The eminent warrior Achilles raged at King Agamemnon for taking for himself Achilles’s beloved concubine Briseis. Achilles’s anger, wrath, and rage transformed the Trojan War.[1] Nonetheless, the goddess Demeter raged much more devastatingly at the god Zeus for arranging for their daughter Persephone to marry Hades. For that perceived relational wrong, Demeter sought to demean the immortal divinities or exterminate humanity. Classical scholars with their deeply entrenched misunderstanding of gender tend to ignore Demeter’s anger and instead emphasize her motherly grief. Demeter’s anger, wrath, and rage, as well as that of women and goddesses more generally, deserve to be better appreciated.
Demeter hid her anger, wrath, and rage about Hades abducting Persephone for marriage. After Persephone’s abduction, Demeter assumed the character of a barren old woman and wandered to Eleusis. There she became the nurse to Demophon, son of Queen Metaneira and King Keleos of Eleusis. Demeter seemed to be a kindly old woman. She promised Metaneira she would take good care of Demophon:
Be joyful, woman, and may the gods give you blessings.
As for your little boy, I will gladly take him, as you request.
I will rear him, and I don’t expect that by any negligence of his nurse
a supernatural visitation or cutter of roots will harm him.
I know a powerful counter-cutter to beat the herb-cutter,
and I know a good inhibitor of baneful pestilence.{ καὶ σύ, γύναι, μάλα χαῖρε, θεοὶ δέ τοι ἐσθλὰ πόροιεν.
παῖδα δέ τοι πρόφρων ὑποδέξομαι, ὥς με κελεύεις·
θρέψω, κοὔ μιν, ἔολπα, κακοφραδίηισι τιθήνης
οὔτ᾿ ἄρ᾿ ἐπηλυσίη δηλήσεται οὔθ᾿ ὑποτάμνων·
οἶδα γὰρ ἀντίτομον μέγα φέρτερον ὑλοτόμοιο,
οἶδα δ᾿ ἐπηλυσίης πολυπήμονος ἐσθλὸν ἐρυσμόν. }[2]
Demeter nourished Demophon with ambrosia. At night she placed him within the hearth’s fire. His parents marveled, because “as he continually bloomed, he was like the gods in appearance {ὡς προθαλὴς τελέθεσκε, θεοῖσι δὲ ἄντα ἐώικει}.” Demeter in fact was making Demophon “ageless and immortal {ἀγήρως καί ἀθάνατος}.” Making a mortal into an immortal would challenge the privileged position of Zeus and the other immortal divinities.
Queen Metaneira unknowingly aborted Demophon becoming immortal. One night Metaneira saw Demeter placing him in the fire. Metaneira was alarmed and cried out:
Demophon, my child! The strange woman is hiding you
in the blazing fire! That is causing me grief and mournful anguish!{ τέκνον Δημοφόων, ξείνη σε πυρὶ ἔνι πολλῶι
κρύπτει, ἐμοὶ δὲ γόον καὶ κήδεα λυγρὰ τίθησιν. }
Metaneira’s words angered Demeter. She took Demophon out of the fire and put him on the floor.[3] Then she castigated Queen Metaneira:
Ignorant and foolish humans unable to recognize
the difference between future good or ill.
And you are one of them irremediably misled by your folly!{ νήϊδες ἄνθρωποι καὶ ἀφράδμονες οὔτ᾿ ἀγαθοῖο
αἶσαν ἐπερχομένου προγνώμεναι οὔτε κακοῖο·
καὶ σὺ γὰρ ἀφραδίηισι τεῆις νήκεστον ἀάσθης. }
Dropping her disguise, Demeter then declared her true name. Calling herself the greatest good to mortals and immortals, she instructed Queen Metaneira to have all the people of Eleusis build a huge temple for her. She said she would then instruct the people how to perform sacred rites pleasing to her.[4] Demeter’s anger at Zeus seems to have been temporarily redirected at Metaneira and the people of Eleusis.
When the people of Eleusis instituted proper worship of Demeter, she directed her anger back at Zeus. She sat in her new temple at Eleusis and shunned the other immortals. To further hurt them, she acted to exterminate humanity:
She made the most terrible year for all mortals across the
nurturing earth, a most grievous year. The earth did not sprout
any seed, for fair-garlanded Demeter suppressed the seed.
Many oxen dragged curved plows over the fields, all in vain.
