Posts Tagged With: zeus

Will stars rise at Many Gods West?

temp-1823

Ovid, Metamorphoses 6.148
All of Lydia murmurs: the tale goes through the towns of Phrygia, and fills the whole world with talk. Niobe had known Arachne. As a girl, before her marriage, Tantalus’ daughter had lived in Maeonia, near Mount Sipylus. Nevertheless she was not warned by her countrywoman’s fate, to give the gods precedence, and use more modest words.

Plato, The Statesman
The Stranger: No, not that; but another part of the story, which tells how the sun and the stars once rose in the west, and set in the east, and that the god reversed their motion, and gave them that which they now have as a testimony to the right of Atreus.

Wikipedia s.v. Pelops
Pelops’ father was Tantalus, king at Mount Sipylus in Anatolia. Wanting to make an offering to the Olympians, Tantalus cut Pelops into pieces and made his flesh into a stew, then served it to the gods. Demeter, deep in grief after the abduction of her daughter Persephone by Hades, absentmindedly accepted the offering and ate the left shoulder. The other gods sensed the plot, however, and held off from eating of the boy’s body. Pelops was ritually reassembled and brought back to life, his shoulder replaced with one of ivory made for him by Hephaestus. Pindar mentioned this tradition in his First Olympian Ode, only to reject it as a malicious invention: his patron claimed descent from Tantalus. After Pelops’ resurrection, Poseidon took him to Olympus, and made him the youth apprentice, teaching him also to drive the divine chariot. Later, Zeus found out about the gods’ stolen food and their now revealed secrets, and threw Pelops out of Olympus, angry at his father, Tantalus.

As Myrtilus died, he cursed Pelops for his ultimate betrayal. This was one of the sources of the curse that destroyed his family: two of his sons, Atreus and Thyestes, killed a third, Chrysippus, who was his favorite son and was meant to inherit the kingdom; Atreus and Thyestes were banished by him together with Hippodamia, their mother, who then hanged herself; each successive generation of descendants suffered greatly by atrocious crimes and compounded the curse by committing more crimes, as the curse weighed upon Pelops’ children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren including Atreus, Thyestes, Agamemnon, Aegisthus, Menelaus, and finally Orestes, who was acquitted by a court of law convened by the gods Athena and Apollo. Although commonly referred to as “the curse of the Atreides”, the circle of atrocious events began two generations before Atreus and continued for two generations after him, before being formally absolved by the Furies in court.

The shrine of Pelops at Olympia, the Pelopion “drenched in glorious blood”, described by Pausanias stood apart from the temple of Zeus, next to Pelops’ grave-site by the ford in the river. It was enclosed with a circle of stones. Pelops was propitiated as a chthonic deity, at night with the offering of a black ram. His remains were contained in a chest near the sanctuary of Artemis Kordax (Pausanias 6.22.1), though in earlier times a gigantic shoulder blade was shown; during the Trojan War, John Tzetzes said, Pelops’ shoulder-blade was brought to Troy by the Greeks because the Trojan prophet Helenus claimed the Pelopids would be able to win by doing so

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looming symbols

Arachne (2)

Clement of Alexandria, Stromateis 5.8.49.3
So what? Does not Epigenes, in his book On the Poetry of Orpheus, in exhibiting the peculiarities found in Orpheus, say that by “the curved rods” (κερκίσι) is meant “ploughs”; and by the warp (στήμοσι), the furrows; and the woof (μίτος) is a figurative expression for the seed; and that “tears of Zeus” signify a storm; and that the “parts” (μοῖραι) are, again, the phases of the moon, the thirtieth day, and the fifteenth, and the new moon, and that Orpheus accordingly calls them “white-robed,” as being parts of the light? Again, that the Spring is called “flowery” (ἄνθιον) from its nature; and Night “still” (ἀργίς) on account of rest; and the Moon “Gorgonian,” on account of the face in it; and that the time in which it is necessary to sow is called “Aphrodite” by the theologian? In the same way, too, the Pythagoreans spoke figuratively, allegorizing the “dogs of Persephone” as the planets, the “tears of Cronus” as the sea.

Hippolytus of Rome, On Christ and Antichrist 4
For whereas the Word of God was without flesh, he took upon Himself the holy flesh by the holy Virgin, and prepared a robe which He wove for Himself, like a bridegroom, in the sufferings of the cross, in order that by uniting His own power with our mortal body and by mixing the incorruptible with the corruptible, and the strong with the weak, He might save perishing man. The web-beam (ἱστόν), therefore, is the passion of the Lord upon the cross, and the warp (στήμων) on it is the power of the Holy Spirit, and the woof (κρόκη) is the holy flesh woven by the Spirit, and the thread (μίτος) is the grace which by the love of Christ binds and unites the two in one, and the rods (κερκίς) are the Word; and the workers are the patriarchs and prophets who weave the fair, long, perfect tunic (χιτῶν) for Christ; and the Word passing through these, like the rods, completes through them the will of His Father.

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A wandering tale of bulls, and stars, and rivers, and drugs

Scholiast on Iliad 12.292
Zeus caught sight of Europa, daughter of Phoenix, gathering flowers with young girls in a meadow, and fell in love; coming down, he changed himself into a bull and breathed the scent of saffron from his mouth. Tricking Europa by these means he took her on his back, carried her over the sea to Crete and had intercourse with her there. Then he gave her in marriage to Asterion, king of Crete; but she was pregnant and gave birth to three sons, Minos, Sarpedon and Rhadamanthys.

Nonnos, Dionysiaka 2.679-695
Let pass the memory of your angry father Agenor, fear not for your wandering brothers; for they all live, though far apart. Cepheus journeyed to the regions of the south, and he has found favour with the Cephenes of Ethiopia; Thasos went to Thasos, and Cilix is king over the Cilicians round about the snowy mount of high-peaked Tauros; Phineus came with all speed to the Thracian land. For you, Cadmus, the Portioner’s thread weighs equal with your brothers; be king of the Cadmeians, and leave your name to your people. Give up the back-wending circuits of your wandering way, and relinquish the bull’s restless track; for your sister has been wedded by the law of love to Asterion of Dicte, king of Corybantian Ida.

Apollodoros, Bibliotheka 1.80
The Colchians who were ruled by Aeëtes, the son of Helios and Perseis, and brother of Circe and Minos’ wife Pasiphae.

Antoninus Liberalis, Metamorphoses 41
Prokris forsook Kephalos and went off as a fugitive to Minos the king of Crete. She found on arrival that he was afflicted by childlessness and promised a cure, showing him how to beget children. Now Minos would ejaculate snakes, scorpions and millipedes, killing the women with whom he had intercourse. But his wife Pasiphae, daughter of Helios the Sun, was immortal. Prokris accordingly devised the following to make Minos fertile. She inserted the bladder of a goat into a woman and Minos first emitted the snakes into the bladder; then he went over to Pasiphae and entered her. And when children were born to them, Minos gave Prokris his spear and his dog. No animal could escape these two and they always reached their target.”

Apollodoros, Bibliotheka 3.11
Daidalos built a wooden cow on wheels, skinned a real cow, and sewed the contraption into the skin. And then, after placing Pasiphae inside, set it in a meadow where the bull normally grazed. The bull came up and had intercourse with it, as if with a real cow. Pasiphae gave birth to Asterios, who was called Minotauros. He had the face of a bull, but was otherwise human. Minos, following certain oracular instructions, kept him confined and under guard in the labyrinth.

Apollonios Rhodios, Argonautika 3.997
Remember Ariadne, young Ariadne, daughter of Minos and Pasiphae, who was a daughter of Helios. She did not scruple to befriend Theseus and save him in his hour of trial; and then, when Minos had relented, she left her home and sailed away with him. She was the darling of the gods and she has her emblem in the sky: all night a ring of stars called Ariadne’s Crown rolls on its way among the heavenly constellations.

Pausanias, Description of Greece 2.31.1-2
In the market-place of Troezen is a temple of Artemis Saviour, with images of the goddess. It was said that the temple was founded and the name Saviour given by Theseus when he returned from Crete after overcoming Asterion the son of Minos. This victory he considered the most noteworthy of his achievements, not so much, in my opinion, because Asterion was the bravest of those killed by Theseus, but because his success in unravelling the difficult Maze and in escaping unnoticed after the exploit made credible the saying that it was divine providence that brought Theseus and his company back in safety. In this temple are altars to the gods said to rule under the earth. It is here that they say Semele was brought out of Haides by Dionysos, and that Herakles dragged up the hound of Haides.

Pausanias, Description of Greece 2.17.1-2
The river Asterion had three daughters – Euboia, Prosymna, and Akraia – who were said to be the nurses of Hera. This Asterion flows above the temple of Hera and falling into a cleft disappears. On its banks grows a plant, which also is called asterion. They offer the plant itself to Hera, and from its leaves weave her garlands.

Orphic Gold Leaf from Pharsalos
To the right in the House of Hades you will find a spring,
And by it stands a white cypress:
Do not approach this spring.
Further on you will find another one,
from the Lake of Memory, cold water pouring forth;
there are guards before it.
They will ask you, with astute wisdom,
what you are seeking in the darkness of murky Hades.
“Who are you? Where are you from?”
You tell them the entire truth.
Say, “I am a child of Earth and starry Sky. My name is Asterios.”

Nonnos, Dionysiaka 13.238-252
But after victory in battle Asterios conceived a bastard passion for the strange country, being hard of heart. For after the Indian War he was not to see his native land and the cave of the Idaian mount shimmering with helmets; he preferred a life of exile, and instead of Dicte he became a Cnossian settler in Scythia. He left greyheaded Minos and his wife; the civilized man joined the barbaric tribes of guest-murdering Colchians, called them Asterians and gave a Cretan name to Colchians whose nature provided them with outlandish customs. He left his own country and the Cretan river of Amnisos which nourished his childhood, and with shamefast lips drank the foreign water of Phasis.

Diodoros Sikeliotes, Library of History 4.45.1-3
We are told that Helios had two sons, Aeëtes and Perses, Aeëtes being king of Colchis and the other king of the Tauric Chersonese, and that both of them were exceedingly cruel. And Perses had a daughter Hecatê, who surpassed her father in boldness and lawlessness; she was also fond of hunting, and when she had no luck she would turn her arrows upon human beings instead of the beasts. Being likewise ingenious in the mixing of deadly poisons she discovered the drug called aconite and tired out the strength of each poison by mixing it in the food given to the strangers. And since she possessed great experience in such matters she first of all poisoned her father and so succeeded to the throne, and then, founding a temple of Artemis and commanding that strangers who landed there should be sacrificed to the goddess, she became known far and wide for her cruelty. After this she married Aeëtes and bore two daughters, Circê and Medea, and a son Aegialeus. Although Circê also, it is said, devoted herself to the devising of all kinds of drugs and discovered roots of all manner of natures and potencies such as are difficult to credit, yet, notwithstanding that she was taught by her mother Hecatê about no a few drugs, she discovered by her own study a far greater number, so that she left to the other woman no superiority whatever in the matter of devising uses of drugs.

Ovid, Metamorphoses 7.412
For Theseus’ death Medea mixed her poisoned aconite brought with her long ago from Scythia’s shores. There is a cavern yawning dark and deep, and there a falling track where the hero Hercules of Tiryns dragged struggling, blinking, screwing up his eyes against the sunlight and the blinding day, the hell-hound Cerberus, fast on a chain of adamant. His three throats filled the air with triple barking, barks of frenzied rage, and spattered the green meadows with white spume. This, so men think, congealed and, nourished by the rich rank soil, gained poisonous properties. And since they grow and thrive on hard bare rocks the farm folk call them ‘flintworts’–aconites.

The Second Vatican Mythographer 137-38
After Jason led Medea to Greece, he had sex with her as he had promised her marriage. Having seen her clever skills in many things before, eventually he asked her to transform his father Aeson into young manhood. She had not yet put aside the love she had for him. Boiling in a bronze cauldron plants whose power she knew, obtained from diverse regions, she cooked the slain Aeson with warm herbs and restored him to his original vigor. When Father Liber noticed that Aeson’s old age had been expelled by Medea’s medicines, he entreated Medea to change his nurses back to the vigor of youth. Agreeing to his request, she established a pledge of eternal benefit with him by restoring his nurses to the vigor of youth by giving them same medicines that rejuvenated Aeson. But when Jason, spurning her, took in Glauce, the daughter of Creon, Medea gave his mistress a tunic laced with poison and garlic: When she put it on, she began to burn alive by fire. Then Medea, not putting up with the soul of Jason raging against her, did away with her and Jason’s sons and fled on a winged serpent.

Ovid, Metamorphoses 6.103-145
The Maeonian girl depicts Europa deceived by the form of the bull: you would have thought it a real bull and real waves. She is seen looking back to the shore she has left, and calling to her companions, displaying fear at the touch of the surging water, and drawing up her shrinking feet. Also Arachne showed Asterie, held by the eagle, struggling, and Leda lying beneath the swan’s wings. She added Jupiter who, hidden in the form of a satyr, filled Antiope […] and seduced Mnemosyne disguised as a shepherd and Proserpine, Ceres’s daughter, as a spotted snake […] She showed how Bacchus ensnared Erigone with delusive grapes, and how Saturn as the double of a horse begot Chiron. The outer edge of the web, surrounded by a narrow border, had flowers interwoven with entangled ivy. Neither Pallas nor Envy itself could fault that work. The golden-haired warrior goddess was grieved by its success, and tore the tapestry, embroidered with the gods’ crimes, and as she held her shuttle made of boxwood from Mount Cytorus, she struck Idmonian Arachne, three or four times, on the forehead. The unfortunate girl could not bear it, and courageously slipped a noose around her neck: Pallas, in pity, lifted her, as she hung there, and said these words, ‘Live on then, and yet hang, condemned one, but, lest you are careless in future, this same condition is declared, in punishment, against your descendants, to the last generation!’ Departing after saying this, she sprinkled her with the juice of aconite, Hecate’s herb, and immediately at the touch of this dark poison, Arachne’s hair fell out. With it went her nose and ears, her head shrank to the smallest size, and her whole body became tiny. Her slender fingers stuck to her sides as legs, the rest is belly, from which she still spins a thread, and, as a spider, weaves her ancient web.

Pliny, Natural History 29.86
Among classes of spiders the Greeks also include a phalangion which they distinguish by the name of ‘wolf.’ There is also a third kind of phalangion, a hairy spider with an enormous head. When this is cut open, there are said to be found inside two little worms, which, tied in deer skin as an amulet on women before sunrise, act as a contraceptive, as Caecilius has told us in his Commentarii. There is another phalangion called rhox, like a black grape, with a very small mouth under the abdomen, and very short legs as though not fully grown. Its bite is as painful as a scorpion’s sting, forming in the urine as it were spider’s webs. The asterion is exactly like it, except that it is marked with white streaks. Its bite makes the knees weak. Least dangerous of all is the ash-coloured spider which spins its web all over our walls to catch flies. For the bites of all spiders remedial is a cock’s brain with a little pepper taken in vinegar and water, five ants also taken in drink, the ash of sheep’s dung applied in vinegar, or spiders themselves of any sort that have rotted in oil.

