Showing posts with label Week 4. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Week 4. Show all posts

Thursday, September 14, 2017

Week 4 Story: The Trial of Niobe


Niobe opened her eyes to find herself in a strange place that looked like an empty court room. The light shining through the windows was tinted red and she could hear something in the distance that sounded like tortured screams. Suddenly, the doors burst open and in strode a man that she immediately knew as Hades, King of the Underworld. He was dressed in robes so black that it felt like you were staring into an abyss when you looked at them, and his equally as dark hair contrasted with his pale, almost translucent, skin. The god stepped up to the bench, unrolled a scroll, and began to read from it.

“Niobe, daughter of Tantalus and wife of Amphion, now that you have died and escaped your rock prison, it is time for you to be judged and receive your punishment in the afterlife.” Hades booming voice echoed through the room, “You are being charged with fourteen counts of reckless child endangerment and fourteen counts of manslaughter. How do you plead?”

“Not guilty, your Honor.”

“Then let the trial begin!” Hades bellowed. The doors at the back of the court room burst open again and in walked a small crowd of people. Leto, the goddess Niobe had insulted so many years ago, strode up to the front and sat at the table next to Niobe’s. Her children, Artemis and Apollo, sat behind her and other miscellaneous gods filled in the rest of the seats. Then in a complete surprise twist that no one saw coming, Niobe’s children walked in and sat in as the jury for their mother’s trial.

“Now unlike your stupid mortal court, I will be the one asking the questions and I will be the one deciding your fate, Niobe.” Hades announced. “Of course, the jury does help me make the decision on the severity of the punishment, however with a jury made up of your children lets hope they are lenient, but also considering your actions are the reason for their deaths… I wouldn’t count on it.”

“My dear brother, I would like to call my son, Apollo, as my first witness.” Leto smiled sweetly as she said this.

“Objection! This entire thing is a conflict of interest and will lead to a direct bias against me!” Niobe stood up and yelled.

“Sweetheart, everything we Olympians do is a conflict of interest, if you haven’t noticed, so sit down and don’t make this worse for yourself.” Hades replied. “Now Apollo, please tell the jury about the day Niobe insulted your mother and my sister, Leto.”

“Uh well it was a few decades ago, so of course I remember it like it was yesterday. I created a beautiful sunrise, one of my top ten of all time, man. I bet my sunrise is what stirred that divine impulse in that chick, Manto, because right after that she was telling everyone to put laurels in their hair and bring offerings and stuff to the temple in honor of Mom, my sister, and I. It was super awesome, but then this lady who looked like she would totally name drop Zeus, ruined the whole thing.” Apollo answered in his surfer dude way.

“Do you see that woman in the court room?”

“Yeah, actually I do. She looks a little different, her face is kind of puffy almost like she had been crying for the last half a century.” Apollo answered pointing at Niobe.

“The witness has identified Niobe as the horrible woman who stopped the wonderful, spontaneous day of celebration!” Hades dramatically told the jury, “Apollo, please tell us what happened next.”

“Uh yeah this lady- I mean Niobe- just starts ragging on Mom and saying how much better she is because she has fourteen children and she is super rich and how Zeus is her great-grandfather. Told you she would name drop Zeus! Anyways, she tells everyone she should be worshipped for being a great mother instead of my mom and sent all the people away from the celebration. Well nobody messes with my mom so my sis and I decide it’s time to teach Niobe a lesson.”

“And how did you teach her this lesson?” Hades inquired.

“By shooting and killing all seven of her sons,” He answered sheepishly.

His answer caused some restlessness among the jury so Hades thanked Apollo for being a witness and dismissed him from the stand, but before he left he called out to the jury, “Oh yeah I almost forgot! To the one dude who prayed for me not to kill you? I totally heard you man and was going to let you live but I had already shot the arrow so that one was my bad.”

As Apollo returned to his seat, Leto called Artemis to the stand as her second and final witness.

“So, Artemis, Apollo killed Niobe’s sons why then did you kill her daughters? Did Niobe not learn her lesson?” Hades inquired.

“We were totally going to stop after the sons and spare the daughters.” She told the jury, her eyes pleading for them to believe her, “We were so moved by the sight of all of you mourning the loss of your brothers and sons that we thought we had gotten through to you, but then your mother screwed it up.”

“How did Niobe mess this up?” Hades asked.

“As she was begging and crying for us to spare you she turned to the sky and asks us where our victory was because she still had more than us.”

Everything in the room just stopped for a moment as everyone let that sink in.

“Wait... so as she is asking Leto for a favor, she also insults her?” Hades asks with a confused look on his face.

“That’s exactly what happened.” Artemis replied.

“So how did you respond?”

