Aeneas in Hades

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Aeneas descended to the Underworld, guided by the Sibyl, through a cave in Cumae (Italy). After having passed the entrance where Grief, Anxiety, Diseases, Old Age, Fear, Hunger, Death, Agony, Hypnos, and other creatures dwell, he came to the Elm from which False Dreams cling. Next he followed the road to the river Acheron where he saw the souls of the unburied whom Charon refused to take to the other side.
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"Easy is the descent to Hades: night and day the door stands
open; but to recall the steps and pass out to the
upper air, this is the task, this the toil!" (The Cumaean
Sibyl to Aeneas. Aeneid 6.126).
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Charon accepted to ferry Aeneas when he saw the Golden Bough that Aeneas was carrying. On the other bank, they first met the hound Cerberus 1, whom the Sibyl put to sleep with a cake of honey and wheat infused with sedative drugs. In the fields behind the cave of Cerberus 1, Aeneas saw those who died in childhood, those who had been condemned to death on a false charge, and those who killed themselves. Next he came to the Vale of Mourning where those who were consumed by unhappy love dwell, and in the farthest fields, before the dividing road, he saw those who were famous in war. Then Aeneas came to the place where the road forks, the left hand leading to Tartarus, and the right, beneath the Palace of Hades to Elysium. In the entrance of the Palace, Aeneas put down his passport, the Golden Bough, and then he proceeded to Elysium, where he met his father Anchises 1, saw souls who were not yet born, and other souls drinking from the waters of the river Lethe (Oblivion) before they were reborn.
The souls of those that Aeneas met in the Underworld:
Adrastus 1, King of Argos who raised the army of the SEVEN AGAINST
THEBES.
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Vision of Aeneas at the Elysian Fields: his father shows him both past and future. Behind them is the Cumaean Sibyl
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Anchises 1, Aeneas' father.
Caeneus 1. Once a woman called Caenis, she was turned into
an invulnerable man by Poseidon. Capys 2. Future King of Alba. Deiphobus 1, son of Priam 1 who
married Helen after Paris' death, and was
himself killed by Menelaus at the end of
the Trojan War. Dido, Queen of Carthage.
Eriphyle. For the story of this woman see Robe & Necklace of Harmonia 1. Glaucus 6. A Trojan, son of Antenor 1. Idaeus 1. A Trojan herald during the war. Leucaspis 2. One of Aeneas'
companions, lost in shipwreck. Medon 4, son of Antenor 1,
killed by Philoctetes at Troy. Musaeus. A famous bard, perhaps son of Orpheus. Numitor 2. Son of Proca, brother of Amulius and grandfather of Romulus and Remus 1, the founders of Rome. Orontes 1. One of Aeneas'
companions, lost in shipwreck. Palinurus. The steersman of the exiled Aeneas, during the
latter's trip from Troy to
Latium. On approaching Italy Palinurus fell asleep
and was hurled into the sea, and apparently he swam
to the coast where he was killed by the locals. A
harbour Palinurus in Italy was named after him.
Palinurus had a brother, Iapis, who received from Apollo the gifts of music
and divination, and certainly he was also a healer,
because he is reported to have applied, on one
occasion, curative herbs to Aeneas' wound. Parthenopaeus. One of the SEVEN
AGAINST THEBES. He was killed in that war. Pasiphae. Queen of Crete. Daedalus constructed a hollowed wooden cow on wheels for Pasiphae so that she could couple with a bull (see Daedalus and Minotaur). Phaedra, wife of Theseus. She fell in love with Hippolytus 4, her stepson, and as he refused her, she falsely charged him of having assaulted her. Phaedra hanged herself when her passion for Hippolytus 4 was made public.
Polyphoetes. A priest of Demeter at Troy. Proca Silvius. King of Alba and Latium. Succeeded his father Aventinus 2. At his death, his younger son Amulius seized the kingship by violence. His other son was Numitor 2. Procris 2. Bribed by a golden crown, Procris 2 admitted a
lover in her bed, and having being detected by her
husband, she fled to Crete where Minos 2 was king. Minos 2 fell in love with
her, and offered her a swift dog and a dart that
flew straight; and in return for these gifts, Procris 2 let herself
be bribed again, sharing his bed. But afterwards,
fearing Queen Pasiphae, she came to Athens, and being reconciled with her husband Cephalus 1, she went with him to the chase. During the hunting she met her death, for Cephalus 1 accidentally killed her with the dart that flew straight, which she had got from Minos 2.
Romulus.
Silvius Aeneas, son of Silvius (see also Aeneas). Silvius, son of Aeneas and Lavinia 2. Succeeded Ascanius 2 on the throne of the Alban and Latin state. Silvius was father of Latinus 2, and of Silvius Aeneas. Sychaeus. First husband of Dido. Thersilochus 1. Son of Antenor 1,
killed by Achilles during the Trojan War. Tydeus 2. Father of Diomedes 2 and one of the SEVEN AGAINST
THEBES. Tydeus 2 was killed in that war by Melanippus 1. |