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JOURNAL ARCHIVES

OCTOBER 2007

redon butterfly

The mythology of butterflies and moths

Trees in art and myth

Aung San Suu Kyi: Fighting the power of fear

The journey

Turn, turn, turn

Leaning into my life

Seeking the Ox

Ten oxherding pictures (Shubun)

Moon deities

The gift of a brick wall

Al Gore: Beyond politics

The capture of Pegasus

Pegasus and the slaying of the chimera

Pegasus and the rescue of Andromeda


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OCTOBER 27, 2007
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THE SLAYING OF THE CHIMERA

While Bellerophon was visiting Argives, King Proteus and his wife Antea entertained him. During his stay, Antea asked Bellerophon to meet her secretly so that they could lie together but he was an honorable man and refused. In retaliation, Antea told her husband that Bellerophon had tried to lie with her against her will. She begged her husband to execute him.

Proteus was unwilling to kill Bellerophon himself. Instead he dispatched him to Lycia with letters of introduction which contained many slanderous lies. He told Bellerophon to present the letters to his father-in-law with the hope that the king of Lycia would kill him.

When he reached Lycia, the king entertained him for nine days. On the tenth day, Bellerophon presented him with the letters. After reading them, the king was furious and determined to send him to his death by commanding that he slay the Chimera.

. . . the Chimera, who was not a human being, but a goddess, for she had the head of a lion and the tail of a serpent, while her body was that of a goat, and she breathed forth flames of fire. Iliad, Book VI. Homer. trans. Samuel Butler.

Before Bellerophon went into battle, however, a seer advised him to first capture Pegasus. With the aid of Athena and her golden bridle, he caught the winged horse.

Chimera

Chimera on clay dish. 350-40 B.C.E. Louvre.

While riding Pegasus and battling the Chimera, Bellerophon hurled lead-tipped spears into its throat. The fiery breath of the monster quickly melted the lead tips, thereby suffocating it.

Pegasus and Bellerophon

Artist Unknown. Source: Myths Every Child Should Know. Mabie, Hamilton Wright (Ed.). 1914.

But the story does not end here.

From the Greek word for excessive pride or wanton violence, hubris is the defiance of the gods and their divine order and Bellerophon fell prey to this tragic flaw.

One day while riding Pegasus, he turned the steed toward the divine realm of Mount Olympus with the intent of joining them. Zeus saw him approaching and sent a gadfly to sting Pegasus. When bitten by the fly, the horse reared, throwing his rider back to earth.

Afterward Zeus placed Pegasus in his heavenly stables where he can be seen as a constellation to this day. Bellerophon was not so fortunate. According to the myth, he lived out the remainder of his mortal life crippled and despairing.

 

 

 

 

 

 
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