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Calypso (mythology)

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Calypso
Detail from Calypso receiving Telemachus and Mentor in the Grotto by William Hamilton
AbodeOgygia
Genealogy
ParentsAtlas or
Oceanus and Tethys
SiblingsPleiades, Hyades, Hyas or the Oceanids and the Potamoi
ConsortOdysseus, Hermes
ChildrenBy some accounts Latinus, by others Nausithous and Nausinous, the Cephalonians

In Greek mythology, Calypso (/kəˈlɪps/; Ancient Greek: Καλυψώ, romanizedKalupsō, lit.'she who conceals')[1] was a nymph who lived on the island of Ogygia, where, according to Homer's Odyssey, she detained Odysseus for seven years against his will. She promised Odysseus immortality if he would stay with her, but Odysseus preferred to return home. Eventually, after the intervention of the other gods, Calypso was forced to let Odysseus go.

Etymology

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The name Calypso derives from the Ancient Greek καλύπτω (kalyptō),[2][3] meaning 'to cover', 'to conceal', or 'to hide';[3][4] as such, her name translates to 'she who conceals' as she conceals Odysseus from the rest of the world, keeping him on her island.[5] According to the medieval dictionary Etymologicum Magnum, her name means 'concealing the knowledge' (from Greek: καλύπτουσα το διανοούμενον, romanizedkalýptousa to dianooúmenon), which – combined with the Homeric epithet δολόεσσα (dolóessa, meaning 'subtle' or 'wily') – justifies the reclusive character of Calypso and her island.[6]

Family

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Calypso is generally said to be the daughter of the Titan Atlas.[7] Her mother is mostly unnamed, but Hyginus wrote that it was Pleione, mother of the Pleiades.[8] Hesiod, and the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, mention either a different Calypso or possibly the same Calypso as one of the Oceanid daughters of Tethys and Oceanus.[9] Apollodorus includes the name Calypso in his list of Nereids, the daughters of Nereus and Doris.[10] John Tzetzes makes her a daughter of Helios and the Oceanid nymph Perse, the parents of Circe,[11][AI-generated source?] perhaps due to her association with Circe; the two goddesses were sometimes confused due to their behaviour and connection to Odysseus.[12] According to a fragment from the Catalogue of Women, Calypso bore the Cephalonians to Hermes[13] as suggested by Hermes' visits to her island in the Odyssey.[14]

Mythology

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The Odyssey

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In Homer's Odyssey, Calypso tries to keep the fabled Greek hero Odysseus on her island to make him her immortal husband, while he also gets to enjoy her sensual pleasures forever. According to Homer, Calypso kept Odysseus prisoner by force at Ogygia for seven years.[15] Calypso enchants Odysseus with her singing as she moves to and from weaving on her loom with a golden shuttle.

Odysseus comes to wish for circumstances to change. He can no longer bear being separated from his wife, Penelope, and wants to tell Calypso. He spends the daytime sitting on a headland or at the sea-shore crying, while at night he is forced to sleep with her in the cave against his will.[16] His patron goddess Athena asks Zeus to order the release of Odysseus from the island; Zeus orders the messenger Hermes to tell Calypso to set Odysseus free, for it was not Odysseus's destiny to live with her forever. She angrily comments on how the gods hate goddesses having affairs with mortals.

Calypso provides Odysseus with an axe, drill, and adze to build a boat. Calypso leads Odysseus to an island where he can chop down trees and make planks for his boat. Calypso also provides him with wine, bread, clothing, and more materials for his boat. The goddess then sets wind at his back when he sets sail. After seven years, Odysseus has built his boat and leaves Calypso.

