THE QUEEN OF THE AIR
Being a Study of the Greek Myths of Cloud and Storm
BY
JOHN RUSKIN, LL.D.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
I. ATHENA CHALINITIS. (Athena in the Heavens.) Lecture on the Greek myths of Storm, given (partly) in University College, London, March 9, 1869.
II. ATHENA KERAMITIS. (Athena in the Earth.) Study, supplementary to the preceding lecture, of the supposed and actual relations of Athena to the vital force in material organism.
III. ATHENA ERGANE. (Athena in the Heart.) Various notes relating to the Conception of Athena as the Directress of the Imagination and Will.
PREFACE
My days and strength have lately been much broken; and I never more felt the insufficiency of both than in preparing for the press the following desultory memoranda on a most noble subject. But I leave them now as they stand, for no time nor labor would be enough to complete them to my contentment; and I believe that they contain suggestions which may be followed with safety, by persons who are beginning to take interest in the aspects of mythology, which only recent investigation has removed from the region of conjecture into that of rational inquiry. I have some advantage, also, from my field work, in the interpretation of myths relating to natural phenomena; and I have had always near me, since we were at college together, a sure, and unweariedly kind, guide, in my friend Charles Newton, to whom we owe the finding of more treasure in mines of marble than, were it rightly estimated, all California could buy. I must not, however, permit the chance of his name being in any wise associated with my errors. Much of my work as been done obstinately in my own way; and he is never responsible for me, though he has often kept me right, or at least enabled me to advance in a new direction. Absolutely right no one can be in such matters; nor does a day pass without convincing every honest student of antiquity of some partial error, and showing him better how to think, and where to look. But I knew that there was no hope of my being able to enter with advantage on the fields of history opened by the splendid investigation of recent philologists, though I could qualify myself, by attention and sympathy, to understand, here and there, a verse of Homer's or Hesiod's, as the simple people did for whom they sang.
Even while I correct these sheets for press, a lecture by Professor Tyndall has been put into my hands, which I ought to have heard last 16th January, but was hindered by mischance; and which, I now find, completes, in two important particulars, the evidence of an instinctive truth in ancient symbolism; showing, first, that the Greek conception of an aetherial element pervading space is justified by the closest reasoning of modern physicists; and, secondly, that the blue of the sky, hitherto thought to be caused by watery vapour, is, indeed, reflected from the divided air itself; so that the bright blue of the eyes of Athena, and the deep blue of her aegis, prove to be accurate mythic expressions of natural phenomena which it is an uttermost triumph of recent science to have revealed.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: The Queen of the Air by John Ruskin
- 2: Give me back my Athena out of your vials
- 3: Whatever charge of folly may justly attach to the saying
- 4: This story of Hercules and the Hydra
- 5: In nearly every myth of importance
- 6: And the living powers of them are Demeter
- 7: The Athena or Athenaia of the Greeks
- 8: For they are not conceived didactically
- 9: And there dwelt AEolus Hippotades
- 10: AEolus is still a kind hearted monarch
- 11: But there are no animating or saving Harpies
- 12: For Pandareos was its guardian only
- 13: The snatching away by the Harpies is with brute force
- 14: The sweet influences of Pleiades
- 15: Ulysses wear the helmet stolen by Autolycus
- 16: The stone of Sisyphus with a vengeance
- 17: You take Athena into your heart
- 18: Then Athena thought of another thing
- 19: But Athena only lifts his hair
- 20: With Erichthonius or the hero Erectheus
- 21: Vergil himself received his name from the seven stars
- 22: A lamp was always kept burning in the Erechtheum
- 23: And the double pipe of Marsyas
- 24: Under the personality of Athena
- 25: Thou shalt have treasure in heaven
- 26: So Athena of the fire of the heart
- 27: Which the philosophers call protoplasm
- 28: While it is only enforcing chemical affinities
- 29: Passing into each other by regular gradations
- 30: That are not the price of Athena
- 31: The teeth of one barb acting as a fulcrum for the other
- 32: So that the Python serpent is killed at Delphi
- 33: Is associated with the earliest conception of Athena
- 34: And the crucifers of endless use
- 35: Then the Drosidae are divided into five great orders lilies
- 36: Of the hyacinth and convallaria
- 37: But the snapdragons and calceolarias carry it to its extreme
- 38: But what directs its vascular threads
- 39: Not with words signifying color
- 40: The physical power of this darkness of the aegis
- 41: Are prevalent in the conception
- 42: The people of Athena robed her
- 43: Conceived as the directress of human passion
- 44: By what faults this Gothic architecture fell
- 45: And that which is born of valor and honor
- 46: And is didactic in its own nature
- 47: The weak little rhyme already shows
- 48: And set our minds again on multiplying Englishmen
- 49: But further Athena presides over industry
- 50: Is worth ten huts and a cask of biscuit
- 51: Rich by the addition to its wealth of so many potsherds
- 52: Of the character of nations by their employments
- 53: Then the inexpensive natural forces
- 54: And every coin spent in useless ornament
- 55: You would interfere with the idolatry then
- 56: Not requiring speed in transit
- 57: For Modesty is the measuring virtue
- 58: Thomas Bewick and George Cruikshank
- 59: Between the sympathy of audience
- 60: As well as of endlessly manifold victory
- 61: Or fearlessly and impudently wrong
- 62: That is the external aspect of it
- 63: Until you can do it without compulsion
- 64: And under determined restrictions
- 65: Luini has left nothing behind him that is not lovely
- 66: Because magnificent idiosyncrasy had become solitude
- 67: The Greek vase is a good thing in its way
- 68: The Athena of Athens grotesque
- 69: For the Camarina Hercules could tell his own story
- 70: The quiet unslothful man says the same
- 71: Never reinforcing it everywhere
