Concerning Queens and their passions, the most famous is,
of course, Helen. Despite her great beauty, the valor of the Trojans to keep
her and the exploits of the Greeks attempting to secure her return -- she is
rarely thought an innocent. Imagine Patty Hearst inscribed upon an ancient
urn. In Homer, Helen thinks herself a whore and in Virgil, Aeneas itches to
put her to the blade.
Agamemnon's Queen commits her adultery in circumstance of
less extenuation. The horrors of which Clytmestrya and family sup are the
courses of a curse served nightly at the house of Atreus. King Atreus, at
the height of a royal pique, slew his brother's sons and fed them to his
sibling in a ghastly pie. Even the gods were appalled. The sons of Atreus,
Menelaus and Agamemnon, (and through them all of Greece), became
inextricably entwined within their father's crime.
In Greek drama, as in the work of Eugene O'Neill, its
American counterpart, payback is on the installment plan and threads itself
through many generations. Paris -- precipitating the Iliad and a decade of
war; kidnaps Menelaus' wife; she whose face will launch a thousand ships.
Agamemnon sacrifices his own daughter, Iphigenia so those same said sails
will catch a desperate wind, heretofore denied. Upon return from Troy his
wife's lover, Aegisthus -- surviving brother of those who like the 4 and
twenty blackbirds were put within a pie, slits Agamemnon from nape to neck
upon an altar stone. Orestes avenges his father by murdering his mother and
so on and on the telling blood will flow. Only in the court of David in a
pair of centuries yet to fall will history record as sordid an intrigue.
The last queen we will consider is the only unsullied of
the three. Queen Dido of Carthage doesn't figure in Homer but rather in
Homer's greatest enthusiast, Publius Vergilius Maro or more familiarly,
Vergil. The great legacy of Rome's thousand years was the gift of Greece,
whose culture it had assimilated. In architecture, art and literature, Rome
closely followed the lead of its superior teacher. In conquering Greece,
Rome allowed Greece the more lasting empire.
Virgil was so enamoured of Homer that he combined both
the Iliad and the Odyssey into the structure of his Aeneid. He does,
however, reverse the order of the stories and comports Aeneas with his
wanderings in the first six books of the poem and with his war stories in
the last six of the twelve that comprise the epic.
As in the Odyssey, the story begins "In Media Res"
and is told in flash back. After the sack of Troy, Aeneas and followers set
off to found a city that is destined for immortality. Vergil's prescience is
aided by being composed for the court of Augustus Ceasar who rules the Roman
world in the generation preceding the birth of Christ.
The Aeneid chronicles much more of the Trojan Horse
episode than we find in Homer. There is palpable horror in Virgil's
description of the fall of Troy and the murder of its king.
What was the fate of Priam, you may ask.
Seeing his city captive, seeing his won
Royal portals rent apart, his enemies
In the inner rooms, the old man uselessly
Put on his shoulders, shaking with old age,
Armor unused for years, belted a sword on,
And made for the massed enemy to die.
Now see Polites, one of Priam's sons, escaped
From Pyrrus' butchery and on the run
Through enemies and spears, down colonnades,
Through empty courtyards, wounded. Close behind
Comes Pyrrhus burning for the death-stroke: has him,
Catches him now, and lunges with the spear.
The boy has reached his parents, and before them
Goes down, pouring out his life with blood.
Now Priam, in the very midst of death,
Would neither hold his peace or spare his anger.
To the Altar Pyrrus dragged the old king slipping
In the pooled blood of his son,
He took him by the hair with his left hand.
The sword flashed in his right; up to the hilt
He thrust it in his body.
That was the end
Of Priam's age, the doom that took him off,
With Troy in flames before his eyes, his towers
Headlong fallen -- he that in other days
Had ruled in pride so many land and peoples,
The power of Asia;
On the distant shore
The vast trunk headless lies without a name.
Note that the Virgil's description of Priam also applies
to Troy. Recalling another of the mighty fallen to a hapless fate, note
Shakespeare's Harry on the death of Hotspur:
When that this body did contain a spirit
a kingdom for it was too small a bound,
now two paces of the vilest earth is room enough
Shakespeare borrowed many of the portents in Julius
Caesar and Macbeth from the classics we have been considering. The most
famous portent of them all is that which persuades the Trojans to their
doom.
It will be remembered that the priest Laocoon was wary of
Greeks bearing gifts, especially one as ominous as the abandoned
wooden horse. The priest had hurled a spear into the horse's flank in
disapproval. The following day during a sacrificial service to his gods he
learned that he and sons were to be the offering split upon the stone. Two
giant serpents swallow the priest and his star crossed sons.
Now came the sound of thrashed seawater foaming;
Now they were on dry land, and we could see
Their burning eyes, fiery and suffused with blood,
They slid until they reached Laocoon.
Each snake enveloped one of his two boys,
Twining about and feeding on the body.
Next they ensnared the priestly man, Laocoon.
Drenched in slime, his head-bands black with venom,
Sending to heaven his appalling cries
Like a slashed bull escaping from an altar,
The fumbled axe shrugged off. The pair of snakes
Now flowed away …
Persuaded by the portent, the populace drags the gift
inside the city and seals its fabled doom. Aeneas' mother, the goddess
Venus, pleads with her son to flee. In a surreal moment of invention, Virgil
has the goddess remove the "films" from his mortal eyes so he
might see the true warp and woof of the fated world.
Look: where you see high masonry thrown down,
Stone torn from stone, with the billowing smoke
and dust,
Neptune is shaking from their beds the walls
That his great trident pried up, undermining,
Toppling the whole city down.
And look:
Juno in all her savagery holds
The Scaean Gates, and raging in steel armor
Calls her allied army from the ships.
Up on the citadel -- turn, look -- Pallas Trionia
Couched in a stormcloud, lightening with her
Gorgon!
The Father himself empowers the Danaans,
Urging assaulting gods on the defenders.
Away, child; put an end to toiling so.
I shall be near, to see you safely home.
The founding of Rome is a deferred event. Aeneas will
visit some of the vaunted haunts of Homer's Odyssey before setting course
for Latium. The Cyclops is once again engaged and other phantasmagorias of
Homer's voyage reviewed.
Dido listens to these tales as intently as King Alcinous
had earlier entertained those told by Odysseus. The purpose of each was to
provide a narrative to bring the reader up to the current chronology of the
story. In Virgil it serves the additional purpose of inspiring Dido's love
for Aeneas.
For Berlioz the exigencies of Homer and Virgil are
spiritual. The demands of the flesh are tempered with a classical devotion
that deepens the concluding tragedy. Here now is Berlioz;' sublime Act 4
Septet. Aeneas, Dido and her court reflect on the beauty of the evening and
the stillness of the sea.
Gradually the court disperses leaving the Queen and
Virgil's hero alone in the moonlight to sing one of the three or four
loveliest love-duets of the 19th century. At the conclusion of
the duet the stern voice of Mercury is heard to intone the will of the gods:
Italie, Italie, Italie!
Hear now the classical restraints that the most romantic
of composers brings to Aeneas and the passion of a Queen.