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The Sex God
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On Mount Olympus they must
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be laughing at Bill Clinton's pleas for privacy, and at our attempts to explain
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his impulses. For about 3,000 years, since the Greek gods first appeared in
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mythology, they've been dropping their tunics, because that's what gods
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do . In fact, the parallels among the inhabitants of Olympus and the
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participants in the drama playing out at the White House are striking.
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Bill:
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Zeus. The king of the gods, Zeus is the most powerful in the pantheon. He
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wields the thunderbolt, which is useful both as a weapon and as a way of
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extracting himself from the sticky situations he often finds himself in. For
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all his power and brilliance, he has a few overwhelming character flaws. At
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times his "pride and petulance" became intolerable, writes classicist Robert
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Graves in The Greek Myths . In Mythology , Edith Hamilton writes,
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"He is represented as falling in love with one woman after another and
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descending to all manner of tricks to hide his infidelity from his wife."
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Graves even reports that the god's mother, "foreseeing what trouble his lust
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would cause, forbade him to marry." But what young god ever listens to his
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mother?
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Hillary: Hera. When Hera first appeared
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in mythology as Zeus' wife, she was also his co-sovereign, writes Graves, but
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as the millenniums marched on, she became subservient to him. Think of starting
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out heading health care reform and ending up supervising the Millennium
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Project. As Ovid wrote in Metamorphoses in the first century, Hera says
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of herself, "Great indeed are my achievements, and mighty my strength." So she
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was incensed at finding herself humiliated repeatedly by Zeus' philandering and
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reduced to being his sexual parole officer. Hera is--Lord have mercy--the
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goddess of marriage. As for her own, writes Graves, she and Zeus "bickered
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constantly," mostly over his infidelities. "Though he would confide his secrets
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to her, and sometimes accept her advice, he never fully trusted Hera." The
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feeling was mutual.
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Monica:
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Io. According to Ovid, when Zeus first saw this nymph, he said, "Maiden,
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you are fit for [Zeus] himself to love, and will make someone divinely happy
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when you share his couch." (Ovid does not say if the couch was in Zeus' private
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study.) Zeus spread a cloud over the Earth to conceal the dalliance, which had
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the unintended consequence of alerting Hera. According to Ovid, "When she could
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not find him in the sky, 'Unless I am mistaken,' she said, 'he is doing me some
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wrong.' " She was right. When she confronts him, in Graves' telling, he simply
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lies: "I have never touched Io." It's clear now that a better translation from
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the Greek would have read, "I have never touched that nymph , Miss Io."
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Never one to confess voluntarily, Zeus then silences Io by turning her into a
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cow.
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Kathleen Willey: Semele. One clear
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lesson from the Greeks is that mortals pay a heavy price for being desired by a
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god. After the mortal Semele had an affair with Zeus, Hera, consumed by
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jealousy, encouraged her to ask Zeus to display to her all the power he
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possessed. He did--and Semele was burned to ashes by the flame from his
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thunderbolt.
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Paula
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Jones: Nemesis. This goddess's name means, according to Hamilton,
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"Righteous Anger." Graves writes that she became the embodiment of "divine
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vengeance on proud kings." In his telling, Zeus pursued the goddess, who fled
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from him. To keep him at bay, she "constantly changed her shape," apparently
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the Hellenic equivalent of a makeover and nose job.
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Linda Tripp: Eris. Tripp is not just
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like you, but she is just like Eris, a minor goddess who helped spark a huge
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conflagration. Eris, as Graves writes, "is always stirring up occasions for war
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by the spread of rumour and the inculcation of jealousy." Hamilton describes
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her as the "evil goddess of Discord." She was hugely unpopular and always being
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left out of things. "Resenting this deeply, she determined to make trouble--and
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she succeeded very well indeed," writes Hamilton. When she was not included at
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an important wedding banquet, she threw into the hall a golden apple marked
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"For the Fairest." The scramble for possession of the apple was the event that
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ignited the Trojan War.
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Mike
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McCurry: Hermes. This god got the job of Zeus' messenger after Zeus heard
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of his clever escapades. As Graves writes of the job interview, Zeus said, "You
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seem to be a very ingenious, eloquent, and persuasive godling." "Then make me
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your herald, Father," the young Hermes answered, adding that he would "never
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tell lies, though I cannot promise always to tell the whole truth." "That would
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not be expected of you," said Zeus, with a smile.
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Ken Starr: Typhon. Typhon is, according
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to Graves, "the largest monster ever born. ... His brutish ass-head touched the
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stars, his vast wings darkened the sun, fire flashed from his eyes, and flaming
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rocks hurtled from his mouth." When he appeared, the gods fled Mount Olympus to
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hide. Finally, though, Zeus overcame his cowardice and grappled with the
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monster. It did not go well. Typhon cut the sinews in Zeus' hands and feet. As
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Graves writes, "Now he could not move a finger." But Zeus, like the presidency,
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if not individual presidents, has immortality. Eventually his power was
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restored, and he threw Mount Aetna on top of the independent counsel, ah,
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monster.
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Finally, the only deities
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possibly more powerful than the Olympians--the three goddesses who literally
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measure out the course and length of a person's life--are the Fates. Zeus, not
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surprisingly, fancies himself their leader. That's always a dangerous fancy. As
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Aeschylus wrote of Zeus in Prometheus Bound , "He cannot fly from
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Fate."
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