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Tag: Jove / god of thunder

“Metamorphoses” (The Giants’ War, VIII) – Ovid

scene-of-the-deluge.jpg!Large

    Scene of the Deluge (1820) 

 

            Théodore Géricault

 

                    _______

 

 

following upon the threat of water,

rather than fire, to destroy the world

under the command of Jove, dutifully 

abetted by Neptune, his Olympian

brother, sea god himself, with his 

fleet of observant minions, the 

rivers, streams, waterways, the 

annihilating flood takes place

 

Ovid recounts

 

            The floods, by Nature enemies to land,
            And proudly swelling with their new command,
            Remove the living stones, that stopt their way, 

 

the living stones, you’ve got me there, 

these could only be stones as initial 

matter somehow contributing to the 

advent of an inherent life source, later 

activated, induced into vivifying action

 

we are dust, in other words, we return 

to dust, inert dust, however 

incomprehensibly

 

            And gushing from their source, augment the sea. 

 

the flowing rivers augment, enlarge, 

the growing sea, covering the land


          Then, with his mace, their monarch struck the ground; 

 

a mace is a club with metal spikes


          With inward trembling Earth receiv’d the wound; 

 

a comma after trembling here would 

make this line easier to read, “With

inward trembling, Earth receiv’d the 

wound”, but not everyone is as 

punctilious about grammar as I am


          And rising streams a ready passage found. 

 

streams easily found their way 

amidst the bracken, the shrubbery, 

the rushes, to overwhelm the 

otherwise quiescent pastures


          Th’ expanded waters gather on the plain: 

 

Manitoba, often, lately, in spring


          They float the fields, and over-top the grain;
          Then rushing onwards, with a sweepy sway,
          Bear flocks, and folds, and lab’ring hinds away. 

 

Bear here is a verb, not a noun, meaning 

that animals, flocks, and folds, and lab’ring

hinds, are carried away, borne away,

borne asunder 


          Nor safe their dwellings were, for, sap’d by floods, 

 

sap’d, sapped, deprived, weakened,

rendered unsuitable


          Their houses fell upon their houshold Gods. 

 

household Gods, icons, Lares or Penates

personally held by the Ancients, like we 

now keep pictures, tokens, of our own

particular, however often secular, 

rather than religious, idols


            The solid piles, too strongly built to fall,
            High o’er their heads, behold a watry wall: 

 

though tall, and apparently indestructible,

the solid piles are nevertheless submerged, 

the very recent South Asian tsunami, for

instance, or the Japanese one that 

provoked the nuclear incident that put an

end there to that earlier profoundly 

nationally integrated industry, if you’ll 

remember 

 

            Now seas and Earth were in confusion lost;
            A world of waters, and without a coast. 

 

water, water, everywhere, but the last 

thing you want to do is drink

 

 

next, how humans survive

 

stay tuned

 

 

R ! chard

 

 

 

“Metamorphoses” (The Giants’ War, III) – Ovid

charon-carries-dead-souls-across-the-river-styx.jpg!Large

    “Charon Carries Dead Souls across the River Styx(1861)

 

           Konstantin Makovsky

 

                 ____________

 

Jove, god of Thunder, speaks

 

            I was not more concern’d in that debate
            Of empire, when our universal state
            Was put to hazard, and the giant race
            Our captive skies were ready to imbrace: 

 

I was not especially disturbed, Jove says,

when the state of our universe was 

challenged, or debate[d], when the giants 

tried to usurp our territory, were ready to 

imbrace, or embrace, take on, our  

vulnerable, [o]ur captive, skies


            For tho’ the foe was fierce, the seeds of all
            Rebellion, sprung from one original; 

 

because the enemy, then, the adversary, 

came from the one original source, its 

however manifold predations, its 

however myriad desecrations, would’ve

been identifiable to Jove, not foreign, not

unmanageable, he would’ve recognized

the black sheep of the Olympian family,

the giants  

 

            Now, wheresoever ambient waters glide,
            All are corrupt, and all must be destroy’d. 

 

ambient, nearby, related, infected, corrupt,

all has been corrupted


            Let me this holy protestation make,
            By Hell, and Hell’s inviolable lake, 

 

here’s another anachronism, for Hell wouldn’t’ve 

been even a concept in the era of Ovid, where

the Underworld, and Hades, entirely different

afterworlds, would’ve prevailed, areas of 

persistent gloom and shade, see Homer here,

for instance, or Virgil

 

the Underworld of the ancient world was 

surrounded by five rivers, Hell’s inviolable 

lake, the most famous of which was the 

river Styx

 

in the Divine Comedy, Dante updates this 

watery boundary for his own 14th Century

readers, and makes it the passageway to

the fifth circle of Hell, where Charon 

remains, after even over a thousand 

years, the very same ferryman

 

see above

 

nor was there either any of our present

conception of Heaven, Heaven would’ve 

been Olympus then, the exclusive domain 

of the Gods, either Greek or Roman 

 

            I try’d whatever in the godhead lay: 

 

Jove says, I tried everything a god 

could use


            But gangren’d members must be lopt away,
            Before the nobler parts are tainted to decay. 