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mimico rusu

One of the options in my fund-raising effort (which is still going on!) is an essay of your choice. Wynn Dark asked me to take a crack at interpreting a Priapic myth. Here’s the result.

The earliest reference to Priapos that has come down to us is a comedy by the 4th century BCE playwright Xenarchos; all we know is its title which was named for the ithyphallic divinity who, following the conventions of the genre, likely appeared as a character on stage. Considering the prevalence of such myths told about him, and the inherent comic potential they possess, it’s likely that the play featured an unsuccessful attempt by Priapos to rape a goddess or nymph. The poet Ovid mentions that he was unable to assault Lotis (Fasti 1.391), Pomona (Metamorphoses 14.534) and Vesta, whose story I’ll quote as emblematic of the others:

Should I omit or recount your shame, red Priapus? It is a very playful, tiny tale. Coroneted Cybele, with her crown of turrets, invites the eternal gods to her feast. She invites, too, satyrs and nymphs and the spirits of the wild; Silenus is present, uninvited. It’s not allowed and too long to narrate the gods’ banquet: night was consumed with much wine. Some blindly stroll shadowy Ida’s dells, or lie down and rest their bodies in the soft grass. Others play or are clasped by sleep; or link their arms and thump the green earth in triple quick step. Vesta lies down and takes a quiet, carefree nap, just as she was, her head pillowed by turf. But the red saviour of gardens prowls for nymphs and goddesses, and wanders back and forth. He spots Vesta. It’s unclear if he thought she was a nymph or knew it was Vesta. He claims ignorance. He conceives a vile hope and tries to steal upon her, walking on tiptoe, as his heart flutters. By chance old Silenus had left the donkey he came on by a gently burbling stream. The long Hellespont’s god was getting started, when it bellowed an untimely bray. The goddess starts up, frightened by the noise. The whole crowd fly to her; the god flees through hostile hands. Lampsacus slays this beast [the donkey] for Priapus, chanting : `We rightly give flames the informant’s guts.’ You remember, goddess, and necklace it with bread. Work ceases; the idle mills are silent. (Fasti 6. 319)

As Ovid notes, Lampaskos was an early center of the god’s cult; according to Pausanias the people of Lampsakos revered Priapos more than any other divinity. (Description of Greece 9.31.2) His cult spread from Mysia in Asia Minor (where it was as equally popular with the Greek colonists as it was with the natives) to central Greece and Italy, eventually being taken up by the Romans. Attempts were made to give this strange foreign god a respectable lineage – Dionysos (Strabo, Geography 13.1.12), Hermes (Hyginus, Fabulae 160), Zeus (Suidas, s.v. Priapos), Pan (Macrobius, Saturnalia 6.5) and even Osiris (Diodoros Sikeliotes, Library of History 4.6.1) were claimed to be his father. Usually Aphrodite was his mother.

Aside from being a personification of the phallos, Priapos presides over the fertility of animal and plant life and is a powerful apotropaic force, defending against thieves, burglars and malefic charms and spells. Images of him, often crudely made and emphasizing his enormous member, were placed in gardens and outside homes to protect those within. Indeed it is primarily in this capacity that he appears in the bawdy collection of anonymous Latin verse called the Priapeia. Although most of the pieces involve prostitutes stealthily sneaking into a garden to “make use of his tumescence in their filthy self-abuse” as one blushing Victorian scholar described it, or the god threatening to forcefully sodomize thieves and witches, in a few instances we catch a glimpse of his role in adolescent rites of passage and his power to heal. Interestingly Petronius describes a mystery-cult devoted to Priapos in his novel the Satyricon with precisely those aims. The priestess Quartilla has contracted malaria and hopes that by overseeing the rites (which involves a mock marriage of children and the rape of a man by an individual representing Priapos) she will be cured of it. As encountered in Petronius, these mysteries of Priapos bear a strong resemblance to contemporary Bacchic, Eleusinian and Isiac mysteries – though whether they represent an actual cult or are a literary mish-mash intended to satirize these sacred institutions remains unsettled in scholarly circles. We do know from Diodoros, Strabo and other authors that Priapos was given a role within a variety of mysteries so perhaps that element is authentic.

Considering how frequently he is associated with aggressive sexuality one may naturally wonder why he is incapable in myth of consummating a union with assorted goddesses and nymphs. Is it all for the laughs – or is there something more behind it?

Both, I suspect.

Diodoros remarked:

And in the sacred rites, not only of Dionysos but of practically all other gods as well, Priapos received honour to some extent, being introduced in the sacrifices to the accompaniment of laughter and sport. (Library of History 4.6.1)

Ovid’s account of the attempted rape of Lotis likewise takes place during a Dionysian ritual, culminating in this scene:

And now he was poised on the grass right next to her, and still she was filled with a mighty sleep. His joy soars; he draws the cover from her feet and starts the happy road to his desires. Then look, the donkey, Silenus’ mount, brays loudly, and emits untimely blasts from its throat. The terrified Nympha leaps up, fends Priapus off, and awakens the whole grove with her flight. And the god, whose obscene part was far too ready, was ridiculed by all in the moon’s light. (Fasti 1.391)

Laughter, likewise, plays a role in the Priapic mysteries of Petronius’ Satyricon, during Quartilla’s interrogation of Encolpius. Dennis P. Quinn, in Quartilla’s Cure, observes:

Then, Quartilla’s mood suddenly changes from weeping to laughter. She begins to kiss Encolpius and rejoices in the prospect of following what course she pleased (18.3). She then clapped her hands and began to laugh so loud that it frightened our three main characters. The ancilla and virguncula joined in with the farcical laughter (mimico rusu), leaving Encolpius at a loss at how they could have changed their mood so quickly (19.1). There is a commonality to other mystery religions here. For example, the participants in the Isis cult would begin one part of the sacred drama in exaggerated sorrow for the fate of Osiris’ dismembered body, and then, when Isis’ re-assembly of the god was proclaimed, the worshippers would all break out in hysterical laughter. So it is possible that, although the Priapic rite has not yet begun, Petronius is poking fun at the use of emotion in ritual, of which the Priestess Quartilla seems to be experts. But perhaps extreme emotional shifts were actually a part of Priapic ritual. When we examine some of the sources describing the Dionysiac cult, for example, like  Augustine who describes in disgust the anticipatory giggles of an audience about to see the huge prick of a Priapic mime, it becomes clear that laughter was an important element of Priapus’ appeal. He looked so disgusting that he was funny. This is also true for the initiation scene as Petronius constructs, or reconstructs: the actions are so disgusting that they are funny, or at least intended to be so for some. Indeed laughter is often portrayed throughout the initiation scenes.

We get an even stronger sense of laughter’s meaning from Iamblichos’ description of aischrorrêmosunai which he associated with phallic imagery:

To answer your question, the erection of phallic images is a symbol of generative power and we consider that this is directed towards the fecundating of the world; this is the reason, indeed, why most of these images are consecrated in the spring, since this is just when the world as a whole receives from the gods the power of generating all creation. And as for the aischrorrêmosunai, my view is that they have the role of expressing the absence of beauty in matter and the previous ugliness of those things that are going to be brought to order, which, since they lack ordering, yearn for it in the same degree as they spurn the unseemliness that was previously their lot. So then, once again, one is prompted to seek after the causes of form and beauty when one learns the nature of obscenity from the utterance of obscenities; one rejects the practice of obscenities, while by means of uttering them one makes clear one’s knowledge of them, and thus directs one’s striving towards the opposite. And there is another explanation too. When the power of human emotions in us is everywhere confined, it becomes stronger. But when it is brought to exercise briefly and to a moderate extent, it rejoices moderately and is satisfied. By that means it is purged and ceases by persuasion, and not in response to force. It is by this means that, when we see the emotions of others in comedy and in tragedy, we still our own emotions, and make them more moderate and purge them. And in sacred rites, through the sight and sound of the obscenities, we are freed from harm that comes from actual indulgence in them. So things of this sort are embraced for the therapy of our souls and to moderate the evils which come to us through the generative process, to free us from our chains and give us riddance. (On the Mysteries 37.3-6; 38.13-40)

Aischrorrêmosunai can mean obscene speech, jokes and laughter and served an important function within the mysteries, as Arnobius of Sicca (Adversus Gentes 5.25-26) relates:

In her wanderings on that quest, she reaches the confines of Eleusis as well as other countries — that is the name of a canton in Attica. At that time these parts were inhabited by aborigines named Baubo, Triptolemus, Eubuleus, Eumolpus, Dysaules: Triptolemus, who yoked oxen; Dysaules, a keeper of goats; Eubuleus, of swine; Eumolpus, of sheep, from whom also flows the race of Eumolpidæ, and from whom is derived that name famous among the Athenians, and those who afterwards flourished as caduceatores, hierophants, and criers. So, then, that Baubo who, we have said, dwelt in the canton of Eleusis, receives hospitably Ceres, worn out with ills of many kinds, hangs about her with pleasing attentions, beseeches her not to neglect to refresh her body, brings to quench her thirst wine thickened with spelt, which the Greeks term cyceon. The goddess in her sorrow turns away from the kindly offered services, and rejects them; nor does her misfortune suffer her to remember what the body always requires. Baubo, on the other hand, begs and exhorts her—as is usual in such calamities—not to despise her humanity; Ceres remains utterly immoveable, and tenaciously maintains an invincible austerity. But when this was done several times, and her fixed purpose could not be worn out by any attentions, Baubo changes her plans, and determines to make merry by strange jests her whom she could not win by earnestness. That part of the body by which women both bear children and obtain the name of mothers, this she frees from longer neglect: she makes it assume a purer appearance, and become smooth like a child, not yet hard and rough with hair. In this wise she returns to the sorrowing goddess; and while trying the common expedients by which it is usual to break the force of grief, and moderate it, she uncovers herself, and baring her groins, displays all the parts which decency hides; and then the goddess fixes her eyes upon these, and is pleased with the strange form of consolation. Then becoming more cheerful after laughing, she takes and drinks off the drought spurned before, and the indecency of a shameless action forced that which Baubo’s modest conduct was long unable to win. If any one perchance thinks that we are speaking wicked calumnies, let him take the hooks of the Thracian soothsayer, which you speak of as of divine antiquity; and he will find that we are neither cunningly inventing anything, nor seeking means to bring the holiness of the gods into ridicule, and doing so: for we shall bring forward the very verses which the son of Calliope uttered in Greek, and published abroad in his songs to the human race throughout all ages:—

With these words she at the same time drew up her garments from the lowest hem,
And exposed to view formatas inguinibus res,
Which Baubo grasping with hollow hand, for
Their appearance was infantile, strikes, touches gently.
Then the goddess, fixing her orbs of august light,
Being softened, lays aside for a little the sadness of her mind;
Thereafter she takes the cup in her hand, and laughing,
Drinks off the whole draught of cyceon with gladness.

A slightly different version of this fragment from an Orphic poem is provided by Clement of Alexandria in the second book of his Exhortation to the Greeks:

This said, she drew aside her robes, and showed a sight of shame; child Iakchos was there and with his hand he, laughing, tossed and jerked it under Baubo’s womb. Then smiled the goddess, in her heart she smiled, and drank the draught from out the glancing cup.

Laughter has the power to banish sorrow and other ills, connecting it to Priapos’ many apotropaic functions. In his myths he is both the one who drives away through laughter and the one whom laughter drives off – especially in the myth of his attempted rape of Vesta who is synonymous with the hearth and the home itself, according to Cicero:

The name Vesta comes from the Greeks, for she is the goddess whom they call Hestia. Her power extends over altars and hearths, and therefore all prayers and all sacrifices end with this goddess, because she is the guardian of the innermost things. (De Natura Deorum 2. 27 )

And the author of the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite:

Zeus the Father gave her high honour instead of marriage, and she has her place in the midst of the house and has the richest portion.

Which sets up a polar opposition with Priapos, god of outdoors:

This god is worshipped where goats and sheep pasture or there are swarms of bees. (Pausanias, Description of Greece 9. 31. 2)

Other polarities abound. Hestia is immobile; Priapos leaps up and is constantly on the move. Priapos is the protector; Hestia is what must be preserved from defilement. Priapos is licentious; Hestia chaste.

However, there may be an even more esoteric significance behind Priapos’ attempted rape – his phallic exuberance stirs up the life-force promoting generation in the plants and animals that are under his care. Without him matter would be barren and stagnant.

Hestia, according to that skillful etymologist Plato, is that matter:

Take that which we call ousia (reality, essence); some people call it essia, and still others ôsia. First, then, in connection with the second of these forms, it is reasonable that the essence of things be called Hestia; and moreover, because we ourselves say of that which partakes of reality ‘it is’ (estin), the name Hestia would be correct in this connection also; for apparently we also called ousia (reality) essia in ancient times. And besides, if you consider it in connection with sacrifices, you would come to the conclusion that those who established them understood the name in that way; for those who called the essence of things essia would naturally sacrifice to Hestia first of all the gods. Those on the other hand, who say ôsia would agree, well enough with Herakleitos that all things move and nothing remains still. So they would say the cause and ruler of things was the pushing power (ôthoun), wherefore it had been rightly named ôsia. (Kratylos 400d – 401b)

If obscenity contributes to the purification of matter, as Iamblichos asserted, then Priapos’ actions towards Hestia take on an entirely different connotation – as do the whole system of mysteries overseen by Quartilla.

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Dionysos in Italy

My current obsession is figuring out how Dionysos got to Italy.

You see, practically every country – if not city – where he was worshipped has a myth of arrival, which has him appearing to a representative of the place (the majority of the time this person is a member of the royal house, but in a number of instances they may be an impoverished peasant) and either receiving hospitality, however humble, for which they are rewarded with wine and knowledge of viticulture or rejection and violent opposition which inevitably brings about madness and child-killing. In a number of instances Dionysos seduces the wife or daughter of his host, begetting heroic offspring that either supplant the current royal line or fill an important, hereditary position within his cult.

The closest I’ve come to finding an example of this mytheme for Italy are the following.

In the 7th Homeric Hymn Dionysos is captured by Tyrsenian pirates while on his way to Naxos. It’s possible that in some variant of this story they brought him back to Tuscany with them. He was certainly popular in the region, known under the names Fufluns, Pachie, Loufir, and possibly Tinś. But that’s extremely hypothetical, especially since most accounts have the pirates wiped out mid-sea and Dionysos claiming ownership of their vessel, which necessarily precludes a return to Italy.

