fn8
Anagrammatically ‘Rhea’ does indeed come out of ‘Hera’; at least so I hear, but
we won’t chase that hare.
fn9
We shouldn’t forget that Gaia is a planet too: she is our home world. Latinized as
Tellus or Terra Mater she is Saxonized for us as ‘Earth’ (cognate with the Germanic
goddess Erde, Erda, Joeth or Urd).
fn10
I would suggest that Marie Dressler, Lady Bracknell and Aunt Agatha, to name
three great examples, can all trace their lineage back to Hera.
fn11
Since Zeus took that decision the number twelve seems to have taken on
important properties. It is divisible by two, three, four and six of course, making it twice
as composite as the stupid number ten. The dozen can still be seen around us in the
Zodiac, the day’s hours, in months and inches and pennies (well, when I was a boy, it
was twelve pennies to the shilling, anyway) not to mention the Tribes of Israel,
Disciples of Jesus, Days of Christmas and the Asian twelve-year cycle. It’s a
duodecimal world.
fn12
The gods were – if you think it through – Aphrodite’s nephews and nieces. They
were born of Kronos and she was the direct issue of the ejaculate of Ouranos.
fn13
An important principal is demonstrated here, one that we will encounter many
times. No god can undo the spells, transformations, curses or enchantments of another.
fn14
Vulcan the planet and its people – notably Commander Spock – are not
connected, so far as I can establish. The Romans sometimes referred to Vulcan as
MULCIBER, smelter, in recognition either of his power to soften metal for working or his
ability to soothe the anger of volcanoes.
fn15
The Greeks still add pine resin to wine, call it retsina and offer it to visitors. No
one knows why a normally kind and hospitable people should do such a thing. It tastes
like what it essentially is, the kind of turpentine artists use to thin their oil paints. I love
it.
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