Psyche and Eros: The Mysterious Husband
Louis-Jean-François…….Psyche Surprising the Sleeping Cupid…….1724
(From the story;)
With insatiable curiosity Psyche examined, touched, wondered at her husband’s weapons.
She drew an arrow from the quiver, testing the point against her thumb-tip, but her hand was still trembling and pressing too hard she pricked the surface, so that tiny drops of crimson blood moistened the skin.
Thus without knowing it Psyche fell further in love with Love himself, so that now inflamed with desire for Desire, she leaned over Cupid, desperate for him.
Robert Johnson discusses the symbolism of the lamp…
The shadow urges a woman to question the paradise garden and gives her some wonderful and terrible tools for her purpose. There is a lamp, hidden at first, which is her ability to see what is.
This is her capacity for consciousness.
Light is always the symbol of consciousness, whether it be in the hands of man or a woman.
A woman’s natural consciousness is of a unique and beautiful kind, a lamp.
It burns the oil of the earth or of the fruit and gives a particularly warm, gentle, soft light. There is not the hard intensity of sunlight in it but the gentle feminine warmth of nature’s light.
The other tool is a knife, very sharp.
Of these tools Psyche uses only one.
She never uses the other, and I think there is sage advice in the myth in this respect.
A woman gently shedding light on a situation produces miracles; a woman with a knife in her hands would kill.
Transform or kill?
This is a critical choice, especially for a modern woman.
If the knife comes first there will probably be much damage.
If the lamp comes first there is a chance of intelligence and growth.
If she wields her tools carefully she can bring about a miracle of transformation — nothing less than the showing forth of the god, Eros in his true light.
She can be justly pleased that her light produced the miracle.
Much of a man’s mute yearning for a woman is his need for her light to show him — as well as her — his true nature and godhood.
Every woman holds this terrible-wonderful power in her hands.
She, Pages 26-29
The Mysterious Husband
The Golden Ass Book V:4-6
The dynamic of Psyche’ and Eros evokes the narrative of the virgin birth of the divine within the womb of possibility offered to humanity. Secrecy, silence and the invisible world – the environment of the collective unconscious , is challenged by the furies who manipulate collective consciousness through doubt, suspicion and malevolent intent. Psyche’ chooses light instead of the knife and while preserving Eros in essence, Psyche’ bifurcates the model of divinity by introducing doubt, thus forging the demigod human: the birthed being.