17 full practice sets covering every prescribed passage of Aeneid Book X. Each set mirrors the exact structure of the VCAA written exam — 50 marks, with full model answers for Sections 2A and 2B.
Every practice set for every prescribed passage of Aeneid Book X. One purchase, instant download, complete coverage for your 2026 exam.
Jupiter silences the gods. The war was never supposed to happen — and he wants it stopped.
Venus fights back. Her Trojans are besieged, Aeneas is absent, and she has no one left to turn to.
Venus escalates — cataloguing every act of divine sabotage Juno has committed across the poem.
Venus gives up. Forget empire, forget Italy. Just let the boy Ascanius survive.
Juno hits back. Nobody forced Aeneas to invade — Turnus is defending his own land.
Juno throws Venus's own words in her face. The gloves are off.
Turnus wants Pallas all to himself. The young warrior stares up at the giant — and doesn't flinch.
Hercules hears Pallas's prayer and weeps. Jupiter's reply is one of the poem's most famous lines.
The duel that changes everything. Pallas's spear grazes; Turnus's does not.
Turnus takes the baldric. The narrator breaks in to tell us this single act will cost him his life.
The god-scorner enters the field. Mezentius is compared to a giant — and Aeneas is watching.
Mezentius prays to his own right hand. An innocent bystander dies remembering home. Aeneas draws blood.
A son throws himself between his father and certain death. Aeneas warns him: you are going to die.
Aeneas kills the boy — then sees his face. What follows is unlike anything Turnus did over Pallas.
Mezentius waits by the river for news. When the body arrives, the tyrant becomes a father.
Mezentius speaks to his horse. They have lived long enough. One last ride.
The final lines of Book X. Mezentius asks only to be buried with his son — then takes the blade.
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