The Use of Epithet in The Aeneid
The Use of Epithet in The Aeneid
The Use of Epithet in The Aeneid
The fact that vija Oo�v is found several times in Homer, as in ApoUonius,
at the beginning of the line and before the hephthemimeral caesura, may
be oflittle importance, since it may be the result of a coincidence. On the
other hand, it should be pointed out that some of the lines in ApoUonius
containing this or another epithet of VY}vs have a complex word order in
which the relative positions of noun and epithet are such as we should
never find in Homer :
We could deal more easily with the point in question if we had some
hexameters written by a Greek poet who did not know Homer; but there
undoubtedly never was such a poet. The best way, therefore, of deter
mining to what point the originality of a poet who did not have Homer as
a model could have I created a technique of diction, is a study of the
Aeneid or of another Latin poem in hexameters. To be sure, the Roman
poets, and not least Virgil, were familiar with Homer ; but his particular
style and expressions do not easily admit of exact imitation in another
language.
The name Aeneas is used by Virgil with and without epithet in the
foUowing proportions :1
I The figures for the names Aeneas, Achates, and Turnus are based on the index o f names in
O. Ribbeck's edition of Virgil, Leipzig 1867; those for navis are based on the uxicon zu
Vergilius by Merguet, Leipzig 1907.
30 The Traditional Epithet in Homer [j6-7]
with with no
epithetic word epithetic word
Aeneas 49 1 03
Aeneae (gen.) 3 18
Aeneae (dat.) 3 10
Aenean 5 30
Aenea (ab!.) 3
Aenea (voc.) 2 8
62 172
Inscius (vi. 711), ignarus (x. 25, x. 85), hospitis (vii. 463),jerus (iv. 466),
[aetum (vii. 288), andjatalem (xi. 232), are all too particularized to count
as ornamental epithets. Virgil is closer to Homer than Apollonius in the
frequency with which he uses the epithet here. Aeneas is accompanied by
an epithet one half as often as ·08vaaEv�.
The cases listed in the following table as without epithet include
occurrences of the word navis with tarda (v. 280), solitae (ii. 462),Jessas (i.
1 68, v. 29), these being too particularized to be ornamental. With this
word Virgil uses an epithet even less often than does Apollonius with
VTJV�:I I
with with no
epithetic word epithetic word
Navis
Navis
Navem 5
Naves
Navis 19
Navibus 9
3 38
Without dwelling on the obvious fact that Roman poetry owes its entire
conception of the epithet to Greek poetry, we can see the direct influence
of Homer in the epithets used by Virgil with the words in question.
Aeneas Anchisiades in the line
Magnanimum (i. 260, ix. 204) may be derived from ILEY&'(}V}LoS, but it is
more likely an exact reminiscence of }LEyaM/,ropos AlvEtao which appears
four times in Homer. Magnus (x. 159), magni (x. 830) seem to have been
inspired by Homer's frequent use of }LEyaS. Aeneas heros (vi. 1 03) can be
compared with A�L'TOS' 7JPwS' (Z 35), T7JU}LaxoS' () 7JPwS' (8 2 1 , 303),
'
Bonus (v. 770, xi. 1 06) could have been suggested by aya(}oS' ; but if it
was, we should have to suppose that the Roman poet badly misunder
stood this epic word, attributing to it the moral sense which it bore in the
Greek language of his own I time. When the poet uses bonus in these two
cases, he is thinking of the kindness which his hero was wont to show. It
may be better to consider this an original idea. Even if he owes a portion
of his epithets to Homer, Virgil attained in the choice of some of these
words that originality which makes of his poem much more than a mere
Roman version of the Iliad and the OdySSf)'. The expressions pius Aeneas ( 1 7
times) and pater Aeneas ( 1 6 times) derive from the most profoundly
original aspect of Virgil's thought.
