Aeneid Book 4, lines 685 - 705

Dido’s release

by Virgil

Death does not come quickly to Dido – she lingers in pain after stabbing herself with Aeneas’s sword. We are spared none of the details, as her sister, Anna, climbs to her on her pyre. Finally, Juno sends Iris, Goddess of the rainbow and Mercury’s female counterpart as messenger of the Gods, to release her. References to the cutting of a tress are to the practice of cutting hairs from the brows of sacrificial animals.

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Sic fata gradus evaserat altos,
semianimemque sinu germanam amplexa fovebat
cum gemitu atque atros siccabat veste cruores.
illa gravis oculos conata attollere rursus
deficit; infixum stridit sub pectore vulnus.
ter sese attollens cubitoque adnixa levavit,
ter revoluta toro est oculisque errantibus alto
quaesivit caelo lucem ingemuitque reperta.
Tum Iuno omnipotens longum miserata dolorem
difficilisque obitus Irim demisit Olympo
quae luctantem animam nexosque resolveret artus.
nam quia nec fato merita nec morte peribat,
sed misera ante diem subitoque accensa furore,
nondum illi flavum Proserpina vertice crinem
abstulerat Stygioque caput damnaverat Orco.
ergo Iris croceis per caelum roscida pennis
mille trahens varios adverso sole colores
devolat et supra caput astitit. ‘hunc ego Diti
sacrum iussa fero teque isto corpore solvo’:
sic ait et dextra crinem secat, omnis et una
dilapsus calor atque in ventos vita recessit.

She mounted the steep slope, hugged and cradled
her dying sister, wailing, and dried
the black gore with her dress. Dido tried
to raise her heavy eyes, but fell back;
breath rattled from her deep chest wound.
Three times she raised herself on her elbow,
Three times fell back to the couch, looked with vague eyes
up for light in the heavens, groaning when she found it.
Then mighty Juno took pity on her long agony and
painful passing and sent down Iris from Olympus
to free her struggling spirit from the  limbs that clung to it.
Because her death was neither fated nor deserved,
but grim, premature and in a sudden fit of frenzy,
Proserpina had not taken the golden tress of hair from
her head and sealed her for Styx and the underworld.
Fresh with dew, Iris flew down through the sky on saffron
wings, trailing a thousand colours against the sun,
and paused above her head. “As bidden, I take this,
sacred to Pluto, and free you from this your body”
she said, and with her right hand cut the tress: at once
all warmth was vanished, her spirit gone to the winds.

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More Poems by Virgil

  1. A Fury rouses Turnus to war
  2. Dido and Aeneas: Hell hath no fury …
  3. Dido and Aeneas: royal hunt and royal affair
  4. Anchises’s ghost invites Aeneas to visit the underworld
  5. New allies for Aeneas
  6. Aeneas is wounded
  7. The death of Dido.
  8. Aeneas’s vision of Augustus
  9. How Aeneas will know the site of his city
  10. Aeneas reaches the Elysian Fields
  11. Aeneas’s oath
  12. Aeneas joins the fray
  13. The Harpy’s prophecy
  14. Laocoon and the snakes
  15. The journey to Hades begins
  16. Aeneas tours the site of Rome
  17. Dido falls in love
  18. Aeneas’s ships are transformed
  19. Aeneas finds Dido among the shades
  20. The Trojans prepare to set sail from Carthage
  21. Aeneas learns the way to the underworld
  22. Virgil’s perils on the sea
  23. Rumour
  24. The Trojan Horse enters the city
  25. Aristaeus’s bees
  26. More from Virgil’s farming Utopia
  27. Mercury’s journey to Carthage
  28. Hector visits Aeneas in a dream
  29. The Aeneid begins
  30. Charon, the ferryman
  31. The Trojans reach Carthage
  32. Help for Father Aeneas from Father Tiber
  33. Fire strikes Aeneas’s fleet
  34. Sea-nymphs
  35. The natural history of bees
  36. Turnus the wolf
  37. Mourning for Pallas
  38. King Latinus grants the Trojans’ request
  39. Laocoon warns against the Trojan horse
  40. The death of Priam
  41. Storm at sea!
  42. Juno is reconciled
  43. Aeneas sees Marcellus, Augustus’s tragic heir
  44. The Syrian hostess
  45. Palinurus the helmsman is lost
  46. Aeneas prepares to tell Dido his story
  47. Virgil predicts a forthcoming birth and a new golden age
  48. King Mezentius meets his match
  49. Aeneas rescues his Father Anchises
  50. Catastrophe for Rome?
  51. The Fury Allecto blows the alarm
  52. Rites for the allies’ dead
  53. The portals of sleep
  54. Turnus at bay
  55. Virgil’s poetic temple to Caesar
  56. Love is the same for all
  57. The farmer’s happy lot
  58. Jupiter’s prophecy
  59. Turnus is lured away from battle
  60. Aeneas saves his son and father, but at a cost
  61. The death of Pallas
  62. Juno throws open the gates of war
  63. Aeneas arrives in Italy
  64. Virgil begins the Georgics
  65. Signs of bad weather
  66. The infant Camilla
  67. Omens for Princess Lavinia
  68. The farmer’s starry calendar
  69. Aeneas comes to the Hell of Tartarus
  70. The death of Euryalus and Nisus
  71. Souls awaiting punishment in Tartarus, and the crimes that brought them there.
  72. Vulcan’s forge
  73. In King Latinus’s hall