So
she poured out the liquid music of her voice to quench the thirst of his
spirit. ~Nathaniel Hawthorne
Welcome to the March mythical creatures installment. You can find the previous posts here (on dragons, fantastical horses, and mythical creatures of the sky).
I have too many mythical creatures of the sea to cover, so I've split it into two posts. Don't worry, I won't make you wait until April! The second half will be up next week.
Mermaid
We’re probably all familiar with the contemporary
depictions of this mythological sea creature, a female human from the waist up
with the tail of a fish. A
male version of a mermaid is known as a ‘merman’ and collectively they are known
as ‘merfolk’ or ‘merpeople’. But what is the origin of the myth?
As it happens, mermaids are depicted in many cultures, far
too many legends to cover here.
In British folklore, mermaids are considered unlucky
omens, either foretelling disaster or causing it. Mermaids may also be a sign
of approaching bad weather.
A popular Greek legend has it that Alexander the Great’s
sister turned into a mermaid after she died (can I have this afterlife?). When
she encountered a ship, she would ask the sailors ‘Is King Alexander alive?’ If
the sailors replied ‘He lives and reigns and conquers the world’ she would be
pleased enough to calm the sea and bid the sailors farewell. Any other answer
enraged her and caused her to raise a terrible storm, dooming the ship and
every sailor on board.
Mermaids typically live in the ocean, using their beauty
and charm to lure sailors to their deaths. They have also been described as
being capable of swimming up rivers or streams to freshwater lakes. One legend
recounts the Laird of Lorntie going to the aid of a drowning woman, only to be
dragged back by his servant. Uncharitable man! But no, the servant warned, the
woman is a mermaid, whereupon the mermaid screamed she would have killed the
laird if not for the lucky intervention of the servant. Whew! Close escape.
Traditionally the mermaid was depicted unclothed, but
censorship in modern culture has resulted in mermaids shown partially clothed
or with hair covering their breasts. Interestingly, some mermaids are described
as 2000 feet long! That is not a fish I want to have an argument with…
Most lore deals with the female, with mermen described as
uglier and wilder than mermaids and having little interest in humans. Looks
like us gals are safe from this creature!
The mermaid appears frequently in popular culture. There
is, of course, Disney’s The Little Mermaid, and quite recently, mermaids made
an appearance in Pirates of the
Caribbean: On Stranger Tides. Or were they sirens…
Sirens
The sirens come from Greek mythology and were depicted in
later folklore as mermaid like, and thus often confused, but they are not the
same thing at all!
The sirens were originally described as ‘winged maidens’,
but later portrayed as ‘fish-like’, thus creating the confusion with mermaids. Early
Greek art shows the sirens as birds with large women's heads, bird feathers and
scaly feet. This transformed to female figures with the legs of birds, with or
without wings, and playing musical instruments, most often harps. Later, Sirens
were sometimes depicted as beautiful women, whose bodies, not only their
voices, are seductive. Lastly, the mermaid-like depiction appeared.
As mentioned, mermaids used their beauty and charm to
lure sailors to their deaths (often compelling the men to jump overboard to
drown in the mermaid’s arms) but sirens instead used their singing to lure
sailors toward rocks, thus sinking the ship on the rocky coast of their island.
The siren’s song is beautiful and irresistible, described as:
‘Their song,
though irresistibly sweet, was no less sad than sweet, and lapped both body and
soul in a fatal lethargy, the forerunner of death and corruption.’
From this legend comes the expression ‘siren song’
referring to an appeal that is hard to resist but, if heeded, will have
terrible consequences.
One version of the legend goes that sirens ate their victims.
Another, based on the depiction of victims with rotting flesh, suggests the
sirens do not kill sailors for food. Instead, the sirens lure sailors to be
their companions but, with their feathers lost, cannot feed their new
companions, who starve to death when they refuse to leave. I like that version
better myself.
Dangerous seductresses, the sirens were considered the
daughters of the river god Acheolus and their number ranged from two to five. The
Greeks did not regard them as sea deities, although the Romans more closely
linked them to the sea as daughters of Phorcys (primordial sea god of hidden
dangers of the deep – now isn’t that a mouthful?). The sirens did not live in
the sea, but in a flowery meadow on their island.