Alternately, we know that the Tarentines, who were descended from the Spartan Partheniae, kept the Dionysia, a festival which in Athens and Ionia tended to be associated with myths of arrival. The Spartan version of this myth is as follows:

DION, a king in Laconia and husband of Iphitea, the daughter of Prognaus. Apollo, who had been kindly received by Iphitea, rewarded her by conferring upon her three daughters, Orphe, Lyco, and Carya, the gift of prophecy, on condition, how­ever, that they should not betray the gods nor search after forbidden things. Afterwards Diony­sus also came to the house of Dion; he was not only well received, like Apollo, but won the love of Carya, and therefore soon paid Dion a second visit, under the pretext of consecrating a temple, which the king had erected to him. Orphe and Lyco, however, guarded their sister, and when Dionysus had reminded them, in vain, of the com­mand of Apollo, they were seized with raging mad­ness, and having gone to the heights of Taygetus,they were metamorphosed into rocks. Garya, the beloved of Dionysus, was changed into a nut tree, and the Lacedaemonians, on being informed of it by Artemis, dedicated a temple to Artemis Caryatis. [Serv. ad Virg. Ed. viii. 30.] (Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology)

So perhaps that served as the basis for the Tarentine Dionysia? But even if Dionysos’ cult did come over with Phalanthos and his men, the story of Carya doesn’t really serve as an aition for his arrival in Italy.

Pliny (Natural History 3.60) mentions a competition between Bacchus and Ceres for ownership of the region of Campania, similar to the contest of Athene and Poseidon for Athens. But battling a goddess is very different from battling a king or his daughters and there’s nothing in those bare lines to imply alien status on Dionysos’ part.

There’s the story Clement of Alexandria relates in the second book of his Exhortation to the Greeks:

If you wish to inspect the orgies of the Corybantes, then know that, having killed their third brother, they covered the head of the dead body with a purple cloth, crowned it, and carrying it on the point of a spear, buried it under the roots of Olympus. These mysteries are, in short, murders and funerals. And the priests of these rites, who are called kings of the sacred rites by those whose business it is to name them, give additional strangeness to the tragic occurrence, by forbidding parsley with the roots from being placed on the table, for they think that parsley grew from the Corybantic blood that flowed forth; just as the women, in celebrating the Thesmophoria, abstain from eating the seeds of the pomegranate which have fallen on the ground, from the idea that pomegranates sprang from the drops of the blood of Dionysos. Those Corybantes also they call Cabiric; and the ceremony itself they announce as the Cabiric mystery. For those two identical fratricides, having abstracted the box in which the phallos of Bacchus was deposited, took it to Etruria–dealers in honourable wares truly. They lived there as exiles, employing themselves in communicating the precious teaching of their superstition, and presenting phallic symbols and the box for the Tyrrhenians to worship. And some will have it, not improbably, that for this reason Dionysos was called Attis, because he was mutilated. And what is surprising at the Tyrrhenians, who were barbarians, being thus initiated into these foul indignities, when among the Athenians, and in the whole of Greece–I blush to say it–the shameful legend about Demeter holds its ground?

But, again, that doesn’t really fit the parameters of the myth.

There’s Livy’s account of the introduction of the Bacchanalia:

A low-born Greek went into Etruria first of all, but did not bring with him any of the numerous arts which that most accomplished of all nations has introduced amongst us for the cultivation of mind and body. He was a dabbler in sacrifices and a fortune-teller, not one of those who imbue men’s minds with error by professing to teach their superstitions openly for money, but a hierophant of secret nocturnal mysteries. These were initiatory rites which at first were imparted to a few, then began to be generally known among men and women. To the religious element in them were added the delights of wine and feasts, that the minds of a larger number might be attracted. When wine had inflamed their minds, and night and the mingling of males with females, youth with age, had destroyed every sentiment of modesty, all varieties of corruption first began to be practised, since each one had at hand to satisfy the lust he was most prone to. Nor was the mischief confined to promiscuous intercourse; false witness, the forging of seals and testaments, and false informations, all proceeded from the same source, as also poisonings and murders of families where the bodies could not even be found for burial. Many crimes were committed by treachery; most by violence, which was kept secret, because the cries of those who were being violated or murdered could not be heard owing to the noise of drums and cymbals. (History of Rome 39.8)

But that took place in historical time, with a human votary in place of Dionysos. As such it only half counts.

So does that mean there existed no narrative of arrival, and if so why?

One possibility I’ve considered is that Dionysos is an autochthonous Italian. After all, Persephone was raised (if not born) in Sicily and some accounts make her Dionysos’ mother. Of course, none of those accounts are associated with Italy, where Dionysos was clearly regarded as the son of Zeus and Semele and his relationship with Persephone tended towards the erotic rather than the maternal. However Dionysos’ birth from Zeus’ thigh is such a popular theme that I wonder if at some point there wasn’t a tradition that located this event in Italy – note its frequency of appearance on Apulian drinking vessels and this bit of folk etymology from Nonnos:

Hermes Maia’s son received him near the birthplace hill of Dracanon, and holding him in the crook of his arm flew through the air. He gave the newborn Lyaios a surname to suit his birth, and called him Dionysos, or Zeus-limp, because while he carried his burden lifted his foot with a limp from the weight of his thigh, and nysos in the Syracusan language means limping. So he dubbed Zeus newly delivered Eiraphiotes, or Father Botcher, because he had sewed up the baby in his breeding thigh. (Dionysiaka 9.16-24)

But then last night I came across this interesting passage from Vergil:

And they’re the why, such transgressions, a goat is sacrificed
on every altar to the wine god – since our elders started to stage plays
and the sons of Theseus rewarded talent along the highways and byeways
and, with drink taken, took to hopping here and there,
a dance on greasy hides, and toppling in soft grass.
So too, Ausonian settlers – who came from Troy –
recited their rough-hewn verse to entertain the masses,
and put on scary masks cut out of bark
and called on you, Bacchus, in rousing song,
and in your honour dangled from the tips of pines tender tokens.
And it ensues that every vineyard crests and fills,
valleys teem, and deep ravines –
anywhere the god took in with his goodly gaze.
Therefore, as is only right, we accord to Bacchus due respect
with songs our fathers sang and trays of baked offerings
and, led by the horn, the sacrifical puck is set before the altar
and his spewling innards roasted on hazel skewers.
(Georgics 2.380-396)

Vergil has the Ausones bring their tragic traditions with them to Italy from Troy and connects these rites with askoliasmos and oscillatio, both of which are strongly tied to Ikarios and Erigone.

Why does that matter?

Do you know what one of the most important locales within Ausonian territory was called? Saturnia.

Why does that matter?

While most sources place Ikarios and his tragic daughter in Attica:

The constellation Bootes. The Bear Watcher. Some have said that he is Icarus, father of Erigone, to whom, on account of his justice and piety, Father Liber gave wine, the vine, and the grape, so that he could show men how to plant the vine, what would grow from it, and how to use what was produced. When he had planted the vine, and by careful tending with a pruning-knife had made it flourish, a goat is said to have broken into the vineyard, and nibbled the tenderest leaves he saw there. Icarus, angered by this, took him and killed him and from his skin made a sack, and blowing it up, bound it tight, and cast it among his friends, directing them to dance around it. And so Eratosthenes says : `Around the goat of Icarus they first danced.’ Others say that Icarus, when he had received the wine from Father Liber, straightway put full wineskins on a wagon. For this he was called Boötes. When he showed it to the shepherds on going round through the Attic country, some of them, greedy and attracted by the new kind of drink, became stupefied, and sprawling here and there, as if half-dead, kept uttering unseemly things. The others, thinking poison had been given the shepherds by Icarus, so that he could drive their flocks into his own territory, killed him, and threw him into a well, or, as others say, buried him near a certain tree. However, when those who had fallen asleep, woke up, saying that hey had never rested better, and kept asking for Icarus in order to reward him, his murderers, stirred by conscience, at once took to flight and came to the island of the Ceans. Received there as guests, they established homes for themselves. But when Erigone, the daughter of Icarus, moved by longing for her father, saw he did not return and was on the point of going out to hunt for him, the dog of Icarus, Maera by name, returned to her, howling as if lamenting the death of its master. It gave her no slight suspicion of murder, for the timid girl would naturally suspect her father had been killed since he had been gone so many months and days. But the dog, taking hold of her dress with its teeth, led her to the body. As soon as the girl saw it, abandoning hope, and overcome with loneliness and poverty, with many tearful lamentations she brought death on herself by hanging from the very tree beneath which her father was buried. And the dog made atonement for her death by its own life. Some say that it cast itself into the well, Anigrus by name. For this reason they repeat the story that no one afterward drank from that well. Jupiter, pitying their misfortune, represented their forms among the stars. And so many have called Icarus, Boötes, and Erigone, the Virgin, about whom we shall speak later. The dog, however, from its own name and likeness, they have called Canicula. It is called Procyon by the Greeks, because it rises before the greater Dog. Others say these were pictured among the stars by Father Liber. In the meantime in the district of the Athenians many girls without cause committed suicide by hanging, because Erigone, in dying, had prayed that Athenian girls should meet the same kind of death she was to suffer if the Athenians did not investigate the death of Icarus and avenge it. And so when these things happened as described, Apollo gave oracular response to them when they consulted him, saying that they should appease Erigone if they wanted to be free from the affliction. So since she hanged herself, they instituted a practice of swinging themselves on ropes with bars of wood attached, so that the one hanging could be moved by the wind. They instituted this as a solemn ceremony, and they perform it both privately and publicly, and call it alétis, aptly terming her mendicant who, unknown and lonely, sought for her father with the god. The Greeks call such people alétides. (Hyginus, Astronomica 2.2)

Critolaus knew an alternate version:

The story of Ikarios who entertained Dionysos is told by Eratosthenes in his Erigone. The Romans, however, say that Saturnus when once he was entertained by a farmer who had a fair daughter named Entoria, seduced her and begat Janus, Hymnus, Faustus, and Felix. He then taught Icarius the use of wine and viniculture, and told him that he should share his knowledge with his neighbours also. When the neighbours did so and drank more than is customary, they fell into an unusually deep sleep. Imagining that they had been poisoned, they pelted Icarius with stones and killed him; and his grandchildren in despair ended their lives by hanging themselves. When a plague had gained a wide hold among the Romans, Apollo gave an oracle that it would cease if they should appease the wrath of Saturnus and the spirits of those who had perished unlawfully. Lutatius Catulus, one of the nobles, built for the god the precinct which lies near the Tarpeian Rock. He made the upper altar with four faces, either because of Icarius’s grandchildren or because the year has four parts; and he designated a month January. Saturnus placed them all among the stars. The others are called harbingers of the vintage, but Janus rises before them. His star is to be seen just in front of the feet of Virgo. So Critolaus in the fourth book of his Phaenomena. (Plutarch, Greek and Roman Parallel Stories 9)

This passage from Vergil shows that it was generally understood that Dionysos and not Kronos was the god hospitably received by Ikarios in Italy. Alternately, one might infer from it that the Ausones transferred the cult of Dionysos from Troy but Vergil elsewhere makes it clear that he was already in Italy when they arrived through the story of Queen Amata, who under the goad of Alecto participated in Bacchic revels in Latium (Aeneid 7.341-405):

Straightway Alecto, through whose body flows
the Gorgon poison, took her viewless way
to Latium and the lofty walls and towers
of the Laurentian King. Crouching she sate
in silence on the threshold of the bower
where Queen Amata in her fevered soul
pondered, with all a woman’s wrath and fear,
upon the Trojans and the marriage-suit
of Turnus. From her Stygian hair the fiend
a single serpent flung, which stole its way
to the Queen’s very heart, that, frenzy-driven,
she might on her whole house confusion pour.
Betwixt her smooth breast and her robe it wound
unfelt, unseen, and in her wrathful mind
instilled its viper soul. Like golden chain
around her neck it twined, or stretched along
the fillets on her brow, or with her hair
enwrithing coiled; then on from limb to limb
slipped tortuous. Yet though the venom strong
thrilled with its first infection every vein,
and touched her bones with fire, she knew it not,
nor yielded all her soul, but made her plea
in gentle accents such as mothers use;
and many a tear she shed, about her child,
her darling, destined for a Phrygian’s bride:
“O father! can we give Lavinia’s hand
to Trojan fugitives? why wilt thou show
no mercy on thy daughter, nor thyself;
nor unto me, whom at the first fair wind
that wretch will leave deserted, bearing far
upon his pirate ship my stolen child?
Was it not thus that Phrygian shepherd came
to Lacedaemon, ravishing away
Helen, the child of Leda, whom he bore
to those false Trojan lands? Hast thou forgot
thy plighted word? Where now thy boasted love
of kith and kin, and many a troth-plight given
unto our kinsman Turnus? If we need
an alien son, and Father Faunus’ words
irrevocably o’er thy spirit brood,
I tell thee every land not linked with ours
under one sceptre, but distinct and free,
is alien; and ‘t is thus the gods intend.
Indeed, if Turnus’ ancient race be told,
it sprang of Inachus, Acrisius,
and out of mid-Mycenae.”
But she sees
her lord Latinus resolute, her words
an effort vain; and through her body spreads
the Fury’s deeply venomed viper-sting.
Then, woe-begone, by dark dreams goaded on,
she wanders aimless, fevered and unstrung
along the public ways; as oft one sees
beneath the twisted whips a leaping top
sped in long spirals through a palace-close
by lads at play: obedient to the thong,
it weaves wide circles in the gaping view
of its small masters, who admiring see
the whirling boxwood made a living thing
under their lash. So fast and far she roved
from town to town among the clansmen wild.
Then to the wood she ran, feigning to feel
the madness Bacchus loves; for she essays
a fiercer crime, by fiercer frenzy moved.
Now in the leafy dark of mountain vales
she hides her daughter, ravished thus away
from Trojan bridegroom and the wedding-feast.
“Hail, Bacchus! Thou alone,” she shrieked and raved,
“art worthy such a maid. For thee she bears
the thyrsus with soft ivy-clusters crowned,
and trips ecstatic in thy beauteous choir.
For thee alone my daughter shall unbind
the glory of her virgin hair.” Swift runs
the rumor of her deed; and, frenzy-driven,
the wives of Latium to the forests fly,
enkindled with one rage. They leave behind
their desolated hearths, and let rude winds
o’er neck and tresses blow; their voices fill
the welkin with convulsive shriek and wail;
and, with fresh fawn-skins on their bodies bound,
they brandish vine-clad spears. The Queen herself
lifts high a blazing pine tree, while she sings
a wedding-song for Turnus and her child.
With bloodshot glance and anger wild, she cries:
“Ho! all ye Latin wives, if e’er ye knew
kindness for poor Amata, if ye care
for a wronged mother’s woes, O, follow me!
Cast off the matron fillet from your brows,
and revel to our mad, voluptuous song.”
Thus, through the woodland haunt of creatures wild,
Alecto urges on the raging Queen
with Bacchus’ cruel goad.

While not an arrival myth this passage does have some fucking profound implications. Which I’ll save for a separate post.

