Blog 4.3:
Two pleads.
Aeneas's tale of his travels takes up Books II and III
of the Aeneid. Aeneas begins by sighing deeply and telling Dido and
her court that his is a long and tragic story, but that he is willing to try to
recall it for his host. He starts by describing the fall of Troy. The
Greeks, aided by the goddess Minerva, construct a huge wooden horse, within which they
hide a great many armed soldiers. The rest of the Greeks flee the land. The
Trojans rejoice, thinking that they have driven off their opponents.
In Troy, Hector
instructs his mother, Hekuba, about the rites to be held in Athena's temple,
and then he goes to find Paris, who has been absent from the battlefield. He
discovers his brother at home with Helen and her handmaidens, and he sternly
rebukes him for his irresponsibility. Paris admits that he has been disgracing
himself, and he prepares himself to join the fight. Hector, meanwhile, goes to
visit his own wife and baby son.
He finds Andromache and the baby Astyanax on the walls
overlooking the battlefield. Andromache
pleads with Hector not to endanger him any longer. Achilles has killed her
father and all her brothers, and now Hector is her whole family; she begs him
to have pity on her and their infant child.
In the other hand, Anchises does not want to live to see the fall of Troy
and asks to be left behind. Aeneas declares that he will never leave his father
to die, and he steels himself for battle, but Creusa begs him to protect the house if he has any hope left for their
survival.
Walang komento:
Mag-post ng isang Komento