Greek mythology from A to Z:
[D] - Dionysus (Διόνυσος) was the god of fertility and wine, later considered a patron of the arts. He had a dual nature; on one hand, he brought joy and divine ecstasy; or he would bring brutal and blinding rage, thus reflecting the dual nature of wine.
Cupid and Psyche, Paolo Andrea Triscornia, late 18th century, marble, Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg.
Greek mythology from A to Z:
[M] - Morpheus (Μορφεύς) was a god of dreams who appeared in the literary work Metamorphoses of the Roman poet Ovid. He was the son of Somus and had a thousand siblings. He had the ability to take any human form and appear in dreams, but his actual form was that of a winged daemon.
Because I wanted to see if there was any way that Patroclus and Achilles’ relationship wasn’t as understandable or blatantly obvious as The Song of Achilles made it out to be. Y’all are welcome.
In general, to start, “Patroclus” is almost always followed by some variation of “my companion”, so there’s that-
Book 11
“(Patroclus), joy of my heart”
Book 16
“Every Trojan and Greek can die as long as we two survive! We can take Troy together” —Achilles’ goofy ass bruh, I swear -_-
“Zeus, give him strength, keep Patroclus alive and bring him back to me” —Zeus: ope
Book 18 (y'all I put the wrong book why ain’t y'all stop me! 😭)
“I hope the gods have not done something that will break my heart (like kill Patroclus)”
[Antilochus preventing him from cutting his wrists after hearing he’s dead, covers his face in dust, screams so loud his mom hears it at the bottom of the ocean]
“What pleasure is there for me, when Patroclus, my beloved companion has been destroyed, the man I honored above all…”
“My own heart has no desire to live on….unless Hector is (killed for killing Patroclus)”
“So now I’ll go (kill Hector), killer of the man I loved” —Now I know he claims love for a lot of men, but he wasn’t willing to fight for any of their dead bodies until Patroclus, sooooo
“I’m going to wait to bury you until we’re both dead so that we’re together in death” —Shit’s a lil weird, but Achilles is a drama queen so it’s in line- UPDATE- okay so, if they wait to be buried together they’ll go to the same place! Makes sense!
Book 19
“I can’t even eat I’m so distressed, not even my own father’s death would upset me as much. I would have had you tell my son of me if you were alive because I thought only I would die” —-this one in particular gets me because Deidameia is alive, but he wanted Patroclus to tell his son about him!
Book 20
“(Hector’s) getting closer, the man who scarred my heart more than all other men”
Book 22
“I’m going to leave your [Hector’s] body here to be torn apart by animals while Patroclus is getting the burial he deserves”
“I’ll not forget [Patroclus] as long as I’m alive. Even when I’m dead, I won’t forget my companion”
Book 23
[Patroclus’ ghost asks to be buried together, Achilles agrees and tries to hold him but he vanishes] —-Why would Patroclus ask this of someone he didn’t love? And why would Achilles agree so easily?
[Gives him a golden urn and commands they have a mound]
In fact, literally all of book 23 is a damn festival for Patroclus lmao
Book 9
“He stole from me (Briseis), a woman I love. Let him sleep with her! I still won’t fight” —-Don’t sound very loving to me, and also star point because they offered Briseis back amongst hella other shit and he still said no
“Achilles slept with Diomede, Patroclus slept opposite Achilles with Iphis"
Book 19 (again!)
Briseis cries over Patroclus’ body, saying that when Achilles killed her husband, Patroclus was nice and would make sure Achilles would marry her instead —–Idk how this would make anyone feel better about their dead spouse, but….go off, I guess? Not to mention he knew Achilles wasn’t gone make it! Liar lmao
Book 24
He sleeps with Briseis after Priam comes to beg for Hector’s body
Bisexual, open relationship. I won’t deny evidence of him and the ladies, but he was most definitely in love with Patroclus.
(update! Lmao y'all I had the right quotes, wrong book for some of them- why ain’t y'all say nothing?)
Norse mythology from A to Z:
[F] - Freyja (Old Norse for ‘Lady’, ‘Woman’, or ‘Mistress’).
The baseline of Freyja’s various functions comes from her role as fertility goddess as per her Vanir descent. Specifically, her other name Horn (Hǫrn, or Härn) probably comes from Old Norse horr, which means flax or linen. This was an important product which began being cultivated early on in Scandinavia and was thought to ward off evil and give fertility to humankind. Flax manufacture was a female affair, and as bridal dresses were made of linen, Freyja became a sort of defender of love and weddings, too. Another one of her names, Gefn, is Old Norse for ‘giver’, bringing to mind a role as a goddess of plenty.
Norse mythology from A to Z:
[S] - Sigyn is a goddess and wife of Loki.
Antilochus: *breaking the news of Patroclus’ death to Achilles* now, don’t overreact-
Achilles: *already digging his grave and shoveling dirt on himself* too late for that.
Norse mythology from A to Z:
[T] - Thor (Old Norse: Þórr) is the god of thunder, the sky, and agriculture.
Ares: PHOBOS, DEIMOS, STOP TRYING TO ROAST YOUR SANDWICHES VIA THE FIRE BREATHING HORSES. I TOLD YOU TO EAT BEFORE BATTLE OR NOT AT ALL.
Norse mythology from A to Z:
[F] - Fenrir or Fenrisúlfr
Odysseus, pretending to be insane to avoid going to war:
Helen, all through the whole damned Iliad:
Agamemnon (I don't think we need an explanation for this):
Iphigenia:
Ajax the great, after failing to get the armor of Achilles:
Achilles:
Patroclus:
Previous parts: 1