Now, unto the one who rules the heavens; the one who rules the gods themselves; I now write again of the all-seeing one, the mightiest of gods, Zeus, the king of the gods; the one who damned humanity to die in the deluge by his son’s will.
Unto Zeus himself I do now sing this song of partial praise; “Thou are after all the one who did decree all of the earth unto humankind;” Lest you return to earth with your children; bringing with you; Aries, far-shooting Apollo, golden haired Aphrodite, beautiful gray-eyed Athena; humanity will continue to be plagued by those that worship the one god; Jove, the god who is nothing more than an ideal.
“I hail all thee, high in the heavens; my heart eagerly awaits your return; especially unto you Zeus, may you again rule over all from the grand heights of Olympus,” we all need the order once given unto humanity by Zeus; if there was ever to be one god, it would surely be Zeus himself.
“O’ great Zeus; hear now as the race born of gray-eyed and beautiful Athena; your daughter; cries out in it’s desperation; they have been lead astray by those that hail the one god who is untrue; damned be those who say that you do not exist, for thou surely does.”
Unto the greatest god of all; the one who rules the sky itself; I ask this now of thee; hear as I cry this now unto you; “Zeus, the thunder lover, the mighty, cast down from Olympus once again your thunderbolts and strike down those that stand against the gods; your children need guidance once more, guidance of a true and divine nature; say unto Athena what you wish of me O’ mighty Zeus, it will be done for you.”
“Has humanity out grown it’s need for thine divinity; Zeus the bearer of the aegis; or has thou because of Hera’s will forsaken the race born of your daughter Athena, unto whom you yourself have promised the rule of the heavens.” In today’s age, there is nothing but need; society, humanity itself; has again become nothing more than a tool for the rich; “Help us O’ mighty Zeus; return unto humanity again your children as well as yourself.”
May all that read my words again now come to know; they must be understood for what their true meanings were meant to be; for it was when my pen first struck upon paper; I knew then that I wrote by Athena’s will; “it was indeed through her that you sent your own words unto this humble bard, O’ Mighty Zeus.”
I seek now others; may any and all, that in this new age wherein I now live; “Rise with me to call upon the gods of old; to call out unto the mighty aegis bearing Zeus himself; that we may have that which is true returned unto humanity; pray again with me Homerus in song, so that thunder-loving Zeus, may again return unto his place upon the great throne of Olympus.”
“All hail now, the greatest of gods; the great lord of thunder; Zeus, the mighty, who has not the time for humanities pettiness; thou art not a god of the people; since thou has forsaken us; let us be to our own; give unto Athena, not only the aegis, but give unto her humanity itself; lest thou has changed O’ mighty Zeus, two millennium is to Zeus, the greatest of gods; but two years to you Zeus; give back to us, the mortals, the old ways, let humanity return to a righteous and glorious age once more.”
Now, here in this new age; wherein mortal men have found the secrets of old; the mortal men who embrace in heated lust, the power of knowledge; through these men the truth has now been revealed ever so selectively; used only in a way that helps them to gain; power and wealth, selfish greed is what drives these men forward.”
“O’ great Zeus, I will not worship thine divinity; thou has indeed forsaken us before; I am thus left to trust that you will even in your return to earth do so once again; in this I only ask of you; the greatest of the gods; return unto the earth the beauty of Athena’s gray eyes, the beautiful laughter of Aphrodite, the free soul and spirit of Apollo; return unto humanity your children once more.”
As I Homerus write again; know that my heart does surely weep; that our race has come to this grand new age by greed; humanity continues now to destroy Athena’s beautiful world; condemning us all knowingly into a land that will surely die; lest we are saved by the divine; the gods of old; those who will return again to the hights of Olympus; take pity upon our ignorance; damned be those that oppress us into the servitude of your brother Hades.”
“O’ great Zeus; the greatest of gods; has thou by Hera’s oppressive domination of humanity now further lost care? Does thou not see that we do indeed cry out desperately from our mortal souls for thine divinity to be returned unto us? Surely the cries of the billions can be heard by thee.”
In this age; I see now the approach of Armageddon; a sorrowful sight plagues the east; the lands of the first divine visits; therein now lays the beginning of the end; for it is here that the holy war will erupt; the beginning of the end; as the sands and cities themselves are turned to glass, by the devastating weapon of war, the death set into the mind of one man, a weapon of mass destruction that will end the wars of Aphrodite.
I ask this now of thee; “O’ great thunder-loving Zeus, bearer of the aegis; why has thou let Aphrodite give this power unto mortal men; thou perhaps has again lost the care for humanity that thou once had; thou has forgotten that after the great flood, it was mankind that helped the divine; even after your council had condemned life to perish; has thou forgotten the promises made to humanity? I pray to Pallas Athena that the answer to this query would be ‘Nay’.”
Knowing that I Homerus have been set here for a task; that by Pallas Athena I call unto all the gods; that again my words be heard by all; those on earth and in the heavens; that the muses of today join with me in song as I cry out to the heavens and over the seas to Neptune.
This bard, sitting on the street; writing again to those in the heavens; “I beg of thee mighty Zeus; may Hera be damned for her ignorance and lack of understanding; hear the wails of the babes; even they in their purity cry out to thee; return to us again your children; do not forsake the covenant that thou has made with humanity.”
If the gods do not answer my call unto them; it is for humanity’s sake itself; a task of which the achievement I often doubt; “I Homerus beg of you; Zeus, the god of gods, return to us as your daughter Athena has returned to me, life; thou are surely the most divine; yet should thou ignore our wails; may you then be damned; ask your brother Hades to take your immortality, give your throne to Athena!"




