The myth of Icarus and Daedalus Amy Adkins

In mythological ancient Greece,

soaring above Crete on wings made
from wax and feathers,

Icarus, the son of Daedalus,
defied the laws of both man and nature.

Ignoring the warnings of his father,
he rose higher and higher.

To witnesses on the ground,
he looked like a god,

and as he peered down from above,
he felt like one, too.

But, in mythological ancient Greece,

the line that separated god from man
was absolute

and the punishment for mortals
who attempted to cross it was severe.

Such was the case for Icarus and Daedalus.

Years before Icarus was born,

his father Daedalus was highly regarded
as a genius inventor,

craftsman,

and sculptor in his homeland of Athens.

He invented carpentry
and all the tools used for it.

He designed the first bathhouse

and the first dance floor.

He made sculptures so lifelike
that Hercules mistook them for actual men.

Though skilled and celebrated,
Daedalus was egotistical and jealous.

Worried that his nephew
was a more skillful craftsman,

Daedalus murdered him.

As punishment, Daedalus was banished
from Athens and made his way to Crete.

Preceded by his storied reputation,

Daedalus was welcomed
with open arms by Crete’s King Minos.

There, acting as the palace
technical advisor,

Daedalus continued to push the boundaries.

For the king’s children,

he made mechanically animated toys
that seemed alive.

He invented the ship’s sail and mast,
which gave humans control over the wind.

With every creation, Daedalus challenged
human limitations

that had so far kept mortals
separate from gods,

until finally, he broke right through.

King Minos’s wife, Pasiphaë,
had been cursed by the god Poseidon

to fall in love
with the king’s prized bull.

Under this spell, she asked Daedalus
to help her seduce it.

With characteristic audacity, he agreed.

Daedalus constructed a hollow
wooden cow

so realistic that it fooled the bull.

With Pasiphaë hiding inside
Daedalus’s creation,

she conceived and gave birth
to the half-human half-bull minotaur.

This, of course, enraged the king

who blamed Daedalus for enabling
such a horrible perversion of natural law.

As punishment, Daedalus was forced
to construct an inescapable labyrinth

beneath the palace for the minotaur.

When it was finished, Minos then
imprisoned Daedalus

and his only son Icarus

within the top of the tallest tower
on the island

where they were to remain
for the rest of their lives.

But Daedalus was still a genius inventor.

While observing the birds
that circled his prison,

the means for escape became clear.

He and Icarus would fly away
from their prison

as only birds or gods could do.

Using feathers from the flocks
that perched on the tower,

and the wax from candles,

Daedalus constructed two pairs
of giant wings.

As he strapped the wings
to his son Icarus,

he gave a warning:

flying too near the ocean
would dampen the wings

and make them too heavy to use.

Flying too near the sun,

the heat would melt the wax
and the wings would disintegrate.

In either case, they surely would die.

Therefore, the key to their escape
would be in keeping to the middle.

With the instructions clear,
both men leapt from the tower.

They were the first mortals ever to fly.

While Daedalus stayed carefully
to the midway course,

Icarus was overwhelmed
with the ecstasy of flight

and overcome with the feeling of
divine power that came with it.

Daedalus could only watch in horror
as Icarus ascended higher and higher,

powerless to change his son’s dire fate.

When the heat from the sun melted
the wax on his wings,

Icarus fell from the sky.

Just as Daedalus had many times ignored

the consequences of defying
the natural laws of mortal men

in the service of his ego,

Icarus was also carried away
by his own hubris.

In the end,

both men paid for their departure
from the path of moderation dearly,

Icarus with his life

and Daedalus with his regret.

在神话中的古希腊,代达罗斯之子伊卡洛斯

乘着蜡和羽毛制成的翅膀翱翔在克里特岛上

空,他
违背了人类和自然的法则。

他不顾父亲的警告,越
爬越高。

在地上的目击者
看来,他就像神

一样,从上面往下看
,他也觉得自己是神。

但是,在神话中的古希腊

,神与人的界线
是绝对

的,
凡人试图越过它,就会受到严厉的惩罚。

伊卡洛斯和代达罗斯就是这种情况。

在伊卡洛斯出生前几年,

他的父亲代达罗斯在他的家乡雅典被高度评价
为天才发明家、

工匠

和雕塑家。

他发明了木工
和所有用于木工的工具。

他设计了第一个澡堂

和第一个舞池。

他制作的雕塑栩栩如生
,以至于赫拉克勒斯把它们误认为是真人。 代达罗斯

虽然技艺高超且
享有盛誉,但自负和嫉妒。

担心他的侄子
是一个更熟练的工匠,

代达罗斯谋杀了他。

作为惩罚,代达罗斯被驱逐
出雅典并前往克里特岛。 代达罗斯

在其声名远播之前,

受到克里特岛国王米诺斯的张开双臂欢迎。

在那里,作为宫殿
技术顾问,

代达罗斯继续突破界限。 他

为国王的孩子

们制作
了似乎有生命的机械动画玩具。

他发明了船的帆和桅杆,
使人类能够控制风。

代达罗斯的每一次创造都挑战

了迄今为止使
凡人与神隔绝的人类限制,

直到最后,他突破了。

米诺斯国王的妻子
帕西法埃被波塞冬神诅咒

爱上了国王珍贵的公牛。

在这个咒语下,她要求代
达罗斯帮助她引诱它。

他以特有的胆量同意了。

代达罗斯建造了一头空心
木牛,

如此逼真以至于它愚弄了公牛。

帕西法埃隐藏在
代达罗斯的创造物中,

她怀孕并
生下了半人半牛的牛头怪。

当然,这激怒了国王

,他指责代达罗斯
促成了对自然法则的如此可怕的歪曲。

作为惩罚,代达罗斯
被迫在宫殿下为牛头怪建造了一个无法逃脱的迷宫

完成后,米诺斯将
代达罗斯

和他唯一的儿子伊卡洛斯囚禁

在岛上最高的塔顶

,他们将在那里
度过余生。

但代达罗斯仍然是一位天才发明家。

一边观察在
他的牢笼里盘旋的鸟儿,

逃跑的手段变得清晰起来。

他和伊卡洛斯会
飞离他们的监狱,

就像只有鸟或神才能做的那样。 代达罗斯


栖息在塔上的羊群的羽毛

和蜡烛的蜡

制成了两
对巨大的翅膀。

当他把翅膀绑在
儿子伊卡洛斯

身上时,他发出警告:

飞得太近海洋
会弄湿翅膀

,使它们太重而无法使用。

飞得太近太阳

,热量会融化蜡
,翅膀会解体。

无论哪种情况,他们肯定会死。

因此,他们逃脱的关键
将是保持在中间。

指示清楚后,
两人从塔上跃下。

他们是第一批飞行的凡人。

当代达罗斯小心翼翼
地保持在中途时,

伊卡洛斯被
飞行的狂喜所淹没,

并被
随之而来的神圣力量的感觉所征服。

代达罗斯只能惊恐地看着
伊卡洛斯升得越来越高,

无力改变他儿子可怕的命运。

当太阳的热量融化
了他翅膀上的蜡时,

伊卡洛斯从天而降。

正如代达罗斯多次忽视

为自我服务而
违背凡人自然法则的后果一样

伊卡洛斯也
被他自己的狂妄所带走。

最后,

两个人都为他们
从温和的道路上的离开付出了沉重的代价,

伊卡洛斯付出了生命

,代达罗斯付出了遗憾。