Painless Pleasure: Two contradictory versions of the myth of Ganymede

The next two sonnets may offend some readers.  If you think you may be offended, please do not read them.

      Painless Pleasure: Two contradictory versions of the myth of Ganymede

“to be very eager in the pursuit of pleasure is to go hunting for pain….  Homer…says that the greatest gods receive no advantage from their power, but are even much injured by it, if they will allow themselves to be hurried away by the pursuit of pleasure.” ~ Athenaeus of Naucratis, Deipnosophistae, BOOK X11, 819

When Zeus had girls to love, he had his love

With them and that was it.  He left them raped

And he was satisfied. Somewhere above

Him, up on Olympus, nothing escaped

The vitriolic green, that green, green eye

Of Hera and she tried as hard as she

Could strain to cause him misery.  Defy

He did.  So much for Zeus’s misery.

But when he wooed a perfect, perfect boy,

The wifey didn’t really seem care.

She let him have unhindered his hot toy.

She didn’t really seem to mind this pair.

Please notice, Athenaeus. . .  Never mind girls.

The moral:  fall in love with boy curls.

 

When Zeus had girls to love, he had his love

With them and that was it.  He left them raped

And he was satisfied. Somewhere above

Him, up on Olympus, nothing escaped

The vitriolic green, that green, green eye

Of Hera and she tried as hard as she

Could strain to cause him misery.  Defy

He did.  So much for Zeus’s misery.

But when he wooed a perfect, perfect boy,

The wifey in her rage went hotly spare.

She hated Ganymede her husband’s toy,

Destroyed Idean parts in her despair.

Please notice, Athenaeus. . .  Never mind girls.

The moral:  fall in love with boy curls.