Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Jared Meacham's avatar

This is deep. Insightful. Very Good. By way of introduction, I am Rebecca’s cousin, Jared Meacham. David is my uncle. I hope all is well with you. I hope you do not mind a family member reading your blog. Anyway …

I happen to be an aspiring writer. I authored a short story about Theseus 24 years ago (back in 2000) as my senior thesis for my BA in English / Creative Writing. I titled it “The Child of the Wineskin Foot.” My creative writing professor hated it so much he died of a stroke reading it. (No cap, as the kids say these days, he really did die!)

Professor Chandra was from India, was quite the highbrow and hated everything that had a touch of fantasy in it. He would spend entire class periods on my work, ripping my stories to pieces. The other students' faces grew red with embarrassment as Professor Chandra expressed his distaste for my work. He really did die when I handed in my take on Theseus. I really did kill him. After he died, they handed my senior thesis over to a professor of Greek literature. He gave me an A for it. I still graduated.

So, what was my story like? There are conflicting opinions on it. The title of my story is about the circumstances of Theseus’s birth. You see, in Plutarch's Lives it was stated that that King Aegeas was cursed – “to loose not the wineskin foot lest Athens is to rise.” And the dilemma was, "whatever does that mean?”

Afraid to return to Athens after visiting the Oracle, he heads north to a tiny town where Theseus would later be born. He meets a woman. She was the princess of that land. With her encouragement, he decides to share the contents of the wineskin. (Thereby “loosening” the “foot” of the wineskin to pour out the wine.) In their drunkenness, they have coitus. He leaves the next day. Theseus is born 9 months thereafter.

In giving his connubial origins the status of title to the story, I mark Theseus with the immaturity of his conception. It serves as a blind spot or shadow obscuring his capacity for insight or growth.

As a character sketch, I based both Theseus and Aegeas on US Marines that I knew. I served eight years in the USMC as a sergeant. I schemed up the idea of focusing on the sexuality of Aegeas after a Marine friend of mine came up to me and showed me pictures of his newborn daughter, then bragged about the woman that slept with that he met in a bar while his wife was still in the hospital. I turned him into the robustly sexual King Aegeas.

I portray Theseus as a drunken kid, like a drunken Marine, seeking heroic escapades. The want of experience driving him to be a killer.

I’d love to show you fragments of “Child of the Wineskin Foot.” (The complete story did not survive the 24 years…) Be careful, it is actually so good in can make a man die from a stroke! It is that good.

Anyway, I hope we are “well met” now. Your cousin, Jared.

Expand full comment
Vivé Griffith's avatar

This is such a thoughtful, beautifully written piece. Thanks, Chuck.

Expand full comment
7 more comments...

No posts