Good morning and welcome to LLT121 Classical Mythology. I’m Joe Hughes. In today’s class, we’re going to be talking about the Odyssey of Homer. When I’m done talking about the Odyssey of Homer we will be done with today’s class. We will be done with instruction for the semester. Let me go on record as saying that it has been a pleasure to teach each and every one of you and I hope to see you again in future classes during your sojourn here at Southwest Missouri State University. That goes for all of you who are watching this on television, too.
That was the fun opening.
Good morning and welcome to LLT121 Classical Mythology. You see, Matt is working on an outtakes reel here. I’m going to have to buy it from him at the end of the semester. He hasn’t told me how much it’s going to cost. So I will be holding office hours immediately after class for you students who care to, you know, bring me presents and stuff like that. It’s for a good cause.
When last we left off, Odysseus had washed up on the shore of an uncharted desert island named Phaeacia. You’ll remember Phaeacia. It is actually the land of the Phaeacians. It’s name is Scheria. I don’t care about Scheria. That is the name of the island. The people who live there are Phaeacians. That, I do care about. They have just wined and dined Odysseus. At the end of the dinner, after he had eaten the food and drank all sorts of wine, listened to the nice songs and stuff like that, they say, “Now, stranger, tell us who you are. Where did you come here from?” He says, “I am Odysseus, darn it, King of Ithaca and my fame reaches the heavens.” Fame, I want to live forever. The Greek word for fame is “kleos.” Odysseus would like to say, too, that he has lots of aritae or virtue. He has so much aritae that he has won by sacking cities, carrying off women, that he is bound to have lots of kleos or fame after he dies. As, indeed, Odysseus does. After all, here it is some 3200 years after the fact and here we are talking about the guy. He did get to be pretty famous. The thing that—and we don’t have much time to go into this today. The Odyssey is worth its own class.
The thing about Odysseus is, he’s got a different kind of aritae because we’re going to see him in any number of situations on his travels. We’ll get to his travels pretty quickly. He is capable of fighting his way out of a situation. He is capable of bullying his way, talking, but he would rather lie his way out of a situation. He would rather cheat his way out of a situation. He would rather fornicate his way out of a bad situation. The idea being that he has his own sort of aritae. Meanwhile, over in Ithaca, tending the home fires, we’ve got Penelope. Penelope would dearly love to kick all of the suitors out of her palace. She would probably like to kill all of them. After all, they’ve been hanging around for the last few years eating all of her food, living in her house, ordering her servants around and being snotty to her son, Telemachus. She can’t do this, however, because she’s a mere female, quote/unquote. Therefore she can’t really rack up the big aritae points. She can’t rack up the big kleos points because she is a female, supposedly.
Let me offer you just one little thing before we launch into the exciting discussion of the Odyssey, which will all be lectures by me. Whenever we meet a goddess or whenever we meet an intelligent woman—there’s lots of them—in the Odyssey, they are always weaving. When we meet Calypso, she’s a goddess. She doesn’t have to work for a living. She is weaving. When we run into Circe, as we will shortly, she sits at a loom and weaves. Why is this? Yeah, yeah, yeah, weaving back in those days is women’s work. Let the men go chop each other in half and rule steadies and carry off cattle. Women stayed home and made clothes. Yeah, sure. I ask you to compare the arts of war with the art of weaving. The art of war is basically, back in these days, the art of killing some other schmuck before he kills you and then bragging about it. There’s not an awful lot to it. Compare weaving. I tried to weave. I was very bad at it. We had a weaving project in eighth grade. I stunk at it. It’s a creative art. It is a useful, constructive art. It takes intelligence. It takes nimbleness. It take dedication. You could make the argument—and a very fine argument it would be—that weaving (and, being married now for some time I agree with it more and more every year) is a metaphor in the Odyssey for the way that the female mind works. Putting things together this way and that way. Constructing something.
