Volume 3

Preparation of Telemachus’ Journey (Book II)

  The next morning, Telemachus convened the assembly of Achaeans with long hair. As some asked why, Telemachus addressed the nobles present in the assembly. He complained that their sons were ruining his house and harassing his mother for almost four years to...

The Situation in Ithaca (Book I)

  Before continuing the story of Odysseus (Ulysses), we must study the course of events in his homeland, Ithaca. As had been decided at the assembly of the gods, Athena went to Ithaca to convince Telemachus, the son of Odysseus (Ulysses), to convene a meeting and...

The Phaeacian Reception (Book VIII)

  The next morning, Athena toured the city under the guise of a herald of King Alcinous to invite the Phaeacians to the assembly. Alcinous still did not know the name of Odysseus (Ulysses) and whether it came from the people of the dawn or those of the sunset. He...

Joining Alcinous (Book VII)

  Nausicaa returned to her father's mansion and went to his room where her old nurse Eurymedusa lit the fire. Odysseus (Ulysses) arrived in the city, hidden by a cloud which Athena had covered him with. The goddess then took on the appearance of a Phaeacian child...

The Arrival among the Phaeacians (Book VI)

  In the past, the Phaeacians lived in Hyperia, but they were subjected to the power of the Cyclops. Thus their king Nausithous, son of Poseidon, removed them from Hyperia. He settled them in Scheria where he built and organized the city. It was now his son...

Sailing to Phaeacia (Book V)

Odysseus (Ulysses) sailed on his raft for seventeen days without ever sleeping, and arrived on the eighteenth in view of the coast of Phaeacia. Poseidon, who had just returned from Ethiopia, saw him and unleashed a great storm, blowing at the same time the four great...

Odysseus and Scylla (Book XII)

  Circe had given Odysseus (Ulysses) the choice of two routes after his encounter with the Sirens. On one side were the two overhanging rocks against which the great swells of Amphitrite were breaking. The gods called them Planktai "unstable rocks" or "wandering...

The Sirens (Book XII)

  Odysseus (Ulysses)' ship was again driven to the island of Circe, where without delay the hero fulfilled the promise made to Elpenor to bury him with dignity. While his men slept, Odysseus (Ulysses) gave Circe a complete account of his journey in the kingdom of...

The Return of Menelaus

  If in the Odyssey, Telemachus, the son of Achilles, is surprised that Menelaus left the murder of Agamemnon unpunished for so long - during the seven years of Aegisthus' reign - it is simply because Menelaus had not yet returned home to Sparta. On his departure...

Orestes’ revenge and Clytemnestra’s murder

  Homer never mentions Orestes’ murder of Clytemnestra, only that of Aegisthus. Let us recall that Orestes, the youngest son of Agamemnon, was born shortly before the Trojan War. He was therefore an adolescent or young man at the war's end. Pindar even claims...

The Return and Murder of Agamemnon

  Agamemnon let the first wave of “returns” depart. He stayed behind to offer sacrifices to Athena to appease her wrath caused by the ungodliness of Ajax the Lesser who tried to take Cassandra by force, or even to rape her. Then, as he was getting ready for the...

The Return of Aeneas

  The Trojan lineage is unambiguously related to the Pleiad Electra, which symbolizes the illumined mind and expresses the achievement of liberation in the spirit. Although one of its branches was wiped out in the Trojan War by the Achaeans under the leadership...

The Death of Ajax “the Lesser”, Son of Oileus

  Ajax “the Lesser” (or Locrian Ajax) represents what various traditions call “the little self” or personality consciousness. He was a son of Oileus, “the consciousness that works to liberate itself. This personality consciousness came from the movement of...

The Return of Teucer (Teukros)

  Let us recall that Teucer (“The right opening to the summits of consciousness”) was the bastard son of Telamon and the Trojan Hesione, and thus the half-brother of the great Ajax. First back home in Salamis, he then settled in Cyprus. To explain his exile, some...

The Return of Neoptolemus

  During the Trojan War, Menelaus promised his daughter Hermione to Neoptolemus, the son of Achilles, who also received Andromache, Hector’s wife, as a share of the booty during the plunder of the city. When he embarked, some say that he also took on board...

The Returns of Idomeneus, Philoctetes and Podalirius

  According to the Odyssey, Idomeneus (“Who desires union”) returned safely to Crete with all his companions. (Some say that he was driven out as soon as he arrived by the tyrant Leucos who took power in his absence: “brilliant transparency” or “simplicity”...

The Returns

  In Chapter IV we examined not only the events of the Iliad but also the elements of four other poems of the Epic Cycle, of which we have only concise summaries: the Cypria, the Aethiopis, The Little Iliad, and the Iliupersis also called The Sack of Troy. The...

