Proverbs/CATS

Showing posts with label Venus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Venus. Show all posts

Thursday, July 8, 2021

Laminating the Heavens

 


Are home-made gifts better than store-bought? I treasured a pencil cup made from a soup can, felt, and macaroni for years and only threw it away when I discovered that mice were gnawing at the (gold spray-painted) macaroni. But first I took a picture that will live forever on the internet. Another gift of a laminated piece of paper with words, decorated with a black-and-gold cord accented with a few mismatched gold-colored buttons hangs on a towel-rack in my bathroom, where it has hung for at least a decade and a half. Simple gifts may not age well but they bring great joy. 


Not a crafty person, I thought I could try laminating some quotations written in my shaky calligraphy. My research into laminators led me to the Fellowes corporation, where I discovered a ridiculous cascade of laminators for every possible situation whether infrequent home use, moderate office use, or industrial/business use. And all gradations in between. 


The most amusing discovery was that Fellowes laminators have Greco-Latin names including heavenly mythological names, from least expensive to most: Ion, Spectra, Halo, Callisto, Saturn, Neptune, Jupiter, Venus, and Proteus. Ion is a form of the Greek verb ienai, “going,” halo derives from Latin from the Greek word halos meaning a “circle” or “threshing floor,” and spectra comes from a Latin verb specto of “looking at.” Callisto was a companion of the Greek goddess Artemis. Seduced by Zeus, the king of the Greek gods, Callisto was transformed into a bear and lives on as the constellation Ursa Major as well as one of the moons of Jupiter. Saturn is the Roman name of Kronos, the father of Zeus in Greek mythology. Neptune, god of the seas, is the Roman name for Poseidon, brother of Zeus. Venus is the Roman name for Aphrodite, goddess of love and beauty. In mythology Proteus is a prophetic seal-herder of Poseidon, capable of changing his appearance; in astronomy Proteus or Neptune VIII is a moon of the planet Neptune. 


The Fellowes website does not give much information about the company’s acquisition of laminators, though they may originally have come from Germany. Those who built and designed them must have seen some fanciful resemblances to planets or space exploration. Other models of Fellowes laminators are Cosmic, Lunar, Mars, Vega, Voyager… quite an array of office machines! When faced with a wide range of choices for a product, I usually choose a product with a mythological name, all other criteria being equal. But all these choices of laminators are out of this world!

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Out of this world


My big dog, a German shepherd, loves his new toy, and when he plays with it, I also smile. His new toy is a big, squishy, minty, hollow orange ball with the word Sol on it. It is one of a series of three dog balls called Sol, Luna, and Venus. They are made by a company with the name Orbee and go, collectively, under the name of Cosmos. I love dog toys with Latin names! Sōl, sōlis m. is the Latin word for sun, lūna, lūnae f. is the Latin word for moon (this ball glows in the dark), and Venus, Veneris f. is the Latin word for Venus, goddess of love and beauty and a planet.  See the Cosmos collection here. The name Orbee sounds like the Latin word orbis, orbis m. circle. My dog loves chasing his toys in circles around the yard!



Friday, June 15, 2012

Venus and Artemis


The January 2012 cover of The Field magazine from England featured a young woman dressed in a short tweed skirt carrying a walking stick and flanked by two dogs. The article on the inside of the magazine was called “Ladies Picking Up,” or ladies using dogs trained to retrieve birds shot by a hunter.  The image called to mind the description by Vergil in Aeneid, Book 1, of his mother, the goddess Venus, disguised as a huntress:
318            namque umerīs dē mōre habilem suspenderat arcum
319            vēnātrīx dederatque comam diffundere ventīs,
320            nūda genū nōdōque sinūs collēcta fluentīs.

[For down from her shoulders according to custom she had hung a handy bow,
and the huntress had given her hair to pour out in the winds,
bare as to her knee and having been gathered as to her flowing folds.]

On the back cover of the magazine was an advertisement for a new model of a Rizzini shot gun called...”Artemis, a perfect combination of elegance and excellence.”  Artemis is the Greek name of the huntress goddess known in Latin as Diana. The classical tradition continues in words and pictures in The Field magazine.