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"And now let me sing Demeter, that awesome goddess, with her beautiful hair, and her daughter with slender feet, whom Aidoneus carried away, and Zeus, who sees far, in his deep voice, allowing it, far away from Demeter..." (Hymn to Demeter, trans. Chas Boer)
Over the past few days any number of admirers have referred to Cindy as a warrior-woman -- including a Brit who dropped by DU to liken her to Boudicca.
But Cindy's wrath is Demetrian, not Boudicean or Athenian. At Zeus's command (how appropriate that Bush claims that God speaks through him!) her child has been ripped from her by Death, but instead of taking up weapons herself, she is sitting by Zeus's gates and demanding that she be seen and heard.
On the road to the Crawford ranch, as close to the gates as she can get, Cindy is sitting down into her grief and wrath, and she will be heard.
Our culture does not offer many role-models for women bereft of their children. The Virgin Mary takes her son's broken body in her arms and models acceptance of God's Will -- the very god that ordained that the child of her body should die in this gruesome manner.
Greek Demeter is different. She faces down Zeus, she does not accept his will. Demeter witholds her harvests and threatens to starve the Earth so that there will be none left to make sacrifices to the gods. Zeus blinks. By the force of her own will she regains her daughter.
Cindy is a mortal mother, and she cannot regain her son in this life. But oh, what a goddess lives in her heart.
Hekate
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