Group 2 — The aristeia and death of Pallas (Lines 439–509)
Before the duel begins, Pallas prays to Hercules — the hero who once ate at Evander's table, who owes the family the bond of guest-friendship. It is the right prayer to the right god, made for the right reason. Hercules hears it. And Hercules weeps. He cannot help. Jupiter explains to his weeping son why: each man's day is fixed, life cannot be recovered once spent. The great ones die — Sarpedon, Hercules' own companions, even Jupiter's own sons have fallen when their time came. What survives is not life but the fame made by how that life was spent: famam extendere factis, hoc virtutis opus.
Jupiter's speech is one of the most debated passages in the Aeneid. It is, on its surface, a consolation. It is also a statement about the limits of divine power: even the king of the gods cannot save those whose time has come. But it is also, read carefully, a deflection — Jupiter does not say he is unable to help Pallas. He says it is not done. The gap between cannot and will not is one Virgil leaves deliberately open.
These lines sit at the philosophical heart of Book X. The question of what fate means, what the gods can and cannot do, and what distinguishes noble acceptance from mere inevitability — all of it is compressed into Jupiter's twelve lines of consolation to a weeping god.
Aeneid Book X — Lines 457–473
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