This post originally went up nine years ago to the day. It's one of my favorites and took so long to
write originally I feel it deserving of occasional re-runs on its merits. Besides, considering how intense my week has been, it'll
be better than what I could do afresh, for late this afternoon I finished what I like to think is a polished re-draft of Andreas Kaldis #13, set on the Grande Dame of the Cyclades islands, SYROS! So, with that introduction, here's Helen
and crew....
How many of you have heard of the Trojan War? I bet there’s not one of you who hasn’t. It’s the world’s best known epic tale of romance, action, and intrigue, and thanks to Homer’s telling in the Illiad and the Odyssey, a source for countless storylines down through the ages…including the Coen Brothers’ 2000 film, O Brother, Where Art Thou.
How many of you have heard of the Trojan War? I bet there’s not one of you who hasn’t. It’s the world’s best known epic tale of romance, action, and intrigue, and thanks to Homer’s telling in the Illiad and the Odyssey, a source for countless storylines down through the ages…including the Coen Brothers’ 2000 film, O Brother, Where Art Thou.
But how many of you know the actual story of the War? Other than of
course the bit about the (possibly) kidnapped Helen’s face launching a
thousand ships and The Horse. Aha, the ranks are thinning quickly.
Well, here’s my adapted telling of the tale based upon a version I came across while reading The Everything Classical Mythology Book, by Lesley Bolton.
The most well-known character in the myth is, of course, Helen of Troy,
though she really wasn’t from Troy. That’s just where she ended up
spending ten years waiting to be “rescued.” Helen was the most
beautiful woman in the world and the daughter of the union of Zeus and
Leda (not Leto, whose children with couldn’t-keep-it-in-his-pants-Zeus
were the twins Apollo and Artemis).
Helen by Evelyn De Morgan |
However the aggravation of raising such a beautiful daughter (something I
know first hand) didn’t fall to her natural mother and father (assuming
there’s anything natural about a Greek god turning himself into a swan
to seduce a mortal), but to her foster father, King Tyndareus of
Sparta.
King Ty, as I like to call him, worked out a way of keeping all the
suitors for his daughter’s hand (and a lot more) at bay by making all
swear that in order to participate in the competition, they had to agree
to abide by Helen’s choice of husband and defend her against anyone who
might try to kidnap her. The winner was Menelaus of Sparta and they
were wed.
Menelaus by Giacomo Brogi |
Then along came Paris of Troy, who stopped in to say “Hi” to the groom
and, when the opportunity presented itself in the form of a quick trip
out of town for Menelaus, to repay his host’s hospitality by stealing
away his bride.
Paris and Helen by Jacques Louis-David |
But the kidnapping wasn’t a spontaneous whim. Paris felt he had a right
to claim Helen. You see, Paris had been the judge in a beauty contest
among the gods Athena, Aphrodite, and Hera to settle a dispute as to
which of the three was the fairest. In keeping with the sort of judging
still seen in many parts of the world today, Paris made a side deal
with Aphrodite that he’d choose her in return for her promising him the
most beautiful woman in the world, Helen. But before he could claim her,
she’d married.
No matter, to Paris a deal was a deal and he’d come to Sparta to collect
his prize. He spirited Helen away and, after spending their first night
together on Kranae, a tiny island just off the port city of Gytheio on
Greece’s Southern Peloponnese, it was off to Troy.
Abduction of Helen, Francesco Primaticcio |
Church on Kranae |
[As a side note, that one-night diversion has created a thriving cottage
industry on modern day Kranae, for today couples exchange marriage vows
at a church on that spot, no doubt hoping for better luck than came to
Paris and Helen.]
Not surprisingly, Menelaus didn’t take kindly to Paris’ thank you, and
when Menelaus’ trip to Troy with Odysseus (aka Ulysses) to demand of
King Priam of Troy her immediate return proved futile, Menelaus returned
home to Sparta, massed Helen’s former suitors who’d pledged to defend
her against kidnappers, and with his brother Agamemnon in command,
dispatched an army of a thousand ships to reclaim her.
But the Olympian biggie gods were involved in this mess up to their tiarasses. Some had aligned with Greece (e.g.,
Poseidon because he was pissed at the Trojans for not having paid his
bill for construction work, and Athena and Hera because of Paris’
involvement in fixing their beauty contest). Others sided with Troy (e.g., Aphrodite who’d created the mess in the first place, and Apollo joined in it with his twin sister, Artemis.)
Anytime the gods got involved in something there were problems. And in
this instance, just to get things started, Agamemnon had to sacrifice
his daughter to the god Artemis (a backer of Troy) for the winds to blow
and launch his thousand ships.
