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It’s Monday! Have out your biography, a pen or pencil, and bring your literature book. Christian Biography Project The Road Not Taken Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both And be one traveler, long I stood And looked down one as far as I could To where it bent in the undergrowth; Then took the other, as just as fair, And having perhaps the better claim, Because it was grassy and wanted wear; Though as for that the passing there Had worn them really about the same, And both that morning equally lay In leaves no step had trodden black. Oh, I kept the first for another day! Yet knowing how way leads on to way, I doubted if I should ever come back. I shall be telling this with a sigh Somewhere ages and ages hence: Two roads diverged in a wood, and I— I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference. Robert Frost Mythology is EVERYWHERE! Descriptive Mythology •titanic- having great size, strength, power, or intellect- from the Titans, the first gods •mercurial- a quick -witted, changeable, fickle- from Mercury the messenger god •herculean- adjective meaning "difficult, requiring great strength or courage"- from the Greek hero Hercules •Junoesque- objective meaning stately and queenlike- from Juno, queen of the Roman gods •odyssey- an extended journey- from Odysseus, who wandered many years trying to get home from the Trojan War •lethal- fatal, deadly, suggestive of death- from the Lethe River, the river of forgetfulness in the Underworld •cloth- fabric- from Clotho, the fate who spun the thread of life •plutonium- a radioactive chemical element- named for Pluto, god of the underworld •Europe- a continent- europa, one of Zeus' lovers, gave this name to the continent •panic- a sudden fear- comes from Pan, the god of fields and woods, who sometimes caused a groundless fear among mortals •phobia- an irrational or persistent fearcomes from Phobus, the god of fear gods and goddesses of ancient Greece Zeus ruler of all Greek gods Apollo Zeus’ son, god of light and the muses Hades god of the dead Proteus sea god Ares god of war Dionysus god of wine and agriculture Charon god of the underworld Chronos god of time Eros god of love Hephaistos god of fire Hermes messenger god Pan god of the shepherds Hera married to Zeus, goddess of women and marriage Aphrodite goddess of love Artemis goddess of the hunt Athena goddess of widsom Persephone goddess of the underworld Phaethon MYTHS Myths: stories about mortals and gods from Greeks & Romans present universal themes, teach virtues, and warn against vices Ovid: • popular Roman poet • wrote Metamorphoses Edith Hamilton: • translated story from Greek to English DAWN had opened her courts full of rosy light…. SON & SUN Phaethon: rash insecure foolish repentant (but too late) Sun: father of Phaethon rides through the skies giving light kind and “loving” wants to prove himself STORY DETAILS Styx—river of the oath of the gods Phaethon’s request: “Dad, may I have the keys to the car?” Natural Event: The rising and setting of the sun FOUR NATURAL OCCURRENCES Sunrise “Consider the road. It rises up from the sea so steeply that the horses can hardly climb it, fresh though they are in the early morning.” Sun at noonday “In midheaven it is so high that even I do not like to look down.” Sunset “Worst of all is the descent, so precipitous that the seagods waiting to receive me wonder how I can avoid falling headlong.” Sun rising daily “Just for a day, a single day, let me have your car to drive.” CONCLUSION ***His downfall is Fallacies: • Gods rule the earth. caused by his • The sun god is able to have children. rashness and pride! • There are beasts in the sky waiting to attack the chariot. • The seasons are gatekeepers. • Due to Phaëthon’s folly, the world was set on fire by the sun. The major flaw of the Greek gods… PRIDE!