Other narratives

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Homer does not mention any children by Calypso. By some accounts that came after the Odyssey, Calypso bore Odysseus a son, Latinus,[17] though Circe is usually given as Latinus' mother.[18] In other accounts, Calypso bore Odysseus two children, Nausithous and Nausinous.[19]

The story of Odysseus and Calypso has some close resemblances to the interactions between Gilgamesh and Siduri in the Epic of Gilgamesh in that "the lone female plies the inconsolable hero-wanderer with drink and sends him off to a place beyond the sea reserved for a special class of honoured people" and "to prepare for the voyage he has to cut down and trim timbers".[20]

A fragment from the Catalogue of Women, erroneously attributed to Hesiod, claimed that Calypso detained Odysseus for years as a favour to Poseidon, the sea-god who detested Odysseus for blinding his son Polyphemus.[21]

According to Hyginus, Calypso killed herself because of her love for Odysseus.[22]

In literature

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In her poem Calypso Watching the Ocean, Letitia Landon describes her as eternally yearning for Odysseus' return and comments on the folly of such obsession.[23]

Philosophy

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Philosophers have written about the meaning of Calypso in the world of ancient Greece. Ryan Patrick Hanley commented on the interpretation of Calypso in Les Aventures de Télémaque written by Fénelon. Hanley says that the story of Calypso illustrates the link between Eros and pride.[24] Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer brought attention to the combination of power over fate and the sensibility of "bourgeois housewives" in the depiction of Calypso.[25]

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Notes

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  1. ^ Grimal, s.v. Calypso.
  2. ^ Pontani, Filippomaria (2013). "Speaking and concealing – Calypso in the eyes of some (ancient) interpreters". Symbolae Osloenses. 87 (1): 45. doi:10.1080/00397679.2013.822722. ISSN 0039-7679. S2CID 162397268.
  3. ^ a b Harper, Douglas. "Calypso". Online Etymology Dictionary.
  4. ^ Entry καλύπτω at LSJ
  5. ^ "Calypso - The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable". Oxford Reference. Oxford University Press. 2005. Retrieved 2024-08-06.
  6. ^ Etymologicum magnum; Sylburg, Friedrich (1816). Etymologikon tomega. Robarts - University of Toronto. Lipsiae Apud J.A.G. Weigel.
  7. ^ Homer, Odyssey 1.14, 1.51–54 & 7.245; Apollodorus, Epitome 7.24. She is sometimes referred to as Atlantis (Ατλαντίς),[citation needed] which means the daughter of Atlas, see the entry Ατλαντίς in Liddell & Scott, and also Hesiod, Theogony 938
  8. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae Preface 16
  9. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 359; Homeric Hymn 2.422. According to Caldwell, p. 49 n. 359, the Hesiod Oceanid is "probably not" the same; see also West 1966, p. 267 359. καὶ ἱμερόεσσα Καλυψώ; Hard, p. 41.
  10. ^ Apollodorus, 1.2.7
  11. ^ Tzetzes ad Lycophron, 174 (Gk text)
  12. ^ E., Bell, Robert (1993). Women of classical mythology : a biographical dictionary. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-507977-7. OCLC 26255961.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Most, p. 173, [= fr. 150.25-35 Merkelbach-West]
  14. ^ Gagné, p. 232
  15. ^ Homer, Odyssey 7.259
  16. ^ Homer, Odyssey 5.151-155
  17. ^ Apollodorus, Epitome 7.24
  18. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 1011
  19. ^ See Hesiod, Theogony 1019, Sir James George Frazer in his notes to Apollodorus, Epitome 7.24, says that these verses "are probably not by Hesiod but have been interpolated by a later poet of the Roman era in order to provide the Latins with a distinguished Greek ancestry".
  20. ^ Dalley, S. (1989) Myths from Mesopotamia. Oxford University Press, Oxford, NY.
  21. ^ Budin, p. 230
  22. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 243.7
  23. ^ Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (1836). "poem". The New Monthly Magazine, 1836. Vol. 49. Henry Colburn. p. 20.
  24. ^ Schliesser, Eric (23 September 2016). Ten Neglected Classics of Philosophy. Oxford University Press, 2017. ISBN 978-0-19-992892-7 – via Google Books.
  25. ^ Horkheimer, Max; Adorno, Theodore (2002). Dialectic of Enlightenment. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-3633-6 – via Google Books.

References

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