A Summary Of Edith Hamilton's Europa

Decent Essays
In the mythology story “Europa” by Edith Hamilton, Europa is a mortal and daughter of the King Sidon. Europa and some friends go to pick flowers in a lovely meadow by the sea. Zeus is in heaven watching the girls and Europa stands out, because of her beauty. Cupid shoots an arrow into Zeus’s heart to make him fall in love with Europa. Zeus turns himself into a beautiful, gentle bull and lies down at Europa’s feet. She gets onto the bulls back; the bull leaps up, and flies over the sea. Zeus tells Europa he loves her and takes her to the island of Crete where he was born. On Crete, Europa marries Zeus and together they have sons.

Related Documents

  • Decent Essays

    In book three Telemachus and Mentor (which is Athena in disguise) are at an impressive religious ceremony in which dozens of bulls are sacrificed to Poseidon. Telemachus is encouraged to talk to the city’s king and ask him questions about Odysseus. The king has no information about Odysseus. He says that he prays that Athena will show kindness to Telemachus as she showed kindness to Odysseus. Telemachus then asks Nestor about Agamemnon’s fate.…

    • 97 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Greek mythology is teachings that belong to ancient Greeks. There are many Greek Gods and Goddess however the Olympian Gods and Goddess ruled the universe. There were fourteen of these Gods and Goddess. The first was the most powerful God, Zeus. Zeus was the God of the Upper World and was in charge of all other Olympian Gods.…

    • 1039 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Hamilton begins this essay by restating that it is an absolute fact that the present confederation, because of the manner in which it has been set up, is the "parent of anarchy," and that the delinquencies of the states of the Union are the "natural offspring" that will lead the country to civil war. From this point, Hamilton proceeds to hypothetically go through the consequences of a lack of a large, standing, national army. In Hamilton's opinion, the end would be a war between the states because the strongest state is likely to prevail in any disagreement with no national army to put the states in their proper place. This would be the violent death of the confederacy. The other alternative would the "natural death" - what Hamilton thought…

    • 379 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Upon entering, Laticus looking high and low for Zeus which she eventually found him sleeping away. Fortunately for Laticus, her plans had just become much easy. With quick and hasty movements, Laticus and her sidekick Jamal tied and bonded Zeus with her amazing knot-tying abilities and slowly creped out of the house, carrying Zeus away from the city and back up to the mountains. Zeus had eventually woken up from his nap and was immediately alarmed by the different setting he was in. Suddenly, a puppy appeared in front of Zeus, making him confused but finding the puppy absolutely adorable.…

    • 838 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Ethan Frome, a 1911 novel by Edith Wharton is a novel featuring uniquely American characters. The novel itself begins and ends in the present, that is the time that the book was published, but the bulk is told in flashback. The flashbacks serve to explain how Ethan has ended up as he has and filling in the back story, which includes no shortage of pain and suffering to the point that it is beyond any possible justification. The book itself is also moral in many respects and while these can be considered American themes, that is, suffering pain in silence and morality, it is in the fierce independence of the characters that they also embody uniquely American values. For the reader, the book's most satisfying aspect is its conclusion in which everything falls into place exactly as foreshadowed, but not in the manner than the characters - or the reader - would have expected (Bentley, 1995).…

    • 661 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Powerful and harsh are the gods of ancient Greece. They are to be respected, worshipped and feared in order to live a peaceful and long life. Hesiod represents these gods in similar but contrasting ways through the tale of Prometheus and Pandora in his poems, Works and Days and The Theogony. Though both poems are different and take on a different form they are both considered wisdom literature because we learn a lesson of right and wrong from the tales being told. In these poems we examine the gods through the eyes of the man working for a living and through the eyes of the gods fighting for their place among themselves in Olympus.…

    • 954 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the first four books of the epic poem, The Odyssey, Homer introduces a troubled young boy named Telemachus. In the beginning of Book One Telemachus is portrayed as a spoiled and immature boy who mentally, never grew up. He does not participate in combat, rather he is cooped up in his household with the servants taking care of him, for he never had any parental figures to look up to. Athena, goddess of wisdom and daughter of Zeus, comes down to aid Telemachus. She is there to teach him what is right and what is wrong, leading him on an expedition filled with various life lessons and assisting him as Telemachus slowly transforms into a man similar to his father.…

