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The very first morning
when we stopped at Troy, archaeologists were boarding up parts
to begin further digging just outside the famous ruins. We learned
a few days later from a newspaper headline that they'd just discovered
unknown outer walls, revealing that Troy was seven times larger
than orginally believed. So despite what historians had long insisted
to the contrary, Homer's description in the Iliad had likely been
accurate, of the Trojans' ability to withstand the lengthy siege.
Once again, historical facts supporting "myths" had
popped up just in time to help out with my own myth-weaving in
The Magic Circle, where I maintain that when it comes
to ancient cultures myths are not only frequently the only history
we have, but may also be closer to the truth than some scholars
are willing to accept.
My next stop was Mount
Ida, where in the myth explaining the start of the Trojan War,
Paris's judgment in a beauty contest was tainted when he accepted
Aphrodite's bribe of Helen, the most beautiful mortal woman, and
he made his fateful decision to give Aphrodite (over Athena and
Hera) the golden apple as the most beautiful goddess. Mount Ida
was also famous as the spot where all the gods and goddesses perched
as they monitored and meddled in the war's progress.
As Karl and I drove
toward the legendary mountain, it was late autumn and the plains
and looming mountain in the distance were pretty much abandoned.
I felt as if we were moving through a veil into the past, into
the age of myth: all around us were those archetypal images so
important to the many ancient cultures that had lived in these
parts. Even the names were important.
Approaching Mount
Ida we crossed the vast Halesian plain, hal
being the ancient Celtic name for salt, where salt
mines still operate today. Salt was once the most valued commodity
on earth--the Romans paid their troops in it, hence our word salary--and
it was also one of the three principal alchemical substances required
for transformation from the earliest of times.
Then, beginning the
mountain's ascent, we found the lower slopes of mount Ida thick
with vineyards--wine being the gift of the god Dionysus. And as
we continued uphill, the mountain was blanketed with apple orchards--the
apple being gift of the god Apollo. These two gods are connected
because they shared rulership of Delphi, the principal Greek shrine,
the rule of each beginning respectively, at the winter and summer
solstices. So even today these two crops on Mt Ida reflect two
of the most ancient symbols of transformation, the grapevine and
the apple tree, symbolizing the "alchemical marriage"
described in so many ancient texts--like the Song of Solomon,
where the white king of the apple orchard joins with the dusky
maiden of the vineyards, a transformation joining the symbols
of spirit and matter, which is what The Magic Circle
is all about.
Near the top of Mt
Ida we found an abandoned picnic ground beside a spring-fed waterfall
forming the brook that waters the rest of the mountain. The judgment
of Paris took place just above such a sacred spring, so I started
to drive up the gravel road that led around a curve toward what
I believed would be the actual mountaintop. A major judgment error.
Partway up, the unstable gravel degenerated into little more than
a footpath that started to crumble under my tires. The car began
to slip backward at an angle, sliding toward the cliff that dropped
fifty feet or more to the waterfall below! At this angle, I could
see nothing above or behind me.
Karl managed to crawl
out on the passenger side, and he stood below yelling directions,
as I carefully edged the car back around the blind curve of the
precipice. Maybe it was only minutes, but it seemed hours before
I was on the flat, the rear tire just inches from the waterfall.
I drove back down to the apple orchard and got out; my legs were
shaking so much I could barely stand. Karl and I hugged a lot,
and we vowed in future we would leave sacred mountains to their
own spiritual powers.
But we forgot this
lesson a few years later when we were among those invited to central
Turkey to see one of the oldest continually-practiced alchemical
transformations in action: the dervishes of Konya.

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