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it’s a god eat god world

And in the myth of Zeus’ birth they introduced Kronos as accustomed to swallow his children immediately after their birth, and Rhea as trying to keep her travail secret and, when the child was born, to get it out of the way and save its life by every means in her power; and to accomplish this it is said that she took as helpers the Kouretes, who, by surrounding the goddess with tambourines and similar noisy instruments and with war-dance and uproar, were supposed to strike terror into Kronos and without his knowledge to steal his child away. (Strabo, Geography 10.3.11)

What if this is how syncretism works? When one god devours another, they absorb all of their powers, attributes, myths and cultus.

Zeus swallowed the phallos of the first-born king, onto which all
the immortals grew (or: clung fast), blessed gods and goddesses
and rivers and lovely springs and everything else
that had been born then; and he himself became solitary
(Orphic theogony quoted in Derveni papyrus)

And since the gods are athanatos it need not be the end of their activity – they just have to do it from a distance. Perhaps they continue exerting an influence on their host, slightly altering their personality, which is why Isis Thesmophoros is so markedly different from Aset.

This also explains why Dionysos is nuttier than a Turkish bathhouse. I’m aware of more than 120 distinct syncretic forms of him, and I’m sure that’s just scratching the surface. You ever been entheos? It can be a lot like Vergil describes in the sixth book of the Aeneid:

But the prophetess, not yet able to endure Apollo, raves in the cavern,
swollen in stature, striving to throw off the god from her breast;
he all the more exercises her frenzied mouth, quelling her wild heart,
and fashions her by pressure.

Now imagine having a legion of gods and daimones crawling around inside you.

Which is one of the reasons I found this lovely song so apt:

Zagreus sits inside your head
Zagreus lives among the dead
Zagreus sees you in your bed
And eats you when you’re sleeping

Zagreus at the end of days
Zagreus lies all other ways
Zagreus comes when time’s a maze
And all of history’s weeping

Zagreus taking time apart
Zagreus fears the hero heart
Zagreus seeks the final part
The reward he is reaping

Zagreus sings when all is lost
Zagreus takes all those he’s crossed
Zagreus wins and all is cost
The hero’s hearts he’s keeping

Zagreus seeks the hero’s ship
Zagreus needs the web to rip
Zagreus sups time at a drip
And life aside, he’s sweeping

Zagreus waits at the end of the world
For Zagreus is the end of the world
His time is the end of time
His moment is Time’s undoing

The Titans didn’t trick Dionysos with their childish crepundia – he let himself get eaten, so that he could transform them from within their bellies. Sort of like what happens when you imbibe.

The beginning of their drinking dates from the reign of Psammetichus; before that they did not drink wine nor use it in libation as something dear to the gods, thinking it to be the blood of those who had once battled against the gods, and from whom, when they had fallen and had become commingled with the earth, they believed vines to have sprung. This is the reason why drunkenness drives men out of their senses and crazes them, inasmuch as they are then filled with the blood of their forbears. These tales Eudoxus says in the second book of his World Travels are thus related by the priests. (Plutarch, On Isis and Osiris 353e)

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A thought …

You know what would be badass? A zombie version of the Aeneid. Troy is overrun by the walking dead and the survivors (a mix of Greeks and Trojans) flee to Italy, founding Rome as the last bastion of humanity. You could even more or less keep to the plot of the original – Aeneas carrying his father and household gods on his back as he flees the burning ruins would be even more dramatic with revenants chasing them.

Cypria Fragment #3
Scholiast on Homer, Il. i. 5:
There was a time when the countless tribes of men, though wide- dispersed, oppressed the surface of the deep-bosomed earth, and Zeus saw it and had pity and in his wise heart resolved to relieve the all-nurturing earth of men by causing the great struggle of the Ilian war, that the load of death might empty the world. And so the heroes were slain in Troy, and the plan of Zeus came to pass.

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Fragments from Euripides’ The Cretans

Minos
[. . .] She alone dared this crime

Chorus
My Lord, you must think:
how can you hide it,
cover up these horrors

Pasiphaë
There is nothing to gain now by deceiving you;
what has happened is already too well known. But consider:
If I had sold the gifts of Kypris,
given my body in secret to some man,
you would have every right to condemn me
as a whore. But this was no act of the will;
I am suffering from some madness brought on
by a god.

It’s not plausible!
What could I have seen in a bull
to assault my heart with this shameful passion?
Did he look too handsome in his robe?
Did a sea of fire smoulder in his eyes?
Was it the red tint of his hair, his dark beard?
His body, so [different] from my husband’s? [. . .]
Are these the things that drew me to lie
in his bed, in my cowskin [. . .]?
I did not imagine that my lover
could give me children [. . .]
What diseased my mind?

Minos’ god afflicted me,
and Minos is more [guilty in this affair than I am.]
He prayed to his god of the sea, and swore
to sacrifice that portentous bull
and then he spared it from the slaughter.

[to Minos]

No wonder Poseidon sought you out:
to punish you through this sick passion
in my heart.

And you would testify before the gods,
when your misdeeds have led to my disgrace.
As the innocent mother of this monster,
I tried to conceal the god’s assault;
but in your cruelty you put
your wife’s humiliation on display,
as if you’d have no share in it.
It is your fault, and my sickness,
my destruction, the result of your sin.
If you intend me to be killed at sea,
kill me now: you are an expert
in human sacrifice and acts of blood.
Do you crave the taste of my flesh?
Then prepare the feast, you cannibal!
Though I am free from all wrongdoing,
let my death pay your penances.

Chorus
Surely this was brought about by the gods;
[do not indulge] your anger, my lord.

Minos
Is she muzzled yet? She bellows [. . .]

Come, [. . . weapons . . .]
Seize that thing — let her die miserably [. . . ]
Bring her accomplice as well — take them both
into the palace, cage them in the cells below
where they’ll never see the light of day again.

Chorus
My lord, please reconsider this judgment;
mercilessness is never admirable.

Minos
My justice is resolved and cannot be postponed.

[…]

Leader of the Chorus
Lord of Europa’s Tyrian line,
Zeus-born, who boldest at thy feet
The hundred citadels of Crete,
I seek to thee from that dim shrine,

Hoofed by the quick and carven beam,
By Chalyb steel and wild bull’s blood
In flawless joints of cypress wood
Made steadfast. There in one pure stream

My days have run, the servant I,
Initiate, of Idaean Jove;
Where midnight Zagreus roves, I rove;
I have endured his thunder-cry:

Fulfilled his red and bleeding feasts;
Held the Great Mother’s mountain flame;
I am set free and named by name
A Bacchos of the Mailed Priests.

Robed in pure white I have borne me clean
From man’s vile birth and coffined clay,
And exiled from my lips alway
Touch of all flesh full of soul.

Minos
To you ruling over all I bring a mixed offering, whether you are
pleased to be called Zeus or Hades; accept from me a sacrifice
without fire, poured forth, full of all sorts of fruit.

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Yeah, I can see how Starry Bull cosmology might be a little intimidating for folks

I suppose, for accuracy, I should have said roots not elements, since Empedokles referred to these generative forces as rhizai (“roots”) or rhizômata (“root-clumps”) which is significant when you consider that according to Timaios after getting expelled from the Pythagorean brotherhood Empedokles began associating with rhizotomoi (“root-cutters”) or magicians who specialized in plants, a knowledge he boasted of in his treatise The Purifications.

What got me thinking of this wizard of philosophy this morning was reading a passage from Athenaios:

The word anestis is identical with nestis (“fasting”), by redundant use of a, like stachys and astachys (“ear of grain”). It is found in Kratinos: ‘Surely you are not the first uninvited guest to come to dinner hungry.’ (Deipnosophistai 47b)

I either forgot or never bothered to look up the derivation of Nestis. I’d always just accepted it as a euphemistic gloss for Persephone in her role as a nymph of waters à la Photios:

A Sicilian goddess mentioned by Alexis. (s.v. Nestis)

And Simplicius:

Empedocles mixes four parts of fire to make bones (perhaps saying they have more fire than any of the other elements because of their dryness and white color, and two of earth and one of air, one of water, which he calls both ‘Nestis’ and ‘gleaming’ – Nestis because of their fluidity, from naein ‘swimming’ and ‘flowing’; and ‘gleaming’ since they are transparent. (Commentary on Aristotle’s De Anima 68.2-14)

So I checked a lexicon and discovered that, indeed, νῆστις means fasting:

From the inseparable negative particle ne– (not) and esthio (to consume); not eating, i.e. to abstain from food for religious reasons.

Which makes sense in light of the punishment that Demeter inflicted upon Sicily in her daughter’s absence:

Where the girl was she knew not, but reproached the whole wide world as ungrateful, not deserving her gift of grain – and Trinacria in chief, for this was where she had found the traces of her loss. So there with angry hands she broke the ploughs that turned the soil and sent to death alike the farmer and his labouring ox, and bade the fields betray their trust, and spoilt the seeds. False lay the island’s fertility, famous through all the world. The young crops died in the first blade, destroyed now by the rain too violent, now by the sun too strong. The stars and the winds assailed them; hungry birds gobbled the scattered seeds; thistles and twitch, unconquerable twitch, wore down the wheat. (Ovid, Metamorphoses 5. 475 ff )

This was also an element of one of Persephone’s most important festivals:

And whenever they are famished, they invoke the witticism that they are celebrating the middle day of the Thesmophoria. This day, the eleventh of Pyanepsion, was the Nesteia on which the women abstained from eating and remained at rest. (Scholion on Aristophanes, Thesmophoriazousae 80)

And as you see, the name is right there; since the Thesmophoria was a popular festival in Sicily (albeit celebrated with some slight variations from the Attic form we tend to be more familiar with) this is likely where Empedokles got it from.

Further corroboration is found in one of the few extant references to Nestis, an Orphic gold tablet from Thurii in Southern Italy, which I’ve found in two separate and very different translations.

Translation One:

To the First-Born, to Mother Earth, to Cybela, daughter of Demeter.
Zeus, Air, Sun. Fire conquers all.
Avatars of fortune and Phanes. Moirai that remember all. You, O illustrious daimon.
Father who subdues all. Compensation.
Air, Fire, Mother, Nestis, Night, Day.
Fasting for seven days. Zeus who sees all. Always. Mother, hear my prayer.
Fine sacrifices. Sacrifices. Demeter. Fire. Zeus. The Underground Girl.
Hero. Light to the intelligence. The Adviser seized the Girl.
Earth. Air. To the intelligence.

Translation Two:

To Earth, first-born Mother, Cybelean Kore said: … [lacuna] … of Demeter … all-seeing Zeus.
O Sun, Fire, you went through all towns, when you appeared with the Victories and Fortunes and All-wise Fate, where you increase the brightness of the festival with your lordship, O glorious deity! By you all things are subdued, all things overpowered, all things smitten! The Decrees of Fate must everywhere be endured. O Fire, lead me to the Mother, if the fast can endure, to fast for seven nights and days! For there was a seven-day fast, O Olympian Zeus and all-seeing Sun …

Based on this one might surmise that Empedokles would have associated Persephone with the rhiza of earth, but instead he makes her preside over water. Indeed this is the only association explicitly stated, leaving commenters both ancient and modern to puzzle out the rest.

I tend to agree with the solution that John Burnet proposed:

Now αἰθήρ certainly means Fire in Anaxagoras, as we shall see, but there is no doubt that in Empedokles it meant Air. It seems likely, then, that Knatz is right (“Empedoclea” in Schedae Philologicae Hermanno Usenero oblatae, 1891, pp. 1 sqq.) in holding that the bright Air of Empedokles was Zeus. This leaves Aidoneus to stand for Fire; and nothing could have been more natural for a Sicilian poet, with the volcanoes and hot springs of his native island in mind, than this identification. He refers to the fires that burn beneath the Earth himself (fr. 52). If that is so, we shall have to agree with the Homeric Allegorists that Hera is Earth; and surely φερέσβιος Ἥρα can be none other than “Mother Earth.” The epithet seems only to be used of earth and corn. (Early Greek philosophy, chapter 5)

As opposed to that of Hippolytus in the Refutation of All Heresies (1.33), though I like how Hippolytus links fasting and fluidity:

Jupiter is fire, and life-giving Juno earth, which produces fruits for the support of existence; and Aidoneus air, because although through him we behold all things, yet himself alone we do not see. But Nestis is water, for this is a sole vehicle of food, and thus becomes a cause of sustenance to all those that are being nourished; but this of itself is not able to afford nutriment to those that are being nourished. For if it did possess the power of affording nutriment, animal life, he says, could never be destroyed by famine, inasmuch as water is always superabundant in the world. For this reason he denominates Nestis water, because, though indirectly being a cause of nutriment, it is not of itself competent to afford nutriment to those things that are being nourished.

Persephone is associated with water and other fluids by more than just Empedokles, as John Opsopaus ably demonstrates:

Springs, wells and other sources of water from the earth were central to the Mysteries of Persephone, and the Eleusinian Mysteries grew up around a spring. This is because springs represent entrances to the Underworld, especially in Greece, where it is common for them to reenter the earth after flowing above ground for some distance. When Persephone was abducted, She was taken down the spring called Kuanê, which was said to have been created from the Maiden’s tears, and She is virtually identical with Kuanê, the nymph of that spring. Indeed, Persephone is Queen of the Nymphs, the daughters of Ocean who are the spirits of springs and streams. Similarly, Demeter, mourning Her lost daughter, created a spring from Her tears. (The equation of Water and divine tears is a distinctly Pythagorean idea, which will be considered later in connection with the Salt Sea.) Kuanos (blue) is the color of divine mourning and grief and is associated with the Mysteries of Demeter and Persephone, which are closely connected with Pythagoreanism and Empedoclean magic; Pythagoreans (especially women) were often the Priests and Priestesses in the mysteries of Demeter and Persephone. Therefore Kuanos is associated with Water and the Underworld.; it is also the color of Cocytus, the river of mourning and tears, which is opposite Pyriphlegethon, the river of fire in the Underworld, as Water is opposite Fire on the Elemental Square. (According to Damscius, each of the Four Rivers of the Underworld has an associated Element.) Water is also connected with the Milk of Immortality from Persephone’s Breasts, for in the Mysteries She is a Goddess of joyous rebirth as well as grievous dissolution. For example, on the Bacchic/Orphic gold tablets (Zuntz A1-3) from Thessaly (a region known for Witchcraft), which date back to the fifth century BCE, we read:

I have flown out of the Circle of Heavy Grief
and stepped swift-footed on the Circle of Joy.
I have made straight for the Breast of the Mistress, the Queen of the Underworld.
And now I come a suppliant to Holy Persephoneia,
that of Her Grace She send me to the Seats of the Hallowed.
Happy and Blessed One, thou shalt be God instead of mortal.
A Kid I have fallen into Milk.

