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Pandora's box

Pandora's box is an artifact in Greek mythology connected with the myth of Pandora in Hesiod's c. 700 B.C. poem Works and Days.[1] Hesiod related that curiosity led her to open a container left in the care of her husband, thus releasing curses upon mankind. Later depictions of the story have been varied, with some literary and artistic treatments focusing more on the contents than on Pandora herself.

Lawrence Alma-Tadema's water-colour of an ambivalent Pandora, 1881
A pithos from Crete, c. 675 BC. Louvre

The container mentioned in the original account was actually a large storage jar, but the word was later mistranslated. In modern times an idiom has grown from the story meaning "Any source of great and unexpected troubles",[2] or alternatively "A present which seems valuable but which in reality is a curse".[3]

In mythology edit

 
An Attic pyxis, 440–430 BC. British Museum

According to Hesiod, when Prometheus stole fire from heaven, Zeus, the king of the gods, took vengeance by presenting Pandora to Prometheus' brother Epimetheus. Pandora opened a jar left in her care containing sickness, death and many other unspecified evils which were then released into the world.[4] Though she hastened to close the container, only one thing was left behind – usually translated as Hope, though it could also have the pessimistic meaning of "deceptive expectation".[5]

From this story has grown the idiom "to open a Pandora's box", meaning to do or start something that will cause many unforeseen problems.[6] A modern, more colloquial equivalent is "to open a can of worms".[7] Pandora's box is a metaphor for something that brings about great troubles or misfortune, but also holds hope. In Greek mythology, Pandora's box was a gift from the gods to Pandora, the first woman on Earth. It contained all the evils of the world, which were released when Pandora opened the box. However, it also contained hope, which remained inside the box. Symbolically, the box represents the curiosity and desire for knowledge that can lead to both negative consequences and positive outcomes. The evils inside the box can be seen as the challenges and difficulties of life, while the hope represents the optimism and resilience to overcome those challenges.[8]

Etymology of the "box" edit

The word translated as "box" was actually a large jar (πίθος pithos) in Greek.[9][10] Pithoi were used for storage of wine, oil, grain or other provisions, or, ritually, as a container for a human body for burying, from which it was believed souls escaped and necessarily returned.[11] Many scholars see a close analogy between Pandora herself, who was made from clay, and the clay jar which dispenses evils.[12]

The mistranslation of pithos is usually attributed to the 16th-century humanist Erasmus who, in his Latin account of the story of Pandora, changed the Greek pithos to pyxis, meaning "box".[13] The context in which the story appeared was Erasmus' collection of proverbs, the Adagia (1508), in illustration of the Latin saying Malo accepto stultus sapit (from experiencing trouble a fool is made wise). In his version the box is opened by Epimetheus, whose name means 'Afterthought' – or as Hesiod comments, "he whom mistakes made wise".[14]

Different versions of the container edit

Contents edit

There were alternative accounts of jars or urns containing blessings and evils bestowed upon humanity in Greek myth, of which a very early account is related in Homer's Iliad:

On the floor of Jove's palace there stand two urns, the one filled with evil gifts, and the other with good ones. He for whom Jove the lord of thunder mixes the gifts he sends, will meet now with good and now with evil fortune; but he to whom Jove sends none but evil gifts will be pointed at by the finger of scorn, the hand of famine will pursue him to the ends of the world, and he will go up and down the face of the earth, respected neither by gods nor men.[15]

In a major departure from Hesiod, the 6th-century BC Greek elegiac poet Theognis of Megara states that

Hope is the only good god remaining among mankind;
the others have left and gone to Olympus.
Trust, a mighty god has gone, Restraint has gone from men,
and the Graces, my friend, have abandoned the earth.
Men's judicial oaths are no longer to be trusted, nor does anyone
revere the immortal gods; the race of pious men has perished and
men no longer recognize the rules of conduct or acts of piety.[16]

 
Giulio Bonasone's 16th century engraving of Epimetheus opening the fatal jar

The poem seems to hint at a myth in which the jar contained blessings rather than evils. It is confirmed in the new era by an Aesopic fable recorded by Babrius, in which the gods send the jar containing blessings to humans. Rather than a named female, it was a generic "foolish man" (ἀκρατὴς ἄνθρωπος) who opened the jar out of curiosity and let them escape. Once the lid was replaced, only hope remained, "promising that she will bestow on each of us the good things that have gone away." This aetiological version is numbered 312 in the Perry Index.[17]

In the Renaissance, the story of the jar was revisited by two immensely influential writers, Andrea Alciato in his Emblemata (1534) and the Neo-Latin poet Gabriele Faerno in his collection of a hundred fables (Fabulum Centum, 1563). Alciato only alluded to the story while depicting the goddess Hope seated on a jar in which, she declares, "I alone stayed behind at home when evils fluttered all around, as the revered muse of the old poet [Hesiod] has told you".[18] Faerno's short poem also addressed the origin of hope but in this case it is the remainder of the "universal blessings" (bona universa) that have escaped: "Of all good things that mortals lack,/Hope in the soul alone stays back."[19]

An idea of the nature of the blessings lost is given in a Renaissance engraving by Giulio Bonasone, where the culprit is Pandora's husband, Epimetheus. He is shown holding the lid of a large storage jar from which female representations of the Roman virtues are flying up into the air. They are identified by their names in Latin: security (salus), harmony (concordia), fairness (aequitas), mercy (clementia), freedom (libertas), happiness (felicitas), peace (pax), worth (virtus) and joy (laetitia). Hope (spes) is delayed on the lip and holds aloft the flower that is her attribute.[20]

Difficulties of interpretation edit

In Hesiodic scholarship, the interpretive crux has endured:[21] Is the hope imprisoned within a jar full of evils to be considered a benefit for humanity, or a further curse? A number of mythology textbooks echo the sentiments of M. L. West: "[Hope's retention in the jar] is comforting, and we are to be thankful for this antidote to our present ills."[22] Some scholars such as Mark Griffith, however, take the opposite view: "[Hope] seems to be a blessing withheld from men so that their life should be the more dreary and depressing."[23] The interpretation hangs on two related questions: First, how is elpis to be rendered, the Greek word usually translated as "hope"? Second, does the jar preserve elpis for people, or keep it away from them?

