From Virgil’s Aeneid to the Senate Chamber
The Persistence of Memory The story of Dido, the tragic Queen of Carthage from Virgil’s Aeneid, has echoed through centuries of Western literature, shaping our understanding of love, betrayal, and the devastating power of a woman scorned. From the classical epic to William Congreve’s Restoration drama, and even into the heated political theater of the 1990s, the figure of Dido continues to resonate—a symbol of emotional ruin wrought by duty, abandonment, and the female voice. When Senator Howell Heflin asked Anita Hill during the 1991 Clarence Thomas confirmation hearings, “Do you consider yourself a woman scorned?” he was not merely invoking a pop-culture cliché. He was drawing on a deep literary tradition—one that traces back to Virgil’s Dido and finds its way into Congreve’s The Mourning Bride, where the now-iconic line “Heav’n has no rage like love to hatred turned, nor Hell a fury like a woman scorn’d” was born. This question, loaded with historical and dramatic weight, invites a ...