
What Virgil Teaches America (ft. Spencer Klavan)
Feb 19, 2026
Spencer A. Klavan, writer and commentator on literature and culture, discusses Virgil's elevation of Aeneas into Rome's founding hero. Short scenes cover divine patrons, the Dido episode, and Virgil's cinematic, Hellenistic style. They trace Aeneas' moral transformation, the poem's violent finale, and why Virgil's cultural project resonates with modern nations facing civic uncertainty.
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Aeneas As Rome's Founding Symbol
- Virgil elevated a minor Homeric figure, Aeneas, into the emblem of Rome by linking him to Augustus and a divine plan.
- The poem reframes Rome as both emergent from obscurity and the culmination of a multi-generational divine design.
Venus Recast To Serve Roman Destiny
- Virgil reshapes Venus from a frivolous Greek figure into a grand Roman matron who advances Rome's destiny through Dido's affair.
- The Dido episode serves Venus's purpose while subordinating personal love to Aeneas's duty and piety.
Arma Virumque: Homer Reworked
- Virgil deliberately combines Homer's two epic themes—rage and wandering—into one work: 'arms and a man.'
- He plunges us into Aeneas's lowest point to create a deep, humane character arc from despair to duty.





