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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY IN LITERATURE AND ART 693<br />

The Apollo of Bellac, in which the god appears as a nondescript inventor. Better<br />

known is his play La Guerre de Troie n'aura pas lieu (The Trojan War Will Not Take<br />

Place, 1935), translated by Christopher Fry with the title Tiger at the Gates. In this<br />

play, Hector and Ulysses agree that Helen will be returned to Menelaus and so<br />

the war will be avoided. But a drunken incident nevertheless precipitates the<br />

fated hostilities, and at the end Cassandra prophesies the inevitable action of<br />

Homer's Iliad—"and now the Grecian poet will have his word." The renowned<br />

Marguerite Yourcenar (1903-1987) has two plays inspired by Greek mythology:<br />

Electre ou la chute des masques (Electra or the Fall of the Masks, 1954), concentrating<br />

on Orestes' return before the murders, and Qui n'a pas son minotaure? (To<br />

Each His Minotaur, 1943), about the legend of Theseus.<br />

In literature in Spanish, the Argentinian Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986) was<br />

especially provocative in his use of classical mythology, whose importance to<br />

him is indicated by the title of his best-known collection of short stories,<br />

Labyrinths (1953; translated into English, 1962). "The Immortal" begins with the<br />

antique dealer Joseph Cartaphilus of Smyrna offering the Princess of Lucinge a<br />

six-volume set of Pope's Iliad. A little later he dies during a voyage to Smyrna<br />

on the ship Zeus, but he leaves in one of the volumes a manuscript relating his<br />

experiences in many ages as a kind of Odysseus. His account ends:<br />

¥ "I<br />

have been Homer; shortly I shall be No One, like Ulysses; shortly I shall be<br />

all men; I shall be dead."<br />

On quite a different scale, the enormous Odyssey, A Modern Sequel of the<br />

Greek author Nikos Kazantzakis (1938; translated into English, 1958) also takes<br />

Odysseus beyond the limitations of place. He travels through the world until<br />

his search for a perfect society is transformed into a search for himself, ending<br />

with his isolation in the Antarctic, where death comes gently to him, as Tiresias<br />

had foretold in the Odyssey.<br />

It is not surprising that our survey ends with Homer, the first and greatest<br />

creator of the literature of classical mythology. The myths and sagas, like the<br />

great mythical figures of the gods and heroes, have proved indestructible because<br />

of their universal quality, expressed in the words of Borges and interpreted<br />

in countless works of poets, dramatists, and other writers for the greater part of<br />

three thousand years.<br />

CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY IN ART<br />

CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY IN THE ART OF LATE ANTIQUITY<br />

Despite the decline of the influence of the gods in the life of the cities and individuals,<br />

they continued to be a source of allegory, especially in funerary art.<br />

With the spread of inhumation (from about A.D. 140), wealthy patrons commissioned<br />

reliefs on sarcophagi (i.e., marble or stone coffins), whose mytho-

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