Many white barley seeds fell into the soil, all in vain.
Indeed, she would have destroyed humanity altogether
by grievous famine, thus depriving the immortal
dwellers of Olympus of their honors and sacrificial food.{ αἰνότατον δ᾿ ἐνιαυτὸν ἐπὶ χθόνα πουλυβότειραν
ποίησ᾿ ἀνθρώποις καὶ κύντατον· οὐδέ τι γαῖα
σπέρμ᾿ ἀνίει· κρύπτεν γὰρ ἐϋστέφανος Δημήτηρ·
πολλὰ δὲ καμπύλ᾿ ἄροτρα μάτην βόες εἷλκον ἀρούραις,
πολλὸν δὲ κρῖ λευκὸν ἐτώσιον ἔμπεσε γαίηι.
καί νύ κε πάμπαν ὄλεσσε γένος μερόπων ἀνθρώπων
λιμοῦ ὕπ᾿ ἀργαλέης, γεράων τ᾿ ἐρικυδέα τιμήν
καὶ θυσιῶν ἤμερσεν Ὀλύμπια δώματ᾿ ἔχοντας }
If Zeus wanted to exterminate humanity, he would kill them all directly with thunderbolts and storms. Indirect aggression is more characteristic of goddesses and women. Demeter sought to exterminate humanity through famine in order to deprive Zeus and all the other gods, including herself, of offerings from humans. Although scarcely expressed and motivating only indirect aggression, Demeter’s devastating rage didn’t even spare herself.
Noticing Demeter’s anger, wrath, and rage, all-knowing Zeus did whatever was necessary to mollify her. First he sent the goddess Iris to beg Demeter to come to Olympus. Demeter refused to come. Zeus then sent other immortals who offered Demeter gifts and honors if she would rejoin the divinities on Olympus. Demeter again refused to join the other immortals. Finally, Zeus sent Hermes to bring Persephone back from the Underworld. Hermes explained to Hades the urgent need:
Sable-haired Hades, lord of the dead,
Zeus the Father has ordered me to bring illustrious Persephone
back from the dark Underworld to those above, so that her mother
may set eyes on her and cease from her wrath and terrifying rage
against the immortals. For Demeter is intending a grave deed —
to destroy the feeble tribes of earth-born humans
by keeping the seed hidden under the soil. She thus would destroy
tribute to the immortals. Her wrath is terrifying. She refuses
to mingle with the gods, but stays apart, seated inside
her fragrant temple occupying Eleusis’s rugged citadel.{ Ἅιδη κυανοχαῖτα καταφθιμένοισιν ἀνάσσων,
Ζεύς με πατὴρ ἤνωγεν ἀγαυὴν Περσεφόνειαν
ἐξαγαγεῖν Ἐρέβεσφι μετὰ σφέας, ὄφρα ἑ μήτηρ
ὀφθαλμοῖσιν ἰδοῦσα χόλου καὶ μήνιος αἰνῆς
ἀθανάτοις λήξειεν· ἐπεὶ μέγα μήδεται ἔργον,
φθεῖσαι φῦλ᾿ ἀμενηνὰ χαμαιγενέων ἀνθρώπων
σπέρμ᾿ ὑπὸ γῆς κρύπτουσα, καταφθινύθουσα δὲ τιμάς
ἀθανάτων. ἣ δ᾿ αἰνὸν ἔχει χόλον, οὐδὲ θεοῖσιν
μίσγεται, ἀλλ᾿ ἀπάνευθε θυώδεος ἔνδοθι νηοῦ
ἧσται, Ἐλευσῖνος κραναὸν πτολίεθρον ἔχουσα. }
Less strong-willed than Demeter, Hades readily agreed to having his beloved Persephone taken away from him and brought to her mother Demeter in Eleusis. Zeus assented to having Persephone spend two-thirds of the year with her mother Demeter and one-third of the year with her husband Hades.[5] That arrangement mollified Demeter. No longer in rage seeking to exterminate humanity, she enabled crops to grow.
Goddesses and women deserve to be well-recognized for their devastating anger, wrath, and rage. In the ancient Greek-speaking world, a poet begin a hymn to Demeter in a telling way:
Sing, goddess, the wrath of Demeter of the splendid fruit.
{ Μῆνιν ἄειδε, θεά, Δημήτερος ἀγλαοκάρπου }[6]
That verse adapts the opening line of the Homeric Iliad:
Sing, goddess, the wrath of Achilles, son of Peleus.