 

you’ve got to lop[ ] away, cut off, the bad 

parts before they infect the more vital 

components of the body

 
            There dwells below, a race of demi-gods,
            Of nymphs in waters, and of fawns in woods:
            Who, tho’ not worthy yet, in Heav’n to live,
            Let ’em, at least, enjoy that Earth we give. 

 

not all beings are corrupt, but nymphs 

and fawns, innocents, Jove pleads, 

should be given consideration on 

Earth, if they be not yet worthy of the 

majesty of Heav’n, and granted earthly 

areas of enjoyment in the confines of 

their forsaken place 


            Can these be thought securely lodg’d below,
            When I my self, who no superior know,
            I, who have Heav’n and Earth at my command,
            Have been attempted by Lycaon’s hand? 

 

if Lycaon could attack me, Jove, god 

of Thunder, asks, how can these 

innocents, nymphs, fawns, ever be 

safe

 

             At this a murmur through the synod went,
             And with one voice they vote his punishment. 

 

the punishment of Lycaon, which we’ll 

soon encounter


             Thus, when conspiring traytors dar’d to doom
             The fall of Caesar, and in him of Rome,
             The nations trembled with a pious fear;
             All anxious for their earthly Thunderer: 
 

 

Thus, or in a similar manner, did the nations

of the earth tremble when Caesar, their 

earthly Thunderer, was assassinated 

 

nations, incidentally, is another anachronism,

nations didn’t appear on earth until the 

18th Century, with the French Revolution

 

             Nor was their care, o Caesar, less esteem’d
             By thee, than that of Heav’n for Jove was deem’d: 

 

Ovid addresses Caesar here, his contemporary,

and compares that emperor’s esteem for nations, 

his reliance on their allegiance, to the esteem 

Heav’n has for Jove

 

             Who with his hand, and voice, did first restrain
             Their murmurs, then resum’d his speech again. 

 

Jove calls for silence in the assembly

before speaking again


             The Gods to silence were compos’d, and sate
             With reverence, due to his superior state. 

 

The Gods … sate, or sat, then took heed,

bowing to Jove’s superior position

 

the tale of the punishment of Lycaon

will follow  

 


R ! chard

 


 


“Metamorphoses” (The Giants’ War) – Ovid

the-giant-1943

    The Giant (1943) 

 

      Nicholas Roerich


          _________

 


The Giants’ War

            Nor were the Gods themselves more safe above;  

“justice” might have returned to Heaven

but that didn’t mean the Gods there 

were not affected by strife, nor immune 


            Against beleaguer’d Heav’n the giants move. 

 

where do the giants come from, who 

knows, I suspect there might be a

vestigial recollection here of larger 

entities, dinosaurs, for instance, 

lurking in our prehistoric memory, 

our primeval consciousness, finding 

expression and acknowledgment 

in our myths


            Hills pil’d on hills, on mountains mountains lie,
            To make their mad approaches to the skie. 

 

the giants were piling hills on hills, 

mountains on mountains, building 

pathways, however “mad”

notion, to the “skie”, or sky

 

see above


            ‘Till Jove, no longer patient, took his time
            T’ avenge with thunder their audacious crime: 

 

Jove, god of thunder

 

            Red light’ning plaid along the firmament,
            And their demolish’d works to pieces rent. 

 

lightning “plaid”, or played, at the edge 

of the heavens, destroying there the 

“works” the giants had erected, the 

high hills, the expanded, the extended, 

mountains

 

rent, past participle of the verb to rend,

to tear asunder

 

            Sing’d with the flames, and with the bolts transfixt,
            With native Earth, their blood the monsters mixt; 

 

the blood of these giants, “[s]ing’d with 

flames”, and “transfixt”, or pierced, 

riven, by thunderbolts, mixes with earth

 

            The blood, indu’d with animating heat, 

 

hot, propulsive, generating blood

 

indu’d, or endued, which is to say,

supplied with

 

            Did in th’ impregnant Earth new sons beget: 

 

the blood of the giants impregnates 

the Earth, begetting sons, there, and 

daughters 


            They, like the seed from which they sprung, accurst, 

            Against the Gods immortal hatred nurst,


the sins of the father are carried on to  

their sons, and daughters, who maintain, 

have maintained, “nurst”, or nursed, the 

primitive rancour

 

            An impious, arrogant, and cruel brood;
            Expressing their original from blood. 

 

the children of the giants were recognizably 

the children of these “original[s]”, these

preliminary giants, an impious, arrogant, 

and cruel brood”


            Which when the king of Gods beheld from high 

 

the king of Gods, Jove


            (Withal revolving in his memory, 

            What he himself had found on Earth of late,
            Lycaon’s guilt, and his inhumane treat), 

 

“withal revolving”, or having revolved,

considered,“in his memory”, what he’d 

recently seen on Earth, the reprehensible 

behaviour of a certain Lycaon, Lycaon’s

monstrous discourtesies, his “inhumane

treat[ment]”, of which we’ll hear later

 

            He sigh’d; nor longer with his pity strove;
            But kindled to a wrath becoming Jove: 

an ire, a fury, worthy of the king of Gods 

 

stay tuned

 


R ! chard