The Greek plan was simple, conquer the numerous towns surrounding Troy
and thereby squeeze it into submission. A simple plan turned into nine
years of war with still no end in sight. Hmm, sound familiar?
In the tenth year everything went to hell in a hand-basket for the Greeks.
First, the Greeks’ greatest warrior, Achilles (slayer of the Trojans’
greatest, Hector) died when pierced in the heel (surely you knew that)
by an arrow cast into the air by Paris from behind his fortress walls
and guided to its mark by Apollo.
Then a fight broke out between Odysseus and Ajax of Salamis (non-kosher
style for sure) over who’d get to wear Achilles armor (starting to sound
more and more like that Brad Pitt 2004 version of the tale called Troy,
does it not?), an honor ultimately bestowed on Odysseus that led Ajax
into madness and ultimately taking his own life. And then the Amazons
weighed in to fight on the side of the Trojans.
But the Greeks did not give up. Led by Odysseus they captured the King
of Troy’s son, and through him learned what they needed to do if there
were to be any hope of Troy falling. The Greeks did as the prince had
said, culminating in snatching away the sacred statue of Athena—the
Palladium—which stood within Troy to protect the city from destruction.
But still Troy did not fall. Then Odysseus came up with a plan, perhaps
the most famous hustle in history: one requiring a gigantic wooden
horse and some mighty gullible Trojans.
It was the blueprint for a classic scam that’s since played out
countless times in print and film: Present the mark with a fascinating
unexpected gift. Get a shill to tell a believable story compete with a
hook that gets the mark to thinking it’s come up with a way to outsmart
the hustler, and toss in a last minute twist that threatens to destroy
the plan but fails because of an even greater surprise twist.
In this case, the Trojan Horse (more aptly the Greek or Spartan Horse,
since they built it) appeared one morning outside the walls of Troy with
the Greek army nowhere to be seen, leaving the Trojans confused over
what to do with it: destroy the horse, or bring it within their city’s
walls. Then appeared a man in rags—the disguised Greek soldier
Sinon—who claimed he’d escaped being sacrificed to Athena by the Greeks
as an offering to appease her ire at their having stolen the Palladium
from Troy.
Then seemingly by chance he revealed a secret of the Greeks: that the
great wooden horse before them was also meant to appease Athena by
serving to replace the Palladium, but the sneaky Greeks had
intentionally built it far too large to pass inside the walls of Troy
out of fear that if brought inside it would bring victory to the
besieged city.
Just as the Greeks’ plan seemed to be working, one Trojan stepped
forward to challenge Sinon’s story (standard screenwriting fare these
days), and hurled his spear at the wooden horse, no doubt hoping to
elicit a cry from whomever it struck within. But just as he did, a giant
sea monster reared up and devoured the cynic, distracting the crowd
from the point of both his logic and spear.
The Trojans took the monster as a sign of Athena’s anger at the spear
being tossed at an offering to her—rather than of an effort on her part
(remember, she was on the side of the Greeks) to silence one threatening
to expose the Greeks’ plan.
Surprise, surprise the Trojans figured out a way to bring the horse
within their walls, and while rejoicing in their good fortune missed
Sinon freeing the soldiers inside it and opening Troy’s gates for the
rest of the Greek army to enter the city.
We all know what happened next. Or at least we think we do. Helen was
returned to her husband. But not until after the Greeks had engaged in a
bloodlust rage of battle so unsettling and sacrilegious to gods that
had once backed the Greeks that they turned on them, bringing Odysseus
ten more years of trials and tribulations before reaching home (after
all, it was a two-book deal for Homer) and far worse fates for far more.
Homer 850 BCE |
Yes, that’s a plot line we’ve seen before and will see again. And though
there were no real winners in the Trojan War, there sure have been a
lot of modern day literary and box office triumphs.
Many thanks again to Lesley Bolton for the inspiration I found for this post in her The Everything Classical Mythology Book.
—Jeff
Congratulations on #13 Silly on Syros! Sybarites of Syros? Syros Sycophant? Sinful Syros? Syringes on Syros? Syphilitic Syros? Okay, I think I'd better stop while I'm behind.
ReplyDeleteThanks, EvKa, but since when has being behind ever slowed you down? :)
DeleteI had to smile all through this post because of the humorous writing. Thanks for the lowdown on the Trojan War, told in a way that will make me remember much of what I learned.
ReplyDeleteHappy to have made you smile, Elizabeth! Thanks.
DeleteI'd not read this before--for sure never heard it told this way before, and I love it. Also looking forward to #13!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ovidia. I'm flattered !!!
DeleteWow, that’s in-depth! For a moment I thought it was going to be a piece on condom wars.
ReplyDelete