dimanche 31 août 2008

Crater 2


Corvus Cup



These two adjacent constellations are linked in a moral tale that goes back at least to the time of Eratosthenes. As told by Ovid in his Fasti, Apollo was about to make a sacrifice to Zeus and sent the crow to fetch water from a running spring. The crow flew off with a bowl in its claws until it came to a fig tree laden with unripe fruit. Ignoring its orders, the crew waited several days for the fruit to ripen, by which time Apollo had been forced to find a source of water for himself.


After eating its fill of the delicious fruit, the crow looked around for an alibi. He picked up a water-snake in his claws and returned with it to Apollo, blaming the serpent for blocking the spring. But Apollo, one of whose skills was the art of prophecy, saw through the lie and condemned the crow to a life of thirst – which is perhaps one explanation for the rasping call of the crow. In memorial of this incident, Apollo put the crow, the cup and the water-snake together in the sky.
The crow is depicted pecking at the water snake’s coils, as though attempting to move it so that the crow may reach the cup to drink. The cup, usually represented as a magnificent double-handed chalice, is shown tilted towards the crow but tantalisingly just out of the thirsty bird’s reach. The water-snake is the constellation Hydra which, in another legend, doubles as the creature slain by Heracles.
The crow was the sacred bird of Apollo, who changed himself into one to flee from the monster Typhon when that immense creature threatened the gods. In another story, related by Ovid in his Metamorphoses, the crow was once snow-white like a dove, but the bird brought news to Apollo that his love, Coronis, had been unfaithful. Apollo in his anger cursed the crow, turning it for ever black.

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