OSIYO DEAR ONES HEED MY CALL
I AM A WARRIOR OF LOVE AND LIGHT FOR HATRED MUST FALL
AS LONG AS I EXIST I SHALL NOT GIVE UP THE FIGHT
TILL JOY AND BLISS REIGN SUPREME FOR THAT IS WHAT'S RIGHT
I AM THE RAIN THAT WASHES HATRED AWAY
I AM THE DIVINE SPARK BURNING BRIGHTLY KEEPING DOUBT AT BAY
I AM THE EARTH MOTHER WHO FILLS YOU WITH LOVE
I AM THE SKY KING WHO WATCHES OVER YOU FROM ABOVE
AS LONG AS I AM I SHALL SHARE THIS TRUTH
JOY BLISS AND HOPE THEY ARE MY PROOF
SO FEAR NOT THE DARKNESS NOR MONSTERS UNDER THE BED
LOOK INTO MY HEART FEEL MY UNCONDITIONAL LOVE INSTEAD
I'M THE JOYOUS WARRIOR SENT TO SHOW YOU THE WAY
I ILLUMINATE THE DARKNESS FOR THE DAWNING OF A BRIGHT NEW DAY
SO REMEMBER ME AND KNOW THIS MY FRIENDS
WHEN YOU TAKE MY OUTSTREATCHED HAND DOUBT FEAR AND HATRED HAVE NOW MET THEIR ENDS





Monday, August 11, 2014

cleopatra and pocahontas

whilst posting my weekly cards something just popped into my head........I think mayhaps Cleoptra and Pocahontas were one and the same woman and mayhaps even the muse Calliope she after all was the one who influenced kings down thru history................
The Nine Muses of the Greek Mythology

“Sing to me oh Muse”… The Nine Muses of the Greek Mythology were deities that gave artists, philosophers and individuals the necessary inspiration for creation.

Hesiod reveals that they were called Muses or Mouses in Greek, as the Greek word “mosis” refers to the desire and wish. The word museum also comes from the Greek Muses.

The Nine Muses were: Clio, Euterpe, Thalia, Melpomeni, Terpsichore, Erato, Polymnia, Ourania and Calliope.

All the ancient writers appeal to the Muses at the beginning of their work. Homer asks the Muses both in the Iliad and Odyssey to help him tell the story in the most proper way, and until today the Muses are symbols of inspiration and artistic creation.

In painting the Muses are usually presented as ethereal women with divine beauty, holding laurels and other items depending on their faculty.

The 9 Muses are dancing while Apollo is playing the lyre
The 9 Muses are dancing while Apollo is playing the lyre

The Muses in the Greek Mythology

muse-with-lyreAccording to the Greek Myths, God Zeus bewildered the young woman Mnemosyne and slept with her for nine consecutive nights. The result of their encounter was the Nine Muses, who were similar to everything.

Μnemosyne gave the babies to Nymph Eufime and God Apollo. When they grew up they showed their tendency to the arts, taught by God Apollo himself.

They were not interested in anything of the regular human everyday life and they wanted to dedicate their lives to the Arts. Apollo brought them to the big and beautiful Mount Elikonas, where the older Temple of Zeus used to be. Ever since, the Muses supported and encouraged creation, enhancing imagination and inspiration of the artists.

Muses and Arts

According to the Greek Mythology, two Muses invented theory and practice in learning, three Muses invented the musical vibrations in Lyre, four Muses invented the four known dialects in the language – Attica, Ionian, Aeolian and Dorian – and five muses the five human senses. Seven muses invented the seven chords of the lyre, the seven celestial zones, the seven planets and the seven vocals of the Greek Alphabet.

Analytically the Nine Muses are:

1. Clio: The Muse Clio discovered history and guitar. History was named Clio in the ancient years, because it refers to “kleos” the Greek word for the heroic acts. Clio was always represented with a clarion in the right arm and a book in the left hand.

2. Euterpe: Muse Euterpe discovered several musical instruments, courses and dialectic. She was always depicted holding a flute, while many instruments were always around her.

3. Thalia: Muse Thalia was the protector of comedy; she discovered comedy, geometry, architectural science and agriculture. She was also protector of Symposiums. She was always depicted holding a theatrical – comedy mask.

4. Melpomene: Opposite from Thalia, Muse Melpomene was the protector of Tragedy; she invented tragedy, rhetoric speech and Melos. She was depicted holding a tragedy mask and usually bearing a bat.

5. Terpsichore: Terpsichore was the protector of dance; she invented dances, the harp and education. She was called Terpsichore because she was enjoying and having fun with dancing ( “Terpo” in Greek refers to be amused). She was depicted wearing laurels on her head, holding a harp and dancing.

6. Erato: Muse Erato was the protector of Love and Love Poetry – as well as wedding. Her name comes from the Greek word “Eros” that refers to the feeling of falling in love. She was depicted holding a lyre and love arrows and bows.

7. Polymnia: Muse Polymnia was the protector of the divine hymns and mimic art; she invented geometry and grammar. She was depicted looking up to the Sky, holding a lyre.

8. Ourania: Muse Ourania was the protector of the celestial objects and stars; she invented astronomy. She was always depicted bearing stars, a celestial sphere and a bow compass.

9. Calliope: Muse Calliope was the superior Muse. She was accompanying kings and princes in order to impose justice and serenity. She was the protector of heroic poems and rhetoric art. According to the myth, Homer asks from Calliope to inspire him while writing Iliad and Odyssey, and, thus, Calliope is depicted holding laurels in one hand and the two Homeric poems in the other hand.

The Nine Muses have been inspiring artists since the antiquity and there countless paintings, drawings, designs, poems and statues dedicated to them. All artists of the Renaissance acknowledged their importance in artistic creation, dedicating their works to the Muses.









these are as historically accurate as I could get, the Cleopatra is a recreation from an actual bust found and the Pocahontas is an actual portrait

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