As with most ancient Greek words, elpis can be translated in a number of ways. A number of scholars prefer the neutral translation of "expectation". Classical authors use the word elpis to mean "expectation of bad", as well as "expectation of good". Statistical analysis demonstrates that the latter sense appears five times more than the former in all of extant ancient Greek literature.[24] Others hold the minority view that elpis should be rendered "expectation of evil" (vel sim).[25]

The answer to the first question largely depends on the answer to the second one: should the jar be interpreted as a prison, or a pantry?[26] The jar certainly serves as a prison for the evils that Pandora released – they only affect humanity once outside the jar. Some have argued that logic dictates, therefore, that the jar acts as a prison for elpis as well, withholding it from the human race.[27] If elpis means expectant hope, then the myth's tone is pessimistic: All the evils in the world were scattered from Pandora's jar, while the one potentially mitigating force, hope, remains locked securely inside.[28] A less pessimistic interpretation understands the myth to say: countless evils fled Pandora's jar and plague human existence; the hope that humanity might be able to master these evils remains imprisoned inside the jar. Life is not hopeless, but human beings are hopelessly human.[29]

It is also argued that hope was simply one of the evils in the jar, the false kind of hope, and was no good for humanity, since, later in the poem, Hesiod writes that hope is empty (498) and no good (500) and makes humanity lazy by taking away their industriousness, making them prone to evil.[30]

In Human, All Too Human, philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche argued that "Zeus did not want man to throw his life away, no matter how much the other evils might torment him, but rather to go on letting himself be tormented anew. To that end, he gives man hope. In truth, it is the most evil of evils because it prolongs man's torment."[31]

An objection to the "hope is good/the jar is a prison" interpretation counters that, if the jar is full of evils, then what is expectant hope – a blessing – doing among them? This objection leads some to render elpis as the expectation of evil, which would make the myth's tone somewhat optimistic: although mankind is troubled by all the evils in the world, at least it is spared the continual expectation of evil, which would make life unbearable.[25]

The optimistic reading of the myth is expressed by M. L. West. Elpis takes the more common meaning of expectant hope. And while the jar served as a prison for the evils that escaped, it thereafter serves as a residence for Hope. West explains, "It would be absurd to represent either the presence of ills by their confinement in a jar or the presence of hope by its escape from one."[32] Hope is thus preserved as a benefit for humans.[33]

Fixing the blame edit

Neither Alciato nor Faerno had named who was responsible for opening the jar beyond saying it was a "mortal". During the Renaissance it is the name of Epimetheus that is mentioned as often as not, as in the engraving by Bonasone noticed above and the mention of Pandora's partner in a rondeau that Isaac de Benserade took it on himself to insert into his light-hearted version of the Metamorphoses (1676) - although Ovid had not in fact written about it himself.[34]

 
Pandora seated with her husband Epimetheus, who has just opened her jar of curses; an etching by Sébastien Le Clerc (1676)

In a jar an odious treasure is
Shut by the gods' wish:
A gift that's not everyday,
The owner's Pandora alone;
And her eyes, this in hand,
Command the best in the land
As she flits near and far;
Prettiness can't stay
Shut in a jar.
Someone took her eye, he took
A look at what pleased her so
And out came the grief and woe
We won't ever be rid of,
For heaven had hidden
That in the jar.

The etching by Sébastien Le Clerc that accompanied the poem in the book shows Pandora and Epimetheus seated on either side of a jar from which clouds of smoke emerge, carrying up the escaping evils. The lid of the jar is quite plainly in Epimetheus' hand.[35] Paolo Farinati, an earlier Venetian artist, was also responsible for a print which laid the blame on Epimetheus, depicting him as lifting the lid from the jar that Pandora is holding. Out of it boils a cloud which carries up a man and a dragon; between them they support a scroll reading "sero nimirum sapere caepit" (finding out too late), in reference to the meaning of Epimetheus' name in Greek.

 
An Allegory of Les Sciences qui Éclairent l'esprit de l'homme (The Sciences that Illuminate the Human Spirit, 1557), an etching ascribed to Marco Angelo del Moro

Another Venetian print, ascribed to Marco Angelo del Moro (active 1565 – 1586), is much more enigmatic. Usually titled "Pandora's Box, or The Sciences that Illuminate the Human Spirit", it portrays a woman in antique dress opening an ornate coffer from which spill books, manuscripts, snakes and bats. By Pandora's side is a woman carrying a burning brand, while a horned figure flees in the opposite direction. Above is a curved vault painted with signs of the zodiac to which the sun-god Apollo is pointing, while opposite him another figure falls through the stars. Commentators ascribe different meanings to these symbols as contradictory as the contents of the chest. In one reading, the hand Pandora holds up to her face makes her the figure of Ignorance.[36] Alternatively her eyes are protected because she is dazzled and the snakes crawling from the chest are ancient symbols of wisdom.[37] Apollo, seated above, points to Aquarius, the zodiacal sign of January/February, which marks the "Ascent of the Sun" from the trough of winter. The falling figure opposite him may be identified either as Lucifer or as night fleeing before the dawn; in either case, the darkness of ignorance is about to be dispelled. The question remains whether the box thus opened will in the end be recognised as a blessing; whether the ambiguous nature of knowledge is either to help or to hurt.

In later centuries the emphasis in art has generally been on the person of Pandora. With few exceptions, the box has appeared merely as her attribute. René Magritte's street scene of 1951, however, one of the few modern paintings to carry the title "Pandora's Box", is as enigmatic as were the Renaissance allegorical prints.[38]

Theatre edit

In the first half of the 18th-century, three French plays were produced with the title "Pandora's Box" (La Boîte – or Boëte – de Pandore). In each of these, the main interest is in the social and human effects of the evils released from the box and in only one of them does Pandora figure as a character. The 1721 play by Alain René Lesage appeared as part of the longer La Fausse Foire.[39] It was a one-act prose drama of 24 scenes in the commedia dell'arte style. At its opening, Mercury has been sent in the guise of Harlequin to check whether the box given by Jupiter to the animated statue Pandora has been opened. He proceeds to stir up disruption in her formerly happy village, unleashing ambition, competition, greed, envy, jealousy, hatred, injustice, treachery and ill-health. Amid the social breakdown, Pierrot falls out with the bride he was about to marry at the start of the play and she becomes engaged instead to a social upstart.

