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Dr Alison Habens, Head of Creative Writing at the 黑料入口 writes for The Conversation

Alison Habens

9 minutes

In the beginning, there was just one, unnamed, muse. The (a poet born around around 850BC) invoked her with the words 鈥淪ing, daughter of Zeus鈥 in the first lines of his epic poem, the .

Then there were said to be three: Melete (practice), Mneme (memory) and Aoede (song), perhaps embodying the basic creative process of early humanity. Eventually, nine muses were identified, covering every branch of the arts, in the ancient Greek poet Hesiod鈥檚 introduction to , his epic poem about mythical stories and characters (circa 730鈥700BC). Hesiod, formerly an illiterate shepherd, claimed that he was inspired to write the poem when a beautiful goddess whispered the story in his ear.

There were muses specifically for comedy, tragedy and even erotica. The oldest was Calliope, mother of the legendary musician Orpheus. Euterpe was the muse of music. Urania guided the scientists. Terpsichore taught dance.

The muses promised fame and fortune to artists who followed them, but are rarely mentioned by name in the prologues and prefaces of artworks today.

A timeline of the muses

Originally characterised as singing and dancing goddesses guarding a sacred spring, evidence for the muses is found in writing by some of the earliest known authors.

Hesiod and the Muse by Gustave Moreau (1891).

Yet, the muses existed long before reading and writing. It was only later that they were conscripted as the mascots of writers, with some showing pens and parchment superimposed on their original images. Following their assimilation from the oral tradition into cheerleaders of literacy, the muses are seen waving pens and quills, scrolls and manuscripts in .

Written storytelling about the muses started in the matriarchal period of prehistory, shifting to patriarchy in approximately 3,000BC, in Ovid鈥檚 story of the god Apollo fashioning himself the . This crown of leaves, which supposedly signified his genius, is seen in the myth of Daphne, who turned into a laurel tree to escape Apollo鈥檚 unwanted advances.

Written by Ovid in , this picturesque tale may have been a metaphor for the switch from female to male authority. Legend has it that Apollo prevented his muse priestess from brewing, imbibing or smoking laurel leaves, which have a mild narcotic property.

It wasn鈥檛 just fanciful poets in the muse鈥檚 congregation 鈥 philosophers kept the faith too. In approximately 370BC, Socrates classed as a form of divine madness like drunkenness, eroticism or dreaming: 鈥淗e who, having no touch of the muses鈥 madness in his soul, thinks that he will get into the temple by the help of art 鈥 he, I say, and his poetry are not admitted.鈥

Clio, Euterpe and Thalia, by Eustache Le Sueur (1652鈥1655).

English poet and soldier , writing in 1948 that his:

鈥業nspiration鈥 was the breathing-in by the poet of fumes from an intoxicating cauldron, the Awen of the cauldron of Cerridwen, containing probably a mash of barley, acorns, honey, bull鈥檚 blood and such sacred herbs as ivy, hellebore and laurel as at Delphi.

Changing times

These original practices of using drink or drugs to inspire art are still in use around the world today. The muses may hold a pen in one hand and a smoke, or steaming mug, in the other 鈥 herbal remedies continue to be efficacious for writer鈥檚 block.

In the Elizabethan period, when a poet鈥檚 relationship with the muses was perceived as directly proportionate to their success in romance, loving attention was paid to their invocation in rhythm and rhyme. But post-Enlightenment, it was no longer considered right for writers to invoke a supernatural mentor for literary endeavours. Modern men were influenced by reason and rationality, rather than a deity. Then it was more likely that a dead bard or was deemed an appropriate source of inspiration.

The nine muses on a Roman sarcophagus (second century AD).
,

Though writing remained a ritualistic practice, and its mechanisms sometimes mystical, the desk no longer doubled as an altar at which the author worshipped.

Yet writers still often claim 鈥渢he muse is with me鈥 at moments when the words flow magically. Her voice can be heard in the modern (2015), which name checks the ancient overseer of love poetry:

That鈥檚 what I like best about you, Erato sighed in bed, that鈥檚 why you鈥檝e become one of my favourites and why you will always be so.

For the most part, the muses are missed off the agenda by both the microscope-gazers and the navel-gazers, these days. However, Plato did insist in his dialogue (370BC) that most people are eu amousoi (蔚峤 峒勎嘉肯呄兾课) an ancient Greek expression that means 鈥渉appily without the muses鈥.

Contemporary theories of creativity do not often mention divine inspiration. We no longer like the idea that the best stories are given to a few fated writers by God, that great plots and characters are bestowed on favoured authors by goddesses. But the answer to that common question all writers are asked 鈥 鈥渨here do you get your ideas from?鈥 鈥 still seems more mystic, less mathematic and as much supernatural as subconscious.

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, Head of Creative Writing,

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