"Aeneas' tale to Dido"
Allusion
Act 2,
Scene 2
Lines 436-456
Hamlet
Hamlet and the actor recite a speech from a fictitious play based on the Aeneid, the Roman writer Virgil’s epic poem about the Trojan war. In the Aeneid, Aeneas tells Dido, the Queen of Carthage, the story of the fall of Troy. A party of Greek soldiers, led by Pyrrhus, constructed a giant wooden horse and hid themselves inside. When the Greeks placed the horse outside the gates of Troy, the unsuspecting Trojans brought it inside their city. That night, the Greeks soldiers emerged, killed King Priam, and sacked the city of Troy.