An abundance of milk is a standard symbol in the Bacchic Mysteries, and milk is often involved in immortalization rites. Further, many enlightened individuals are described as consuming only milk.
The Water of Life is found near Persephone’s Tree. Pherecydes (6th. cent. BCE), a mentor of Pythagoras, told how Khthoniê (She Beneath the Earth – one of Persephone’s names) stretches upward as a self-supporting Winged Oak (Hupopteros Drus), with Her Roots in the Underworld, Her trunk climbing through the middle elements, Her crown in Heaven. At the base of the Tree, between Her Roots, is the Outflow (Ekroê), the Springs of Ambrosia (Krênai Ambrosiai), for the Waters of the Underworld flow out from Her Roots. The Winged Oak, round which the Robe of Earth is wrapped, draws into Her Roots the sap of life, the Waters of the Abyss, conveys it upward to Her crown, from which the golden Ambrosial Dew drips down like honey to feed immortal souls. (Indeed “Ambrosia” means “immortal.”) Before a soul can return to incarnation, it must approach one of these rivers and drink the Water of Life from it, for the Outflow of the Rivers is called the Semen of Life. Thus a fourth century BCE Orphic Gold Tablet (Zuntz B1) is inscribed:

Thou shalt find to the left of the House of Hades a Spring,
and by the side thereof standing a White Cypress.
To this Spring approach not near.
But thou shalt find another, from the Lake of Memory,
Cold Water flowing forth, and there are Guardians before it.
Say: “I am a child of Earth and Starry Heaven,
but my race is of Heaven alone. This Ye know Yourselves.
But I am parched with thirst and I perish. Give me quickly
the Cold Water flowing forth from the Lake of Memory.”
And of Themselves They will give thee to drink of the Holy Spring.
And thereafter among the other Heroes thou shalt have lordship.

The spring on the left is associated with Forgetfulness (Lêthê) and dissolution, the spring on the right with Memory and immortality. The revitalizing Tree of Life belongs to the Goddess and is guarded by the serpent Ophioneus (or Ophiôn) who dwells in the waters around Her roots. (We find this same theme in the serpent guarding the Apples of the Tree of the nymphs Hesperides, which is in the west, the region of death, near the World Axis where Atlas supports Heaven.)

Total aside, but this fragment from Pherekydes has always reminded me of that section from The Doors’ Celebration of the Lizard:

Some outlaws lived by the side of a lake
The minister’s daughter’s in love with the snake
Who lives in a well by the side of the road
Wake up, Girl, we’re almost home.

Is the Girl that wakes up the weaver Persephone or the spinner Ariadne? Depends on how much she drank.

Want to have your mind totally blown? There’s another place you can find mortal tears and αἰθήρ mixed. Tarentum.

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The Story

You would hear a story – the story – Mousaios? Very well, I will tell it. But first let all the profane ones close the door of their ears – it is not proper for the like to take such holy words into themselves.

The Maiden lived on the beautiful island of Sicily but she could only see its plentiful fields of colorful flowers from her window, for she was locked away in a cold stone tower that was guarded by ferocious dragons, placed there by her mother, the grain goddess. Demeter had fled to Sicily from Olympos long ago, after being raped in a field of beans by her brother Zeus, king of the gods; she had raised the Maiden in fearful isolation lest a similar fate befall her. When the spidery Maiden wasn’t wistfully gazing at the world outside her web, she was busy weaving its replica at her loom and dreaming of a life of freedom and adventure that would never be hers.

One day Hybla, mother of the bee-rich mountains nearby, took pity on the Maiden and sent her nymphs, who were knowledgeable in all the herbs that grow on that miraculously fertile island, to drug the dragons into a deep slumber from which they would not rouse, and the nymphs enticed the Maiden from her tower of solitude to dance with them and gather lovely flowers for festive crowns. They were joined in their revels by the virgins Athene, Artemis and Hekate who were overjoyed to be reunited with their long-lost sister the Maiden, who had never been given a proper name of her own, so great had her mother neglected her in an effort to protect her. At the pool of Kyane the Maiden stopped and stared intently at her reflection, mesmerized by the image of herself that floated upon that exceedingly blue water. It was such a rich color because it’s depths were unfathomable – some said it went all the way down to the kingdom of the dead which was ruled over by a somber figure in a wolf’s cloak who sat upon his black throne and never addressed the gloomy subjects of his infernal realm.

From mount Eryx the goddess Aphrodite watched and plotted. She loathed the king below for in all of creation his stony heart was the only one she could not touch. Her empire of love extended from the surface of the earth to the dwelling of the remote cosmic gods high above the stars – but the doors of hell itself were barred her. So she sent her lover Hermes, death’s herald, to beguile Haides with his cunning words – swift as thought he descended and was at the dread sovereign’s side, whispering into his ear. He spoke of the unsurpassed beauty of the Maiden above, inventing erotic verse, and Haides felt a strange stirring in his loins; when he glanced up and caught sight of the Maiden through the waters of Kyane he was done for – trapped by the threads Aphrodite had artfully woven around him with the aid of clever Hermes. He was mad with lust for the Maiden and had to possess her! He reached a hand up through the waters and nearly grasped her, but at the last instant her sisters called out to her and the Maiden rushed off to join the riotous troop of reveling nymphs.

They ran the distance from the spring of Kyane to the marshes of Enna where the Palikoi have their dwelling, twin sons of the nymph Thalia and Adranos the smith-god who works his forge beneath the earth in the streams of lava that send up geysers of steam and boiling water to test the hearts of those who swear oaths at this spot. Nearby is the cave of the nymphs, the navel of Sicily, which is surrounded by violets and irises and hyacinths and many other types of flower as well; and there is never a season of the year when these flowers grow not. Their fragrance is so great that it throws hunting dogs off the scent, so many rabbits and deer and other creatures have made their home here with the nymphs in this paradise on earth. While her sisters and the nymphs were playing with the animals and exchanged ribald verse with the Palikoi who graze their herds in the area (the one placid-eyed cattle, the other swine of immense size) the Maiden wandered off to explore a cave from which the most alluring scent of roses came – roses said to have sprung up for the first time when the shepherd Daphnis was pulled under water by the nymph who loved him; in the struggle his blood was shed and splattered to the ground becoming roses. As the Maiden was about to enter the cave the earth shook violently and a great chasm opened up causing the swine of the Palikos-brother to tumble into the abyss. All the other beasts and the nymphs and goddesses fled screaming in terror, all save Hekate who watched astonished as a black carriage drawn by black steeds with eyes like glowing coals rose to the surface. Goading them on was the lord of the dead in golden armor that shown like the sun, the pelt of a wolf hanging across his broad shoulders and a double-headed axe carved from the thigh-bone of a giant clutched in his right hand. And she watched as the carriage pulled up next to the petrified Maiden and the king of hell reached out and grabbed her about the waist and hoisted her over his shoulder as if she weighed less than a cloud. The Maiden screeched and pounded his back with her tender fists but to no avail; Haides snapped the reins and the team of steeds were off, headed towards that part of Sicily that in time would be settled by the men of Minos when they came here from Crete in search of Daidalos. Hekate watched until even the clouds of dust disappeared, but she dared not follow.

She was standing like that still several days later when the goddess Demeter staggered up, her black gown tattered and stained with dirt, her hair down and loose like a mountain-roaving bacchant, her features etched by sorrow and tears. Demeter spotted the goddess by the wayside and inquired if she had seen her daughter, whom she was searching for, as she had asked so many times since returning to the tower and the slumbering dragons. Demeter informed her of all the places she had already been – the river of Arethusa where Artemis was wont to bathe, down by the seashore where Poseidon’s one-eyed son pined for fair Galatea, whom he had lost to the white-capped waves, the crater of Aetna where Typhoeus was buried after having been defeated in battle with the gods; Demeter stopped there to light her torches so that she could continue to search by night. She came to the kingdom of Saturnus in Italy where men lived without war or want; he was a good and pious king and he received the goddess hospitably, bidding her refresh herself with fine red wine, and take her fill of sweet cakes soaked in honey, and ripe figs plucked right from the tree. He even offered to butcher his fattened oxen to make feast for her, but she refused. All she would accept was a bowl of water with some barley and grated cheese mixed in, and to make this feast fit for a dog more palatable Demeter added some mentha pulegium leaves and drank it right up. In return for his hospitality she offered to make his son Ianus immortal but as she was holding the boy over the fire his mother Ops came and screamed in horror. She grabbed the boy by the head and tried to pull him away from the grieving mad-woman but Demeter held tight and the boy’s flesh, softened by the fire, began to reshape itself so that he now had two faces, one on either side.

She traveled the length and breadth of Italy but found no sign of her daughter and had finally returned to Sicily in search of her. No one she had interrogated in all that time had seen or heard anything – even the sun that sees all and the primordial oracle of Nyx were silent. At the place that would one day be called Syrakousai she was exhausted and sat to rest a while on a boulder – one can see the indent she made in the stone to this day – and while she wept for the daughter she had lost a strange old woman named Iambe approached her and tried to get her to smile. All her jokes were to no avail so to cover her head in shame Iambe lifted her skirt high, exposing her nether parts, which brought a chuckle to Demeter’s lips – the first time she had laughed since she had come to Sicily to flee her wicked brother.

From there she journeyed to Enna and that’s when she found Hekate standing by the chasm. Hekate explained all and pledged to join Demeter in her search, no matter how long it took them to find the raptured Maiden. Finally the pair came to the Hyblaean range where the prophetic sons of Apollon dwell and perform their orgiastic gecko dances while Mother Hybla beats the kettle-drum for them. These told the wandering women what they had seen in a dream-vision – a black wolf carrying a dove in its teeth through gates of flame – and Hybla warned Demeter to give up her search, for the goddess would not like what she found. They heeded Mother Hybla not.

Hekate was clever and understood that the dream had indicated the river Phlegethon near Baiae where the Oracle of the Dead was located; its fiery depths served as the border between this world and the next. Hekate took Demeter by the hand (the grain-goddess was terrified) and led her into a cave which contained a secret passageway to the invisible land. They were greeted by Hermes on the shores of the Kokytos who came bearing torches to lead them the rest of the way.

When finally they reached the castle of the midnight sun Demeter’s frantic search was over – there in the chamber-room on a throne of gleaming bone to complement the onyx of her lord was the Maiden, though she was a maiden no longer. The girl licked blood-red pomegranate juice from her kiss-swollen lips and informed her mother that she now had a name. Persephone she was to be called when her mother came to visit; she lived in this world of death now, with Haides her master. As the two began to fight as only women can fight the cheeks of Persephone’s husband took on a semblance of color they had never known before – Hekate and Hermes turned their gaze away, uncomfortable by the death-king’s open display of emotion. The sound of Aphrodite’s triumphant laughter made Eryx temporarily bereft of doves. Finally daughter and mother were reconciled: Persephone would remain as queen of those below and not suffer to be locked away in her mother’s bower – but she would come back for visits, since she loved Demeter dearly. Demeter was satisfied that Haides would protect and care for and treat her daughter well, for she had seen how they were doting upon each other when Hermes led her into their chamber. Yes, this Kronides would make a fine husband for her little girl – a better husband than she herself had ever known. Neither Zeus nor Poseidon nor Zephyros had treated her well – the only pleasure she’d known, and briefly, was in the arms of Iasion in a thrice-plowed field. But this would not do – the two of them running off to elope! They were gods born of gods and rulers of uncounted hosts below the earth – they deserved honor in the halls of high Olympos. And so Demeter set about arranging a proper wedding for them, one to rival even that of Kadmos and Harmonia.

The site that they chose would in generations to come be called Lokroi of the Western Wind but the gods then knew it as the Land of Blessedness. All the great and small gods of Greece and Italy were summoned to the festivities which lasted for a full nine days and nine nights and not once in all that time did saffron-cloaked Hymenaios’ torches smoke or sputter. The party really got started on the sixth day when Dionysos and his shaggy satyrs arrived on the scene with kegs of the best wine that had ever been brewed and he gifted the groom with a kantharos that remained always full and a golden branch of ivy; to the bride he gave a finely-wrought distaff and a ball of silver thread which he said she would one day have need of. Each of the gods sought to outdo each other in the gifts they bestowed on the happy couple and when it was Mother Hybla’s turn she brought a large kettle-drum with a spider at the center of a web painted upon the taut hide. Once she had presented her gift Demeter took her aside and inquired about the strange prophecy she had delivered which had gone unfulfilled. Mother Hybla just laughed and said that there is time yet for you to regret what your eyes have witnessed. Zeus was last among the gods to present his daughter with her bridal gift. He staggered up to the happy couple, head muddled from his son’s wine and nearly tripping over his feet like some poor sloppy satyr. He gave his daughter possession of Sicily and the girdle of Aphrodite and slurring his words told her he hoped she used it well, for he wanted many fat grand-children to bounce on his knee just like Demeter’s flabby titties had bounced when they conceived her in that bean-field. Hera, shamed by her drunken husband’s obscene outburst, escorted him back to Olympos and the revelers returned to their celebration as if nothing had happened.

Persephone settled into her role as queen of the dead quite happily; she persuaded her husband to make some changes so that it was a more pleasant place for the shades to spend eternity and their love blossomed like the flowers that had led her to that cave. She even convinced Haides to get a pet, the three-headed dog Kerberos who fawned upon his masters but was ferocious when he stood sentry at the gates of hell. As happy as their marriage was, it remained childless for death’s lord was sterile. Persephone said she did not mind – she had all the dead as her children, but secretly she was grieved by her empty womb and so when Theseus and Perithous harrowed hell to rescue her she imprisoned them and vented her anger by punishing them in increasingly cruel ways. Likewise Persephone devised torments for Ixion and Tantalos and Sisyphos and all of the other great sinners; before her Haides had merely buried them in shit, for he lacked her creativity or malice.

Then everything changed, so that in times to come their happiness would seem as insubstantial and fleeting as a dream. While Persephone was pelting Niobe with seventy stones, her husband grabbed her by the neck and thrust her up against a wall. He ripped the gown from her body and grinned wolfishly at her nakedness. For a moment she was caught pleasantly by surprise – her husband’s affections were never so ardent – but then she looked into his eyes and knew that it was not Haides who was having his way with her. She had seen him but once, at her wedding, and she would recognize the eyes of her father Zeus anywhere. Persephone pleaded and tried to fight her rapist off, but to no avail. One could wrap a golden chain about the waist of Zeus and all the Olympians together could not force him to budge so much as an inch, so great was his power. Still she fought and pleaded with her father not to do this thing, but all he said was that he would have fat grand-children to bounce on his knee, one way or another. She begged him to resume his natural form or at least to change into a horse or a bull or some winged creature, but he retained the face of her husband all the while that he raped her. Zeus could be a gentle lover, soft as rays of golden sunlight – he was not gentle with Persephone. He tore her flesh and made her bleed like an over-ripe pomegranate crushed in a fist. And when her rending was complete he left her there with only battered Niobe to help her back to her husband.

