Prayer to Athena
Athena
I begin to sing of Pallas Athena, the glorious goddess, bright-eyed, inventive, unbending of heart, pure virgin, saviour of cities, courageous, Tritogeneia. From his awful head wise Zeus himself bare her arrayed in warlike arms of flashing gold, and awe seized all the gods as they gazed. But Athena sprang quickly from the immortal head and stood before Zeus who holds the aegis, shaking a sharp spear: great Olympos began to reel horribly at the might of the grey-eyed goddess, and earth round about cried fearfully, and the sea was moved and tossed with dark waves, while foam burst forth suddenly: the bright Son of Hyperion stopped his swift-footed horses a long while, until the maiden Pallas Athena had stripped the heavenly armour from her immortal shoulders. And wise Zeus was glad. Hail to you, daughter of Zeus who holds the aegis!
Fons · Source
AuthorAnonymous (Homeric corpus)
WorkHomeric Hymns
Section29 (to Athena)
Periodarchaic Greek (7th-6th c. BC)
OccasionHomeric Hymn to Athena — poetic invocation celebrating her birth fully armed from the head of Zeus and the cosmic awe at her coming forth
Classificatio · Taxonomy
Culturegreek
Formhymn
DeitiesAthena
Functionsinvocation · praise
Spherecivic