In LLPSI Cap XXXVIII a Greek soldier has just surrendered to Aeneas and his band and confessed his part in making war on Troy.
Hoc audiens ipse pater anchises iuveni supplici dextram dedit eumque interrogativ ‘quis esset?’ et ‘unde veniret?’. Ille, victo tandem terrore, haec respondit: '…
Two questions:
Anchises waves to him in acknowledgement with his right hand ‘dextram dedit’ ? I don’t believe he extends his hand to him. I think he waves to him to be silent so he can interrogate him. Am I right?
..and this is the tricky one: Ille, victo tandem terrore,…
I believe this is an ablative absolute meaning:
in terror that his life was at an end’ I’m taking it that victo is perf. passive participle of vivo, vivere in the masculine ablative singular…
or tandem could simply mean he, in fear of his life, at last responded…
…thinking about it I suspect it’s the latter. I’d be grateful for any guidance.
I beg to differ on both accounts: “victo tandem terrore” = “fear finally having been conquered”. (To have “victo” in an ablative absolute referring to the subject is very inelegant; in that case it ought to be rewritten as “victus”.) Why was fear conquered? Because of Anchises’s friendly gesture of extending the hand to be clasped. I don’t know if “dextram dare” can mean just “to wave”?
one would really have to go to a good Virgil translation to be sure what Orberg means… Though the sense of Orberg’s rendering isn’t consistent with spontaneous reconciliation or friendliness…
“… Anchises gave
his own right hand in swift and generous aid,
and by prompt token cheered the exile’s heart,
who, banishing his fears, poured forth this tale:”
(Translated by Theodore C. Williams)
“The good Anchises rais’d him with his hand;
Who, thus encourag’d, answer’d our demand:”
(Translated by John Dryden)
“My father Anchises himself, with little delay, gives the youth his hand and comforts his heart with the present pledge. At last he lays aside his fear and speaks thus:”
(Translated by H. R. Fairclough)