Alexander’s Great Love

Children and lunatics cut the Gordian knot which the poet spends his life patiently trying to untie.”

—Jean Cocteau

Attributed to Alexander the Great, the Gordian knot is a moniker commonly used to describe a complicated, unsolvable problem. As legend goes, Alexander and his army marched into the Phrygian capital of Gordium, in what is now modern day Turkey. As they entered the city, Alexander saw the cart that belonged to King Midas’s father, Gordius. The remarkable feature on this cart was the yoke, which the Roman historian, Quintus Curtius Rufus described as, “several knots all so tightly entangled that it was impossible to see how they were fastened.”

An oracle proclaimed that whomever unraveled its hopelessly complicated knots was destined to become the ruler of all Asia. This posed an irresistible challenge to Alexander. “For some time Alexander wrestled unsuccessfully with the knots,” Rufus remarks. “Then he said: ‘It makes no difference how they’re untied,’ and cut through all the thongs with his sword, thus evading the oracle’s prophecy—or, indeed, fulfilling it.”

That very night, lightning and thunder shook Gordium, which the seers interpreted to mean the gods were pleased with the man who had cut the Gordian knot. True to the prophecy, Alexander went on to conquer Egypt and much of Asia, before his death from fever at the age of 32.

The tales of Alexander the Great endure and the symbolism of the Gordian knot has become a proverbial term for an intractable problem. Likewise, “cutting the Gordian knot” denotes taking bold action to solve a seemingly impossible problem.

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Angelina & Alexander

Alexander the Great

by Anonymous

Four men stood by the grave of a man,
The grave of Alexander the Proud:
They sang words without falsehood
Over the prince from fair Greece.

Said the first man of them:
“Yesterday there were around the king
The men of the world–a sad gathering!
Though to-day he is alone.”

“Yesterday the king of the brown world
Rode upon the heavy earth:
Though to-day it is the earth
That rides upon his neck.”

“Yesterday,” said the third wise author,
“Philip’s son owned the whole world:
To-day he has nought
Save seven feet of earth.”

“Alexander the liberal and great
Was wont to bestow silver and gold:
To-day,” said the fourth man,
“The gold is here, and it is nought.”

Thus truly spoke the wise men
Around the grave of the high-king:
It was not foolish women’s talk
What those four sang.

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