Friday, October 25, 2019
Suffering in Job and The Aeneid Essay -- Comparison Compare Contrast E
Suffering in Job and The Aeneid       à     à  Ã   Throughout Virgil's  Aeneid and Jobà   from the Old Testament, great obstacles block the paths of the protagonists.à  Ã   Mental and  physical, anguish is placed upon Job and Aeneas.à   Though both men suffer extreme pain, the  extent and content of the tribulations are different.   à     à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Job's suffering is placed upon him  without provocation.à   Aeneas also believes his à ³pain [is] so great and unmerited!à ² (Virgil 2.89).à   Juno's  hatred towards the Trojans, however,à   is fueled by many things such as the  descent of the Trojans from Jupiter's illegitimate son and the fact that the Trojan  people are fated to destroy Carthage, her favorite city.   à     à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  God takes away everone deat to  Job.à   He is physically alone except for Eliphaz, Bilad, Zophar and Elihu.à   These men, although they are the only  people to speak to Job, offer very little sympathy.à   They blame him for his  misfortune and tell Job that he has probably angered God to an extent that his  punishment is deserved.à   Aeneas, though,à   has the companionship of his men and  other friends which help him along his journey.à   Notà  Ã   only are his  men friendly and admiring of Aeneas, they are on his side.à   Theyà   help him on his  journey.à   They are all fighting for the same cause.à   This fact alone makes Job's  misfortune more taxing.   à     à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Their mental anguish is not  limited to matters of this world.à   Each man is faced with dillemas concerning their spiritual beliefs. Though he begs  and calls to God for an explanation, Job receives nothing.à   This causes  alone causes more mental anguish than anything else that happens in either work.à    Job's family is exterminated, he is pile of fermenting flesh, and he has no sign  from God as to why t...              ... He has thousands of mortals  working with him, not to mention the fact that he has the gods working to protect  him too.   à     à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  The proportionate level of  suffering weighs heavily on Job's side. Aeneas has some tough times, but Job suffers almost beyond human  capabilities. Aeneas had moments of excitement and adventure along his path, while Job  had utter misery.à   Aeneas had far from a pain free voyage, but he was also  worlds away from feeling the desperation and unheralded torture of Job.   à       Works Cited     Block, Elizabeth. The Effects of Divine Manifestation on the Reader's  Perspective in Vergil's Aeneid.à   Arno Press, New York, 1981.     Green, Joel B., & Longman, Tremper (Eds.).à   Holy Bible -- The  Everday Study Edition. Dallas: Word Publishing. 1996.     Quinn, Kenneth. Vergil's Aeneid, A Critical Description. Routledge &  Kegan Paul, London. 1968.                      
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