The play by Philippe Poisson (1682-1743) was a one-act verse comedy first produced in 1729. There Mercury visits the realm of Pluto to interview the ills shortly to be unleashed on mankind. The characters Old Age, Migraine, Destitution, Hatred, Envy, Paralysis, Quinsy, Fever and Transport (emotional instability) report their effects to him. They are preceded by Love, who argues that he deserves to figure among them as a bringer of social disruption.[40] The later play of 1743 was written by Pierre Brumoy and subtitled "curiosity punished" (la curiosité punie).[41] The three-act satirical verse comedy is set in the home of Epimetheus and the six children recently created by Prometheus. Mercury comes on a visit, bringing the fatal box with him. In it are the evils soon to subvert the innocence of the new creations. Firstly seven flatterers: the Genius of Honours, of Pleasures, Riches, Gaming (pack of cards in hand), Taste, Fashion (dressed as Harlequin) and False Knowledge. These are followed by seven bringers of evil: envy, remorse, avarice, poverty, scorn, ignorance and inconstancy. The corrupted children are rejected by Prometheus but Hope arrives at the end to bring a reconciliation.

It is evident from these plays that, in France at least, blame had shifted from Pandora to the trickster god who contrives and enjoys mankind's subversion. Although physical ills are among the plagues that visit humanity, greater emphasis is given to the disruptive passions which destroy the possibility of harmonious living.

Poetry edit

 
Dante Gabriel Rossetti's painting of Pandora holding the box, 1871

Two poems in English dealing with Pandora's opening of the box are in the form of monologues, although Frank Sayers preferred the term monodrama for his recitation with lyrical interludes, written in 1790. In this Pandora is descending from Heaven after being endowed with gifts by the gods and therefore feels empowered to open the casket she carries, releasing strife, care, pride, hatred and despair. Only the voice of Hope is left to comfort her at the end.[42] In the poem by Samuel Phelps Leland (1839-1910), Pandora has already arrived in the household of Epimetheus and feels equally confident that she is privileged to satisfy her curiosity, but with a worse result. Shutting the lid too early, she thus "let loose all curses on mankind/ Without a hope to mitigate their pain".[43] This is the dilemma expressed in the sonnet that Dante Gabriel Rossetti wrote to accompany his oil painting of 1869–71. The gifts with which Pandora has been endowed and that made her desirable are ultimately subverted, "the good things turned to ill…Nor canst thou know/ If Hope still pent there be alive or dead."[44] In his painting Rossetti underlines the point as a fiery halo streams upward from the opening casket on which is inscribed the motto NESCITUR IGNESCITUR (unknown it burns).

