I tend not to read the posts on this thread very carefully, so I could be mistaken, but I have the distinct impression that Steph just said 'I hate Vergil'. Steph, I'm going to pretend I didn't see that, or assume it's the HSC talking. Either way, never say it again. As for not wanting to hear about Hercules, Cacus, Aeneas etc, you may want to avoid me. I can't avoid the Aeneid. At our Leavers Lunch yesterday Michael's father walked up to me, after taking a photo of the whole Greek group, and said 'So, Nicholas. Do you think Turnus should have been forgiven?' completely out of the blue. I think it scared Jeremy and Ross off.
Jeremy, you can't judge Aeneas' 'wussiness' by the standards of the idiots in Homer. For all that he seems to be able to produce a 'two-toothed goat' whenever he needs to (and I've never come across an instance of him actually doing that) he's more human that either Achilles or Odysseus. All Aeneas' piety equates to is a sense of duty, and it's often not a duty undertaken willingly. The Aeneid is about what it means to be dutiful, and that isn't always a good think, emotionally, for the individual in question. If Aeneas is a wuss, or boring, than so are you and I.
You should never have introduced this argument to the thread Jeremy. Then again, Dr Stevens did say you were an attention seeker...