Whereas, the male mind works like, “Uh, not like that!. Kill! Kill!” As we’ve seen in the Iliad ,what was Achilles’s first inclination when Agamemnon took his girl away? “Kill!” Okay? So on and so forth. The exception, of course, to this, “Me guy. Mad. Kill!” orate is that lying sack of turd, Odysseus, who was faithful to his wife, Penelope, the entire time. Okay. It’s the last day of classes. You people will believe anything I say. I’m going to take you on an abridged trip of Odysseus’s wanderings with a star next to the ones I find especially (hint, hint, nudge, nudge) important. Their first stop, Odysseus has a fleet of men. They all bail into the ships and start sailing away from Troy. Yes, they are sailing away. They set an open course on emergency, etc. It’s going to take Odysseus ten years to get home. He’s going to get home all alone. It’s sad.
The first stop is the island of the Ciconians. That is a joke. It is actually spelt with one “C.” I was going to tell you they are a bunch of people who looked like Madonna and dressed like Madonna. They sacked the city or believed they were going to sack the city. That is how they win aritae, after all. They’re driven away. It’s not that important except for, on this first stop, Odysseus gets twelve jars of red, red wine, which will help him next time.
*Lotus, the land of the lotus-eaters is kind of like an ancient version of California, where everybody sits around and eats the fruit of the lotus. Once they have eaten the fruit of the lotus. It is like a Bavarian cream doughnut. You don’t really care about anything. You’re just, “Oh, okay.” Odysseus’s men all partake of the fruit of the lotus. Pretty soon they don’t care about Ithaca. They don’t care about their boat. They just want to sit there and eat the fruit of the lotus. Odysseus has to go walking around whapping them upside the head because Odysseus was able to just say no. “Get back on the boat. We’re going to Ithaca, you jerks.” So they do.
Stop number three is Polyphemus island. It brings a sense of closure to the class. Polyphemus is the charming Cyclops we met at the beginning of the semester whose eye got poked out by Odysseus. It wasn’t enough that Odysseus got away with poking out his eye. It wasn’t enough that Odysseus got back into the boat, with a shipload of men and got away. When Polyphemus came out yelling, “Nobody has poked my eye out.” Okay, go ahead. Odysseus yells back, “No! I, Odysseus, have poked your eye out. Odysseus, son of Laertes, King of Ithaca, Box 1, Royal Palace, Ithaca, Greece, 65804.” Now, Jeremy, why did he do that? Here, let me stare intently at the board. Yes, one, poking the Cyclops eye out and getting away with it is aritae. It’s a very heroic, some might say it’s kind of sleazy to poke his eye out when he’s asleep and he’s drunk, but that would not bug Odysseus in the least. It makes him pretty famous. My very first memory of something to do with the Odyssey comes from the Kirk Douglas movie, circa 1955, with the bad production values, where Odysseus pokes the Cyclops’s eye out. It sticks with you. I was about this high, but I was giving Odysseus kleos. “Wow, that is pretty slick.” He poked his eye out. He wins the undying enmity of Poseidon, which is going to make his trip very dangerous.
*Stop number four. I’ll put a star by it. Aeolus’s island. On Aeolus’s island, Aeolus is the god of the winds. He and his wife live on an island with their six sons and their six daughters, wind gods and wind goddesses all. The six sons are married to the six daughters. That is okay because they’re divine gods and goddesses. Aeolus, the wind god, gives Odysseus a magic bag full of winds, the correct blend of winds and breezes to blow him back to Ithaca. So Odysseus is opening the bag and directing it into the sail. But his men are such idiots, being male, and what they do is, “He got something in bag he not giving us.” And, so, poor Odysseus, he is pulling an all-nighter. He just sees on the horizon, the island of Ithaca and he drops off. Do you ever do that? You are just about home. You’re driving and you drop off. I almost fell asleep out on Route 96 between Carthage and Springfield one time after a 14 hour drive at 3 in the morning. Well, I’m still here to talk about it. Here’s what happens. Odysseus falls asleep. The men tear open the bag. All the winds blow out because they’re idiots and blow them right back to Aeolus’ island. Odysseus gets off the boat. “Aeolus, you’ll never believed what happened. Could I, like, have some more wind?” And he is invited to perform a...you know, etc. “No, you may not. Surely the gods hate you because it just isn’t in the cards.” That is true because Poseidon hates Odysseus.