While the speakers of the verse monologues are characters hurt by their own simplicity, Rossetti's painting of the red-robed Pandora, with her expressive gaze and elongated hands about the jewelled casket, is a more ambiguous figure. So too is the girl in Lawrence Alma-Tadema's watercolour of Pandora (see above), as the comments of some of its interpreters indicate. Sideways against a seascape, red-haired and naked, she gazes down at the urn lifted towards her "with a look of animal curiosity", according to one contemporary reviewer,[45] or else "lost in contemplation of some treasure from the deep" according to another account.[46] A moulded sphinx on the unopened lid of the urn is turned in her direction. In the iconography of the time, such a figure is usually associated with the femme fatale,[47] but in this case, the crown of hyacinths about her head identifies Pandora as an innocent Greek maiden.[48] Nevertheless, the presence of the sphinx at which she gazes with such curiosity suggests a personality on the cusp, on the verge of gaining some harmful knowledge that will henceforth negate her uncomplicated qualities. The name of Pandora already tells her future.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hesiod, Works and Days. 47ff. 2021-02-25 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Chambers Dictionary, 1998
  3. ^ Brewer's Concise Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, 1992
  4. ^ Cf. Hesiod, Works and Days, (90). "For ere this the tribes of men lived on earth remote and free from ills and hard toil and heavy sicknesses which bring the Fates upon men ... Only Hope remained there in an unbreakable home within under the rim of the great jar, and did not fly out at the door; for ere that, the lid of the jar stopped her, by the will of Aegis-holding Zeus who gathers the clouds. But the rest, countless plagues, wander amongst men; for earth is full of evils and the sea is full. Of themselves diseases come upon men continually by day and by night, bringing mischief to mortals silently; for wise Zeus took away speech from them."
  5. ^ Brill's Companion to Hesiod, Leiden NL 2009, p.77 2023-01-02 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English". from the original on 2019-04-22. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
  7. ^ Ammer, Christine (2013). The American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms, Second Edition. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 342. ISBN 978-0-547-67658-6.
  8. ^ James, Frances C., and Charles E. McCulloch. "Multivariate analysis in ecology and systematics: panacea or Pandora's box?." Annual review of Ecology and Systematics 21.1 (1990): 129-166.
  9. ^ Schlegel and Weinfield, "Introduction to Hesiod" p. 6
  10. ^ Meagher 2314, p. 148
  11. ^ Cf. Harrison, Jane Ellen, Prolegomena to the Study of Greek history, Chapter II, "The Pithoigia", pp.42-43. Cf. also Figure 7 which shows an ancient Greek pot painting in the University of Jena where Hermes is presiding over a body in a pithos buried in the ground. "In the vase painting in fig.7 from a lekythos in the University Museum of Jena we see a Pithoigia of quite other and solemn booty. A large pithos is sunk deep into the ground. It has served as a grave. ... The vase-painting in fig. 7 must not be regarded as an actual conscious representation of the rupent rite performed on the first day of the Anthesteria. It is more general in content; it is in fact simply a representation of ideas familiar to every Greek, that the pithos was a grave-jar, that from such grave-jars souls escaped and to them necessarily returned, and that Hermes was Psychopompos, Evoker and Revoker of souls. The vase-painting is in fact only another form of the scene so often represented on Athenian white lekythoi, in which the souls flutter round the grave-stele. The grave-jar is but the earlier form of sepulture; the little winged figures, the Keres, are identical in both classes of vase-painting."
  12. ^ Cf. Jenifer Neils 2005, p.41 especially: "They ignore, however, Hesiod's description of Pandora's pithos as arrektoisi or unbreakable. This adjective, which is usually applied to objects of metal, such as gold fetters and hobbles in Homer (Il. 13.37, 15.20), would strongly imply that the jar is made of metal rather than earthenware, which is obviously capable of being broken."
  13. ^ Meagher 1995, p. 56. In his notes to Hesiod's Works and Days (p.168) M.L. West has surmised that Erasmus may have confused the story of Pandora with that found elsewhere of a box which was opened by Psyche.
  14. ^ William Watson Baker, The Adages of Erasmus, University of Toronto 2001, 1 i 31, p.32
  15. ^ Iliad, 24:527ff 2020-02-02 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ Theognis, 1135ff.
  17. ^ "Aesopica". from the original on 2018-12-05. Retrieved 2018-04-12.
  18. ^ "In simulachrum spei". from the original on 2021-05-06. Retrieved 2018-04-12.
  19. ^ Fabulum Centum, London 1743, Fable 94, p.216 2023-01-02 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ "Metropolitan Museum". from the original on 2021-01-24. Retrieved 2018-04-12.
  21. ^ Though Pandora was not a subject of medieval art, Dora Panofsky and Erwin Panofsky examined the post-Renaissance mythos, see Bibliography
  22. ^ West 1978, p. 169.
  23. ^ Griffith 1983:250.
  24. ^ Leinieks 1984, 1–4.
  25. ^ a b E.g., Verdenius 1985; Blumer 2001.
  26. ^ The prison/pantry terminology comes from Verdenius 1985 ad 96.
  27. ^ Scholars holding this view (e.g., Walcot 1961, 250) point out that the jar is termed an "unbreakable" (in Greek: arrektos) house. In Greek literature (e.g., Homer, and elsewhere in Hesiod), the word arrektos is applied to structures meant to sequester or otherwise restrain its contents.
  28. ^ See Griffith 1984 above.
  29. ^ Thus Athanassakis 1983 in his commentary ad Works 96.
  30. ^ Cf. Jenifer Neils, in The Girl in the Pithos: Hesiod's Elpis, in "Periklean Athens and its Legacy. Problems and Perspectives" 2023-01-02 at the Wayback Machine, pp. 40–41 especially.
  31. ^ Nietzsche, Friedrich, Human, All Too Human. Cf. Section Two, On the History of Moral Feelings, aph. 71. "Hope. Pandora brought the jar with the evils and opened it. It was the gods' gift to man, on the outside a beautiful, enticing gift, called the 'lucky jar.' Then all the evils, those lively, winged beings, flew out of it. Since that time, they roam around and do harm to men by day and night. One single evil had not yet slipped out of the jar. As Zeus had wished, Pandora slammed the top down and it remained inside. So now man has the lucky jar in his house forever and thinks the world of the treasure. It is at his service; he reaches for it when he fancies it. For he does not know that the jar which Pandora brought was the jar of evils, and he takes the remaining evil for the greatest worldly good—it is hope, for Zeus did not want man to throw his life away, no matter how much the other evils might torment him, but rather to go on letting himself be tormented anew. To that end, he gives man hope. In truth, it is the most evil of evils because it prolongs man's torment."
  32. ^ West 1978, 169–70.
  33. ^ Taking the jar to serve as a prison at some times and as a pantry at others will also accommodate another pessimistic interpretation of the myth. In this reading, attention is paid to the phrase moune Elpis – "only hope," or "hope alone." A minority opinion construes the phrase instead to mean "empty hope" or "baseless hope": not only are humans plagued by a multitude of evils, but they persist in the fruitless hope that things might get better. Thus Beall 1989 227–28.
  34. ^ Metamorphoses d’Ovide en rondeaux (1714 edition), "Pandore", pp. 10-11
  35. ^ Panofsky 1956, p.79 2020-04-30 at the Wayback Machine
  36. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-01-23. Retrieved 2018-01-22.
  37. ^ Count Leopoldo Cicognara, Le premier siècle de la calcographie; ou, Catalogue raisonné des estampes, Venice 1837, pp.532-3 2023-01-02 at the Wayback Machine
  38. ^ "Yale University Art Gallery". from the original on 2018-01-23. Retrieved 2018-01-22.
  39. ^ Oeuvres choisies de Lesage, Paris 1810, vol.4, pp.409 – 450 2023-01-02 at the Wayback Machine
  40. ^ "Théâtre Classique" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2017-06-30. Retrieved 2018-01-23.
  41. ^ Brumoy, Pierre (1743). "La Haye 1743". from the original on 2023-01-02. Retrieved 2018-01-23.
  42. ^ Poems, Norwich 1803, pp.213-19 2023-01-02 at the Wayback Machine
  43. ^ Poems, Chicago 1866, pp.24-5 2023-01-02 at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ Rossetti Archive
  45. ^ The Pall Mall Budget 1882, vol. 27, p.14 2023-01-02 at the Wayback Machine
  46. ^ The Life and Work of L. Alma Tadema, Art Journal Office, 1888, p.22
  47. ^ Lothar Hönnighausen, Präraphaeliten und Fin de Siècle, Cambridge University 1988, pp.232-40 2023-01-02 at the Wayback Machine
  48. ^ Victoria Sherrow, Encyclopedia of Hair: A Cultural History, Greenwood Publishing Group 2006, A 2023-01-02 at the Wayback Machine

Bibliography edit

  • Athanassakis, Apostolos, Hesiod: Theogony, Works and Days and The Shield of Heracles. Translation, introduction and commentary, Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore and London, 1983. Cf. P.90
  • Beall, E. "The Contents of Hesiod's Pandora Jar: Erga 94–98," Hermes 117 (1989) 227–30.
  • Gantz, Timothy, Early Greek Myth: A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996, Two volumes: ISBN 978-0-8018-5360-9 (Vol. 1), ISBN 978-0-8018-5362-3 (Vol. 2).
  • Griffith, Mark. Aeschylus Prometheus Bound Text and Commentary (Cambridge 1983).
  • Hesiod; Works and Days, in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White, Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Lamberton, Robert, Hesiod, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1988. ISBN 0-300-04068-7. Cf. Chapter II, "The Theogony", and Chapter III, "The Works and Days", especially pp. 96–103 for a side-by-side comparison and analysis of the Pandora story.
  • Leinieks, V. "Elpis in Hesiod, Works and Days 96," Philologus 128 (1984) 1–8.
  • Meagher, Robert E.; The Meaning of Helen: in Search of an Ancient Icon, Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, 1995. ISBN 978-0-86516-510-6.
  • Neils, Jenifer, "The Girl in the Pithos: Hesiod's Elpis", in Periklean Athens and its Legacy. Problems and Perspective, eds. J. M. Barringer and J. M. Hurwit (Austin: University of Texas Press), 2005, pp. 37–45.
  • Panofsky, Dora and Erwin. Pandora's Box. The Changing Aspects of a Mythical Symbol (New York: Pantheon, Bollingen series) 1956.
  • Revard, Stella P., "Milton and Myth" in Reassembling Truth: Twenty-first-century Milton, edited by Charles W. Durham, Kristin A. Pruitt, Susquehanna University Press, 2003. ISBN 9781575910628.
  • Rose, Herbert Jennings, A Handbook of Greek Literature; From Homer to the Age of Lucian, London, Methuen & Co., Ltd., 1934. Cf. especially Chapter III, Hesiod and the Hesiodic Schools, p. 61
  • Schlegel, Catherine and Henry Weinfield, "Introduction to Hesiod" in Hesiod / Theogony and Works and Days, University of Michigan Press, 2006. ISBN 978-0-472-06932-3.
  • Verdenius, Willem Jacob, A Commentary on Hesiod Works and Days vv 1-382 (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1985). ISBN 90-04-07465-1. This work has a very in-depth discussion and synthesis of the various theories and speculations about the Pandora story and the jar. Cf. p. 62 & 63 and onwards.
  • West, M. L. Hesiod, Works and Days, ed. with prolegomena and commentary (Oxford 1978)

