Listen to:
Song to the Heliconian Muses (1:59)
from Theogony
by Hesiod
performed by Bob Gonzalez, rhapsode
In ancient Greece, the other most popular poet to rhapsodize, after the divine Homer, was Hesiod, whose birthday we celebrate today. Here
is the opening to Theogony, Hesiod’s
account of the birth of the gods. It appropriately enough begins with an
account of the Muses, who inspire poets as poets inspire rhapsodes:
Of the Heliconian Muses let us begin to sing,
who hold the great and holy mount of Helicon,
and dance on soft feet about the deep-blue spring
and the altar of the almighty son of Cronos,
and, when they have washed their tender bodies,
they make their fair, lovely dances upon highest Helicon
and move with vigorous feet.
From there, they arise and go abroad by night,
veiled in thick mist,
and utter their song with lovely voice,
praising Zeus the aegis-bearer
and queenly Hera of Argos
who walks on golden sandals
and the daughter of Zeus the aegis-bearer – bright-eyed
Athene,
and Phoebus Apollo, and Artemis who delights in arrows,
and Poseidon the earth-bearer who shakes the earth,
and quick-glancing Aphrodite,
and the holy race of all the other deathless ones that are
for ever.
And one day they taught Hesiod glorious song
while he was shepherding his lambs under holy Helicon,
and this word first the goddesses said to me –
the Muses of Olympus,
daughters of Zeus who bears the aegis:
“Shepherds of the wilderness,
wretched things of shame, mere bellies,
we know how to speak many false things
as though they were true;
but we know, when we will,
to utter true things.”
So said the ready-voiced daughters of great Zeus,
and they plucked and gave me a rod,
a shoot of sturdy laurel, a marvellous thing,
and breathed into me a divine voice
to celebrate things that shall be
and things there were in the past;
and they bade me sing
of the race of the blessed gods that are eternally,
but ever to sing of themselves both first and last.
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