{ Μῆνιν ἄειδε, θεά, Πηληιάδεω Ἀχιλῆος }[7]
Achilles’s anger, wrath, and rage has been recognized as “the demonic destructive power of a justified curse.” Demeter’s anger, wrath, and rage, in contrast, was arguably less justified and certainly more potentially destructive.[8] Moreover, Demeter’s rage follows the pattern of goddesses’ cosmos-ordering rage. For example, Zeus feared the wrath of the goddess Thetis, mother of Achilles. Hera controlled Zeus, and in her rages manipulated mortals’ fate. Many men have long regarded beloved mortal women to be goddesses, and men are justifiably wary of criticizing women. The anger, wrath, and rage of women and goddesses shape the world.
In contrast to assertions of gender supremacists, women and goddesses are equal to men and gods in propensity to anger, wrath, and rage. Women and goddess, however, are more socially adept in self-presentation and more skilled in indirect aggression. In addition, women and goddess have been unfairly deprived of credit for their anger, wrath, and rage. The rage of Achilles as represented in the Iliad has been enormously influential. The rage of Demeter deserves to be equally well known.
* * * * *
Read more:
- Iambe / Baubo with obscenity cheered despondent goddess Demeter
- Zeus should have rejected Thetis’s plea for her son Achilles
- Greek women warriors danced Pyrrhic victory for gender equality
Notes:
[1] In this post, anger, wrath, and rage refer to the Homeric Greek word μῆνις (transliterated as mênis) and closely related Homeric Greek words. For detailed philological study of μῆνις in relation to Achilles as represented in the Iliad, Muellner (1996). The book summary in the online version of Meullner’s book states:
He believes that notions of anger vary between cultures and that the particular meaning of a word such as menis needs to emerge from a close study of Greek epic. Menis means more than an individual’s emotional response. On the basis of the epic exemplifications of the word, Muellner defines the term as a cosmic sanction against behavior that violates the most basic rules of human society.
For all his close study of Homeric Greek, Muellner repeatedly asserts that Hades rapes Persephone in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter. See, e.g. Muellner (1996) p. 34. That’s philologically incorrect. See note [1] in my post on Iambe / Baubo cheering Demeter.
While carelessly and expansively using the term rape in relation to males victimizing females, Muellner focuses on the benefits of females victimizing males:
What has aroused Demeter’s mênis is the forceful (βίῃ), unwilling (ἀέκουσα), and inescapable (ἀναγκῃ) removal of her divine daughter (κούρη) from the surface of the earth to the world below. In contrast to the passionate upward thrust of the mortal warrior or the insubordinate Ares, and in contrast to the uplifting, willing seduction of mortal men by goddesses, the offensive, dangerous act here is unwilled and downward in the cosmic hierarchy: not a man’s seduction but a maiden’s rape, not the immortalization of a mortal but the relegation of an immortal to the land of the dead.
Muellner (1996) p. 25. Careful attention to the meaning of the word “rape” and concern to avoid gender bias in asserting that felony crime are a particularly important matter of social justice given the vastly gender disproportionate imprisonment of men.
Trivializing the actual central meaning of the word “rape” in current English language and current criminal law, Sowa redefines it to discuss the motif of “Rape” in relation to the Homeric hymns:
Rape, as we shall use the term, describes a violent abduction often carried out for sexual purposes.
Sowa (1984) p. 121. Personally redefining words to align them with prevailing anti-men gender bigotry in interpreting ancient Greek literature is bad philology. Hades violently abducted Persephone, with the consent of her father Zeus, in order to marry her. Marriage is much broader than a “sexual purpose.” As for violent abduction, men taken captive in war and other hostilities are never considered under a specially defined “Rape” motif. Many scholars, artists, and writers have uncritically followed bigoted assertions about the “Rape” of Persephone. See, e.g. Ginevra (2020).
[2] Homeric Hymn to Demeter (Homeric Hymns 2, To Demeter {Εισ Δημητραν}), vv. 225-30, ancient Greek text and English translation (modified) from West (2003). Alternate English translations are those of Nagy (2018), Rayor (2004), Shelmerdine (1995), Foley (1994) and Evelyn-White (1914). Subsequent quotes from the Homeric Hymn to Demeter are similarly sourced.