External links edit

  Media related to Pandora at Wikimedia Commons

pandora, this, article, about, mythological, artifact, other, uses, disambiguation, artifact, greek, mythology, connected, with, myth, pandora, hesiod, poem, works, days, hesiod, related, that, curiosity, open, container, left, care, husband, thus, releasing, . This article is about the mythological artifact For other uses see Pandora s box disambiguation Pandora s box is an artifact in Greek mythology connected with the myth of Pandora in Hesiod s c 700 B C poem Works and Days 1 Hesiod related that curiosity led her to open a container left in the care of her husband thus releasing curses upon mankind Later depictions of the story have been varied with some literary and artistic treatments focusing more on the contents than on Pandora herself Lawrence Alma Tadema s water colour of an ambivalent Pandora 1881A pithos from Crete c 675 BC LouvreThe container mentioned in the original account was actually a large storage jar but the word was later mistranslated In modern times an idiom has grown from the story meaning Any source of great and unexpected troubles 2 or alternatively A present which seems valuable but which in reality is a curse 3 Contents 1 In mythology 2 Etymology of the box 2 1 Different versions of the container 3 Contents 4 Difficulties of interpretation 5 Fixing the blame 6 Theatre 7 Poetry 8 Notes 9 Bibliography 10 External linksIn mythology editMain article Pandora nbsp An Attic pyxis 440 430 BC British MuseumAccording to Hesiod when Prometheus stole fire from heaven Zeus the king of the gods took vengeance by presenting Pandora to Prometheus brother Epimetheus Pandora opened a jar left in her care containing sickness death and many other unspecified evils which were then released into the world 4 Though she hastened to close the container only one thing was left behind usually translated as Hope though it could also have the pessimistic meaning of deceptive expectation 5 From this story has grown the idiom to open a Pandora s box meaning to do or start something that will cause many unforeseen problems 6 A modern more colloquial equivalent is to open a can of worms 7 Pandora s box is a metaphor for something that brings about great troubles or misfortune but also holds hope In Greek mythology Pandora s box was a gift from the gods to Pandora the first woman on Earth It contained all the evils of the world which were released when Pandora opened the box However it also contained hope which remained inside the box Symbolically the box represents the curiosity and desire for knowledge that can lead to both negative consequences and positive outcomes The evils inside the box can be seen as the challenges and difficulties of life while the hope represents the optimism and resilience to overcome those challenges 8 Etymology of the box editThe word translated as box was actually a large jar pi8os pithos in Greek 9 10 Pithoi were used for storage of wine oil grain or other provisions or ritually as a container for a human body for burying from which it was believed souls escaped and necessarily returned 11 Many scholars see a close analogy between Pandora herself who was made from clay and the clay jar which dispenses evils 12 The mistranslation of pithos is usually attributed to the 16th century humanist Erasmus who in his Latin account of the story of Pandora changed the Greek pithos to pyxis meaning box 13 The context in which the story appeared was Erasmus collection of proverbs the Adagia 1508 in illustration of the Latin saying Malo accepto stultus sapit from experiencing trouble a fool is made wise In his version the box is opened by Epimetheus whose name means Afterthought or as Hesiod comments he whom mistakes made wise 14 Different versions of the container edit nbsp Nicolo dell Abate 1555 nbsp Russian fountain 1801 nbsp James Gillray political cartoon 1809 nbsp Pandora by John Gibson 1899 nbsp John William Waterhouse 1896Contents editThere were alternative accounts of jars or urns containing blessings and evils bestowed upon humanity in Greek myth of which a very early account is related in Homer s Iliad On the floor of Jove s palace there stand two urns the one filled with evil gifts and the other with good ones He for whom Jove the lord of thunder mixes the gifts he sends will meet now with good and now with evil fortune but he to whom Jove sends none but evil gifts will be pointed at by the finger of scorn the hand of famine will pursue him to the ends of the world and he will go up and down the face of the earth respected neither by gods nor men 15 In a major departure from Hesiod the 6th century BC Greek elegiac poet Theognis of Megara states that Hope is the only good god remaining among mankind the others have left and gone to Olympus Trust a mighty god has gone Restraint has gone from men and the Graces my friend have abandoned the earth Men s judicial oaths are no longer to be trusted nor does anyone revere the immortal gods the race of pious men has perished and men no longer recognize the rules of conduct or acts of piety 16 nbsp Giulio Bonasone s 16th century engraving of Epimetheus opening the fatal jarThe poem seems to hint at a myth in which the jar contained blessings rather than evils It is confirmed in the new era by an Aesopic fable recorded by Babrius in which the gods send the jar containing blessings to humans Rather than a named female it was a generic foolish man ἀkratὴs ἄn8rwpos who opened the jar out of curiosity and let them escape Once the lid was replaced only hope remained promising that she will bestow on each of us the good things that have gone away This aetiological version is numbered 312 in the Perry Index 17 In the Renaissance the story of the jar was revisited by two immensely influential writers Andrea Alciato in his Emblemata 1534 and the Neo Latin poet Gabriele Faerno in his collection of a hundred fables Fabulum Centum 1563 Alciato only alluded to the story while depicting the goddess Hope seated on a jar in which she declares I alone stayed behind at home when evils fluttered all around as the revered muse of the old poet Hesiod has told you 18 Faerno s short poem also addressed the origin of hope but in this case it is the remainder of the universal blessings bona universa that have escaped Of all good things that mortals lack Hope in the soul alone stays back 19 An idea of the nature of the blessings lost is given in a Renaissance engraving by Giulio Bonasone where the culprit is Pandora s husband Epimetheus He is shown holding the lid of a large storage jar from which female representations of the Roman virtues are flying up into the air They are identified by their names in Latin security salus harmony concordia fairness aequitas mercy clementia freedom libertas happiness felicitas peace pax worth virtus and joy laetitia Hope spes is delayed on the lip and holds aloft the flower that is her attribute 20 Difficulties of interpretation editIn Hesiodic scholarship the interpretive crux has endured 21 Is the hope imprisoned within a jar full of evils to be considered a benefit for humanity or a further curse A number of mythology