dido and Aeneas story being a dig at
> Anthony over Cleopatra, that is just SO good. That just made my day.
> It just reminded me of the most amazing, transport-me-to-another-universe
> music that would be a perfect warmup for students who are even a tiny bit
> receptive to classical music - Purcell's Dido and Aeneas, the Kirsten
> Flagstaad - Elizabeth Schwartzkopf (excuse spelling) recording. Play them
> 'When I am Laid in Earth'. Guaranteed to melt the hardest heart. If you
> haven't heard it, go listen to it!
> this webpage has an audio file, I don't know if it works though as my
> computer wouldn't load it:
> http://www.alphamusik-shop.de/2059817.html
>
> best wishes
> Helen
>
> _________________________________________________________________
> Hot chart ringtones and polyphonics. Go to
> http://ninemsn.com.au/mobilemania/default.asp
>
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