In Egypt, Demeter was associated with the goddess Isis. In Latin literature, Demeter became associated with Ceres, and Hades and Persephone became Pluto / Dis and Proserpina.
Daughters of King Keleus of Eleusis told the disguised Demeter the names of the nominally leading men of Eleusis. These princesses knowingly declared women’s control:
The wives of all of them manage the houses.
{ τῶν πάντων ἄλοχοι κατὰ δώματα πορσαίνουσιν }
Homeric Hymn to Demeter v. 156. The houses seem to refer to royal residences in the past and religious temples in the present. Nagy (2018) n. 12. In any case, women controlled the core of ordinary life.
Subsequent quotes above from the Homeric Hymn to Demeter are vv. 241 (as he continually bloomed…), 242 (ageless and immortal), 248-9 (Demophon, my child…), 256-8 (Ignorant and foolish humans…), 305-12 (She made the most terrible year…), 347-56 (Sable-haired Hades, lord of the dead…).
[3] A similar story immortalizing / abusing a child developed in relation to the goddess Thetis, her son Achilles, and his father Peleus. See note [3] and related text in my post on Achilles and his foster-father Chiron.
[4] Demeter stated that her temple should be built in Eleusis:
above Kallichoron on a prominent hill
{ Καλλιχόρου καθύπερθεν ἐπὶ προύχοντι κολωνῶι· }
Homeric Hymn to Demeter v 272. Καλλιχόρου literally means “beautiful dancing.” Pausanias reported:
The Eleusinians have a temple of Triptolemus, of Artemis of the Portal, and of Poseidon Father, and a well called Kallichoron, where the Eleusinian women first danced and sang in praise of the goddess.
{ Ἐλευσινίοις δὲ ἔστι μὲν Τριπτολέμου ναός, ἔστι δὲ Προπυλαίας Ἀρτέμιδος καὶ Ποσειδῶνος Πατρός, φρέαρ τε καλούμενον Καλλίχορον, ἔνθα πρῶτον Ἐλευσινίων αἱ γυναῖκες χορὸν ἔστησαν καὶ ᾖσαν ἐς τὴν θεόν. }
Pausanias, Description of Greece 1.17.2 (Attica), ancient Greek text and English translation (modified slightly) from Jones (1918). Demeter could thus look down on women dancing in her praise.
The Homeric Hymn to Demeter, v. 154, refers to Eumolpus {Εὔμολπος}. He was known as one of Demeter’s first priests and a founder of the Eleusinian Mysteries. Eumolpus means literally “he who sings well.” In a cult context, singing well also implies dancing well. On Eumolpus, Nagy (2018) n. 12. Dancing, which both men and women did, was of central importance in ancient Greece.
[5] According to the hymn singer / narrator, before Hermes took Persephone away, Hades surreptitiously “gave her a honeysweet pomegranate seed to eat {ῥοιῆς κόκκον ἔδωκε φαγεῖν μελιηδέα λάθρηι}.” Homeric Hymn to Demeter, v. 372. Verses 387-40, which are significantly damaged in the sole surviving manuscript, apparently have Demeter saying fearfully that if Persephone ate any of Hades’s food, then she has to stay with him one-third of the year. Persephone then told her mother Demeter:
He put into me a pomegranate seed, honey-sweet food,
and forced me to eat it unwillingly.{ ἔμβαλέ μοι ῥοιῆς κόκκον, μελιηδέ᾿ ἐδωδήν,
ἅκουσαν δὲ βίηι με προσηνάγκασσε πάσασθαι. }
Homeric Hymn to Demeter, vv. 372, 412-3. Honey-sweet pomegranate seeds historically were associated with fertility and marriage. Bezzant, (2019), which has a forced interpretation of the evidence.
Persephone saying that she was forced to eat the pomegranate seed deflects to Hades full responsibility for Persephone spending a third of the year in the Underworld. Ancient audiences surely would have had some doubt about Persephone’s claim of being forced to eat the pomegranate seed. Clay (1989) pp. 256-7. On the implicit audience, Hendriksma (2019). Id. follows anti-meninist orthodoxy in wrongly claiming that the Homeric Hymn to Demeter includes Hades raping Persephone.
