Group 1 — The divine council (Lines 1–95)
Juno's assault reaches its peak. She takes the weapon Venus handed her and turns it directly back. Venus boasted that she could rescue Aeneas from the Greeks at Troy and transform his ships into sea-nymphs — acts of blatant divine intervention on behalf of the Trojans. By what principle, Juno asks, is it criminal for her to help the Rutulians? The parallel is exact and devastating.
Then the verbal ambush: Aeneas ignarus abest — ignarus et absit. Venus had used Aeneas's absence as a complaint. Juno throws the exact phrase back at her as a dismissal. Let him be absent and ignorant. Venus has her sacred islands — Paphos, Cythera, Amathus. Let her go there and leave the war alone. The echo of Venus's own language is not accidental: it is a rhetorical technique Virgil deploys with surgical precision, and students who miss it miss the entire structure of the exchange.
The speech closes by reaching back to the origin of everything: Paris's abduction of Helen, the treachery that broke the treaty between Europe and Asia, the war that destroyed Troy. Tum decuit metuisse tuis — you should have worried about your side then. Juno's final line is not an argument. It is a verdict.
Aeneid Book X — Lines 79–95
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