And Leto will shortly be known as Latona in Ovid, the Latona and Niobe story. The ORDER Ovid is putting in these stories might give a causal reader the wrong idea. He's got lovely stories to come. Perhaps once we get thru with this one we can embark on the Palace of the Sun King, (the beginning of Book II) and dazzle our way into a tale with a moral, and nothing to do with love, lust, or any carnal pleasure.
Strange. Perhaps Ovid is pandering to his readers who normally would be eager for naughty doings, having read his TWO books on the subject previously. The entire 15 books contain stories that every English reader should know and his unforgettable way of describing them is magic. Countless artists, sculptors and authors have taken up HIS themes, not simply the themes of ancient mythology. I am glad we are reading this but I agree we do need to get over poor Io and peculiar Argus (why does that name seem familiar?) ..But has Ovid made his point with Io?
What was it?
Personally I thought it was unfair, I think Jupiter is unfair, to have killed Argus, who was just doing what Jupiter asked him to: watching the cow. Jupiter did that....why? To appease Juno? To make a front. But he got caught in his own front? Oh what a tangled web we weave when first we/he practices to deceive? That's all he's doing. It must be exhausting.
And he disliked Io's being watched by this ancient private eye, so he kills him? Whatdid that solve? Poor Argus, doing his job, gone. So now what? Senseless. Jupiter here is senseless.
What else can Ovid do with Jupiter to convince us? Remember he compared Jupiter to Augustus and the pantheon of the Gods to the Palatine and the Roman senate early on in the composition. . Pretty clear, no?
If you watch any of the UCONN film on Ovid, the Introduction to Ovid, you can see how Ovid is making parallels, particularly in the depiction of craftsmen (and women) to the unfair treatment they receive.
Jupiter here if I had to describe him is amoral, and he's also unfair, self centered and vain. I loved I think it's the Introduction to Ovid D in Dr. Travis's film where he compares the other gods in Ovid's Pantheon of the Gods, his high council, to the senate of Rome. Note the decision to flood was supposedly a council matter but it was Jupiter's decision (not theirs, but did they dare to object?) to flood the world. That whole thing describes perfectly the condition of the Senate in Augustus's rule. Augustus is NOT who I think most of us picture, he's something else entirely. There's a reason Classicist Mary Beard calls him "that old reptile" in her new book S.P.Q.R.
So we've been awash in seeing carnal pleasures, and, as Barbara described, power plays, described by Ovid in the BEGINNING of the first book. There are 15 books. What a way to start out a book, by giving his loyal readers more of what they have previously enjoyed to hook them to the greater work. Were they fooled? Are we?
Good thing we live in 2016, huh? Where there is no pornography online or on TV or in any bookstore or in the movies. No "bodice ripping" Romance novels. As Bellamarie said, no Shades of Grey. The people in Ovid's day had it somewhat lame in that department, for purchased reading materials. Good thing we don't have politicians playing god, who are amoral, narcissistic, unfair, prone to making snap decisions or underhanded ones or shady dealing...good thing OUR senate is above all that. No sex-capades to be on the news. NO trips to the Appalachians. No...please. The next time you're in Amsterdam, a city I love, do NOT turn on the TV if there is a child in the room, that's all I can tell you. Where we get Matt Lauer and the CBS eye and NBC Peacock, they get something a lot more startling on almost every channel. No joke. You can't get it OFF the screen and you don't know what you're looking at first. I'm not a gynecologist, thank God.
Good thing WE are so evolved.
What can WE make of Argus? Of why he was killed? Of this story of yet another attempt like that of Apollo and Daphne, of conquering. Again turning into something else. The Pan story is so boring Argus went to sleep. Then why put it in there?
Is Ovid doing anything with these seques? If so, what?