
doi: 10.58079/v5ly
handle: 20.500.13089/v5ly
Au chant IV de L’Énéide (Ier siècle av. J.C.), la reine de Carthage, Didon, découvre que son amant, le Troyen Énée, vient de l’abandonner pour partir à la conquête de l’Italie. Plutôt être le premier dans Lavinium (la cité qu’il va construire après avoir établi son autorité du côté de la future Rome) que le second à Carthage. On est un homme, un vrai, ou on ne l’est pas. Énée choisi l’ingratitude vis-à-vis de Didon, qui l’a recueilli après sa fuite de Troie (en Turquie actuelle). Pas question d’égoïsme...
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