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A Titan, supposed son of Pluto (because of his immense patrimony), a fabulous inhabitant of [[Tartarus]], the portion of [[Hades]] in [[Greek mythology]] reserved for the punishment of the evil.
A Titan, supposed son of Pluto (because of his immense patrimony), a fabulous inhabitant of [[Tartarus]], the portion of [[Hades]] in [[Greek mythology]] reserved for the punishment of the evil.


Already blamed for having stolen the dog of Ephestus (god of metals), Tantalus was placed in Tartarus because he killed his own son Pelope just to proof the powers of the gods:
Already blamed for having stolen the dog of [[Hephaestus]] (god of metals), Tantalus was placed in Tartarus because he killed his own son Pelope just to test the powers of the gods:
Tantalus presumed he was a son of Zeus and used to take part in gods' meals, and one day he thought he would have demonstrated that gods had no clairvoyance. He killed Pelope, outraged his dead body to make it unrecogniseable, and served it as meat for the gods' lunch. Gods were aware of his plan, so they didn't touch it; only Cerere, disturbed by the rapture of her daughter Proserpina, did not realise what it was and had a little of the baby's shoulder. Hermes, ordered by Zues, brought the baby to life again (he collected the parts of the body and boiled them in milk) and rebuilt his shoulder in dolphin's ivory.
Tantalus presumed he was a son of [[Zeus]] and used to take part in the gods' meals, and one day he thought he would show that gods had no clairvoyance. He killed Pelope, mutilated his dead body to make it unrecogniseable, and served it as meat for the gods' lunch. The gods were aware of his plan, so they didn't touch it; only [[Ceres]], disturbed by the rapture of her daughter Proserpina, did not realise what it was and had a little of the baby's shoulder. [[Hermes]], ordered by Zeus, brought the baby to life again (he collected the parts of the body and boiled them in milk) and rebuilt his shoulder in dolphin's ivory.


Tantalus' punishment, now proverbial for endless efforts to achieve results, was to stand in a pool of water beneath a fruit tree with low branches. Whenever he reached for the fruit, the branches raised his intended meal from his grasp. Whenever Tantalus bent down to get a drink, the water receded before he could get any.
Tantalus' punishment, now proverbial for endless efforts to achieve results, was to stand in a pool of water beneath a fruit tree with low branches. Whenever he reached for the fruit, the branches raised his intended meal from his grasp. Whenever Tantalus bent down to get a drink, the water receded before he could get any.

Revision as of 15:43, 25 February 2002

A Titan, supposed son of Pluto (because of his immense patrimony), a fabulous inhabitant of Tartarus, the portion of Hades in Greek mythology reserved for the punishment of the evil.

Already blamed for having stolen the dog of Hephaestus (god of metals), Tantalus was placed in Tartarus because he killed his own son Pelope just to test the powers of the gods: Tantalus presumed he was a son of Zeus and used to take part in the gods' meals, and one day he thought he would show that gods had no clairvoyance. He killed Pelope, mutilated his dead body to make it unrecogniseable, and served it as meat for the gods' lunch. The gods were aware of his plan, so they didn't touch it; only Ceres, disturbed by the rapture of her daughter Proserpina, did not realise what it was and had a little of the baby's shoulder. Hermes, ordered by Zeus, brought the baby to life again (he collected the parts of the body and boiled them in milk) and rebuilt his shoulder in dolphin's ivory.

Tantalus' punishment, now proverbial for endless efforts to achieve results, was to stand in a pool of water beneath a fruit tree with low branches. Whenever he reached for the fruit, the branches raised his intended meal from his grasp. Whenever Tantalus bent down to get a drink, the water receded before he could get any.

Tantalus is the origin of the English word "tantalize." The idea being that when a person tantalizes someone else, that person is making them like Tantalus: there is something desirable that is always just out of that person's reach.

A Tantalus, by an obvious analogy, is also the term for a type of drinks decanter stand in which the bottle stoppers are firmly clamped down by a locked metal bar, as a means of preventing servants from stealing the master's drinks.