-
Homer's Odyssey,
-
one of the oldest works
of Western literature,
-
recounts the adventures
of the Greek hero Odysseus
-
during his ten-year journey home
from the Trojan War.
-
Though some parts
may be based on real events,
-
the encounters with strange monsters,
terrifying giants and powerful magicians
-
are considered to be complete fiction.
-
But might there be more to this myths
than meets the eye?
-
Let's look at one famous episode
from the poem.
-
In the midst of their long voyage,
-
Odysseus and his crew find themselves
on the mysterious island of Ogygia.
-
Starving and exhausted, some of the men
stumble upon a palatial home
-
where a stunning woman welcomes them
inside for sumptuous feast.
-
Of course, this all turns out to be
too good to be true.
-
The woman, in fact,
is the nefarious sorceress Circe,
-
and as soon as the soldiers
have eaten their fill at her table,
-
she turns them all into animals
with a wave of her wand.
-
Fortunately, one of the men escapes,
-
finds Odysseus
and tells him of the crew's plight.
-
But as Odysseus rushes to save his men,
-
he meets the messenger god, Hermes,
-
who advises him to first consume
a magical herb.
-
Odysseus follows this advice,
-
and when he finally encounters Circe,
her spells have no effect on him,
-
allowing him to defeat her
and rescue his crew.
-
Naturally, this story of witchcraft
and animal transformations
-
was dismissed as nothing more
than imagination for centuries.
-
But in recent years, the many mentions
of herbs and drugs throughout the passage
-
have piqued the interest of scientists,
-
leading some to suggest
-
the myths might have been
fictional expressions of real experiences.
-
The earliest versions of Homer's text
-
say that Circe mixed baneful drugs
into the food
-
such that the crew might utterly forget
their native land.
-
As it happens, one of the plants growing
in the Mediterranean region
-
is an innocent sounding herb
known as Jimson weed,
-
whose effects include pronounced amnesia.
-
The plant is also loaded with compounds
that disrupt the vital neurotransmitter
-
called acetylcholine.
-
Such disruption can cause
vivid hallucinations,
-
bizarre behaviors,
-
and general difficulty distinguishing
fantasy from reality,
-
just the sorts of things
-
which might make people believe
they've been turned into animals,
-
which also suggests that Circe
was no sorceress,
-
but in fact a chemist who knew how
to use local plants to great effect.
-
But Jimson weed is only half the story.
-
Unlike a lot of material in the Odyssey,
-
the text about the herb that Hermes
gives to Odysseus is unusually specific.
-
Called Moly by the gods,
-
it's described as being found
in a forest, Glenn,
-
black at the root
and with a flower as white as milk.
-
Like the rest of the Circe episode,
-
Moly was dismissed
as fictional invention for centuries.
-
But in 1951, Russian pharmacologist
Mikhail Mashkovsky
-
discovered that villagers
in the Ural Mountains
-
used a plant with a milk-white flower
and a black root
-
to stave off paralysis
in children suffering from polio.
-
The plant, called snowdrop,
-
turned out to contain a compound
called galantamine
-
that prevented the disruption
of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine,
-
making it effective in treating
not only polio
-
but other disease, such as Alzheimer's.
-
At the 12th World Congress of Neurology,
-
Doctors Andreas Plaitakis
and Roger Duvoisin
-
first proposed that snowdrop was, in fact,
the plant Hermes gave to Odysseus.
-
Although there is not much direct
evidence that people in Homer's day
-
would have known about
its anti-hallucinatory effects,
-
we do have a passage from 4th century
Greek writer Theophrastus
-
stating that Moly
is used as an antidote against poisons.
-
So, does this all mean
-
that Odysseus, Circe, and other characters
in the Odyssey were real?
-
Not necessarily.
-
But it does suggest that ancient stories
may have more elements of truth to them
-
than we previously thought.
-
And as we learn more
about the world around us,
-
we may uncover some of the same knowledge
-
hidden within the myths
and legends of ages passed.