[6] From Orphic Fragment / Orphicorum Fragmenta 48 in Kern (1922), English translation from Nickel (2003) p. 59. Fragment preserved in pseudo-Justin Martyr, Exhortation to the Greeks / Cohortatio ad Graecos {Λόγος παραινέτικος πρὸς Ἕλληνας} 17.1 (from the fourth century GC). The epithet “of splendid fruit {ἀγλαόκαρπος}” is used for Demeter in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, v. 4.
Orphic hymns probably from the third century GC praise Demeter and plead to her. See Orphic hymns 40 and 41 in Athanassakis & Wolkow (2013). Mentioning Demeter’s rage in such hymns would be incongruous. Orphic Fragment 48 might come from much older Orphic poetry. On the ancient Orphic tradition, West (1983).
[7] Homer, Iliad 1.1, ancient Greek text and my English translation. “Rage — Goddess, sing the rage of Peleus’ son Achilles” is the translation of Fagles (1990). On the proem to the Iliad, Redfield (1979). The Chryses episode that takes up much of Book 1 of the Iliad might have been adapted from a preexisting Homeric hymn to Apollo. Faraone (2015). On parallels between Chryses and Demeter, Nickel (2003) pp. 73-4.
[8] The short quote “the demonic destructive power of a justified curse” is from Redfield (1979) p. 97. Demeter raged at Persephone’s father Zeus depriving Demeter of Persephone’s company. Such changes in child custody typically aren’t regarded as an acute wrong. Moreover, arranged marriages of various types and changes in household residence have been common for daughters and sons throughout history and across cultures. For example, in the first half of the fourth century BGC, Erinna lamented that her friend Baucis’s marriage brought forgetfulness:
When you went to a man’s bed, you forgot all
that you heard as a child from your mother,
dear Baucis. Aphrodite set forgetfulness in your heart.
Because of this, weeping for you, I leave behind other things.{ ἁνίκα δ’ ἐς [λ]έξος [ἀνδρός ἔβας, τ]όκα πάντ’ ἐλέσασο
ἄσσ’ ἔτι νηπιάσα[σα] τ[εᾶς παρὰ] ματρὸς ἄκουσας,
Β]αῦκι φίλα· λάθα[ν ἄρ’] ἐ[νὶ φρεσὶ θῆκ’] Ἀφροδίτα.
τῶ τυ κατακλαίοισα τὰ [κάδεα νῦν] παραλείπω· }
Erinna, Distaff {Αλακατα} vv. 15-18, ancient Greek text ed. pr. Vitelli-Norsa, Papiri Greci e Latini, ix. 1929, no. 1090, English translation (modified) from Page (1941) p. 489. For a closer, more complete translation of the Distaff, as well as Erinna’s surviving epigrams, Rayor (1991) pp. 121-4. Freely available online are more interpretative translations by Josephine Balmer and by Michael R. Burch. Erinna’s circumstances were similar to Demeter’s, but Erinna apparently didn’t seek to exterminate humanity.
The story pattern of Demeter in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter is similar to the story pattern of Achilles in the Iliad: “the same story pattern – wrath, withdrawal, and return – serves as the principal organizational device of each poem’s narrative.” Nickel (2003) p. 59. For less extensive and less detailed analysis of the commonalities, Lord (1967) and Sowa (1984) Chapter 4.
[images] (1) Hades abducting Persephone. Painting on an Apulian red-figure volute-krater. Painted c. 340 BGC by the circle of the Darius Painter. Krater preserved as accession # Inv. 1984.40 in the Altes Museum (Berlin, Germany). Source image thanks to Bibi Saint-Pol and Wikimedia Commons.
(2) Roman marble statue of Demeter standing, with restored head. Preserved as Inv. 8546, Ludovisi Collection, in Museo nazionale romano di palazzo Altemps (Rome, Italy). Source image thanks to Marie-Lan Nguyen and Wikimedia Commons.
(3) Persephone returning from the Underworld with Hermes to Demeter. Painting on a terracotta bell-krater. Painted c. 440 BGC and attributed to the Persephone Painter. Preserved as object number 28.57.23 in the Metropolitan Museum (New York, USA). Credit line: Fletcher Fund, 1928. Alternate image.
(4) Hades lustfully abducting naked Persephone. This watercolor painting is titled “Nouvelle Mythologie Amoureuse {New Love Mythology}.” Painted by Gerda Wegener and published in the review Le Sourire, July 6, 1933. Source image via Wikimedia Commons. Numerous paintings from the early modern period to the present present the myth of the “Rape of Persephone.” See, for example, such a painting by Peter Paul Rubens.