Something broke in her that day – gone was the sunny girl plucking flowers, gone the haughty queen of the underworld. In their place remained a mere shell of a woman, a shadow of her former self. So deep in sorrow was she plunged that she neither ate nor spoke nor saw to the needs of her immortal body – even when her pale belly swelled with life. When she was delivered of a daughter – Melinoë whose body was half light and half dark and mangled by the fury of her father – Haides hoped that she would be restored to him, but instead Persephone thrust the crying babe away from her and refused to give her her breast. Haides did the best that he could to raise little Melinoë but he had no training in such things or skill in general when it came to dealing with others. Aphrodite took pity on them for the devastation she had unleashed with her ambitions and so became Melinoë’s wet-nurse. When the girl was older Haides made sure that she had plenty of monsters as well as the Erinyes to play with, but she grew strange with only these strange things to keep her company. Haides worried that he was doing wrong by her, so he sought a normal girl and one of good character to be her playmate – the daughter of his old friend Herakles – who accepted death to preserve the lives of her siblings. He adopted her as his own daughter and Melinoë and Makaria became bosom companions, though there remained something off about Persephone’s wayward daughter. She was often found staring at things even spirits could not see and was subject to uncontrollable fits of manic violence that frightened the lord of hell. These failed to rouse her mother from her melancholic torpor; the most she would do to acknowledge her daughter was recoil in disgust when she came near.

Haides was mulling over his problems, as he often did these days, when Dionysos came striding up and boldly announced that he was there to win back his mother’s soul. Having proved his might on earth and established himself as one of the Olympians by brokering the release of Hera and aiding them in their war with the rebellious giants, the son of Semele planned to conquer even hell itself. The king of the dead was in no mood to be sassed by the upstart wine-god and so he leapt from his black throne and transformed himself into a ravening wolf mid-air. Haides’ fangs and claws tore the side of the bull that Dionysos had become and the son of Zeus butted the lupine god away with his savage horns. The fight was fierce and shook the halls of hell, causing the shades to scatter like a swarm whose hive has been upturned. Melinoë alone remained, clapping and laughing madly at the skirmish that played out before her. Haides struck the bull a mighty blow and Dionysos resumed his man-shape just in time to save Melinoë from getting crushed. He begged an end to their conflict – saving his mother from the gloom was not worth harming a child as precious as this. Haides’ heart was warmed by the stranger’s kindness and he changed his countenance so that it gleamed as brightly as the sun once more. Haides collapsed to his knees and confessed that he didn’t know what to do – his daughter was insane and her mother even worse, lost to him in the labyrinth of Tartaros. Dionysos merely smiled and said that such things were his specialty.

He slaughtered a ram by the river of Lethe and spread its wet hide over a tripod, which he bid Melinoë sit upon. Then he washed her in milk and sprinkled her with ash and white chalk, making a game of it, until the girl looked like a ghost. He placed a crown of flowers on her head and then started to dance and sing in a rough semi-circle around her. Melinoë watched incredulously at first, glancing at her equally incredulous father who just shrugged his shoulders. Then all of a sudden her eyes grew heavy and she began to sway in time to the rhythmic movements and noise Dionysos was making. Haides feared she might fall off the three-footed stool but despite the laxness of her body she remained firmly in place. Then Dionysos began taking a series of toys from the pouch he wore at his side and handed them to the girl. With each gift he leaned in and whispered something in her ear, then continued dancing about like a capering goat. And then he showed her something else, something which it is not lawful to reveal to the uninitiate, something that left her simultaneously weeping and laughing. After it was done he helped her down from the tripod and the two of them walked hand-in-hand to Haides, Melinoë running the rest of the way to her father, clasping him tightly to her as she never had before. She glanced up at him with eyes that had always been murky with madness but now were clear as the light of the day; Haides shed tears as freely as Aethra one day would. He had his daughter back. Before death’s king could properly thank Dionysos he had his back turned towards them and was approaching the labyrinth of Tartaros into which Persephone had wandered and gotten lost. Haides had tried to find her and failed; neither Hekate nor Hermes nor any of the others he sent proved any more successful. Dionysos should have been frightened to be entering hell’s hell but he was too drunk to care.

After wandering through nightmares and perversions for an eternity he finds the Maiden, more a monster than a girl. He gets the rocks to spew forth wine and bids her drink in a voice impossible to ignore. Once she has drunk to intoxication she begins talking. The things she says are horrible and beyond believing, a mix of truth and delusion which she cannot tell apart. Dionysos listens to it all, gentle and not judging. He bids her drink more and then he holds her, soothing the pain and fury that has become such a part of her that she knows nothing else. She relaxes into his loving arms and he just holds her and rocks and says nothing. How funny, she remarks after a while. I remember when our positions were reversed. You were my child then, trembling in fear for you knew the monsters with white faces would come for you one day and no matter how hard you fought or fast you ran they would still rip you apart and eat your bloody flesh. I held you and shushed you to sleep, my child, not believing a word of it – and then it happened. I couldn’t save you from them. Do you remember that? No, Dionysos whispers. But I have drunk so much to ease my pain that there is much that I have forgot. I am sure that you tried, mother. Mother? Persephone asks, her body going stiff. Why do you call me that? I am sorry, my sister. Dionysos whispers, I have been so many things over the centuries it is hard to keep track of them all. Oh my brother, you say the strangest things. Persephone laughs, letting him stroke her hair. I suppose you have no choice but to make up stories to entertain yourself, being trapped down here. Especially considering how infrequent my visits have been of late. You come when you can, Dionysos says. I do not begrudge you your life above. Don’t you? She asks. Even with that hideous face and bull’s horns that keep you locked away down here? It’s not your ugliness, you know. I think you’re quite lovely. It’s that you remind father of mother’s sin, of his inadequacies as a man. And he cannot have that. I know, he replies with sorrowful resignation. At least you come to visit me. I will never leave you, my brother. She whispers into his ear, her soft hand exploring the growing hardness between his legs. Not even when you should find yourself a suitable mate, a king from a distant land perhaps? No. Not even then. They make love in the dark, slow and tender and sad, for they both know that isn’t true. She’s going to be his death and run away with that Athenian – the threads of their fate have already been spun. After they have made love (which resulted in the conception of Iakchos) she sits bolt upright. My father. Where’s my father? Don’t worry, my little dove, your father is fine. Dionysos assures her, stopping further protest with a kiss. I gave him my vine-branches and taught him how to make strong wine to share with his neighbors. Boy, are they in for a treat! My dog, she says, confused. Why is my dog’s cry so plaintive?

Dionysos cut Persephone down from the tree, held her lifeless body close to him, and carried her out of the labyrinth and into a meadow of fragrant flowers that would never grow old or lose their scent, setting her down beneath a tree where a stream of ice-cold water ran. In the distance shown a white cypress, radiant in the gloom. Many souls congregated there. He cupped the water in his hands and held it for her to drink. Once she had, he asked if she knew who she was. At first she didn’t. Then she looked at him confusedly and said, I am a child of earth – of earth and the starry sky. Fate and the Thunderer sent me here. I don’t know my name. Yes you do. Who are you? She stared at him for a moment and then nodded. I am the darkness that makes the stars shine forth. And I. Who am I? Persephone smiled. You are my starry bull, my savior. And I will always come for you, whether you are sister, wife or mother. Mother? But I’m not Semele. Not this time, he answers. And then the two of them walked hand-in-hand back to the throne-room of Haides until Persephone spotted her husband – she ran the rest of the way, threw herself into his arms and rapturously kissed him. You returned my daughter and wife to me – however can I thank you? Haides of the golden hair was beside himself with joy. I want a third of your kingdom, the bull proclaimed with savagery in his eyes. And I want you to renounce any claim you might have on my initiates, brother. And the two gods clasped hands in solemn oath to each other.

So when you come before the judges in the underworld you tell them the whole story, you tell them that Bakchios set you free, that you have wine as your fortunate reward.

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Whiskey helps the goddess Hera through her identity crisis in this short film by Jameson Irish Whiskey

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Serpent crowned

Nor is it a case that Plato says this and Orpheus something different. For Hipta, who is the soul of the world, and who is so named in the Theologian because her intellections are expressed in the most vigorous movements. Having placed a winnowing basket on her head and wound it round with a snake she takes into care Dionysos, he of the heart. And Dionysos proceeds toward her out of the thigh of Zeus, to whom he had been united at that point. (Proklos, Commentary on Timaios 1.407.22)

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On the Creation of man

I am reminded of a myth that I never heard before.

Once, Zeus the King of the Gods, conceived in his mind the idea to create man, and behold, man appeared in his primal form, like unto a chunk of potter’s clay. Aphrodite beheld the clay and said, “Man should be beautiful in form, shapely, proportionate, elegant, a perfect mixture of male and female.” And behold, the man came to resemble the deathless Gods in form. Athene said, “Man should be cunning, able to discern right from wrong, and to think up new solutions to problems.” And the man began to think. Ares said, “The man will need to be courageous and fearless, for we have already made many beasts stronger and more terrible than him.” “But not too fearless,” replied Apollo, “lest he become prideful and contend against us, his makers. Let him ever know his mortal place – but strive to attain the best portion of that place.” And it was so, the man changing as each God spoke a different part of him into being. Hera said, “Let him be just, abiding by his promises, and honoring his commitments all of the days of his life.” Hephaistos said, “With his curiosity and ingenuity, let him be a maker like us, using his hands to build new things.” Hestia said, “The man should make for himself a fine dwelling place, and keep it dutifully and with utmost care, for this will be the center of his world.” Artemis said, “But the man also should feel a kinship with all of the other creatures, and feel joy in the wild places.” Dionysos said, “Let him feel with great intensity, that he might participate in the world around him and not remain aloof.” Eris said, “May there be a great hunger in his belly, which drives him ever onward.” Demeter said, “But may he also find consolation for his suffering.” And Hermes said, “One way that he shall do so is through laughter, as he of all the animals shall be keenly aware of the absurdity of things.” And so it went, each God or Goddess who dwells upon Olympos speaking a blessing which shaped the nature of man.

When finally each had had their say, the Gods beheld man, and saw that he was the measure of all things, the greatest of their creations. But Eros, the child of Aphrodite, came running into the room, chasing a ball that had been tossed for him by Peitho, and in his haste he knocked into the table upon which the man was standing, and he tumbled to the marble floor and shattered into countless pieces. Eros picked up the pieces and tried to fit them together again, but it was no use: they had been broken apart too well. Whereas man had originally been one, now he was many, both male and female, and each piece contained an unequal measure of the blessings of the Gods. So it is that some men are more cunning and creative than others, while some have a greater affinity with Ares and his cruel ways.

And there is another mystery here, for just as Eros was the cause of man’s fall, so too is he the source of man’s desire for unity and wholeness, and it is only through him that we feel a measure of that primal state, wherein our broken pieces are temporarily fitted back together again.

If you like this piece or the work I’m doing here at the House of Vines please consider donating to Rhyd Wildermuth so that he can attend the Polytheist Leadership Conference in July.

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neoplatonic bricolage orphic cosmology

And Zeus appoints Dionysos as king of all the gods of the universe and confers on him the highest honours… (Proklos, Commentary on Plato’s Timaios 42d)

… it is said that Hephaistos made a mirror for Dionysos and that the god, seeing himself in it and contemplating his own image, decided to create all plurality… (Proklos, Commentary on Plato’s Timaios 33b)

… Dionysos, when he saw his image reflected in the mirror, began to pursue it and so was torn to pieces. But Apollon put Dionysos back together and brought him back to life because he was a purifying god and the true savior … (Olympiodoros, Commentary on Plato’s Phaedo 67c)

mirror

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I know I’m not one of your favorites, and I’m not welcomed in your house, but I could use a little attention, please.

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I’ve been seeing a bunch of stuff about Constantine the Great in the pagan blogosphere the last couple days in anticipation of Easter.

Unlike a lot of folks I don’t get my hate on when it comes to this Emperor since he was basically an opportunistic devotee of Dionysos who exploited the potential for social cohesion in the nascent church to bolster a floundering Rome. At this point the empire had been greatly destabilized by close to a century of petty foreign wars and civic strife, and was on the brink of economic collapse. There had also been massive droughts and famines and a plague that wiped out close to a tenth of the population. He attempted to reform Rome’s institutions from within to address these problems and met with little success since the senatorial class was deeply entrenched and resistant to change lest they lose their power base so he looked outside to the church as a model for social and political cohesion, repealing the ban on the religion and granting it official imperial patronage. This eventually proved a disastrous move, but it’s unfair to fault him for making it considering the problematic situation the empire found itself in. He was pretty much fucked no matter what he did. So he made a deal with a devil – a deal, by the way, which permitted the Western Roman empire to limp along for another hundred years or so and the Eastern branch to persist until the fifteenth century. In that light his efforts must be seen as something of a success.

But the man himself was no conventional Christian – he continuously put off receiving baptism until his deathbed, at which point he was too weak to protest further and the sacrament may have been performed on him without his consent. When he rededicated a city on the site of the ancient Byzantium to serve as the new imperial capital (the first fully Christian city according to tradition) temples to Tyche and the Dioskouroi were built. A court panegyrist hailed him as being under the divine protection of Apollo and Jupiter years after the incident at the Ponte Milvio and the court historian Zosimus (himself a pagan) recounted how Constantine erected numerous statues to Apollo. Even after he began using the Chi Rho symbol Constantine minted coins with the image of Sol Invictus. Though he made legal concessions to the growing Christian elites (for instance substituting hanging for crucifixion for capital offenses and passing laws that privileged the church with state support and outlawed magic and divination) his primary goal was fostering religious tolerance. He permitted sacrifice in the temples and the celebration of festivals, provided that they were non-compulsory, and gave local, regionally specific cults imperial sanction:

“Let no one disturb another, let each man hold fast to that which his soil wishes…”

But his true allegiance was to the cult of Dionysos, as his grandson the Emperor Julian made clear. In his satirical piece The Caesars (written for the occasion of the Saturnalia) Julian has the great emperors of the past summoned to a feast of the gods with Dionysos advocating for the inclusion of Constantine:

In the silence that followed, Kronos turned to Zeus and said that he was astonished to see that only martial Emperors were summoned to the competition, and not a single philosopher. “For my part, he added, “I like philosophers just as well. So tell Marcus to come in too.” Accordingly Marcus was summoned and came in looking excessively dignified and showing the effect of his studies in the expression of his eyes and his lined brows. His aspect was unutterably beautiful from the very fact that he was careless of his appearance and unadorned by art; for he wore a very long beard, his dress was plain and sober, and from lack of nourishment his body was very shining and transparent, like light most pure and stainless.

When he too had entered the sacred enclosure, Dionysos said, “King Kronos and Father Zeus can any incompleteness exist among the gods?” And when they replied that it could not, “Then,” said he, “let us bring in here some votary of pleasure as well.”