Stop number five is the Laestrygonians. Not all that important. They just, basically, eat all of Odysseus’s men, being cannibals, except for one boatload. Odysseus has got to be the worst admiral in the entire ancient Greek Navy. I mean, everybody who got on the boat with him the day that the Trojan War started all come back dead, to a man. You would normally feel quite sorry for them, but Homer does a magnificent job of making you feel like “Oh, gee! What a bunch of turkeys.” They break into his windbag. You know. They get eaten by cannibals. They are dumb.
**Stop number six. Circe. Two stars. In the movie, Hughes’s Odyssey, Circe is always played by Cher, a dark woman with the big nose who is kind of scary because she has tattoos all over her. Odysseus and his men, one boatload, land on Circe’s island. Once they land on Circe’s island, they don’t know what’s going on there. They just see smoke rising from a clearing in the center. Odysseus very bravely divides his men into two groups. One group will go investigate the going ons in the clearing in the middle of the forest. While group B will bravely stay behind and guard the ship. Guess what group Odysseus bravely stays with. He and his brave men bravely guard the ship. All these other guys go into the clearing to find out what that smoke is. It is Circe. She’s sitting there at her loom weaving. “Oh, men! Okay.” She waves her magic wand at them. Poof! The men become pigs. Yeah, this had to have been written by a woman. I mean the men all turn into pigs. Okay, I’m waiting for some woman to raise her hand and say, “Turn men into pigs? Ha!” I’m secure in my manliness. I can tell this joke.
One guy breaks away from the herd, I guess. Circe’s house is a real hoot. There is all sorts of guys. Some of them are zebras. It looks like Erotic Animal Paradise out there. One guy runs back to the ship and says, “Odysseus. There is this woman there, and she turned all the guys into pigs.” Odysseus goes, “Oh.” Fortunately, he is walking over to Circe’s to do something about it. What happens? Hermes appears to him. Tada! Hermes says to Odysseus, “Here, eat some of this magic herb. It will make you immune to anything she does to you and, when she pulls out her little magic wand to turn you into a pig, you pull out your big, long manly sword and wave it in her face.” Freud would have had a field day with this one, except for Freud was not to be born for another 3100 years. So it’s funny. This is what Hermes tells him to do. So Odysseus goes, “all right.” He eats the herb. He’s walking around. Here comes Circe. Oh, one other thing, Hermes gives him one other piece of advice. “Once you pull out your big, manly, sword she’s going to get all wobbly kneed and beg you to have sex with her. Do that, because she can help.” So goes this plan. Circe pulls out her little magic wand to put a spell on Odysseus. Odysseus draws out from his sheath his big, manly sword and waves it in her face. She says, “Ahhh! I’m sorry, I’m sorry. Please sleep with me, sir.” He does, because Hermes told him to. Well, Circe changes the men back from pigs into men. They’re better looking once she gets done changing them. They stay there for a year. Yeah, make it quick, Crystal. Go ahead, just one for old time sake. Oh, good. Yes, he was. How’s that for an answer? Yes, he was. After a year or so she says, “You really got to go.” “Oh, okay. Where do I go?” “Go to hell!” And she sends him on a katabasis. I never knew this: when I yell the green lights on that thing just go “blup.” She tells him to go to hell. He goes on a katabasis to Portugal and finds out, among other things, that the afterlife is nasty, brutal and goes on and on and on forever and comes back knowing just what happens to you after you die, Crystal. I think I’ll make the point in a little bit, but, just to set it up, remember, it’s only after this that Calypso offers him immortality. He could be Wynona Rider’s personal sex toy through all eternity. But, if he chooses mortality to be with Penelope, he’ll be with Penelope for a while, then they’re both going to die. Life will suck—forever. That is why I say that, in his own way, Odysseus is faithful. Besides, Penelope, is going to make him suffer.
Stop number seven is the katabasis, the trip to the underworld.