“I shot and killed her daughters and then as Niobe was crying over the bodies of her children and her husband, who had been driven to kill himself because of all of this, Mom turned her into granite on the mountain side where she stayed until she showed up here.” Artemis answered.

“Okay that’s it! This trial is over! I have made my decision! I do not want you here in my Underworld so I am turning you back into granite for all of eternity and that is final!” Hades announced.

The next time Niobe opened her eyes she was surrounded by granite and had a nice mountain view.




(Photo of the Weeping Rock, also known as Niobe's Rock, from flickr)

Author’s Note: This was a pretty accurate summary of the myth of Niobe and how her pride got the best of her. The original of course is much longer and not near as funny as mine. I also changed all the gods from their Roman names to their Greek ones because that is just easier for me to keep up with and I feel like it would be easier for yall too. I was originally going to have another god commentate on the whole thing, but I stumbled across the afterlife trial idea as I was looking though the story ideas and I decided that this would be a much more interesting way to summarize the story. I also wanted to make the characters more causal and use more modern language because I feel that the formal way some of these myths are written really take the humanness out of the stories, therefore making it hard to see them from different perspectives. I just hope you guys all thought Niobe was as annoying as I did and enjoyed her trial.

Bibliography. “Niobe Rejects Latona” from Ovid's Metamorphoses, translated by Tony Kline. Web Source.

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Reading Notes: Olvid's Metamorphoses II, Part B

Part B of the reading was two long myths, each broken up into smaller parts. I decided the best way to take notes on these was to just discuss both myths in full instead of breaking it up into the little sections because way too much happened to try and split it all up.


(Photo from some ecards)

Procne, Philomela, and Tereus

Where to even begin on this crazy tale? We could all tell that this wasn't gonna be a happy tale when the wedding of Procne and Tereus was attended by the same creatures that attend funerals, but I really didn't expect the ending I got! I mean I don't want to spoil it for anyone but this was some serious Criminal Minds stuff. My favorite character was the father because it was clear how much he loved his daughters and if he knew what Tereus was going to do to either daughter, he would never have sent them with him. It was a nice departure from the uncaring and callous fathers that are so often depicted. Honestly the whole myth was very modern in that the women aren't treated as dumb or unable to fight back. It was very, very tragic though but I really wouldn't change anything about it because while everyone did terrible things, everyone also lost something and was punished for their actions.

Medea

Another tale of betrayal and crazy twists and turns, except this one includes magic! When Medea is telling us about her love for Jason in the beginning, it felt very much like a fourteen year old girl telling her diary about her love for her current crush and how the world is so unfair for keeping them apart. It was very annoying especially because I knew beforehand that Jason betrays her and you're just kind of like "awwww sweetie of course he was going to tell you all these things to sleep with you and then never talk to you again." Of course, Jason actually does marry Medea after she helps him win the golden fleece. He then asks her to restore his father's youth, which she does, and then she kills Jason's evil uncle, and then Jason leaves her for another woman. She then sets everything on fire and flies away on a dragon. She was basically the original Deaneyrus and she just came off as super crazy but also a little justifiably crazy.

Bibliography. Olvid's Metamorphoses II by Tony Kilne, links to readings here 

Reading Notes: Olvid's Metamorphoses II, Part A

Some of these transformations were pretty brutal. I didn't expect the transformations to be so graphic and gory, and I was honestly a little taken off guard. These really should have come with a warning that the people of Lycia are just awful and you think they would have learned to treat the gods better.

Arachne and Minerva

I had heard a little bit about this myth before didn't know the full story and I found Arachne and Minerva and the follow up myth, Arachne Weaves a Web, pretty interesting. I was very impressed with Arachne's call out of the gods even though the entire time I was like just admit someone taught you to weave and you could've avoided all of this. I also thought she was an idiot to call out Minerva as the old woman but then it all made sense when she wove the tapestry of all the times the gods had tricked people to best them and cover up their own mistakes. I think it would be interesting to write a storybook about all the times the gods got called out on their mistakes because I think it would hilarious.

Niobe Rejects Latona

Now this story was filled with just so much stupidity on Niobe's part. I totally get Arachne's pride and her great call out of the gods because she knew that she was going to probably be killed no matter what so why not go out with a bang. Niobe on the other hand continually spits in the goddess's face. Her pride in the beginning was kind of justifiable because it could have been played off as a general question to the gods about why she wasn't worshipped as a goddess because she had all the qualifications. Then, in The Death of Niobe's Children, after all her sons have been killed, she begs Latona to stop and leave her daughters alive but then insults the goddess again! You idiot! I could just picture all the gods stopping a second to look at each other and be like "did she really just ask that?" Honestly I would just rewrite this from another god's perspective and have them commentate on the entire thing. 

(Photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Bibliography. Olvid's Metamorphoses II by Tony Kilne; links to readings here