Showing posts with label Week 9. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Week 9. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

Week 9 Story, Vengeance of the Sun God Part 3


A cool mist enveloped Daedalus and chased away the scorching heat.  He blinked his eyes, clearing his vision.  The flash of light was so magnificent that it dazzled his vision even through closed eyes.  If they had been open when the light appeared, he certainly would have been blinded.  Daedalus rolled to his knees and looked at the altar.  The wood remained unlit, and a golden man stood behind it, gently running his fingers across the wings positioned on top. The grief that Daedalus felt was mirrored in the lines etched deeply on the man’s face.  

Behind the man rested a chariot flanked by two people.  One, a man calming glittering horses.  The other, a woman with arms raised and serene concentration on her face.  The cool mist that brought Daedalus back to consciousness permeated the area around the new arrivals, muting the heavenly light.  Daedalus recognized the couple near the chariot.  Helios and (mom’s name), the divine parents of (queen’s name), which he had met on several occasions when he was still welcome in the court of King Minos.  Daedalus’ surprise dissipated and he remembered his manners.  He touched his face to the sand to honor his visitors.  The man by the altar must have been Apollo.  Daedalus waited, prostrate, to be addressed.

“Put on the wings,” Apollo commanded with a thick, choking voice.  Daedalus looked up, incredulous.  Apollo glared at him from across the altar.  “Put on the wings,” he repeated.  Daedalus rose slowly and walked to the altar.  Apollo stared into Daedalus’ eyes.  The god’s eyes shone gold like a beam of light piercing cloudy skies.  Brownish-red spots swam into view inside the charioteer’s irises, giving them the appearance of flowing magma.  “Put on the wings,” Apollo commanded a third time.  The cadence of his voice changing, the words not quite matching up with the lips that were forming them.  

The cadence was familiar and, strangely, made Daedalus’ mouth water.  It hit him. It was the same accent he heard from a young man who traveled with the Venetian spice merchants.  The merchants visited Crete once a year to supply the royal kitchen with rich spices from around the world.  A young Indian man, a favorite of King Minos, would spend his time teaching the palace cooks new recipes from his homeland.  They could never quite replicate the curried rice and crispy fried vegetable dishes the man produced, so King Mino rewarded him richly for his culinary dishes.  

“I couldn’t possibly…” Daedalus began, but grief caught thickly in the back of his throat and he couldn’t continue.  He hung his head.

“Please, Grandson. It is the only way you can perceive the Convergence,” Athena took a step forward, catching Daedalus’ eye.  The look of urgency communicated in her dark eyes encouraged Daedalus to stumble toward Apollo and the altar.  Apollo draped the wings across Daedalus’ shoulders and stepped back. 

The world in front of Daedalus shifted, then sharpened.  The visages of the three visitors dramatically changed and the glow of their skin altering from gold to bronze.  Three additional horses appeared in front of the chariot, bringing the team’s number to seven. Daedalus took a double-take as he took in the lead horse.  The magnificent beast, white as the purest snow, had seven heads.  The man who took Apollo’s place seemed amused at Daedalus’ reaction.

“Please, let me introduce Goddess Saraswathi, Origin of All Knowledge” began the man as he indicated toward Athena.  Daedalus turned to find her form had shifted as well.  Along with the deepened ruddiness of skin, the compeer donned two additional arms, the hands containing additional spools of thread.  My esteemed companions are Lord Surya, Eye of the Universe, his consort, Lady Saranya, and his vahana, Uchchaihshravas, King of the Horses.”  Daedalus bowed to each in turn. 

“I am Aruna, Charioteer of Lord Surya and father of Sampati and Jatayu, those slain to procure your escape.”  His eyes narrowed.  “You are able to perceive us as well as the gods who rule over your people because you are draped in my son Jatayu.  His essence has strengthened your eyesight in both the natural and spiritual realms.”  Saraswathi broke the tension by closing the meager gap between herself and Daedalus.  

“Athena and I brought you to Sicily because the old gods of the island still live in the rocks and trees and each immigrant brings their own gods to protect their hearths and thresholds.  Your Pantheon has a tenacious hold on this island, so it is easier for mine to reach out to you.”  Her form guttered like a candle and was replaced with Athena.

“Each deity is one soul containing infinite forms; or essences.  The form that appears depends on the essence of the mortal that perceives us.  Your essence calls forth the Olympians.  Jatayu’s essence beckons the Deva-Asuras.  The many types of essences located on this island soften the bonds between gods and devotees.  Jatayu’s essence is no longer attached to a mortal soul, so his essence is able to veil your soul as his wings shroud your physical form and you are able to observe the Devas.”

“You are each one god with many faces?” asked Daedalus, looking between the deities surrounding him.  Ever the scientist, he quickly evaluated this new information and produced a hypothesis. “Your omniscience allows each follower to discern the form they would be most comfortable with.  Faces that resemble their own.  Language they understand.”  Athena’s face glimmered and two faces simultaneously smiled and nodded.  Surya cleared his throat. 

“We are here to offer you the chance to make up for a grievous error,” he stated.  “You may have lost your son, but you can grant new life to Jatayu.  We can take you to India and bind his essence to your soul.  He can live a full life and fulfill his divine mission.”

“How?” asked Daedalus.  “I’m not immortal.  I have no interest to be.  Will you strip my essence from my soul?  I just lost my son.  I will gladly sacrifice myself to join him and bring Jatayu back from Asphodel.”

“Your willingness is admirable and honorable,” responded Surya.  He nodded toward the Goddesses of Knowledge.  “Let us begin.”    

Author's Note:


I don't know why Daedalus ended up in Sicily after the flight.  The island that Icarus' body supposedly ended up on (Icaria) is marked on the map below.  That's a weird trip.  Why did Daedalus fly over Greece and just keep going?
Map courtesy of Google Maps and Microsoft editing tools.

When Daedalus reached Sicily, he offered his wings as a sacrifice to Apollo, built a temple to Apollo, and lived the rest of his life in the service of the Sicilian king.  

I did a lot of random research for this part of the story.  There were three tribes of people who lived in Sicily before the Greeks took over in 6th c. BCE.  Two of the three tribes followed gods that were not Greek.  I also learned how royalty is supposed to be introduced.  Saraswati is the highest-ranking Deva, so she is introduced before Surya.  

Bibliography:

           


Sunday, March 8, 2020

Week 9 Wikipedia Trail, The Fates

(Image courtesy of ClipArt Library.)



I have to tie the fates of Daedalus and Jakayu and Icarus and Sampati together, so I figured it would be a good idea to learn how Indian religions understood the concept of fate.  They focus on karma and dharma, so I'm not sure how fate plays into a religion that actively celebrates autonomy.  It took me a little bit to figure out the path to get from the Greek Fates to Indian ideas of fates.  I had to start with the Greek term Moirai before I could find anything that remotely looked like The Fates in Indian mythology.





Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Week 9 Extra Credit Reading, Dasharatha

(Image courtesy of Giphy.)



Bibliography:

Chandrakant, Kamala, and M.N. Nangare. Dasharatha: The Story of Rama's Father. Amar Chitra Katha Pvt.

Week 9 Reading Notes, The Pandava Princes

(Image courtesy of Giphy.)


Bibliography:

Bhagwat, B.R., and Subhash Tendle. The Pandava Princes: Pandu's Five Brave Sons. Amar Chitra Katha Pvt, 1970.