The Return of Calchas

  The soothsayer of the expedition, Calchas, took the land road with Amphilocus, Leonteus, Podalirius and Polypoetes. He died after reaching Colophon, following a contest of prophecies from which Mopsus, son of Apollo and Manto, emerged victorious. Indeed, the...

The Returns of Diomedes and Nestor

  Returning from Troy, following a quarrel between the two Atrides, Agamemnon and Menelaus, created by Athena, many Achaean heroes and fighters had to endure the wrath of the goddess. A meeting was called in which Menelaus recommended that everyone should leave...

THE RETURN OF ODYSSEUS (ULYSSES) : THE ODYSSEY

  The manuscripts of the Odyssey date from the Middle Ages and we know little about the transmission of texts since Homeric times, except that there was most likely a very long period of oral transmission. However, to the extent that these texts reflect...

LATEST ACHIEVEMENTS OF HERACLES

The latest exploits of Heracles illustrate the advanced stages of the process of purification-liberation or "unveiling" of the divine involuted in matter. After the installation of the seeker in the overmind, these are the first experiences of the supramental...

THE TROJAN WAR (THE ILIAD)

The Trojan War sung by Homer in the Iliad illustrates a major reversal in the process of spiritual quest. This reversal marks the end of the quest for the divine in the spirit when the seeker finally agrees to purify the depths of the vital. Achilles and Ajax playing...

THE LINEAGE OF ASOPOS: ACHILLES

The lineage of the Asopos illustrates the purification of the deep layers of the vital achieved successively by Aeacus, Peleus and Achilles.The other major lineages involved in the Trojan War include: the Tantalum lineage, the Trojan royal lineage, the Spartan...

THE ROYAL LINEAGE OF ARCADIA: ATALANTA

The royal line of Arcadia illustrates the liberation from all attachment and the achievement of equality through endurance, equality embodied by Atalanta. Atalanta fighting with Peleus - Staatliche Antikensammlungen To fully understand this web page, it is recommended...

THE LINEAGE OF MAIA: HERMES AND AUTOLYCOS

The lineages involved in the Trojan War include: the Tantalum lineage, the Trojan royal lineage, the Spartan lineage, the Maia lineage, the Deion lineage and the Asopos lineage. The lineage of Maia continues with her son the god Hermes, symbol of a force consciously...

THE ROYAL LINEAGE OF SPARTA: LEDA, PENELOPE AND HELEN

The lineages involved in the Trojan War include: the Tantalum lineage, the Trojan royal lineage, the Spartan lineage, the Maia lineage, the Deion lineage and the Asopos lineage. The royal lineage of Sparta (Taygetus lineage) studied here illustrates the access to the...

THE LINEAGE OF TANTALUS: PELOPS, ATREUS AND AGAMEMNON

The lineages involved in the Trojan War include: the Tantalum lineage, the Trojan royal lineage, the Spartan lineage, the Maia lineage, the Deion lineage and the Asopos lineage.The lineage of Tantalus studied here embodies the aspiration of the seeker. It includes in...

OEDIPUS AND THE THEBAN WARS

The myth of Oedipus and the wars of Thebes illustrate the process of purification of energy centers to make the body transparent to the penetration of divine forces. Oedipus and the Sphinge - Louvre Museum / CC BY (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0)...

ORION

The myth of Orion describes a searcher who "draws" excessively the divine ecstasy in his nature which is not yet ready to receive it. To fully understand this web page, it is recommended to follow the progression given in the tab Greek myths interpretation. This...

THE LAST FEATS OF THESEUS

The last feats of Theseus concern the period between the realization of equality and the descent into body consciousness. Theseus leading Helen to a chariot arranged by Peirithoos - National Archaeological Museum of Athens...

THE CALYDONIAN BOAR HUNT

Calydonian boar hunt represents a very advanced purification of the deep layers of the vital, only possible when equality is achieved. The Boeotian Atalanta fighting with Peleus - Staatliche Antikensammlungen To fully understand this web page, it is recommended to...

Greek myths interpretation

  INTRODUCTION TO THE INTERPRETATION OF GREEK MYTHS This introduction to the decoding of Greek myths invite us to discover that they are an extraordinary and very accurate description of the spiritual path as it was known in the time of Homer Prologue...

Miscellaneous

1. Synoptic table of the symbols-letters of the Ionian alphabet 2. Diagram of Construction of the symbol-letters 3. Planes of Consciousness (Diagram) 4. The Sephiroth Tree (Diagram) 5. The Caduceus (Diagram) 6. The Caduceus and the Tree of Life (Description) 7. The...

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