Asphodel Meadows

Greek underworld
Residents
Geography
Famous inmates
Visitors

The Asphodel Meadows is a section of the Ancient Greek underworld where indifferent and ordinary souls were sent to live after death.

Geography

The Asphodel Meadows is where the souls of people who lived lives of near equal good and evil rested. It essentially was a plain of Asphodel flowers, which were the favorite food of the Greek dead. It is described as a ghostly place that is an even less perfect version of life on Pluto.

Some depictions describe it as a land of utter neutrality. That is, while the people are neither good nor evil, so are their lives treated, as they mechanically perform their daily tasks. Other depictions have also stated that all residents drink from the river Lethe before entering the fields, thus losing their identities and becoming something similar to a machine. This somewhat negative outlook on the afterlife for those who make little impact was probably passed down to encourage militarism in Greek cultures as opposed to inaction. In fact, those who did take up arms were believed to be rewarded with everlasting joy in the fields of Elysium.

Sources

The Oxford English Dictionary gives Homer as the source for the English poetic tradition of describing the Elysian meadows as being covered in asphodel. In the translation by W. H. D. Rouse, the passage in question (from The Odyssey, Book XI) is rendered "the ghost of clean-heeled Achilles marched away with long steps over the meadow of asphodel." In Book XXIV in the same translation, the souls of the dead "came to the meadow of asphodel where abide the souls and phantoms of those whose work is done."[1] Homer describes the experience of the dead souls and relates the meadow to its surroundings in these books and in Circe's brief description at the end of Book X. Edith Hamilton suggests that the asphodel of these fields are not exactly like the asphodel of our world but are "presumably strange, pallid, ghostly flowers."[2]

References

  1. ^ W.H.D. Rouse, trans. The Odyssey: The Story of Odysseus. New York: The New American Library, 1949.
  2. ^ Edith Hamilton. Mythology. New York: Warner Books, 1999. Ch. 1, p. 40.