Stop number eight is the Sirens, beautiful women with beautiful voices. I’m going to recycle this island. They live on this island, on the rocks, and they sing beautiful music. They sing American music. It’s so beautiful that anybody that hears it wants to swim over to the rock and hear it more clearly—and gets washed up on the rocks and die, right? Odysseus instructs his men that they’re going to have to stick wax in their ears. But, before they do this, he has himself tied to the mast of the ship. His ears are not plugged. Odysseus wants to live and take everything that life has to offer. That is what makes him so great. He rules the whole universe. So they lash him to the mast of his ship, stick the earplugs in their ears and start rowing by the Sirens. You know what happens next. Odysseus’s men can’t hear a thing, but Odysseus hears the song of the sirens. It’s beautiful and he’s yelling, “Cut me loose, you jerks! I must swim and hear more of the song.” But they can’t hear him. So he gets away with hearing the Sirens.
Stop number nine. Scylla and Charybdis. Scylla and Charybdis are located, really, at the Strait of Messina in Italy. Supposedly, Scylla is a former lover of Poseidon. She got stuck with 6-12 dog heads around her waist. All you Freud buffs take heed. Charybdis is the whirlpool who is Poseidon’s daughter. It’s a Greek proverb for being caught between a rock and a hard place. You know. Which is he going to pick, Scylla or Charybdis? He figures Charybdis will kill everybody, including him. So better to lose 6-12 guys to the barking dog heads. And that is what happens.
Bring in the island number ten, the Cattle of the Sun. The Cattle of the Sun belong to the sun god. The son god is Circe’s dad. Circe had warned them, “Guys, you may wind up on the island of my dad, Helios. You may wind up on the island of his cattle. Whatever you do don’t kill any of his cattle. He doesn’t like that.” So they land on the island of the Cattle of the Sun. They’re stuck there for a month, No wind. No nothing. Odysseus says, “You slobs, don’t eat any of the beef.” They don’t, but one night, while Odysseus is asleep, they kill one cow and sacrifice it to Zeus. “Oh, Zeus, oh Zeus, oh Zeus.” They burn just about everything—they save just enough for some hamburgers and stuff—while Odysseus is asleep. Odysseus wakes up and somebody hands him a cold hamburger. “Where did you get that hamburger?” “Oh, we just killed one of the cattle, Odysseus.”
You know what happens. The wind picks up. They all get onto the boat. They start sailing away to Ithaca. The weather starts getting rough. The tiny ship gets tossed. Since they have eaten the Cattle of the Sun, since Poseidon is mad at them, since they have not listened to Circe, there is a massive storm and a massive shipwreck and everybody dies except for Odysseus.
Odysseus is rescued by Calypso, which is where we found him at the beginning of our flashback sequence. Odysseus tells the people in Phaeacia, “And then I stay with Calypso for seven years. But trust me, I was faithful to my wife Penelope, the entire time. Really, I was, because I turned down immortality to be with her. I don’t know if I’m even going to make it.” To make a long story short, the people in Phaeacia tell him, “Yes, that was a very nice story, Odysseus. We’ll take you and drop you off on your home island of Ithaca.”
This is the first half of the Odyssey. The second half I can dispense with pretty quickly. Which is just as well because the second half of the Odyssey takes forever. It’s padded. The basic plan is that Odysseus has to make his way home to Penelope. He could try, “Hi, Penelope, I’m home.” That is not going to cut it. Number one, who’s to say Penelope will believe him? Number two, who is to say Penelope doesn’t want to put him through some trouble, first? You know, she has been tending the home fires. “Yeah, have you been faithful to me over the last 20 years, a manly man like you?” Something else is a very human interest story thing; maybe you’ve experienced it. If you haven’t, you will. You will meet someone you will love as your other, as your second self. Then two of you will get into a spat. You will both feel horrible. Each of you, in your own right, is going to want to make the other one admit to being wrong first. This happens with my beloved wife and me. “I’m so sorry we got mad at each other, but you were wrong. Admit it.” It’s like this grim struggle of will to find out who missed the other one more.
