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The myth of Arachne and Athena - Iseult Gillespie

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    From sailors who were turned into pigs,
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    nymphs that sprouted into trees,
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    and a gaze that converted
    the beholder to stone,
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    Greek mythology brims with shape-shifters.
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    The powerful gods usually changed
    their own forms at will,
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    but for mortals, the mutations
    were often unwanted.
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    One such unnerving transformation
    befell the spinner Arachne.
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    Arachne was the daughter
    of a tradesman
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    who spent his days dying cloth
    the deepest shades of purple.
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    She had a flair for spinning
    the finest threads,
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    weaving them into flowing fabric,
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    and creating magnificent tapestries.
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    People flocked to watch her hands
    flying across her loom,
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    as if thread sprung directly
    from her fingertips.
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    But as praise for her work grew,
    so did her pride.
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    Arachne could often be heard
    boasting about her skills,
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    declaring that her talent surpassed
    anyone else’s—mortal or divine.
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    She refused to see weaving
    as a gift from the gods.
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    Rather, she flaunted it
    as her own personal genius.
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    Unfortunately, the goddess of wisdom
    and crafts, Athena,
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    overheard Arachne
    making these claims.
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    Planning to teach
    the ungrateful girl a lesson,
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    Athena disguised herself as an old woman
    and stole amongst the mortals.
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    She berated Arachne in public—
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    how dare the weaver claim
    herself greater than the gods?
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    But Arachne only laughed,
    barely looking up from her loom.
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    Provoked, the old woman threw off
    her cloak to reveal her true form.
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    If Arachne insisted on defaming the gods,
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    Athena would challenge her
    to a contest directly.
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    Masking her shock at the appearance
    of the grey-eyed goddess,
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    Arachne accepted the challenge.
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    Athena drew up her own glittering loom
    as a great crowd gathered to watch.
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    The weavers began,
    eyes fixed and shuttles blurring.
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    Athena conjured
    wisps of cloud from above
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    and slender threads of grass
    from below in a spectacle of strength.
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    She wove tremendous scenes
    that showed the power of the gods:
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    Poseidon riding the waves,
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    Zeus firing thunderbolts,
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    and Apollo hurtling across the sky.
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    In Athena’s splendid tapestry,
    the glory of the gods dwarfed mortal life.
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    But Arachne had no interest
    in boosting godly egos.
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    Her tapestry showed the gods
    abusing their power:
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    squabbling amongst themselves,
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    drinking and bragging,
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    and meddling in the lives of mortals.
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    She represented Zeus as a philanderer,
    transfiguring himself to ensnare women:
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    a swan for Leda,
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    a bull for Europa,
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    a shower of gold for Danae.
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    Arachne then turned
    to the misdemeanors of other gods,
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    from Pluto’s abduction of Persephone
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    to Bacchus’s wild pursuit of Erigone.
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    Even though she cast the gods
    in the most unflattering light,
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    Arachne’s work shone
    with her dazzling skill.
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    Her tapestry was almost alive,
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    filled with movement
    and lustrous colors
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    that winked triumphantly.
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    When Athena saw Arachne's undeniably
    better and flagrantly subversive work,
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    she flew into a rage
    and turned on the human weaver.
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    Arachne’s glee dimmed as she felt her body
    shrinking and contorting.
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    Her fingers waved wildly
    as her arms stuck to her sides,
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    and black hair
    sprouted all over her body.
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    The goddess left Arachne with a single
    spool of thread unfurling from her belly,
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    a slim reminder of her human talent.
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    For challenging the assumption
    that the gods were untouchable,
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    Athena had shrunk her adversary
    into the first spider.
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    To this day, Arachne and her children spin
    out her penance—
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    or is it undaunted persistence?—
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    in the shadows of giants.
Title:
The myth of Arachne and Athena - Iseult Gillespie
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:30

English subtitles

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