 It's called an unconscionable love, a love without conscience, that's a phrase that Virgil uses. And then there's this wonderful metaphor when they're facing each other and Diado is begging him to stay, begging him to keep on with the relationship. There's the wind, like a gale force wind, like a hurricane of passion that's just blowing. And it's impacting Anais because he still has feelings towards her, he's not cold towards her, he still has those feelings but he knows he has to subjugate those feelings for a greater cause and a greater good. We have this wind of passion that's being blown, but he stands there like an oak tree. You have passion, emotion, wind that blows us hither and thither all over the place and then you have the oak tree rooted, the will, this is the will, the will has to be rooted so deeply that it cannot be buffeted and blown around by the winds of passion, a great metaphor that we're given in the Aeneid.