
Eneida
The Aeneid is the foundational epic of Western civilization, the poem that gave Rome its mythology and gave the world one of literature's most enduring heroes. When Troy falls, the prince Aeneas carries his father on his back and leads his son by the hand through the flames, a man who has lost everything except his duty. What follows is a journey of seven years across the Mediterranean, through storms and temptation, as the gods shape his fate toward a city not yet built. In Carthage, Aeneas finds love with Queen Dido, and for a moment the wandering prince imagines rest. But the gods demand more. When he leaves, Dido's curse echoes across centuries: her death will seed the enmity between Carthage and Rome, the wars that defined the ancient world. This is a story about what we sacrifice for destiny, our loves, our homes, our desires, and whether the price is ever worth paying.










