This is a picture of the
Temple of Aeolus in
Kew Garden. I mentioned
before that I would blog about it again, as it fascinated me. I don't know exactly why this more than another attraction of the park, which had plenty to choose from. Hey, it's not even a real Greek temple! But I am like many Westerners, absolutely fascinated by Greco-Roman culture, about their mythologies and the stories they invented. It is funny: when one visits a park here (or in France), you can find plenty of neoclassical statues or, in this case, pseudo-Greek stuff. But I cannot complain. I can understand why people wanted to inherit this culture.
I have been into Greek mythology since I watched as a child
Ulysse 31 and
Clash of the Titans. Then of course I read about the real thing and discovered
The Odyssey. I got fascinated by it. Ulysse was by my favourite Greek hero. He was a wanderer, a cunning man, therefore easier to identify with (his strenght came first and foremost from his intellect), his story was very dramatic but had a happy ending (and a bloody climax). Ah yes, and there was this episode with
Aeolus. A short episode, not nearly as violent and dramatic as most of the others, yet not devoid of bitter irony.
But I love the temple for other reasons than its association with my favourite Greek story. I love its simplicity, the way its pillars almost sprouts out of the greenery, as if it had been there all along, belonged to the place like the trees and grass and plants. And well, it is appropriate temple to the god (or, originally, the ruler) of the wind that the temple is circular, entirely open on top of a hill to the winds that can blow through it, visited by Aeolus himself, in a way. I don't know if Sir
William Chambers who designed it ever thought about it. I thought about our old
Dungeons and Dragons games and regretted that we did not think about something like that: a small abandoned temple in the wilderness. it is such a beautiful, atmospheric setting.