Abstract :
Controversial efforts to find political allegory in Dido and Aeneas (c.1689), the great
chamber opera by Nahum Tate and Henry Purcell, have obscured the opera’s broader concern
with the politics of culture. As rival political factions claimed ownership of the nation’s cultural
heritage, Tate and other dramatists in Restoration England asked searching questions about the
relationship between the artist and political authority. Grappling with Virgil’s Aeneid, a central
text of Stuart absolutism, Dido and Aeneas explores the workings and the costs of partisan
myth-making. The opera joins many other Restoration voices in taking up an ancient ‘chaste
Dido’ tradition, which accused Virgil of mangling Dido’s historical reputation in the service of
imperial propaganda. Yet Dido does not set forth a topical allegory or a coherent critique of
Stuart misrule, but takes an unstable, irresolute attitude towards the cultural legacy of Virgil, the
aesthetics of female suffering, and the politics of royal praise.