Some
research I'm doing on Mercury-Mercury was known to be the fastest
moving of the planets, according to pre-Copernican astronomers. (We now
know that he orbits the sun every 88 days, whereas Venus takes 225
days, Mars 687 days, Jupiter 12 years, Saturn 29 years.) Partly because
of this rapidity, Mercury became thought of as the messenger of the
gods; he is often depicted with wings on his cap
(the petasus) and on his heels. He held a wand with which he directed
pious souls to their happy dwellings in the after-life. He was credited
with inventing the flute.Mercury's lightness and quickness carry over
to the metal with which he was associated. Quicksilver will roll around
a dish, dividing up into droplets and recombining very swiftly and
glitteringly. Mercury brings about 'meeting selves / Same but sundered'.
This tendency of Mercury to divide and reunite meant that he became
connected to a variety of different things which split up and come back
together. He was the god of boxers, of thieves, and even of crossroads.
In Greek mythology Mercury was called Hermes, and in ancient Greece
columnar pedestals carrying busts of Hermes (known as 'herms') were set
up as boundary-markers or signposts at important junctions. Another of
his names was Hermes Propulaios, 'Hermes Before-the-Gates'. Yet another
title was Hermes Kriophoros, 'Hermes the Ram-bearer'.As the messenger
of the gods, Mercury was also thought to have a particular
Bibleresponsibility for speech. C.S. Lewis's poem, 'The Planets', calls
him 'lord of language'. He was linked to scholarship and learning.
Mercury was thought to rule over the constellation of Gemini, the Twins,
- Castor and Pollux, the horseman and the boxer.Paul's ship in the Acts
of the Apostles has these twin brothers as its figurehead (Acts 28:11)
Mercury am I, gentle, soft,
Sixth planet, I send the winds aloft.
When other stars are warm, I'm hot;
I'm just as cold when they are not.
The Twins and the Maid so fine
Are the houses I account as mine.
In which I go most cleverly,
So Jupiter can't bewilder me.
I'm at my best when in the Maid,
But in the Fishes sure to fade.
Through all the signs I make my ways
In three hundred and four and thirty days.
His Children
My children I faithfully instill
With lust for beauty, greed for skill.
No long journey for them too hard,
Strange new knowledge is their reward.
Their faces are full and pale and round,
Their bodies white, their limbs unsound.
Their clocks and organs are the best,
Excellent scribes, they take no rest.
Dextrous goldsmiths, painters good,
People praise them - and they should.
They are a smart, hardworking lot,
When asked for help they give it not.-from The Book of the Seven Planets
The root of the idea of Mercury lies in Greek mythology with the
messenger god, Hermes. The Romans, whose culture was in many ways a
melting pot of the Greeks,Egyptians,and Persians, borrowed the old
stories and myths from the Greek God Hermes and laid them on top of
their own similar god, Mercury.He killed Argus on the orders of Zeus, by
lulling him to sleep and then chopping off his head. He assisted
Odysseus in his travels as that wanderer returned from the siege of
Troy.Mercury was the son of Jupiter (king of the gods), the result of an
illicit union with Maia, goddess of the clouds (as well as one of the
Pleiades).His many adventures and his assignment as guide of the dead to
Hades, made him the patron god of travellers. But his tricks also made
him patron of thieves. The Romans also made him god of merchants and he
lent his name to "mercantilism". Wednesday (Wodin was the Norse
equivalent of the Roman Mercury) was his day of the week. This day the
Romans called "Mercurii dies", which survives in the names for that day
in many of the Romance languages, such as the Spanish, "miƩrcoles". We
also find Mercury lending his fame, in a "mercurial" manner, to a number
of other objects... But that is for another time.- Copyright 2015 Vincent Piazza
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