textbooks echo the sentiments of M L West Hope s retention in the jar is comforting and we are to be thankful for this antidote to our present ills 22 Some scholars such as Mark Griffith however take the opposite view Hope seems to be a blessing withheld from men so that their life should be the more dreary and depressing 23 The interpretation hangs on two related questions First how is elpis to be rendered the Greek word usually translated as hope Second does the jar preserve elpis for people or keep it away from them As with most ancient Greek words elpis can be translated in a number of ways A number of scholars prefer the neutral translation of expectation Classical authors use the word elpis to mean expectation of bad as well as expectation of good Statistical analysis demonstrates that the latter sense appears five times more than the former in all of extant ancient Greek literature 24 Others hold the minority view that elpis should be rendered expectation of evil vel sim 25 The answer to the first question largely depends on the answer to the second one should the jar be interpreted as a prison or a pantry 26 The jar certainly serves as a prison for the evils that Pandora released they only affect humanity once outside the jar Some have argued that logic dictates therefore that the jar acts as a prison for elpis as well withholding it from the human race 27 If elpis means expectant hope then the myth s tone is pessimistic All the evils in the world were scattered from Pandora s jar while the one potentially mitigating force hope remains locked securely inside 28 A less pessimistic interpretation understands the myth to say countless evils fled Pandora s jar and plague human existence the hope that humanity might be able to master these evils remains imprisoned inside the jar Life is not hopeless but human beings are hopelessly human 29 It is also argued that hope was simply one of the evils in the jar the false kind of hope and was no good for humanity since later in the poem Hesiod writes that hope is empty 498 and no good 500 and makes humanity lazy by taking away their industriousness making them prone to evil 30 In Human All Too Human philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche argued that Zeus did not want man to throw his life away no matter how much the other evils might torment him but rather to go on letting himself be tormented anew To that end he gives man hope In truth it is the most evil of evils because it prolongs man s torment 31 An objection to the hope is good the jar is a prison interpretation counters that if the jar is full of evils then what is expectant hope a blessing doing among them This objection leads some to render elpis as the expectation of evil which would make the myth s tone somewhat optimistic although mankind is troubled by all the evils in the world at least it is spared the continual expectation of evil which would make life unbearable 25 The optimistic reading of the myth is expressed by M L West Elpis takes the more common meaning of expectant hope And while the jar served as a prison for the evils that escaped it thereafter serves as a residence for Hope West explains It would be absurd to represent either the presence of ills by their confinement in a jar or the presence of hope by its escape from one 32 Hope is thus preserved as a benefit for humans 33 Fixing the blame editNeither Alciato nor Faerno had named who was responsible for opening the jar beyond saying it was a mortal During the Renaissance it is the name of Epimetheus that is mentioned as often as not as in the engraving by Bonasone noticed above and the mention of Pandora s partner in a rondeau that Isaac de Benserade took it on himself to insert into his light hearted version of the Metamorphoses 1676 although Ovid had not in fact written about it himself 34 nbsp Pandora seated with her husband Epimetheus who has just opened her jar of curses an etching by Sebastien Le Clerc 1676 In a jar an odious treasure is Shut by the gods wish A gift that s not everyday The owner s Pandora alone And her eyes this in hand Command the best in the land As she flits near and far Prettiness can t stay Shut in a jar Someone took her eye he took A look at what pleased her so And out came the grief and woe We won t ever be rid of For heaven had hidden That in the jar The etching by Sebastien Le Clerc that accompanied the poem in the book shows Pandora and Epimetheus seated on either side of a jar from which clouds of smoke emerge carrying up the escaping evils The lid of the jar is quite plainly in Epimetheus hand 35 Paolo Farinati an earlier Venetian artist was also responsible for a print which laid the blame on Epimetheus depicting him as lifting the lid from the jar that Pandora is holding Out of it boils a cloud which carries up a man and a dragon between them they support a scroll reading sero nimirum sapere caepit finding out too late in reference to the meaning of Epimetheus name in Greek nbsp An Allegory of Les Sciences qui Eclairent l esprit de l homme The Sciences that Illuminate the Human Spirit 1557 an etching ascribed to Marco Angelo del MoroAnother Venetian print ascribed to Marco Angelo del Moro active 1565 1586 is much more enigmatic Usually titled Pandora s Box or The Sciences that Illuminate the Human Spirit it portrays a woman in antique dress opening an ornate coffer from which spill books manuscripts snakes and bats By Pandora s side is a woman carrying a burning brand while a horned figure flees in the opposite direction Above is a curved vault painted with signs of the zodiac to which the sun god Apollo is pointing while opposite him another figure falls through the stars Commentators ascribe different meanings to these symbols as contradictory as the contents of the chest In one reading the hand Pandora holds up to her face makes her the figure of Ignorance 36 Alternatively her eyes are protected because she is dazzled and the snakes crawling from the chest are ancient symbols of wisdom 37 Apollo seated above points to Aquarius the zodiacal sign of January February which marks the Ascent of the Sun from the trough of winter The falling figure opposite him may be identified either as Lucifer or as night fleeing before the dawn in either case the darkness of ignorance is about to be dispelled The question remains whether the box thus opened will in the end be recognised as a blessing whether the ambiguous nature of knowledge is either to help or to hurt In later centuries the emphasis in art has generally been on the person of Pandora With few exceptions the box has appeared merely as her attribute Rene Magritte s street scene of 1951 however one of the few modern paintings to carry the title Pandora s Box is as enigmatic as were the Renaissance allegorical prints 38 Theatre editIn the first half of the 18th century three French plays were produced with the title Pandora s Box La Boite or Boete de Pandore In each of these the main interest is in the social and human effects of the evils released from the box and in only one of them does Pandora figure as a character The 1721 play by Alain Rene Lesage appeared as part of the longer La