(5) Hades sexually assaulting the naked Persephone. Print by Giovanni Jacopo Caraglio, based on the design of Rosso Fiorentino, as part of his collection Gli Amori Degli Dei {The Loves of the Gods}, printed c. 1527. Source image via Wikimedia Commons. Alternate image. On Caraglio’s Loves of the Gods, Turner (2007).
References:
Athanassakis, Apostolos N., and Benjamin M. Wolkow, trans. 2013. The Orphic Hymns. Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
Bezzant, Makayla. 2019. “Pomegranate Imagery: A Symbol of Conquest and Victory.” Studia Antiqua. 18 (1): 9-15.
Clay, Jenny Strauss. 1989. The Politics of Olympus: Form and Meaning in the Major Homeric Hymns. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press. Review by Christian Werner.
Evelyn-White, Hugh G. 1914. The Homeric Hymns and Homerica. London: William Heinemann Ltd.
Fagles, Robert, trans. and Bernard Knox, intro. and notes. 1990. The Iliad. New York, N.Y., U.S.A.: Viking.
Faraone, Christopher A. 2015. “On the Eve of Epic: Did the Chryses Episode in Iliad I Begin Its Life as a Separate Homeric Hymn?” Chapter 15 (pp. 397-428) in Ilya Kliger and Boris Maslov, eds. 2015. Persistent Forms: Explorations in Historical Poetics. New York, NY: Fordham University Press.
Foley, Helene P. 1994. The Homeric Hymn to Demeter: Translation, Commentary, and Interpretive Essays. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Review by William Thalmann.
Ginevra, Riccardo. 2020. “The Poetics of Distress, the Rape of the Heavenly Maiden, and the Most Ancient Sleeping Beauty: Oralistic, Linguistic, and Comparative Perspectives on the (Pre-)Historical Development of the Homeric Hymn to Demeter.” Center for Hellenic Studies (CHS) Research Bulletin 8.
Hendriksma, Judith A. 2019. Text and Context: The Narrative Audience of the Homeric Hymn to Demeter and the Cult at Eleusis. RMA Thesis, Utrecht University.
Jones, W. H. S., ed. and trans. 1918. Pausanias. Description of Greece. Volume I: Books 1-2. Loeb Classical Library 93. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Kern, Otto. 1922. Orphicorum Fragmenta. Berolini Apud Weidmannos.
Lord, Mary Louise. 1967. “Withdrawal and Return: An Epic Story Pattern in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter and in the Homeric Poems.” The Classical Journal. 62 (6): 241–48.
Muellner, Leonard Charles. 1996. The Anger of Achilles: Mênis in Greek Epic. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. Alternate source. Review by Michael Lynn-George.
Nagy, Gregory. 2018. “Homeric Hymn to Demeter.” Online at The Center for Hellenic Studies.
Nickel, Roberto. 2003. “The Wrath of Demeter: Story Pattern in the Hymn to Demeter.” Quaderni Urbinati di Cultura Classica. 73 (1): 59–82.
Page, Denys L., trans. 1941. Select Papyri, Volume III: Poetry. Loeb Classical Library 360. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Rayor, Diane J. 1991. Sappho’s Lyre: Archaic Lyric and Women Poets of Ancient Greece. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Rayor, Diane J. 2004. The Homeric Hymns: A Translation with Introduction and Notes. Updated edition, 2014. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. Rayor’s translation of the Homeric Hymn to Demeter (Homeric Hymns 2). Review by Stephen Evans.
Redfield, James. 1979. “The Proem of the Iliad: Homer’s Art.” Classical Philology. 74 (2): 95–110.
Shelmerdine, Susan C., trans. 1995. The Homeric Hymns. Newburyport, MA: Focus Information Group. Review by Ingrid Holmberg.
Sowa, Cora Angier. 1984. Traditional Themes and the Homeric Hymns. Chicago: Bolchazy-Carducci. Excerpts.
Turner, James Grantham. 2007. “Caraglio’s Loves of the Gods.” Print Quarterly. 24 (4): 359–80.
West, Martin L. 1983. The Orphic Poems. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
West, Martin L., ed. and trans. 2003. Homeric Hymns. Homeric Apocrypha. Lives of Homer. Loeb Classical Library 496. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Review by R. Garner.