Ovid’s Surprising Homage to
Virgil
by
Janice Siegel
illinois state university
In this short presentation, I hope to persuade my
audience that in fact Ovid used Aeneid
IV (Virgil’s tale of Dido and Aeneas) as his model for Met. 6.424-674 (the Procne).
As surprising as it appears, the tales share the same basic plot line:
in each, there is an attraction between a man and a woman, a
“marriage,” the man’s betrayal and the woman’s response, which
in both tales signals an all-important shift in power among the
participants. Not
surprisingly, though, Ovid uses a cracked mirror to reflect the original
– in his tale, there are two “marriages,” two betrayals, two
reactions. The distinction between the tales is all due to the
difference in the role divinity plays in each: in the Aeneid,
Dido suffers a divinely-wrought passion for Aeneas, their “marriage”
is divinely concocted, and Aeneas’ betrayal is done according to
divine fiat. In the face of such powerful adversity, disempowered Dido
can only lie down and die. In Ovid’s tale, there is no divinity:
neither Tereus’ lust nor Procne’s vengeance must endure the kind of
limitations suffered by Dido and Aeneas. But without divine guidance,
Procne loses her moral way (sed
fasque nefasque/confusura, 6.585-586) in her rush to justice (ruit poenaeque in imagine tota est, 6.586) and commits that terrible
atrocity bequeathed her by mythographic tradition, the murder and
cooking of her own son.
As an example of my method and conclusions, for this
short presentation, I have chosen to compare the poetic presentations of
Dido’s and Tereus’ manifestation of lust for their respective
objects of obsession. As I believe is true of every scene in Ovid’s Procne,
the initial connection with Aeneid
IV is always a verbal echo. But the similarities run much deeper – the
Virgilian influence extends beyond the formal characteristics of poetics
– such as vocabulary choice, syntax, metrics and rhetorical devices -
into key thematic and symbolic resonances and reflections. Starting with
this one example, I will demonstrate that Ovid artfully tweaks
Vergil’s presentation in order to offer a strictly anti-Virgilian
godless world whose inhabitants are doomed to suffer the reckless abuse
of unbridled power and perverted piety with no hope of salvation.
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