Aphrodite and Venus
Aphrodite vs. Venus
In many ways the two goddesses were the same person because they were both said to be beautiful and carried the mantle as goddesses of love and fertility. However, the tradition is much different since both were borrowed from other traditions (Venus came, in part, from the Aphrodite tradition), so were not unique to the pantheons they occupied. The goddesses were both also associated with multiple trysts, often playing the gods and men they had interactions with against each other. The stories of their affairs and lives have become important in myth and in reality as many women identify with the characters of these two. Two pieces, The Odyssey by Homer and The Lusiads by Camoes, are examined herein as classic pieces of literature in which the goddesses served a crucial part in the story.
Aphrodite: The Odyssey
The Iliad and the Odyssey are two of the most famous books to come from the classical ancient canon, and they continue to be read and regarded as masterpieces of the classical mythical genre. The first book, The Iliad, is the story of the Greek war with the Trojans famous for the deceptively arranged horse taken in by Troy. One of the combatants on the Greek side was a young man named Odysseus who matured during the war and the short voyage home which became an adventure retold in The Odyssey. Aphrodite plays a part in The Iliad as she is the reason why Helen was stolen from Greece (due to the madness of Aphrodite) (Homer 30), but she plays but a minor part. She is seen more in The Odyssey as a sometimes protector of Odysseus as he makes his way home to Penelope.
After they have been on the voyage for a little while, a bard sings the song about how Ares and Aphrodite consort in her husband Hephaestus' house. Her husband has been very good to her, but she is unsatisfied with the type of husband he has been and longs after the bad boy credibility of Ares. All is going well until Hephaestus is told of what is happening under his own roof. The bard continues to tell the tale of betrayal and intrigue while Odysseus and his company listen. They are charmed, but it seems that the story reminds Odysseus of his own beautiful wife and the men that were left behind who are probably making life difficult for her. The infidelity of Aphrodite in this sequence is something that the Greeks in the story seem to take for granted as just another of the characteristics of Aphrodite. She is also called laughing Aphrodite at the end of the story (Homer 64), so not only does she cheat on her husband, the fact does not seem to bother her in the least.
Hephaestus was not one who was going to take the affair lightly. Although he was a god known for his patience, he could only take so much. Since Zeus had given Aphrodite to him as a wife, he was willing to make the most of it and keep her out if the trouble that Zeus had originally believed that she would get into with the other gods because of her beauty and playful manner. She seems, from the way she acted when married, to have agreed reluctantly. When Hephaestus found out about the affair, he arranged a surprise for them. He went out for the days and Ares suggested that he and Aphrodite should use Hephaestus's couch for their "sport" (Homer 63). The two were secretly being watched by Hephaestus and he trapped them. Then he would have killed the lovers, but Aphrodite appealed to her father and she was allowed to escape as was Ares, but the two went their separate ways (Homer 64).
The story that the bard tells, shows exactly the type of person Aphrodite is. She is interested in her own pleasure and she does not care who she hurts to get it. She is also someone who the other gods find irresistible and it is hard for them to control themselves when they are around her. All succumb to Aphrodite's madness whether the victim be god or human.
During the story it compares people to Aphrodite to speak of their beauty often. Helen is first compared to her and then Penelope. It seems when a woman has the look of Aphrodite, she inspires the same madness that Aphrodite produced during her own conquests. Although this was not the goal of Helen, and especially not Penelope who longed for her husband, it is...
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