Or I could tell you about all the grody little details about how… Odysseus dresses up as a beggar and goes into his own house disguised as a beggar to see how the suitors treat this old beggar. Kind of like Tom Sawyer going to his own funeral, right? Except for this was 3100 years before Samuel Langhorn Clemens. How do the suitors treat this disguised Odysseus? They’re mean to him. They throw things at him. There is one guy who bullies him. That is not good. He goes around to various people in his homeland of Ithaca, asking for help. Would you give me a cloak? Would you put me up for the night? Nobody is willing to help him except for one guy, a swineherd. He’s sleeping in the sty with his pigs. He’s not quite that bad, but he’s not quite that far off either. Only the swineherd, named Eumaeus, puts him up for the night. Pretty soon, Eumaeus and Odysseus are plotting how to get back into the palace. Telemachus joins the team, too. That is Odysseus’s son. I’m just giving you a few of the high points.
There is one scene that I have to tell you about. It’s the scene about Argus, the dog. Argus, the dog, was only a puppy when Odysseus left for the Trojan War. Odysseus had just trained him to be a hunting dog. This is going to be the first person who recognizes Odysseus when he lands on Ithaca. Odysseus is disguised and he’s coming up to his palace. He sees an old dog lying, flea-bitten and moth eaten, half dead on a big pile of poop, a big, reeking pile of poop, outside the palace of Odysseus. Odysseus, who is in disguise, thinks to himself, “This might have been a good hunting dog at one time, but he is very old.” Indeed he was, because he had been trained by Odysseus himself. Odysseus never, himself, had gotten the joy of hunting with the dog. The dog looks and sees the stranger, recognizes Odysseus and his tail goes thump and a tear forms in his eye. He dies very happy, because he’s seen Odysseus. I mean, I want to cry whenever I read this.
But, there’s also scenes of, you know, whooha, like I said. The serving girls, the suitors, were all really mean to the beggar, Odysseus. Odysseus the beggar in disguise asks for an interview with Penelope and goes in there. Penelope says, “Now, stranger, do you have any word on my husband, Odysseus?” It is within his power to say, “Yeah, it’s me,” but he won’t because he wants to prove that she missed him more. You know this old slave lady comes out to give him a nice footbath and pulls up his well-grieved sock to show a scar, a hunting scar that Odysseus had gotten when he was a kid. If Penelope had seen it she’d know right away it was Odysseus, but Athena turns Penelope’s head so she can’t see the hunting scar that Odysseus got when he was a little boy, because we all haven’t suffered enough yet. Try reading this in ancient Greek. Penelope asks the stranger, “Now, did you see Odysseus?” Odysseus, I mean he’s a real lying sack of crap, too. “Yeah, I saw him in Egypt. He missed Penelope. He’s coming this way. He might be coming this way. He was looking pretty scruffy. I don’t know if he’s going to make it.”
You know they’re testing each other. Does Penelope know this is Odysseus? Yeah, she does. She says, “Well, I hope he gets here soon, because tomorrow morning I’m going to have a contest to see which of the suitors gets to marry me. I’m going to set up twelve ax handles in a row. I’m so sick and tired. I miss Odysseus very much but you know a girl has got to do what a girl has got to do, stranger. Certainly you know that.” Ancient Greek ax handles look like this. You put the rock through the handle and you make it into an ax. “Tomorrow morning, whoever can string the bow of Odysseus and shoot it through twelve ax handles gets to have me as his wife.” Now, this guy is Odysseus, right? He goes gulp, “That sounds like a good idea, lady.” He stumbles back off to the swineherd’s house.
Well, the next day rises and all the suitors are really pumped up. They’ve been partying all night. They’re going to take it to the max. They’re going to have a competition to see who gets to win the hand of Penelope, after all these years. The beggar comes in. They take turns trying to string the bow of Odysseus, but they can’t even bend it, because they’re not worthy. Then the beggar says, “Let me try it.” So they said, “This ought to be good.” The beggar puts the string to the bow. Jaws start to drop. He puts an arrow to it. He shoots it through all twelve ax heads. He pulls out another arrow and starts massacring the suitors. From his spot in the balcony, Telemachus picks off suitors. The noble swineherd Eumaeus pulls out his AK-47. Pretty soon we’re all knee deep in gore. Odysseus—because we know it’s him now—asks for an interview with the lady, Queen Penelope. “Who is it?” He’s still not going to say, “It’s Odysseus,” because he wants to prove that she missed him more than he missed her. “Well, it’s me, the beggar. I killed all them other suitors. They won’t be troubling you ma’am. I just need a place to hang my hat tonight and I’ll be on my way.”