Fausse Foire 39 It was a one act prose drama of 24 scenes in the commedia dell arte style At its opening Mercury has been sent in the guise of Harlequin to check whether the box given by Jupiter to the animated statue Pandora has been opened He proceeds to stir up disruption in her formerly happy village unleashing ambition competition greed envy jealousy hatred injustice treachery and ill health Amid the social breakdown Pierrot falls out with the bride he was about to marry at the start of the play and she becomes engaged instead to a social upstart The play by Philippe Poisson 1682 1743 was a one act verse comedy first produced in 1729 There Mercury visits the realm of Pluto to interview the ills shortly to be unleashed on mankind The characters Old Age Migraine Destitution Hatred Envy Paralysis Quinsy Fever and Transport emotional instability report their effects to him They are preceded by Love who argues that he deserves to figure among them as a bringer of social disruption 40 The later play of 1743 was written by Pierre Brumoy and subtitled curiosity punished la curiosite punie 41 The three act satirical verse comedy is set in the home of Epimetheus and the six children recently created by Prometheus Mercury comes on a visit bringing the fatal box with him In it are the evils soon to subvert the innocence of the new creations Firstly seven flatterers the Genius of Honours of Pleasures Riches Gaming pack of cards in hand Taste Fashion dressed as Harlequin and False Knowledge These are followed by seven bringers of evil envy remorse avarice poverty scorn ignorance and inconstancy The corrupted children are rejected by Prometheus but Hope arrives at the end to bring a reconciliation It is evident from these plays that in France at least blame had shifted from Pandora to the trickster god who contrives and enjoys mankind s subversion Although physical ills are among the plagues that visit humanity greater emphasis is given to the disruptive passions which destroy the possibility of harmonious living Poetry edit nbsp Dante Gabriel Rossetti s painting of Pandora holding the box 1871Two poems in English dealing with Pandora s opening of the box are in the form of monologues although Frank Sayers preferred the term monodrama for his recitation with lyrical interludes written in 1790 In this Pandora is descending from Heaven after being endowed with gifts by the gods and therefore feels empowered to open the casket she carries releasing strife care pride hatred and despair Only the voice of Hope is left to comfort her at the end 42 In the poem by Samuel Phelps Leland 1839 1910 Pandora has already arrived in the household of Epimetheus and feels equally confident that she is privileged to satisfy her curiosity but with a worse result Shutting the lid too early she thus let loose all curses on mankind Without a hope to mitigate their pain 43 This is the dilemma expressed in the sonnet that Dante Gabriel Rossetti wrote to accompany his oil painting of 1869 71 The gifts with which Pandora has been endowed and that made her desirable are ultimately subverted the good things turned to ill Nor canst thou know If Hope still pent there be alive or dead 44 In his painting Rossetti underlines the point as a fiery halo streams upward from the opening casket on which is inscribed the motto NESCITUR IGNESCITUR unknown it burns While the speakers of the verse monologues are characters hurt by their own simplicity Rossetti s painting of the red robed Pandora with her expressive gaze and elongated hands about the jewelled casket is a more ambiguous figure So too is the girl in Lawrence Alma Tadema s watercolour of Pandora see above as the comments of some of its interpreters indicate Sideways against a seascape red haired and naked she gazes down at the urn lifted towards her with a look of animal curiosity according to one contemporary reviewer 45 or else lost in contemplation of some treasure from the deep according to another account 46 A moulded sphinx on the unopened lid of the urn is turned in her direction In the iconography of the time such a figure is usually associated with the femme fatale 47 but in this case the crown of hyacinths about her head identifies Pandora as an innocent Greek maiden 48 Nevertheless the presence of the sphinx at which she gazes with such curiosity suggests a personality on the cusp on the verge of gaining some harmful knowledge that will henceforth negate her uncomplicated qualities The name of Pandora already tells her future Notes edit Hesiod Works and Days 47ff Archived 2021 02 25 at the Wayback Machine Chambers Dictionary 1998 Brewer s Concise Dictionary of Phrase and Fable 1992 Cf Hesiod Works and Days 90 For ere this the tribes of men lived on earth remote and free from ills and hard toil and heavy sicknesses which bring the Fates upon men Only Hope remained there in an unbreakable home within under the rim of the great jar and did not fly out at the door for ere that the lid of the jar stopped her by the will of Aegis holding Zeus who gathers the clouds But the rest countless plagues wander amongst men for earth is full of evils and the sea is full Of themselves diseases come upon men continually by day and by night bringing mischief to mortals silently for wise Zeus took away speech from them Brill s Companion to Hesiod Leiden NL 2009 p 77 Archived 2023 01 02 at the Wayback Machine Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Archived from the original on 2019 04 22 Retrieved 2018 01 16 Ammer Christine 2013 The American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms Second Edition Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 342 ISBN 978 0 547 67658 6 James Frances C and Charles E McCulloch Multivariate analysis in ecology and systematics panacea or Pandora s box Annual review of Ecology and Systematics 21 1 1990 129 166 Schlegel and Weinfield Introduction to Hesiod p 6 Meagher 2314 p 148 Cf Harrison Jane Ellen Prolegomena to the Study of Greek history Chapter II The Pithoigia pp 42 43 Cf also Figure 7 which shows an ancient Greek pot painting in the University of Jena where Hermes is presiding over a body in a pithos buried in the ground In the vase painting in fig 7 from a lekythos in the University Museum of Jena we see a Pithoigia of quite other and solemn booty A large pithos is sunk deep into the ground It has served as a grave The vase painting in fig 7 must not be regarded as an actual conscious representation of the rupent rite performed on the first day of the Anthesteria It is more general in content it is in fact simply a representation of ideas familiar to every Greek that the pithos was a grave jar that from such grave jars souls escaped and to them necessarily returned and that Hermes was Psychopompos Evoker and Revoker of souls The vase painting is in fact only another form of the scene so often represented on Athenian white lekythoi in which the souls flutter round the grave stele The grave jar is but the earlier form of sepulture the little winged figures the Keres are identical in both classes of vase painting Cf Jenifer Neils 2005 p 41 especially They ignore however Hesiod s description of Pandora