Thus we find in the Aeneid a not infrequent use of non-traditional
epithets ; but this leaves us very far from finding in it what could be called
a system. There is not, in Virgil, the necessary variety of expressions
designed to serve in different parts of the line; and what is yet more
conclusive, there is an abundance of expressions identical both in metre
and in sense. Pius Aeneas and pater Aeneas are of like metrical value, and if
we regard the Virgilian epithet as a true ornamental word, we must
conclude that their sense is the same.
The expression pius Aeneas most often begins in the first foot. We find
Note finally that Tros in Tros Aeneas (xii. 723) could be replaced by
pius or pater or bonus.
The other expressions containing Aeneas in the nominative with an
epithetic word of different metrical value from those listed above are :
whole expression has the measure - - -, and begins in the first foot.
� �
formulae of
principal types other measures
Aeneas ( 1 52 times in the Aeneid) 2 39
7!fYTI' (43 times in Homer) 15 12
L1tofL�S'1/' (42 times in Homer) 34 7
ityafLtfLvwv (100 times in Homer) 63 15
it1T6Mwv (II I times in Homer) 51 15
Ntu'Twp (55 times in Homer) 32 7
Whereas in Virgil we find that four epithets peculiar to Aeneas have the
same metrical value : pater, pius, Tros, and bonus. The influence of metre in
epic style on the one hand determined the abundance of noun-epithet
formulae, as we have had occasion to point out ; but on the other hand, it
S141S15 D
34 The Traditional Epithet in Homer
determined a rigorous simplicity for the whole set of these formulae,
excluding with very few exceptions any formula which might match
another in both sense and metre. Thus of the 723 formulae indicated on
Table I (TE, p. 39) , only 8 1 show the same metrical value as another
noun-epithet formula used for the same person. When we compare with
these figures the proportion of equivalent formulae for Aeneas-of 4 1
noun-epithet formulae in the nominative case, 3 9 repeat the metrical
value of others-we find a proportion so different as to make plain that it
would be impossible to establish, in terms of the noun-epithet formulae of
Aeneas, a system characterized at once by great extension and great
simplicity.
A comparison of a different sort between the works of Virgil and of
Homer will demonstrate with equal certainty that the former poet uses
the epithet for reasons entirely apart from convenience of versification. It
makes little difference to Homer I if he uses a greater or smaller number
of epithets with the names of his several heroes. Epithets being for him
no more than a device to facilitate the handling of nouns, the frequency
with which he uses them with a particular noun will be a function of the
metrical value of the latter. Epithets can be of service to the poet in the
disposition of some names. They may be less useful to him, and even an
encumbrance, in the case of others. For example, epithets are used in
Homer with the nominatives of a number of names whose measure is
� - - in fairly constant proportion :
Similarly, the proportions are generally the same for the use of
epithets with names whose metrical value is .1 __
I The name NEUTWP, which appears with epithet in a proportion quite different from that
of other names of heroes of the same metrical value, is a good example of why we must not lose
sight of the action of the poem when we make numerical comparisons; and at the same time
it shows us how rough these comparisons are. This name is used 39 times with epithet and 13
times without, a proportion of 1 : 3. The explanation for this unusual proportion is not far to
seek. Nestor is most likely to be mentioned under circumstances requiring him to address an
assembly or in some way or other to give advice. Thus ofthe 52 times that the name N'UTWp
appears, it is found 21 times at the end of a line announcing the beginning of a speech; and
the subject expression of such lines, as we have shown, regularly consists of a noun-epithet
formula. Had the lord of the Pylians been less of an orator, he would doubtless have received
fewer epithets.
Epic Poems of Non-traditional Style 35
Finally, the proportions of the use of epithets with names of the same
metrical value with Aeneas are consistent among themselves, but at
vanance with the proportions found for names of different metrical
value :
with epithet without epithet proportion
Alv£las 5 26 1 :5"2
llaTpoKAos 5 39 1 :7.8
.Eap7TTJS<!JV 5 11 1 :2·2
"Hg,aLfTTos 4 20 I : 1 ·5