Telemachus, the son of Odysseus, says, “Mom, don’t be a bitch, mom. Mom!” It is sad. I mean, yeah, you chuckle, you laugh. You ever seen your parents get hacked off at each other for no reason at all. Be so easy to just get them together. They’re messing with you? Multiply that by 20 years. “Mom, it’s dad!” Penelope says, “Yes, you can spend the night, stranger. There’s a place out on the porch. There’s a bed out on the porch that Odysseus once carved for us on our wedding night. He made it for our wedding. He severed a tree and then he embroidered mattresses of sedge grass on top. I put it out on the porch. Why don’t you sleep on that?” “What? That bed I made for you, and you put it out on the porch. After all these years? Have you no regard?” Penelope looks at him and laughs because she wins, hands down. Odysseus says, “I can’t believe you did that, Penelope.” “That is you, isn’t it, Odysseus? I win.” Then you know that they do? They go to bed immediately and perform the love deed. They missed each other. Only then do they talk about their various adventures. “Yeah, I met a few women, but nothing serious, you know, dear.” The next day, Odysseus goes and visits his dad. The end of the Odyssey. The end of the class.
Coda: Classical Mythology in Your Life
While Odysseus and Penelope are sleeping, it is time to round off the classical mythology experience, to say goodnight, and make a few remarks before we all toddle off to sleep, too. Actually you have an exam to take. I’m going to go to sleep. We’ve covered an awful lot of myths in this class. We have invested these myths with all sorts of significance. Sometimes we agreed that the “X” myth bore certain significance. Sometimes we rejected the significance of a myth and said, “No, it’s just pure entertainment.” Some of the myths, quite frankly, weren’t even entertaining or profound. They’re there for us. There are a lot of things you can use, a lot of scholarly purposes for which you can use classical mythology— the legend, sagas and myths of the ancient Greeks and Romans. As I’ve said, as I pointed out at the beginning of this class, they are a fascinating historical document of the ancient people of ancient Greece and ancient Rome. They talk to us about the ancient Greek and ancient Roman concerns, lifestyles, and beliefs in a way that no history book ever could.
They also tell us a lot about, if you will, the ancient mind at work. That is to say, the ancients: their ways of thinking about things. Just to offer you one example, we’ve seen over and over again that the ancient Greeks and Romans were not really big on the concept of mutual exclusivity. If one myth says that Aphrodite was the daughter of Zeus and Dione and another myth says she was born when Uranus’s severed genitalia splashed down in the ocean, as skeptical children of the 20th century we say it’s either one or the other, but not both. The ancient Greeks were perfectly willing to accept both. That tells us something about the ancient Greeks, right there. That is the sort of insight you can really only get from reading the myths. That is something you can read in the history book, but it would never come home to you.
We have learned all sorts of things about the psyche through our study of classical mythology. The individual soul, the personality, and what not. In the play, Hippolytus, for example, we have seen the various stages of love at work. We have seen the denial phase. We have seen the, “oh, well, just a little bit,” phase. We have seen the rejection phase. We have seen the feelings of children towards opposite sex parents in Oedipus Rex. There are more such psychological insights to be obtained in classical literature and classical mythology. That is all really worthwhile, too.
History. We have seen—it’s been kind of a major theme in the last few weeks of the course—that legend, by its very nature, contains a kernel of historical fact. As a reformed history major—I got out of it just in time—I have to admit I find this, myself, especially compelling. Homer, for example, in his poetry about the Trojan War, has preserved for us all sorts of really interesting historical details that might otherwise have been lost. The ancient Greeks did possess siege machinery as early as 1200 BC. They did like to roll up towers to fortified cities. That Mycenaean Era Greece was a series of city-states with no central government, merely one king, the king of Mycenae, who was more influential and powerful than the rest—hereditarily so. That is all pretty interesting stuff to me, too.
