From http://www.messagenet.com/myths/bios/promethe.html
Prometheus
pro
ME thee us
The Rebel
Prometheus was a not a fool, but why else would he rebel against Zeus? He
tried to trick Zeus (who knows all and sees all) with a false sacrifice. How
foolish can you get? Prometheus also stole fire from Zeus and gave it to the
primitive mortals on the earth. Zeus did not punish Prometheus alone, he
punished the entire world for the effrontery of this rebel god.
Prometheus was the son of Iapetos and Klymene. His name means ’Forethought’.
Prometheus was a god long before Zeus took the Throne of Eternity. He fought
for Zeus against the devising Kronos, but Prometheus never had true respect for
Zeus. He feared that the new Olympians had no compassion for each other or the
mortals on the earth below. To show his disdain, Prometheus prepared two
sacrifices and, in an attempt to belittle father Zeus, he made one sacrifice of
fat and bones and the other of the finest meat. The trick was, Prometheus had
wrapped the fat in such a way that it looked to be the most sincere tribute of
the two. Zeus saw through the trick and magnanimously controlled his anger. He
warned Prometheus but did not punish him.
Zeus had many plans for the
reshaping of creation. After the fall of Kronos and his confinement in Tartaros,
Zeus took no interest in the mortal race of men on the bountiful earth, he
intended for them to live as primitives until they died off. Zeus said that
knowledge and divine gifts would only bring misery to the mortals and he
insisted that Prometheus not interfere with his plans.
Dispite Zeus’ warning,
Prometheus took pity on the primitive mortals and again, he deceived Zeus.
Prometheus gave the mortals all sorts of gifts: brickwork, woodworking, telling
the seasons by the stars, numbers, the alphabet (for remembering things), yoked
oxen, carriages, saddles, ships and sails. He also gave other gifts: healing
drugs, seercraft, signs in the sky, the mining of precious metals, animal
sacrifice and all art.
To compound his crime,
Prometheus had stolen fire from Zeus and given it to the mortals in their dark
caves. The gift of divine fire unleashed a flood of inventiveness, productivity
and, most of all, respect for the immortal gods in the rapidly developing
mortals. Within no time (by immortal standards), culture, art, and literacy
permeated the land around Olympus. When Zeus realized the deception that
Prometheus had fostered, he was furious. He had Hepheistos shackle Prometheus to
the side of a crag, high in the Caucasus mountains. There Prometheus would hang
until the fury of Zeus subsided.
Each day, Prometheus would be
tormented by Zeus’ eagle as it tore at his immortal flesh and tried to devour
his liver. Each night, as the frost bit it’s way into his sleep, the torn
flesh would mend so the eagle could begin anew at the first touch of Dawn.
Zeus’ anger did not stop
there. He intended to give the mortals one more gift and undo all the good
Prometheus had done. He fashioned a hateful thing in the shape of a young girl
and called her Pandora. Her name means, ’giver of all’ or ’all endowed’.
Her body was made by Hepheistos, he gave her form and voice. Athene gave her
dexterity and inventiveness. Aphrodite put a spell of enchantment around her
head and Hermes put pettiness in her tiny brain. She was ready for the world.
Zeus gave Pandora to
Ephemetheus (brother of Prometheus). Ephemetheus knew better than to trust Zeus
and he had been warned by Prometheus never to accept gifts from the Olympians,
especially Zeus. One look at Pandora and Ephemetheus was rendered helpless. He
could not resist her, he accepted her willingly. When the gift was ’opened’,
evil and despair entered into this world. Mistrust and disease spread over the
wide earth. After Pandora was emptied of her curse, Hope was left inside.
Unreasonable, groundless Hope that makes the curse of life into a blessing.
And so, Prometheus was destined
to suffer at the hands of his own kind. Gods punishing gods. To him, the saddest
part of his punishment was the implication that the gods (Zeus in particular)
had lost their right to rule because they had lost touch with their hearts.
As Prometheus was hanging,
shackled to the rockface, he spoke to Ocean and the river’s daughters. They
were all shocked at Zeus’ excesses but Prometheus warned them not to speak out
against Zeus, it would do no good. Zeus would soon fall from his throne and they
had but to wait for that inevitable moment.
When Io, also being punished at
Zeus’ will, came upon Prometheus and the daughters of Ocean, she wanted to
know her future. Prometheus, even in his tortured condition, tried to spare the
feelings of the poor girl. She had been transformed into a black and white
heifer and was cursed to wander, prodded by an evil gad-fly. Her future was only
slightly better than his, she was lucky because she was mortal and would die and
be rid of her earthly torment. He, on the other hand, was immortal. His torment
would last forever.
The journey of Io was crucial
to the release of Prometheus from his bonds. After her wandering journey to
Egypt, Io was returned to her human form and had a glorious son named Epaphos.
Thirteen generation later, Herakles climbed the mountain, killed the eagle and
freed Prometheus from his shackles.
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