This
happy morning, I give thanks as the smell of baking turkey drifts through our
home and wait anxiously for Santa Claus to appear at the Macy Day Parade. This happy morning; this twilight moment
between what was and what will be, I finished the final session of The
Ancient Greek Hero in Twenty Four Hours.
In
this session we studied among other things the Homeric Hymn to Dionysus. It begins with the god apparently looking for
a ride standing on “a jutting headland by
the shore of the fruitless sea…his rich, dark hair was waving about him, and on
his strong shoulders he wore a purple robe.” Back then
only the wealthy could afford purple fabric.
Conveniently, a crew of pirates
came upon him and “they thought that he
was the son of a line of kings nurtured by the sky god.” They snatch
the young god up in hopes of a great ransom.
Immediately
the helmsman yells out “What kind of
daemon possesses you all! What kind of god is this that you seized and tried to
tie up…?
Elsewhere, I pondered the helmsman’s second sight. I wondered if his hand on the rudder could
sense the weight of the god affecting the boat.
Professor Nagy says of the helmsman’s clarity and vision; “…you have to have the mentality to get this. And if you have the right mentality, then
you're saved.” The rest of the crew
clearly doesn’t have the helmsman’s pious perspective. The skipper over rules his arguments and tells
him to keep to his work. Immediately
weird things started happening. Dionysus
turns into a lion, grapevines start growing up the mast and line, a bear
appears on deck and the “fruitless sea” turns to wine, hence Homer’s wine-dark
sea. Naturally, “The men, terrified, were fleeing toward the stern of the ship, crowding
around the steersman.” Apparently, a
bear on deck was the final straw and the crew leaped over board. Dionysus turned them into the first
dolphins. The
helmsman at his post till the end was about to follow them into the deep when
the god saved him from doing so. Dionysus
said “Have courage, you radiant man,
reached by a force that works from far away. You
have achieved beauty and pleasure for my heart.” As Nagy explains in the textbook
at 24.16 “Since Dionysus caused it to
happen that the steersman ‘became the most blessed of all men’, I interpret
this divine action as the transforming of a man into a cult hero.”
I
had a different perspective this time while reading the textbook, studying the source
material and listening to the lectures.
You see the federal government “furloughed” me. Consequently, I was working at a local cannery
located upon “a jutting headland by the shore of the fruitless sea”. My comrades were not a crew of pirates but
neither were they sons “of a line of kings nurtured by the sky god.” That is to say they did not live in the “rarified
air” they believed I did. One day while
we trimmed fillets of salmon, we got some good news about our progress.
“Praise God!”
I shouted. “Oh, are you
religious?” one of the guys asked innocently.
In the federal government if I began discussing my faith, the boss would
have yelled at me and told me to keep to my work. My cheeks blushed as though I’d drank too
much red-wine. I hesitantly answered,
yes. My comrades showered me with
questions about my faith and church.
Then the conversation passed on to other things.
At
break my comrades would stand on the dock at the back overlooking the
water. That day as the afternoon break
wound down and our comrades leapt back to work, one of them fled toward the
stern of the cannery where I stood and crowded up to me. He had a question about lying. Being experienced in dialogue from this class
and familiar with Odysseus I helped him work through the ethics of a bummed
cigarette. As we returned to work he seemed satisfied with the conclusion we’d
drawn, as though he had “achieved beauty and pleasure for (his) heart.”
This
concludes my current adventure with version CB22.1x of The Ancient Greek Hero
in Twenty Four Hours. I have” turned the
post” as we say. But the race goes on
forever. After the holidays I will race
with other graduates in “Hour
25” and God willing, I and my winged steads will race with others during
version CB22.3x during the Summer of 2014.