please please please let me into the scriptorium i would be such a good little monk please i will not eat the parchment or anything i promise

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Kaledo Art
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"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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@chidher
please please please let me into the scriptorium i would be such a good little monk please i will not eat the parchment or anything i promise
in middle school during my Intense Greek Mythology Phase, Artemis was, as you can likely guess, my best girl. Iphigenia was my OTHER best girl. Yes at the same time.
The story of Iphigenia always gets to me when it's not presented as a story of Artemis being capricious and having arbitrary rules about where you can and can't hunt, but instead, making a point about war.
Artemis was, among other things--patron of hunting, wild places, the moon, singlehood--the protector of young girls. That's a really important aspect she was worshipped as: she protected girls and young women. But she was the one who demanded Agamemnon sacrifice his daughter in order for his fleet to be able to sail on for Troy.
There's no contradiction, though, when it's framed as, Artemis making Agamemnon face what he’s doing to the women and children of Troy. His children are not in danger. His son will not be thrown off the ramparts, his daughters will not be taken captive as sex slaves and dragged off to foreign lands, his wife will not have to watch her husband and brothers and children killed. Yet this is what he’s sailing off to Troy to inevitably do. That’s what happens in war. He’s going to go kill other people’s daughters; can he stand to do that to his own? As long as the answer is no—he can kill other people’s children, but not his own—he can’t sail off to war.
Which casts Artemis is a fascinating light, compared to the other gods of the Trojan War. The Trojan War is really a squabble of pride and insults within the Olympian family; Eris decided to cause problems on purpose, leaving Aphrodite smug and Hera and Athena snubbed, and all of this was kinda Zeus’s fault in the first place for not being able to keep it in his pants. And out of this fight mortal men were their game pieces and mortal cities their prizes in restoring their pride. And if hundreds of people die and hundred more lives are ruined, well, that’s what happens when gods fight. Mortals pay the price for gods’ whims and the gods move on in time and the mortals don’t and that’s how it is.
And women especially—Zeus wanted Leda, so he took her. Paris wanted Helen, so he took her. There’s a reason “the Trojan women” even since ancient times were the emblems of victims of a war they never wanted, never asked for, and never had a say in choosing, but was brought down on their heads anyway.
Artemis, in the way of gods, is still acting through human proxies. But it seems notable to me to cast her as the one god to look at the destruction the war is about to wreak on people, and challenge Agamemnon: are you ready to kill innocents? Kill children? Destroy families, leave grieving wives and mothers? Are you? Prove it.
It reminds me of that idea about nuclear codes, the concept of implanting the key in the heart of one of the Oval Office staffers who holds the briefcase, so the president would have to stab a man with a knife to get the key to launch the nukes. “That’s horrible!,” it’s said the response was. “If he had to do that, he might never press the button!” And it’s interesting to see Artemis offering Agamemnon the same choice. You want to burn Troy? Kill your own daughter first. Show me you understand what it means that you’re about to do.
Kudzu vines resembling Christ’s crucifiction
salmon so tasty it make me eat hasty / when salmon is finished the joy is diminished
sweet mother i cannot weave. slender aphrodite has overcome me with carpal tunnel
hi so the haruspex just got done examining the entrails for you and he said they were SUPER yucky. maybe even icky. yeah he said they were the yuckiest entrails he's ever seen and he couldn't even figure out what the omens were because they were so yucky. probably you're cursed forever. sorry about that
Erika Lee Sears
Trajan’s Column. A roman warrior is fighting while is carrying a head of an enemy in the mouth like a trophy
unfinished high(er) quality collection of my stick figure drawings i think you can tell how much raw emotion i felt drawing every single one
i need to know every language immediately
babeeee I promise I'll stop saying "it's morbin time" every time we have sex please come back to bed
Little bunny foo foo. ❤️ Hope you all enjoy. Design by @fivepointpress by kelseylulu
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