s pithos as arrektoisi or unbreakable This adjective which is usually applied to objects of metal such as gold fetters and hobbles in Homer Il 13 37 15 20 would strongly imply that the jar is made of metal rather than earthenware which is obviously capable of being broken Meagher 1995 p 56 In his notes to Hesiod s Works and Days p 168 M L West has surmised that Erasmus may have confused the story of Pandora with that found elsewhere of a box which was opened by Psyche William Watson Baker The Adages of Erasmus University of Toronto 2001 1 i 31 p 32 Iliad 24 527ff Archived 2020 02 02 at the Wayback Machine Theognis 1135ff Aesopica Archived from the original on 2018 12 05 Retrieved 2018 04 12 In simulachrum spei Archived from the original on 2021 05 06 Retrieved 2018 04 12 Fabulum Centum London 1743 Fable 94 p 216 Archived 2023 01 02 at the Wayback Machine Metropolitan Museum Archived from the original on 2021 01 24 Retrieved 2018 04 12 Though Pandora was not a subject of medieval art Dora Panofsky and Erwin Panofsky examined the post Renaissance mythos see Bibliography West 1978 p 169 Griffith 1983 250 Leinieks 1984 1 4 a b E g Verdenius 1985 Blumer 2001 The prison pantry terminology comes from Verdenius 1985 ad 96 Scholars holding this view e g Walcot 1961 250 point out that the jar is termed an unbreakable in Greek arrektos house In Greek literature e g Homer and elsewhere in Hesiod the word arrektos is applied to structures meant to sequester or otherwise restrain its contents See Griffith 1984 above Thus Athanassakis 1983 in his commentary ad Works 96 Cf Jenifer Neils in The Girl in the Pithos Hesiod s Elpis in Periklean Athens and its Legacy Problems and Perspectives Archived 2023 01 02 at the Wayback Machine pp 40 41 especially Nietzsche Friedrich Human All Too Human Cf Section Two On the History of Moral Feelings aph 71 Hope Pandora brought the jar with the evils and opened it It was the gods gift to man on the outside a beautiful enticing gift called the lucky jar Then all the evils those lively winged beings flew out of it Since that time they roam around and do harm to men by day and night One single evil had not yet slipped out of the jar As Zeus had wished Pandora slammed the top down and it remained inside So now man has the lucky jar in his house forever and thinks the world of the treasure It is at his service he reaches for it when he fancies it For he does not know that the jar which Pandora brought was the jar of evils and he takes the remaining evil for the greatest worldly good it is hope for Zeus did not want man to throw his life away no matter how much the other evils might torment him but rather to go on letting himself be tormented anew To that end he gives man hope In truth it is the most evil of evils because it prolongs man s torment West 1978 169 70 Taking the jar to serve as a prison at some times and as a pantry at others will also accommodate another pessimistic interpretation of the myth In this reading attention is paid to the phrase moune Elpis only hope or hope alone A minority opinion construes the phrase instead to mean empty hope or baseless hope not only are humans plagued by a multitude of evils but they persist in the fruitless hope that things might get better Thus Beall 1989 227 28 Metamorphoses d Ovide en rondeaux 1714 edition Pandore pp 10 11 Panofsky 1956 p 79 Archived 2020 04 30 at the Wayback Machine Smith College Archived from the original on 2018 01 23 Retrieved 2018 01 22 Count Leopoldo Cicognara Le premier siecle de la calcographie ou Catalogue raisonne des estampes Venice 1837 pp 532 3 Archived 2023 01 02 at the Wayback Machine Yale University Art Gallery Archived from the original on 2018 01 23 Retrieved 2018 01 22 Oeuvres choisies de Lesage Paris 1810 vol 4 pp 409 450 Archived 2023 01 02 at the Wayback Machine Theatre Classique PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2017 06 30 Retrieved 2018 01 23 Brumoy Pierre 1743 La Haye 1743 Archived from the original on 2023 01 02 Retrieved 2018 01 23 Poems Norwich 1803 pp 213 19 Archived 2023 01 02 at the Wayback Machine Poems Chicago 1866 pp 24 5 Archived 2023 01 02 at the Wayback Machine Rossetti Archive The Pall Mall Budget 1882 vol 27 p 14 Archived 2023 01 02 at the Wayback Machine The Life and Work of L Alma Tadema Art Journal Office 1888 p 22 Lothar Honnighausen Praraphaeliten und Fin de Siecle Cambridge University 1988 pp 232 40 Archived 2023 01 02 at the Wayback Machine Victoria Sherrow Encyclopedia of Hair A Cultural History Greenwood Publishing Group 2006 A Archived 2023 01 02 at the Wayback MachineBibliography editAthanassakis Apostolos Hesiod Theogony Works and Days and The Shield of Heracles Translation introduction and commentary Johns Hopkins University Press Baltimore and London 1983 Cf P 90 Beall E The Contents of Hesiod s Pandora Jar Erga 94 98 Hermes 117 1989 227 30 Gantz Timothy Early Greek Myth A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources Johns Hopkins University Press 1996 Two volumes ISBN 978 0 8018 5360 9 Vol 1 ISBN 978 0 8018 5362 3 Vol 2 Griffith Mark AeschylusPrometheus BoundText and Commentary Cambridge 1983 Hesiod Works and Days in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G Evelyn White Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1914 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Lamberton Robert Hesiod New Haven Yale University Press 1988 ISBN 0 300 04068 7 Cf Chapter II The Theogony and Chapter III The Works and Days especially pp 96 103 for a side by side comparison and analysis of the Pandora story Leinieks V Elpis in Hesiod Works and Days 96 Philologus 128 1984 1 8 Meagher Robert E The Meaning of Helen in Search of an Ancient Icon Bolchazy Carducci Publishers 1995 ISBN 978 0 86516 510 6 Neils Jenifer The Girl in the Pithos Hesiod s Elpis in Periklean Athens and its Legacy Problems and Perspective eds J M Barringer and J M Hurwit Austin University of Texas Press 2005 pp 37 45 Panofsky Dora and Erwin Pandora s Box The Changing Aspects of a Mythical Symbol New York Pantheon Bollingen series 1956 Revard Stella P Milton and Myth in Reassembling Truth Twenty first century Milton edited by Charles W Durham Kristin A Pruitt Susquehanna University Press 2003 ISBN 9781575910628 Rose Herbert Jennings A Handbook of Greek Literature From Homer to the Age of Lucian London Methuen amp Co Ltd 1934 Cf especially Chapter III Hesiod and the Hesiodic Schools p 61 Schlegel Catherine and Henry Weinfield Introduction to Hesiod in Hesiod Theogony and Works and Days University of Michigan Press 2006 ISBN 978 0 472 06932 3 Verdenius Willem Jacob A Commentary on Hesiod Works and Days vv 1 382 Leiden E J Brill 1985 ISBN 90 04 07465 1 This work has a very in depth discussion and synthesis of the various theories and speculations about the Pandora story and the jar Cf p 62 amp 63 and onwards West M L Hesiod Works and Days ed with prolegomena and commentary Oxford 1978 External links edit nbsp Media related to Pandora at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pandora 27s box amp oldid 1192641671, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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