Bachelor of Secondary Education Major in English
(University of Rizal System)
reporting in EL 111- Mythology and Folklore
Submitted to: Dr. Stephen P. Soliguen
Story credits to: https://www.greekmyths-greekmythology.com/myth-pegasus-bellerophontes/
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Pegasus-Greek-mythology
1. 𝕻𝖊𝖌𝖆𝖘𝖚𝖘 𝖆𝖓𝖉 𝕭𝖊𝖑𝖑𝖊𝖗𝖔𝖕𝖍𝖔𝖓
Labarda, Abbygale M.
Pescador, Marjorie
Tenio, Dixie
BSE MAJOR IN ENGLISH
(University of Rizal
System)
REPORTING IN EL 111-
MYTHOLOGY AND
FOLKLORE
Dr. Stephen P. Soliguen
2.
3. While Pegasus was enjoying his calm days with the Muses, Bellerophontes
was dreaming about adventures. Looking for them he met Proteus, the early
sea-god, and son-in-law of the King of Lycia. The king’s wife, Stheneboea,
tried to seduce him but he declined so she framed him saying the otherwise.
Believing in their friendship, Bellerophontes didn’t recognize Proteus’s
jealousy, let alone his friend’s plan to kill him.
Aware of Bellerophonte’s adventurous nature, Proteus sent him with a sealed
letter to his in-laws. When he arrived in Lycia, Bellerophontes found out that
every night Chimera, the monster with the head of a lion and the tail of a
dragon, terrorized the village taking children, women and livestock away and
4. Bellerophontes didn’t know that his own death was requested in the
letter he brought. Proteus asked his in-laws to get rid of the
messenger. Instead of killing him on spot, the king asked
Bellerophontes to kill the Chimera, knowing that he would never come
5. Bellerophontes was excited and went for advice to Polyidus or Polyeidos, the wisest
man in Lycia. Polyeidos told him he would need the winged horse Pegasus. The
following morning, Bellerophontes hid in the bushes waiting for Pegasus to come.
Wise enough, he waited longer for Pegasus to kneel so he can sit on his back. When
that finally happened, Bellerophontes slipped the bridle given by Athena, onto
Pegasus’s head. The flying horse flew into the air trying to shake the intruder off
from his back. When he realized that he had an experienced and skillful man on his
back, Pegasus gave up and surrendered. A different version of the myth says that
Pegasus voluntarily kneeled in front of Bellerophontes when he saw Athena’s bridle.
After that, they started every battle quest that the King requested him to do.
6. In any case, Bellerophontes became the hero killing the fire-breathing
Chimera from the back of Pegasus, who not only carried the hero but actively
participated in the battle himself. All the battles that the king tried to give him
to eventually lead on his death, he succeeded every last of it.
Bellerophontes was given the King’s daughter for his wife and he succeeded
the king after his death. But Belerophonte’s restless nature called for new
adventures and he rode Pegasus to fly to the Mount Olympus to visit the
7. Was it greed or simply lack of awareness, but it was the wrong idea
of Bellerophontes. Furious because Bellerophontes even dared to
think to come to the heights of the Olympus, Zeus sent a gadfly
towards the flying guest. Pegasus was stung and disturbed and
Bellerophontes lost his balance and fell on the ground.
8. Athena, as it’s said, spared his life softening the ground for the
fall, but until the end of his life, the crippled and lonely
Bellerophontes was hiking around looking for his precious
Pegasus. Of course, he never found him. Pegasus continued to
live on Mt Olympus, where Zeus welcomed him and kept him as
his favorite and most important steed. The myth says that