“Nay,” answered Zeus, “it is not permitted that any man should enter here who does not model himself on us.”

“In that case,” said Dionysos, “let them be tried at the entrance.  Let us summon by your leave a man not unwarlike but a slave to pleasure and enjoyment. Let Constantinus come as far as the door.”

Constantinus was allowed to speak next. On first entering the lists he was confident enough. But when he reflected on the exploits of the others he saw that his own were wholly trivial. He had defeated two tyrants, but, to tell the truth, one of them was untrained in war and effeminate, the other a poor creature and enfeebled by old age, while both were alike odious to gods and men. Moreover his campaigns against the barbarians covered him with ridicule. For he paid them tribute, so to speak, while he gave all his attention to Pleasure, who stood at a distance from the gods near the entrance to the moon. Of her indeed he was so enamoured that he had no eyes for anything else, and cared not at all for victory. However, as it was his turn and had to say something, he began:

“In the following respects I am superior to these others; to the Macedonian in having fought against Romans, Germans and Scythians, instead of Asiatic barbarians; to Caesar and Octavianus in that I did not, like them, lead a revolution against brave and good citizens, but attacked only the most cruel and wicked tyrants. As for Trajanus, I should naturally rank higher on account of those same glorious exploits against the tyrants, while it would be only fair to regard me as his equal on the score of that territory which he added to the empire, and I recovered; if indeed it be not more glorious to regain than to gain. As for Marcus here, by saying nothing for himself he yields precedence to all of us.”

“But Constantinus,” said Silenus, “are you not offering us mere gardens of Adonis as exploits?”

“What do you mean,” he asked, “by gardens of Adonis”?

“I mean”, said Silenus, “those that women plant in pots, in honour of the lover of Aphrodite, by scraping together a little earth for a garden bed. They bloom for a little space and fade forthwith.” At this Constantinus blushed, for he realised that this was exactly his own performance.

While Julian is harsh in his judgments on his grandfather (and gets in a couple good swipes at Jesus later in the piece) it’s important to keep in mind that τρυφἠ was an essential quality in the Dionysian model of kingship promulgated by the Ptolemies and other Hellenistic monarchs. (Plus Julian had an axe to grind since a lot of his family had been executed and he himself was forced into exile early on during the dynastic squabbles of Constantine’s sons.)

Another indication of Constantine’s Dionysian character was his choice of location when he summoned representatives of the Christian churches to iron out their theological and personal differences. The ecumenical council (where he basically locked the bishops in a room and told them that if they didn’t reach consensus he was going to have them all killed) took place in the Anatolian city of Nikaia which had originally been founded by Dionysos himself:

This city is named after the nymph Nikaia who is said to have been the daughter of Kybele and Sangarios, the ruler of the country. Preferring virginity to cohabitation with a man, she spent her life hunting in the mountains. Dionysos fell in love with her, but she rejected his advances. After his rejection Dionysos tried to achieve his desire by a trick. He filled the spring, from which Nikaia used to drink when she was worn out from hunting with wine instead of water. She suspected nothing and, acting as normal, took her fill of the deceptive liquid. Then drunkenness and sleep took hold of her, and she submitted to the wishes of her lover. Dionysos had intercourse with her, and fathered Satyros and other sons by her. (Memnon, History of Herakleia 28.9)

One wonders if this naiad was involved in Constantine’s famous vision while crossing the Tiber, when the words Εν Τούτῳ Νίκα appeared before him in the heavens.

A church built by Constantine to celebrate the miraculous healing of his daughter from a disease very similar to the one suffered by the Proetides was later mistaken for a temple of Dionysos, further attesting a link between the two. But the real cincher for me is Constantine’s posthumous activities, primarily his involvement in the Orthodox Greek festival Anastenaria:

The Anastenaria is a traditional ritual of fire walking which dates back to pagan times. Barefoot villagers of Ayia Eleni near Serres, and of Langada near Thessaloniki, and other places, annually walk over hot coals. As there are variations in the ritual from place to place, the following description is largely based upon the performance of the festival as celebrated at Ayia Eleni, the most authoritative Anastenarian community, and the illustrations are from the ritual at Langada. On the eve of the feast of Saints Constantine and Helen (May 20th) the Anastenarides gather in the konaki, where the participants dance and sing to the music of the Thracian lyra, and a large drum. After some time, the dancing generates extreme emotional and ecstatic phenomena in the devotees, particularly in those dancing for the first time. This manifests itself in the form of violent trembling, repeated rocking backwards and forwards, and writhing. The archanastenaris hands out icons from the shelf to some of the dancers. The Anastenarides believe that during the dance they are “seized” by the saint, and enter a state of trance. On the morning of the saints’ day (May 21st) the Anastenarides gather at the konaki before leaving together in procession, accompanied by musicians and candle bearers to a holy well, where they are blessed by the holy water. Next, they sacrifice one or several animals to the saints. In Ayia Eleni, the animal must be over one year old, and of an odd number of years of age, the most acceptable being seven. The beast must also be unmarked and it must not have been castrated. It is incensed, and then led up to a shallow pit excavated in a place previously indicated by the Archanastenaris in a trance, usually beside the roots of a tree or at the agiasma. At one side of the shallow pit candles are lighted, while, on the other stand pots of holy water and the sacrificial animal. The beast is turned upside down, with its head tilted upwards, at the edge of the pit. Its throat is cut in such a way as to allow its blood to soak into the earth. The carcass is hung and skinned to the sound of music, and the raw flesh and hide cut up into equal parts put into baskets and distributed, amongst the families of the village in a procession from house to house.

Though attached to the name of one of Christianity’s greatest saints, the church attempted to suppress these practices as a survival of Dionysian ecstatic worship:

Among scholars the origins of the Anastenaria, as opposed to what the cult has become today, are a matter of considerable dispute. Although there is no evidence in ancient literature of fire-walking rituals associated with the god Dionysos, most scholars connect the Anastenaria with the widespread cult of that divinity. This association was also made by the Church authorities when they condemned the practices of the cult. Folklore scholar George A. Megas observes that “the cradle of Dionysiac worship was precisely in the Haemus area where the Anastenaria are danced today, passed down by the Greeks to the neighboring Bulgarian villages.” This latter point is made clear by the fact that the prayers used by the Bulgarian Anastenarides are recited in Greek, and that the transmission of the rites from Greeks to Bulgarian settlers in the area is a matter of historical record. Moreover, the evidence of mid-winter and carnival customs is that much that was associated with the Dionysian cult has survived throughout northern and central Greece. Katerina Kakouri has established a close connection between these customs and the Anastenaria in Ayia Eleni.

There are some amazing videos of Anastenaria on Youtube that you should check out if you’re interested in seeing the Dionysian parallels for yourself.

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Some videos to watch for Anthesphoria

Orphic Hymn 29. Hymn to Persephone
Persephone, blessed daughter of great Zeus, sole offspring of Demeter,
Come and accept this gracious sacrifice.
Much-honored spouse of Plouton, discreet and life-giving,
You command the gates of Hades in the bowels of the earth,
Lovely-tressed, Praxidike, pure bloom of Deo, mother of the Furies,
Queen of the netherworld whom Zeus sired in clandestine union.
Mother of loud-roaring and many shaped Eubouleus,
Radiant and luminous playmate of the Seasons, august, almighty,
Maiden rich in fruits, you alone are beloved of mortals.
In spring you rejoice in the meadow breezes,
And you show your holy figure in shoots and green fruits.
You were made a kidnapper’s bride in the fall,
And you alone are life and death to toiling mortals,
O Persephone, for you always nourish all and kill them too.
Hearken, O blessed goddess, and send forth the earth’s fruits.
You who blossom in peace, in soft-handed health,
And in a life of plenty that ferries old age in comfort to your realm,
O queen, and to that of mighty Plouton.

Strabo, Geography 6.1.5
Because the country round about Hipponion has luxuriant meadows abounding in flowers, people have believed that Kore used to come hither from Sicily to gather flowers; and consequently it has become the custom among the women of Hipponion to gather flowers and to weave them into garlands, so that on festival days it is disgraceful to wear bought garlands.

Diodoros Sikeliotes, Library of History 5.3.1-4
Again, the fact that the rape of Kore took place in Sicily is, men say, proof most evident that the goddesses made this island their favourite retreat because it was cherished by them before all others. And the rape of Korê, the myth relates, took place in the meadows in the territory of Enna. The spot lies near the city, a place of striking beauty for its violets and every other kind of flower and worthy of the goddess. And the story is told that, because of the sweet odour of the flowers growing there, trained hunting dogs are unable to hold the trail, because their natural sense of smell is balked. And the meadow we have mentioned is level in the centre and well watered throughout, but on its periphery it rises high and falls off with precipitous cliffs on every side. And it is conceived of as lying in the very centre of the island, which is the reason why certain writers call it the navel of Sicily. Near to it also are sacred groves, surrounded by marshy flats, and a huge grotto which contains a chasm which leads down into the earth and opens to the north, and through it, the myth relates, Pluton, coming out with his chariot, effected the rape of Korê. And the violets, we are told, and the rest of the flowers which supply the sweet odour continue to bloom, to one’s amazement, throughout the entire year, and so the whole aspect of the place is one of flowers and delight. And both Athena and Artemis, the myth goes on to say, who had made the same choice of maidenhood as had Korê and were reared together with her, joined with her in gathering the flowers, and all of them together wove the robe for their father Zeus. And because of the time they had spent together and their intimacy they all loved this island above any other, and each one of them received for her portion a territory.

Diodoros Sikeliotes, Library of History 5.4.1-2
Like the two goddesses whom we have mentioned Korê, we are told, received as her portion the meadows round about Enna; but a great fountain was made sacred to her in the territory of Syracuse and given the name Kyanê or “Azure Fount.” For the myth relates that it was near Syracuse that Pluton effected the rape of Korê and took her away in his chariot, and that after cleaving the earth asunder he himself descended into Hades, taking along with him the bride whom he had seized, and that he caused the fountain named Kyanê to gush forth, near which the Syracusans each year hold a notable festive gathering; and private individuals offer the lesser victims, but when the ceremony is on behalf of the community, bulls are plunged in the pool, this manner of sacrifice having been commanded by Herakles on the occasion when he made the circuit of all Sicily, while driving off the cattle of Geryones.

Proklos, Commentary on Plato’s Timaeus
Orpheus says that the vivific cause of partible natures (i.e. Persephone), while she remained on high, weaving the order of celestials, was a nymph, as being undefiled; and in consequence of this connected with Zeus and abiding in her appropriate manners; but that, proceeding from her proper habitation, she left her webs unfinished, was ravished; having been ravished, was married; and that being married, she generated in order that she might animate things which have an adventitious life. For the unfinished state of her web indicates, I think, that the universe is imperfect or unfinished, as far as to perpetual animals (i.e., the universe would be imperfect if nothing inferior to the celestial gods was produced). Hence Plato says the single creator calls on the many creators to weave together the mortal and immortal natures; after a manner reminding us, that the addition of the mortal genera is the perfection of the textorial life of the universe, and also exciting our recollection of the divine Orphic fable, and affording us interpretative causes of the unfinished webs of Persephone.

Theognis, Fragment 1. 703; 973
Persephone who impairs the mind of mortals and brings them forgetfulness. Once death’s dark cloud has enveloped him and he has come to the shadowy place of the dead and passed the black gates which hold back the souls of the dead, no man may return to the world above no matter how much he wails and protests. None there have the pleasure of listening to the lyre or pipes or of raising to his lips the gift of Dionysos.

Orphic tablet from Thurii
To the First-Born, to Mother Earth, to Cybela, daughter of Demeter.
Zeus, Air, Sun. Fire conquers all.
Avatars of fortune and Phanes. Moirai that remember all. You, O illustrious daimon.
Father who subdues all. Compensation.
Air, fire, Mother, Nestis, night, day,
Fasting for seven days. Zeus who sees all. Always. Mother, hear my prayer.
Fine sacrifices. Sacrifices. Demeter. Fire. Zeus. The Underground Girl.
Hero. Light to the intelligence. The Adviser seized the Girl.
Earth. Air. To the intelligence.

Gold tablet from Thurii
A: I come from the pure, o Pure Queen of the earthly ones, Eukles, Eubouleus, and You other Immortal Gods! I too claim to be of your blessed race, but Fate and other Immortal Gods conquered me, the star-smiting thunder. And I flew out from the hard and deeply-grievous circle, and stepped onto the crown with my swift feet, and slipped into the bosom of the Mistress (Kore), the Queen of the Underworld. And I stepped out from the crown with my swift feet.
B: Happy and blessed one! You shall be a god instead of a mortal.
A: I have fallen as a kid into milk.

ZPE 72, 1988, 245
When through the shadowy mountains, through the region of black radiances, from the garden of Persephone, at the hour of milking, the child brings by necessity the holy quadruped, companion of Demeter, the goat, to nurse at the fountain of inexhaustible milk, calling for torches for Hekate at the crossroads, the goddess with a terrible voice guides the stranger to the god.

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The Name Game

A commenter at The Wild Hunt asked the insightful question:

Could I ask a stupid question here? I’ve been reading this blog for a few weeks and have noticed that some people don’t like the term “pagan.” What is it about that term that doesn’t fit or make sense for them? I’m not objecting to that at all, just wondering.

I’m not going to rehash all of the differences between contemporary paganism and the various forms of polytheism as we’ve done a pretty good job of that already, particularly over the last couple years. (Check my “paganism” and “polytheism” tags if you really want a refresher on all of that.) Instead what I would like to discuss today is the fact that this was never our word for ourselves. Not in recent times (by the latter half of the 90s when I first made contact with the broader online Hellenic polytheist community people had already been eschewing the term “pagan” for a while, and this in fact seems to go back to the early 80s) and most assuredly not in antiquity.

And even the word that we do have is not unproblematic.

In fact one thing that you immediately notice when you set out to study the cultures that flourished around the Mediterranean a couple thousand years ago is that none of them – not the Egyptians, not the Greeks, not the Etruscans and none of their neighbors either – had a word in any of those languages for what we today consider religion. They had a very rich religious vocabulary, but it would have been incomprehensible to them if a person had said, “I am a ___.” Religion was merely part of a broader spectrum of culture and concerned primarily with what a person did not who they were or what they believed, a fact which is reflected in their vocabulary.

To use the Greeks as an example, the word that is most often suggested as an analogue for our “religion” was eusebeia. Literally this means “good or proper reverence; piety, loyalty” or as one ancient Greek commentator remarked, “that portion of justice which is concerned with divine matters and giving to the gods their due.” Another commonly found term was threskeia which means “conducting religious ceremonies, worship” and is derived from the ethnonym “Thracian.” Other words are therapon “divine tendance or service”, proskynesis “inclining towards; bowing, intense respect or devotion” and by extension any dedicated act expressing powerful religious sentiment, nomos “custom, tradition, law” and so on and so forth. A related concept was deisidaimonia “fear of spirits”, which had largely negative connotations suggesting superstitious, extravagant or foreign types of worship. All of these, as you can see, were primarily concerned with actions.