    • 938 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The European Age Of Exploration There are two era’s which led to a great deal of change in the world, these two ages are known as the Age Of Exploration, and the Protestant Reformation. If someone were to ask which age was more important it would be a tough question to answer, however many people believe that the Age Of Exploration had a greater significance than the protestant reformation. A few reasons the Age Of Exploration is considered to have a greater impact than the Protestant Reformation are that the Asian countries may have stayed closed off from the rest of the world and a lack of connection and culture would remain. A second reason is that there were large developments in culture, religion, science, and technology occurred and the Age of Exploration spread European ideas and religion around the world.…

    • 1060 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    “A goddess is a woman who breaks the mold, she’s who she wants to be… And she offers no apologies.” In greek mythology, there appear to be several different gods and goddesses each owning their own unique statistic(s). Gods and goddesses were immortals looked up to by mortals; mortals praised and worshipped them. Goddesses were powerful woman who were flawless and thought the world of themselves; this was normal.…

    • 1481 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The ultimate goal of Avant Garde is to find evidence of life on Europa, based on the underlying assumption that it is possible for life to thrive where there is water. Life on Earth is made possible only in an environment with very specific conditions: a delicate balance of select elements such as hydrogen, water, carbon, nitrogen, phosphorous, and calcium. Collectively, these atoms essentially constitute the entire human body and may be the foundation of life on another planet. We seek to determine whether life elsewhere requires the same chemical composition, or if completely different atoms and chemical bonds are utilized. In doing such research, we may make discoveries about how the human body operates at a molecular level, possibly leading…

    • 218 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Throughout the ages, Greek myths have become a popular subject and have been reimagined numerous times through various medias including art and literature. Each generation brings forth a new perspective on these ancient tales, providing a new glimpse into the bygone civilization. During the 1920s, both William Butler Yeats and H.D (Hilda Doolittle) wrote poems about women in Greek mythology, each choosing a notable figure who contributed to the fall of Troy. In “Leda and the Swan,” Yeats explains a famous Greek myth, where Leda is raped by Zeus in the form of a massive swan. This copulation led to the conception of Helen, who history deems as the beauty who launched a thousand ships in the Trojan War.…

    • 989 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Loyalty manifests itself in abiding by a specific, moral code of conduct of a society, a group, or relationship. Loyalty also means having the moral strength to be true to a person or an ideal. Thousands of years ago the ancient Greeks held fast and true to their beliefs and to the cast of characters that populated their pantheon of human-like gods. Homer’s Iliad, an epic poem of the Trojan War, shows the Greeks’ value of loyalty to their gods, their military, and to their family.…

    • 1247 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Great Essays

    Elinor Fuchs is a university professor whose work has revolved around the analysis of theater and comprehension of the world inside a play. She released an article with the intention of helping her readers create a better analysis of whichever play in hand by creating a series of questions that removes the reader from looking inside the world of the play into the outside. Questions such as “What changes in this world?” (Fuchs, p.7) help place the reader from the first page to the last sentence in order to understand what happened from an outside perspective. On the other hand, she also makes her reader analyze with her question “what has this world demanded of me?”…

    • 1809 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Robert Fagles describes the first four books of the Odyssey as the “Telemacheia”, “the story of a young man from a poor and backward island who asserts himself at home and visits the sophisticated courts of two rich and powerful kingdoms, to return home a grown man.” (introduction, pg 9). Crucial to this maturation is Athena, who assumes the role of father figure for Telemachus. Telemachus had no father in his life, since Odysseus left for Troy when Telemachus was an infant.…

    • 1303 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Medea and the patriarchy In Ancient Greece, most of the literature and writing were composed by elite, wealthy, and well-educated men. The play Medea, written by Euripides is no different than most of the plays of the time except for its subject matter. Medea is about Medea, a strong mother from a foreign land, who is cheated by her husband Jason. What is different about this play is that Medea does not act as a woman should according to the traditional customs of the time. Instead, Medea tries to break down the walls of injustice and point out the patriarchal society present, and the consequential oppression of women.…

    • 716 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays