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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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CHAPTER<br />

3<br />

MYTHS OF CREATION<br />

There were many myths about creation among the Greeks and Romans, and<br />

these myths have many parallels in other mythologies, such as Egyptian, Sumerian,<br />

Babylonian, and Hebraic. Homer (ca. 800 B.C.) 1 has the Titans Oceanus and<br />

Tethys (identified later in this chapter) responsible for the origin of the gods (Iliad<br />

14. 201) and reflects a primitive belief in the geographical nature of the universe<br />

as a flat disc with hills, touched at its rim by the vast dome of the heavens.<br />

The deity Oceanus is the stream of ocean that encircles the earth (see figure<br />

on page 585). But Homer does not by any means provide a complete account of<br />

genesis. Hesiod (ca. 700), as far as we can tell, was the first to give literary expression<br />

to a systematic explanation of how the gods, the universe, and humankind<br />

came into being. At any rate his, the earliest account to survive, may<br />

be considered the classic Greek version. The genealogical scheme is presented<br />

in his Theogony, while his Works and Days adds significant details.<br />

CREATION ACCORDING TO HESIOD<br />

In the opening of the Theogony, Hesiod devotes many lines to the beauty and<br />

power of the Muses, with particular emphasis upon their ability to inspire the<br />

infallible revelation of the poet (a complete translation of the opening section of<br />

the poem is found in the Additional Reading at the end of this chapter). This ardent<br />

invocation to the Muses is no mere artistic convention but rather the utterance<br />

of a prophetic visionary. 2 Hesiod's vehement sincerity may be illustrated<br />

by these lines from the Theogony (22-34):<br />

f<br />

They, the Muses, once taught Hesiod beautiful song, while he was shepherding<br />

his flocks on holy Mount Helicon; these goddesses of Olympus, daughters of<br />

aegis-bearing Zeus first of all spoke this word to me, "Oh, you shepherds of the<br />

fields, base and lowly things, little more than bellies, we know how to tell many<br />

falsehoods that seem like truths but we also know, when we so desire, how to<br />

utter the absolute truth."<br />

Thus they spoke, the fluent daughters of great Zeus. Plucking a branch, to<br />

me they gave a staff of laurel, a wondrous thing, and into me they breathed a<br />

divine voice, so that I might celebrate both the things that are to be and the<br />

things that were before; and they ordered me to honor, in my song, the race of<br />

5i

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