And although the Greeks were aware that they constituted a unique people with its own language, gods, religious customs and so forth which could differ significantly from those of their neighbors, there was no real sense of exclusivity among them. After all the similarities were far more numerous than the differences (everyone acknowledged a plurality of gods, built temples, had priests, conducted purifications, animal sacrifice, libations and related sacred rites, etc.) and very often it seemed to them that the same gods were worshiped in different lands, just under locally appropriate names. They were intensely conscious of their cultural and religious indebtedness to their neighbors – especially the Egyptians and Babylonians – and you could find incredible and far more significant differences among the various Greek city-states than you often could between generalized Hellenes and other races. Therefore they assumed that the same basic religion was common to all, and that over time each culture had developed specific customs that were best suited to their national temperament.

Much later on “Hellene” and “Hellenismos” evolved into terms for a distinct religious identity – but it’s rather telling that the earliest instances of this are found among Jewish authors writing in Greek. Hellenismos had originally meant stylistic proficiency or in other words someone who wrote or spoke excellent Greek. The Jews (who had long emphasized their cultural and religious separateness from the world and all other races, making this an essential characteristic of their faith) broadened the definition to include all aspects of Greek life, ranging from the worship of a multitude of gods on down to athletic competitions, politics and even fashion. The word was used derisively of those Jews who had forsaken their ancestral traditions in order to acclimate and participate in Greek cultural life. Many Jews had taken up the study of philosophy, adopted Greek names and spoke Greek instead of Hebrew or Aramaic, refused to have their sons circumcised, served in the Ptolemaic and Seleukid administration, and spent time in the gymnasion and theater instead of attending temple or synagogue. Some even converted altogether and began worshiping the Olympian deities, with Zeus and Dionysos being the most popular. Needless to say, this didn’t go over so well with their more traditional and conservative brethren and there were intense and often bloody conflicts with the Hellenizers.

The Christians – who of course started off as a renegade Jewish sect – continued this usage, making “Hellene” pretty much synonymous with ethnikos, gentilis, paganus and other terms of derision. Hellene was stripped of its ethnic connotations so that anyone who believed or worshiped as a Greek – that is to say sacrificed to a multitude of divinities – had this label applied to them, even if they happened to be Egyptian, Syrian, Arab, Italian, Spanish, etc. by birth. Amusingly, even though the Byzantine empire was centered in Greece and Greek the lingua franca of their dominion (used in everything from the administration, the arts, the Orthodox liturgy on down to casual conversation in people’s homes) they insisted, vehemently, that they were Rhomaioi or Romans and anathematized those who identified as Hellenes or sought to study Hellenic philosophy. This persisted up to the War of Independence from the Ottomans, when the partisans decided that calling themselves Greeks once more would help them gain support for their cause from European Philhellenes like Byron – though the anathemas may still be heard in Orthodox churches to this day.

This is largely due to the early Byzantine Emperor Julian who sought to abolish the religious policies of his predecessors and return Rome to its polytheistic roots and named his hierarchically organized and philosophically oriented creation Hellenismos, even though it was truly oecumenical and drew upon Greek, Italian, Egyptian, Syrian, Persian and other traditional religious systems. He himself composed sacred verse honoring the Magna Mater, Sol Invictus and similar originally non-Hellenic deities; likewise he was intensely drawn to theurgy which had as its basis the Chaldaean Oracles and he appears to have been initiated into the Mithraic mysteries. All of the members of his close circle – Maximus, Sallustius, Aidesios, etc. – were similarly eclectic and syncretic in their religious tastes. This amuses me to no end because so many who insist on a narrow definition of Hellenismos today (excluding anyone who doesn’t think or worship as they do, especially if they happen to honor non-Olympian deities with some even arguing that only ethnic Greeks can belong) often have a great reverence for Julian and the Neoplatonism that underpinned his system. (A Neoplatonism, by the way, that counts the Greco-Egyptian Plotinos as its founder and the Syrians Porphyry and Iamblichus as its greatest proponents.) Yet by the standards they seek to impose, Julian and all of his associates would be booted out of the religion!

So, you see, “pagan” was never our term for ourselves. It’s always been something imposed on us by outsiders – first by Christians as an insult and then by Wiccanesque neopagans in a ham-fisted attempt to create an illusionary sense of “unity” where none did or could exist.

In fact for this very reason I eschew identifying as an adherent of Hellenismos although I do sometimes describe what I do as Hellenic – ancient Greek religion always had a strong local focus and instead of fully immersing themselves in the praxis and weltanschauung of a particular polis or region (e.g. Thebai in Boiotia or Magna Graecia) a lot of folks in that community tend to take a Bullfinch approach to the religion, indiscriminately drawing on any source from any area or time period and trying to merge it into syncretic, synthetic “whole.” Not only am I a Magna Graecian polytheist but more specifically I am a Dionysian, an adherent of the Bacchic Orphic tradition (an even more specific form of the Dionysian religion) and a member of the thiasos of the Starry Bull.  Therefore I have no need of generic terms such as “pagan”, “polytheist”, or “Hellenismos” except within the context of interfaith dialogue and then I only use them sparingly.

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καπνοβαται

I have the utmost respect for Pete Helms. His knowledge and experience with Ares are a valuable asset – anytime someone approaches me with questions about this god I instantly refer them to him, certain that they’ll get a smart, practical and respectful response. I admire his service record, his strong convictions, his unwavering moral courage, his level-headedness and his lack of tolerance for community drama. In fact one of the first things that struck me about him was his willingness to dialogue with people who hold contrary opinions from his own. Knowing where he fell with regard to some of the big schisms in the Hellenic community I honestly didn’t expect us to hit it off and yet we’ve known each other for a couple years now and are still having some great conversations and hopefully that’ll continue after I thoroughly trash him for his latest article, It’s not enough.

There’s actually a lot in the piece I agree with and ironically it’s because I hold those views that I also profoundly disagree with a couple of the points he makes. Basically he’s arguing for boundaries, concrete ethical standards and personal and communal responsibility against the rampant relativism and self-centeredness of our modern American culture. (Another thoughtful and thought-provoking exploration of these themes can be found in Rhyd Wildermuth’s Abuse and the Will-to-Power.)

And that’s why I feel his stance on marijuana is wrong.

The consumption of this naturally occurring product is illegal only because the United States Federal government has declared it so – against the will of numerous states which have approved it for both medical and recreational use, mind you.

They only did so in the 20th century (as any patchouli-reeking hippie will tell you, our Founding Fathers grew hemp, maaaaan) because of an anti-Mexican hysteria that was sweeping through the country at the time. Even today the enforcement of prohibition unfairly targets minority communities which has all sorts of socioecomomic ramifications in addition to the violence and exposure to other criminal elements it produces. Supposing that there were some sort of valid legal, moral or medical basis for prohibition, at this point even it’s most strident proponents must concede that the war on drugs hasn’t been waged very successfully. People from all levels of society imbibe and it’s so readily accessible anyone can score some anytime they want if they’ve got the right connections.

Of course therein lies the fatal flaw of prohibition – those connections are, by definition, people who engage in criminal activity. The only reason that pot is a “gateway drug” is because dealers often have the other stuff on hand or because people try pot, realize everything they’ve been told about it is a lie and figure that the government is lying about the dangers of other drugs too. If we really wanted to stop the spread of actually harmful substances like coke and meth we’d legalize pot and introduce dispensaries operated and overseen by the state, as liquor stores are in many communities.

Indeed the analogy is an appropriate one for there are plenty of perfectly legal substances that have a far greater impact on our health than any tests have shown for even extreme levels of pot consumption – tobacco, alcohol, caffeine, processed sugar, fatty foods, chemical additives and preservatives, etc ad infinitum are all much more dangerous to us, yet no one bats a lash when a person puts those things in their body. Can you imagine the hue and cry if the government decided to shut down all the Starbucks and McDonalds and banned Facebook?

So singling out marijuana in this way is arbitrary and illogical – especially considering its demonstrated medical and psychological benefits like easing pain, nausea and anxiety, increasing appetite among chemo patients and so forth. Indeed one of the most miraculous things about pot is that there don’t seem to be any complications with other medications which is practically unheard of since even eating bread can fuck with some meds.

I have immense respect for the law – indeed, Orpheus tells us that Themis and Dike sit enthroned beside Zeus – but law is the immutable order of existence, not the mere whims and dictates of man. When our rules conform with that order they are right, just, noble and good, worthy of defending with our blood and life. But when they stray from that order they carry no weight of acceptance and obligation and if they stray too far I consider it a just act to oppose them, for instance when German officers during WWII refused to execute their orders to open fire on civilian Jewish populations. Doing so made them guilty of insubordination and treason but preserved them from committing a far greater sin.

And as much as I stress the importance of the collective I fervently believe in the sovereignty of the individual and that our souls are accountable to a higher authority than man. (Or lower, since the seats of Minos, Rhadamanthys and Aiakos are located in the underworld.) Consequently I believe, as a Dionysian, that one of the greatest evils we can do to another human being is to violate the sovereignty of their being. (Consider his myths where he is gentle and persuasive in adversity, to the point where he’ll take more shit from people than any other god would – up to the point where the will of innocents is impigned and then he is unspeakably savage in retaliation.) Which is why I am opposed to rape and murder and monism.

And also why I believe that a person has the right to alter their consciousness in whatever manner they choose to. Laws govern our interactions with our fellows and they have no business touching upon what happens within the sanctity of our skulls. If I choose to take drugs in order to explore the furthest reaches and primordial depths of my soul, to commune with gods and spirits, to expand my thoughts and open the floodgates of creativity (not to mention all of the other uses these substances have) that has no bearing on anyone else and therefore should be of no concern to them.

Now, obviously, the moment that I begin interacting with other people I am obligated to behave in a certain manner and should be held accountable for everything I say and do and the impact it has on them regardless of how much I am being influenced by the drugs. Indeed because I made the conscious choice to put myself under their power I believe that I should be even more accountable for my actions since that decision opens up everything that follows from it. I especially must respect the boundaries of others and the choices they make or did not make (such as being exposed to an intoxicated idiot.)

Or to put it in other words if you can’t handle your shit you shouldn’t be doing it and if you fuck up you deserve to have the book thrown at you and then some – but if you can then I don’t see a problem with imbibing.

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You will be heard.

One of the things that’s most bothered me about what I’ve been reading since the Kenny Klein story broke is how often the sufferers of abuse in our communities have been deprived of their voice. People refused to hear them, told them that they were lying or crazy, told them to keep quiet because it would make their group or paganism at large look bad, told them to forget and get over it.

This really fucking offends my innate sense of justice – but it also troubles me as a devotee of the goddess Melinoë who was conceived when Zeus disguised himself as Haides and violently raped his daughter Persephone, mangling her flesh in the process. The wound grew into rage and that rage became personified as Melinoë who was transformed from a wrathful Fury into a gentle goddess when Dionysos Eubouleos was willing to sit and listen to her tell her story, as he had listened and thereby soothed the vengeful anger of Hephaistos when no one else would. Subsequently Melinoë became a fierce protector of his initiates as well as the rejected and forgotten dead, which is why she is honored among the pantheon of the thiasos of the Starry Bull.

Neither Dionysos nor Melinoë would care for how far too many in our overlapping communities have been treated for far, far too long.

So I was thinking about all of this when Pete Helms, in a very Aresian gesture, approached Galina and I, writing:

I had a thought about Wyrd Ways; I know it’s not your normal thing, but I thought it may be a good idea to do a show about the issues with the sex crimes, etc that are mulling through things. Maybe have a prayer vigil for the victims perhaps? It may seem a little heavier than the normal topics (not that they’re shallow, but usually less in the dark side), but I think it could be good for some folks. Maybe instead of focusing on the predators, you can focus on helping and healing victims. Just a thought.

I knew, even before I finished reading, that we had to make this happen.

Unfortunately we already had a wonderful guest slated for Wednesday’s show, Sarenth Odinsson who:

is a Northern Tradition shaman and priest of Odin and Anubis. He has written as well as edited articles for RendingtheVeil.com, an occult ezine, and has been published in Witches and Pagans magazine. His passions include writing, reading, drawing, martial arts, spirituality, and sustainable living. He holds an Associate’s in Graphic Communication, and is enrolled at Eastern Michigan University for his Bachelor’s in Psychology. He can be contacted through his blog at sarenth.wordpress.com.

So I considered doing it for the next show which would give us two weeks to prepare but then I got a strong sense that NO this had to be done now.

Fuck.

I contacted Sarenth asking if he’d mind getting bumped and explaining what we intended to do for the show on April 2nd and he asked if he could get in on it. As a youth minister and father the news that’s been coming out of the pagan community over the last couple days hit him hard and he wanted to do something to help. He’s writing a series of prayers that will be read at the end of the show asking for Frigga’s blessing on the children, for Tyr and Angrboda to bring justice to all and for Niðogg’s help removing the poison from us and to teach us to take the poison out of our own roots. And for the rest of it we’ll simply provide space for survivors to share their experiences and be heard.

The show starts at 10:00pm EST and will go for an extended hour and a half. You may call in at 347-308-8222 to tell your story directly or you may e-mail it to me at sannion@gmail.com before 9:00pm EST and one of us will read it on the air for you.

And everyone else will listen.

We may not be able to do much more, but we can at least do that.

We’ll have Sarenth back on in the summer as a regular guest. I would like to thank him for doing this with Galina and I and I would also like to thank Pete Helms for listening to the promptings of his heart and contacting us with this beautiful, powerful idea.

Please help get the word out about this. I’d like as many people as possible to know about this before the show on Wednesday so that they can participate if they feel so moved.

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Taurus draconem genuit et taurum draco

I’ve probably read this passage a couple hundred times over the last two decades and more and yet I just tonight noticed where Arnobius claims this verse came from.

Arnobius of Sicca, Adversus Nationes 5.21.4-6
When Jupiter Verveceus saw Proserpina was strong, plump, and blooming, forgetting what evils and what wickedness, and how great recklessness, he had a little before fallen into, he returns to his former practices; and because it seemed too wicked that a father openly be joined as in marriage with his daughter, he passes into the terrible form of a dragon: he winds his huge coils round the terrified maiden, and under a fierce appearance sports and caresses her in softest embraces. She, too, is in consequence filled with the seed of the most powerful Jupiter, but not as her mother was, for she bore a daughter like herself; but from the maiden was born something like a bull, to testify to her seduction by Jupiter. If any one asks who narrates this, then we shall quote the well-known senarian verse of a Tarentine poet which antiquity sings, saying: “The bull begot a dragon, and the dragon a bull.” Lastly, the sacred rites themselves, and the ceremony of initiation even, named Sebadia, might attest the truth; for in them a golden snake is let down into the bosom of the initiated, and taken away again from the lower parts.

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