One tale has the sirens as companions of a young Persephone
(daughter of Zeus and the harvest goddess, Demeter) and given wings by Demeter
to allow them to search for Persephone when she was abducted by Hades to become
queen of the underworld. An alternative version of the myth has Demeter cursing
the sirens for failing to intervene in Persephone’s abduction. The sirens
searched for Persephone but eventually gave up and settled on their island
home. Later, they were provoked by Hera (wife of Zeus) to enter a contest with
the Muses and, defeated, were deprived of their wings.
Sirens are fated to live only until the mortals who heard
their songs could pass on by. In Homer's classic The Odyssey, Odysseus plugged his ears with wax so he could not
hear the siren’s song and so the sirens cast themselves into the sea and
drowned (or turned into rocks, or so says the alternative version... go
figure!).
According to the mermaids in Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, they were not sirens,
but did the bidding of sirens.
The sirens are not truly creatures of the sea, but I have
covered them here because they are sea-related and so often confused with
mermaids.
Tritons
Triton is a Greek god, son of Poseidon,
god of the sea, and Amphitrite, goddess of the sea, whose herald he is. He is most often represented
as a sea-coloured merman.
Over time, Triton's name and image came to be associated
with mermaid-like creatures, the Tritons. Tritons were both male and female and formed
the escort of marine divinities. Tritons were a race of sea gods and goddesses
born from Triton.
Tritons are often considered the aquatic versions of satyrs. We
haven’t covered satyrs yet – we’ll get to them in a future post, but think Mr. Tumnus from The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. Another
description of Tritons is that of the Centaur-Tritons, also known as Ichthycentaurs, depicted
with two horse's feet in place of arms.
Tritons are the trumpeters of the sea, using great
trumpets of conch. Blowing the conch
would calm the waves, or stir them up.
Triton (the god) appears in The Last Olympian by Rick Riordan. He
helps his father fight against the Titans of the sea, and is very rude to Percy Jackson,
who is his half brother. In the book he is described as a young-looking merman
with two fish tails instead of one, green skin, black hair tied into a
ponytail, and wearing armour studded with pearls.
Nereids
Another one from Greek mythology! Those Greeks sure did
get around. The Nereids were the nymphs of the sea, daughters of Nereus, god of
the sea (how many sea gods are there, I ask you?). He had fifty daughters, so
he sure knew how to party.
These lovely ladies were friendly folk. Finally, a
mythical creature that wants to be my friend instead of eat me, drown me or
kill me! Nereids were known for helping sailors through rough storms and lived
mostly in the Mediterranean. Too bad if you’re sailing across the Atlantic when
a storm blows up…
The Nereids also often accompanied Poseidon (another
sea-god if you recall…) and lived with their father in a silvery cave. The most
well-known is Thetis, mother of Achilles. Who knew? First time I heard Achilles
was half-sea-nymph!
Other notable Nereids included Amphitrite, Poseidon’s
wife (who else would a sea-god wed than the daughter of another sea-god?) and
Galatea, who had the dubious honour of being the love of Cyclops.
I’m off to consult my mythical creatures bestiary for
next week’s Part 2 – Beasties of the Deep: Mythical Creatures Beneath the
Waves.
You can find other posts in mythical creatures series here - Dragons, Fantastical Horses, Creatures of the Sky, Mythical Creatures of the Sea - Part 2, and Spirits of Inland Waterways.
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14 comments:
Great post, Ciara! You don't see enough nereids in fiction these days. Maybe they're a little too nice and not as exciting? Oh well, looking forward to part 2 :-)
Great post! I love the mythology surrounding merfolk.
I guess they probably don't create enough conflict! I did forget to mention apparently there is also a Nereid in The Last Olympian.
Thanks! Next week we'll be moving on to other mythical creatures of the ocean, including selkies, kraken and the Each Uisge.
Fab post, Ciara, and gorgeous imagery. As a Hawaii girl I'm perhaps overfond of mermaids...
Thanks, Toby! Mermaids would definitely live off the coat of Hawai'i.
I love the mythical creature descriptions. Very interesting.
Thanks Kelly :-)
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