Skip to main content

Thirty-One Words /////// Isabelle Ferguson

 Hephaestus has really captured my attention lately, and I was pretty upset with the information given to me from the reading this weekend. I need more of this beautiful role-model! There is so much more depth and personality to be explored, which brings me to lines 926 and 927 of  "Selections from the Theogony." I was excited to get more on this severely under-rated god. I was disappointed. Two lines. Thirty-one words for the god of fire's beginning. 
I felt sorry for Hephaestus, at first. He’s always overlooked. I even overlooked him when I learned about the Greek gods before college, and he is easily overlooked. Hephaestus is the only deformed immortal, which makes him the comedy relief for the other immortals. When he's mentioned, it is mainly for his craftsmanship and being laughed at by other immortals. His own father overlooks him. The gods and goddesses that stay in focus have powers and personalities that adhere to what stays in the focus of humankind. Drama, power, women, riches, honor, etc. Hera is in constant conflict with Zeus, Zeus loves to practice procreation with people other than his wife, and the list goes on and on. 
All that information just gives me a deeper appreciation for Hephaestus. Instead of being bitter about the lack of love received from his father, he gives his mother double the affection and attention. He defends Hera and encourages her. Hephaestus is the god of fire, so he could easily be violent and ill-tempered. Instead of using his power to burn those who overlooked him, Hephaestus creates. He built all of the houses on Mount Olympus, crafted Achilles a new shield, and many of the immortals' weapons and armor. The other gods and goddesses are engaged in battle, conflict, gossip. Personally, I would rather be Hephaestus, hanging out on Mount Olympus with my workshop and art room. His life, to me, seems to be the happiest.

P.S. I commented on Logan Turner's post and Hailey Morgan's post.

Comments

  1. How many times has Hephaestus saved mortals and other deities with his smithing and craftsmanship? More than any of the other immortals combined I'd wager. Hephaestus seems to be perfectly fine with just chilling in his forgery making whatever his heart desires for all eternity with no need or worry of being bothered.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Isn't it odd that we humans have sympathies for a god? I share the sympathies with you regarding Hephaestus. He is one of the most just gods. He is the least loved but the most loving. He has the power to have conflict with the other gods, yet he chooses not to do so. He is very admirable.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I really love your blog post! You really brought out a side of Greek mythology I hadn't considered yet. It's easy for me to notice how the Greeks made flawed gods, and while one would think that the most physically "flawed" god would follow their moral suit, he doesn't! Instead he's the one that has love and compassion. He literally married Aphrodite! I think the Greeks may have been commenting that power is more than physical power.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Word Painting in Vesta—Lily Caswell

  Word painting in Weelkes’s As Vesta Was from Latmos Hill Descending is quite interesting. And because that is a really long title, I’m calling it Vesta from now on. Word painting is basically when the melody matches up with the lyrics. So in Vesta, when it says “ascending” and “descending”, there are obviously scales going up and down. The madrigal was written for six voices to sing unaccompanied, so when they start to come together, it matches with the lyrics; so if the lyric says “two by two”, there are only two voices; “three by three” there is another voice added, and so forth. All the parts combine in exclamation before Vesta before it is left “all alone” to the highest soprano. All the way to the end of the piece, word painting continues when shouts of “Long live fair Oriana” with the bass sustaining long notes. Word painting in and of itself is a highly interesting topic because a musician takes the words of a poem or a sonnet and writes a melody line that pertains to cer...

Welcome to Honors! (Please Read This)

     Welcome to Honors! My name is Abbie Hedden and I serve as President of Honors. Jamie Peters is our Vice President, and Caroline Tucker is our Secretary. I look forward to getting to know all of you in class during this upcoming year! There are a few things you need to know about Honors.      There are no quizzes or tests in Honors. Grades are provided based on attendance/class participation, blogs, explication papers, and the research paper. The papers will be addressed at a later date, as they aren't due until later in the semester. However, there is a blog post due every week. Bearing that in mind, here are the requirements! Criteria Blog posts are due Monday at 11:59PM , and comments are due Tuesday at 9:29AM . DO NOT BE LATE ON ASSIGNMENTS. Points WILL be deducted from late assignments! Be sure to have your name in your Blogger profile Blog posts should include at least one to two paragraphs on that week’s reading assignment.  Blog posts shoul...

Topsy Turvy Day—Lily Caswell

  I cannot remember how old I was when I watched T he Hunchback of Notre Dame  but I was at least 8 or 9. I didn’t realize until probably a couple of years ago that the song  “Topsy Turvy” and the corresponding event was actually based on a real festival. The Feast of Fools was usually held on January 1 though it could have also been held on the 6 th  or the 13 th  of January. It was portrayed as a parody of Catholic feasts. Church bells were rung improperly, songs were sung out of tune, and the celebrants “wore strange garments and masks, and used puddings, sausages, and old shoes as censers.” (Seaton, p 77) In the song “Topsy Turvy”, it says “It’s the day the devil in us gets released / It’s the day we mock the prig and shock the priest / Everything is Topsy Turvy at the Feast of Fools… And it’s the day we do the things that we deplore ‘ On the other three hundred and sixty-four.”  I commented on Haylee Lynd’s and Jamie’s posts. Sources: https://www.brita...