But, what I find most interesting—and I think that, if anything, this is what I would like to leave you folks with—is that classical mythology—far more than ancient history, far more than the study of ancient Greek and the study of Latin—classical mythology and its sibling, Comparative Mythology LLT321 (I have to throw in a plug for that), is a way to meet our ancestors. It is a way to encounter our ancient Greek and Roman forebears as they really were, Whether or not one is descended from ancient Greeks or ancient Romans, they are still, of course, our intellectual and spiritual ancestors. It is a chance to see these people, a chance to understand at a gut level what makes them tick.
The most recent classical quote/unquote themed movie to come out at this taping is Disney’s Hercules. As I’ve suggested in my comments on the Hercules myth a few weeks back, civilizations tend to reinterpret Heracles as one of the most popular of all Greek heroes over and over again. And as an individual civilization changes over, as it evolves or is replaced by another civilization, the constant is that Heracles will be there, if nothing else. It may be interesting. It is instructive for us to know that the original Heracles, the Heracles we encounter in the Odyssey and the Iliad, was just a two-fisted brawler who stuck Hera in the left breast with a three-barbed arrow, among other things. This is not really family values. This fellow is as rude and crude as they go. By the time that philosophers such as Socrates, but more precisely Proticus of Chaos got a hold of him, he had already become somewhat of a philosophical hero. This by the year 400 BC. By the time of Christ, let us say, the Stoic philosophers had converted Heracles into a complete role model for the aspiring Stoic philosopher. That is to say, when given the choice between virtue and vice, Heracles would choose virtue, even though it’s a harder path, less enjoyable and what not. 200 year later the Roman Emperor Comidus basically declared that he was Heracles—not the Stoic philosopher brand Heracles. We are talking about the Heracles who wore lion skins, slept with women 50 at a time, shot bizarre-looking animals and the like from the safety of his booth in the Coliseum. Hercules only took two centuries to become completely unphilosophized.
Hercules, the philosopher, makes a comeback of sorts in the Renaissance, but today Heracles is pretty much still aphilosophical. By studying the changes in which each society has regarded Heracles. What is it about Heracles and his nature that made him so adaptable to philosophy in the eyes of the ancient Greeks and the Republican Romans and early Imperial Romans? What was it about Heracles that made it so attractive for the Emperor Comidus, right around 192 AD, to say, “Hey, I’m Hercules?” Apparently, the historians tell us that the Roman people, the average people in the streets, just loved it. They loved having Hercules as their ruler. They bought into it. They thought it was great. They wanted him to keep it up. They wanted more. Today, people are bringing their kids to see little Hercules dance around. Go figure it out, but this, to me, is a true value of classical mythology. It provides all of us with an unbelievable opportunity, an enjoyable opportunity, to come into contact with the culture, the belief system, and, most of all, the stories of our cultural forbearers, the Greeks and Romans.
You may have noticed that the class has been rather short on hard and fast answers. Very seldom during the course of this class have I been able to provide answers that will completely satisfy you skeptical children of the 20th—soon to be 21st—century. I have pleaded all the way along that is the nature of the material—and it really is. What I hope, finally, you have gained is an interest in the stories, a familiarity with the major characters of the stories, a little understanding about the civilizations that produced these stories so that, as you go on in life, you can interpret these stories, you can read these stories and have an appreciation for these stories and can use them for your own personal purposes, enjoy them for your own personal purposes, whether you just want to laugh or whether you want to understand your soul, if you want to understand ancient religion better, you know, these opportunities are available to you. This isn’t going to make you very wealthy, the knowledge that we’ve had in this class. But I hope that you’ve enjoyed it and have found that it is something that you will continue to enjoy as you go through life. I know I have. Thank you.
Source: http://courses.missouristate.edu/josephhughes/myth/TranscriptsWord/Lecture38.doc
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