.....Return here to the What The Fire Said home page.....

Andromeda and the Monster



It was, of course, asking for trouble. When Queen Cassiopeia made the claim that she considered herself more beautiful even than the sea nymphs of Poseidon, the god who was the sea demanded retribution. Chained to an offshore rock, her daughter Andromeda now waits in helpless terror for the arrival of the sea monster that will devour her. In myth, victorious rescue is preordained, and the hero Perseus will arrive from the skies to do battle with the monster and win fair Andromeda’s hand.

Perhaps the myth hints at other possibilities. Perhaps the princess is more powerful than this traditionally masculine reading of the myth allows her to be. Andromeda, with all the power she commands, has made a pact with the serpent, who is really her guardian. Entwining her in its radiant coils, the monster will protect the princess against all threats.

Understanding none of this, brash Perseus in his glinting armour wings towards the pair above the moonlit Mediterranean waves, and the monster, to protect its mistress, knows that it must join battle with the meddlesome hero. Andromeda, princess of monsters, must wish that the outcome will favour her protector, although the myth dictates otherwise. And yet she must hope against hope that, for once, the myth will be rewritten in the monster’s favour.

No comments:

Post a Comment

You are welcome to share your thoughts.