Deucalion and Phrrha
by Artist
Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640)
Date 1636
Prado Museum (The Lombardo translation is highly recommended, but there are tons of them available online, free. Here is a sampling, or please share with us another you've found which you like:)
---http://ovid.lib.virginia.edu/trans/Metamorph.htm#488381088---Translated by A.S. Kline...(This one has its own built in clickable dictionary)...---http://classics.mit.edu /Ovid/metam.html...---Translated by Sir Samuel Garth, John Dryden, et al
---- http://www.theoi.com/Text/OvidMetamorphoses1.html----Translated by Brookes More
Family Tree of the Gods and Goddesses of Greece and Rome:
-------http://www.talesbeyondbelief.com/roman-gods/roman-gods-family-tree.htm
-------http://www.talesbeyondbelief.com/greek-gods-mythology/greek-gods-family-tree.htm
For Your Consideration:
Week Two: Gods and men learn to interact January 26--?
First section: The Four Ages
Bk I:89-112 The Golden Age
Bk I:113-124 The Silver Age
Bk I:125-150 The Bronze Age
1. Have you heard other versions of the Four Ages? Where did Ovid get this story?
2. Why do you think the ages progress from better to worse instead of the other direction?
3. The Golden Age sounds wonderful, doesn't it? What would your idea of a "Golden Age" feature?
4. What is your favorite line from Ovid about the Golden Age?
5. What was it that turned the Golden Age into the Silver Age?
6. What is "Classical Mythology?" Do you have time to watch less than 10 minutes of Dr. Roger Travis of UCONN explain what "The Rudy Thing" is, so we can discuss it?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvt3EazHqXYSecond Section: Giants and Lycaon
Bk I:151-176 The giants
Bk I:177-198 Jupiter threatens to destroy humankind
Bk I: 199-243 Lycaon is turned into a wolf
1. What are the Giants? Why is this chapter there? Does it accomplish anything?
2. We now meet the Pantheon of Gods for the first time. The imagery here is spectacular. What line or lines particularly struck you in the writing about their conference?
3. A direct reference is made to Augustus for the first time in this poem. Who is he being likened to? Why?
4. What would the Romans have seen as Lycaon’s real offense?
Third section: The Flood
Bk I:244-273 Jupiter invokes the floodwaters
Bk I:274-292 The Flood
Bk I:293-312 The world is drowned
1. What other ancient flood stories do you know? How is this one the same or different?
2. Are the other gods wholeheartedly behind Jupiter’s plan? Why or why not? Do you think Jupiter was justified in bringing the flood?
3. During the flood, what would happen to the nymphs and other forest spirits Jupiter is supposedly protecting.
Fourth section: Life returns
Bk I:313-347 Deucalion and his wife Pyrrha
Bk I:348-380 They ask Themis for help
Bk I:381-415 The human race is re-created
Bk I:416-437 Other species are generated
I seem to remember reading that either the Incas or the Aztecs had a flood story similar to ours. It was used to hypothesize early contact with Europe, I'm not convinced. The Americas had an ice age too. And the desire to want to explain natural disasters and to do so as anger of a superior being seems common.
this whole passage in the Lombardo translation is amazing! I'm so glad I read it.