Old Man of the Sea
In
Mythology
In book 4 of Homer's Odyssey, Menelaus recounts to Telemachus his journey home, and how he is obliged to seek the advice of the Old Man of the Sea. The Old Man will answer truthfully any questions put to him when captured. Capturing him, however, entails holding on to him as he changes bewilderingly from one form to another in his attempts to break free from his interrogator. The dogged Menelaus succeeds in hanging on to the slippery god throughout all his transformations and, in the course of the following interrogation, is able to obtain an answer to his question as to whether Telemachus' father Odysseus is still alive.
Sinbad
References in poetry
The Old Man of the Sea is alluded to in Edwin Arlington Robinson's book-length narrative poem King Jasper.[3] In part 3 of the poem, King Jasper dreams of his deceased friend Hebron (whom Jasper betrayed) riding on his back. "You cannot fall yet, and I'm riding nicely," Hebron tells Jasper. "If only we might have the sight of water, / We'd say that I'm the Old Man of the Sea, / And you Sinbad the Sailor." Hebron then turns to gold (a symbol of Jasper's motivation for betraying him) and coaxes Jasper to leap across a ravine with the heavy, golden Hebron on his back.
The Old Man of the Sea also figures in the poetry of West Indian poet Derek Walcott. In a 1965 paper, "The Figure of Crusoe",[4] writing about the poem "Crusoe's Journal", Walcott notes:
It is not the Crusoe you recognize. I have compared him to Proteus, that mythological figure who changes shapes according to what we need him to be. Perhaps my mythology is wrong. I am, however, also summoning, in the combination of Crusoe and Proteus, the Old Man of the Sea with whom a mythological hero wrestled. The commercial Crusoe gives his name to our brochures and hotels. He has become the property of the Trinidad and Tobago Tourist board, and although it is the same symbol that I use, you must allow me to make him various, contradictory and as changeable as the Old Man of the Sea. ... My Crusoe, then, is Adam. Christopher Columbus, God, a missionary, a beachcomber, and his interpreter, Daniel Defoe.
Referencing the figures of Adam, Christofer (Columbus) and Friday in succession, the poem's narrator remarks, "All shapes, all objects multiplied from his,/our ocean's Proteus;/in childhood, his derelict's old age/was like a god's."
References in other works
- The Old Man of the Sea is briefly mentioned in Alcatraz.[full citation needed][page needed]
- Going by the name Nereus, this character features in Percy wrestles him.[full citation needed][page needed]
- The Old Man of the Sea is mentioned in The Devil's Code[5] (2000) by John Sandford. It is also mentioned in The Navigator[6] by Morris West.[full citation needed][page needed]
- The Old Man of the Sea is mentioned in The Log from the Sea of Cortez[7] by John Steinbeck.[full citation needed][page needed]
- The Old Man of the Sea is also a card in Sinbad voyages, with Susan Van Camp's artwork clearly demonstrating a controlling and torturous character.[8]
- The Old Man of the Sea is mentioned in Avengers, Vol. 1, No. 1 (1963) by Loki.
- The Old Man also appears in the fourth episode of the Japanese anime series Arabian Nights: Sinbad's Adventures. This version is able to speak and execute feats of superhuman strength, and can turn himself into a humanoid goat.
- The Old Man of the Sea is mentioned in Little Women (1868-9) by Jo in reference to Aunt March.
- The Old Man of the Sea is mentioned in George Moore's short story 'Mildred Lawson' (1895): '[...] she had become a sort of Old Man of the Sea [...]' (Celibates, London: Walter Scott, 1895, page 104)
- The Old Man of the Sea is mentioned multiple times in Beware of Pity by Stefan Zweig. One instance can be found on page 294.
- The Old Man of the Sea is a follower card in the board game Talisman the Magical Adventure, 4th ed. The card curses the player to lose 1 life, 1 craft, or one strength every turn until he is delivered to the Tavern.
- The Old Man of the Sea is mentioned in Methuselah's Children by Robert Heinlein.[9]
- The Old Man of the Sea is also mentioned in The Golden Key by George MacDonald.
References
- ^ Iliad, Book I, line 588 (Stanley Lombardo's notation)
- ^ Wood, James, ed. (1907). . The Nuttall Encyclopædia. London and New York: Frederick Warne.
- ^ Robinson, Edwin Arlington. King Jasper, New York, The Macmillan Company, 1935.
- ISBN 0-89410-142-0.
- ISBN 0-399-14650-4.
- ISBN 0-7493-1074-X.
- ISBN 0-14-018744-8.
- ^ "Old Man of the Sea (Arabian Nights)". Gatherer – Magic: The Gathering.
- OCLC 40675982.