fn36 It was either the action of the Hecatonchires or of glacial moraines. No one can say for absolute certain.
PROMETHEUS
fn1 The Greek for ‘between rivers’ is
fn2 See Appendix here.
fn3 That is one theory as to the origin of the word
THE PUNISHMENTS
fn1 It is a subtler name than that, for
fn2 It is said to have been Erasmus of all people, the great sixteenth-century scholar and Prince of Humanists, who misread Pandora’s
fn3 See Appendix, here.
fn4 Foresight, but not prophecy …
fn5 Another English word for a werewolf is
fn6 According to Ovid at least. Other sources suggest Mount Etna or Mount Athos. Round about the same time Noah was landing on Mount Ararat. Archaeology confirms, it seems, that there really was a Great Flood.
fn7 See Appendix here.
fn8 Charon was also happy to receive a
fn9 Virgil’s description of Aeneas’s visit to the underworld tells of the colour of Charon’s boat.
fn10 The story of how Zeus seduced Europa will be told a little later on.
fn11 The Canaries were Byron’s candidate for the Isles of the Blessed in his
fn12 But not in France, despite the name of Paris’s grand thoroughfare, the Champs Elysées.
PERSEPHONE AND THE CHARIOT
fn1 She features prominently in Shakespeare’s
fn2 Helios could be as dull and slow in the wits as he was bright and swift in the sun-chariot. How he came to take over these duties from Apollo will be revealed later.
fn3 Although some say this, I tend to believe that Pan (FAUNUS to the Romans) was older than the Olympians. Perhaps as old as nature itself. We will encounter him from time to time as we move forward.
fn4 There were two Mount Idas – the Cretan one, Zeus’s birthplace, and another in Phrygia, Asia Minor – today’s Turkish Anatolia. This was the one from which Hermaphroditus hailed.
fn5 The great museums of the world have hidden away treasures that represent intersex figures like Hermaphroditus. Many of these have only recently come to light, with exhibitions at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford and other leading institutions setting a trend for rediscovery of this neglected area. It coincides with a greater, society-wide understanding of the fluidity of gender.
fn6 Or possibly Pan.
CUPID AND PSYCHE
fn1 The well-known aluminium statue by Alfred Gilbert that forms the focus of the Shaftesbury Memorial in Piccadilly Circus, London, is actually not of Eros but of Anteros, deliberately chosen to celebrate the selfless love that demands no return. This was considered an appropriate commemoration of the seventh Earl of Shaftesbury’s great philanthropic achievements in hastening the abolition of child labour, reforming lunacy laws, and so on.
fn2 Cupid draw back your bow
And let your arrow go
Straight to my lover’s heart for me, for me …
© Sam Cooke
fn3 The King James Bible renders the conclusion of the thirteenth chapter of St Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians (written in Greek of course) as: ‘And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity.’ In modern translations ‘charity’ is rendered simply as ‘love’.
fn4 You might notice strong resemblances to
fn5 Apuleius, who flourished in the second century AD, was from North Africa but wrote in Latin and so used the names Cupid (interchangeably with
fn6 In due time Psyche gave birth to their child: a daughter, HEDONE, who was to be the spirit of pleasure and sensual delight. The Romans called her VOLUPTAS
MORTALS