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Post by Dominique Martin on Sept 15, 2016 0:42:53 GMT
This story is obviously following the tale of Aeneas, but I'm finding the involvement, morals, and emotions of the gods just as important. Example: Juno wants to be rid of Aeneas because of her stereotyped hatred for all Trojians, Neptune can recognize the dedication and reverence in Aeneas and tries to save him. Another point I think, is that even though Aeneas knows his destiny, would he really have the strength to fulfill it without the help of the gods?
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Post by Christopher Martin on Sept 15, 2016 15:34:39 GMT
An excellent point of discussion. I'll refrain from inserting my own comments until after we have more student contributions. Kateri will be joining us later this week (Friday, I believe), and we may have one or two other additions as well.
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artsykat
Junior Member
Hello, I'm Kateri, nice to meet you~!
Posts: 51
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Post by artsykat on Sept 16, 2016 21:47:10 GMT
I agree with that as well! Aeneas can't do one thing without the gods interfering, but then, what else is knew. However, if he destined to be a hero, then why not justsummit into that fate and let the gods take the wheel?
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