The Fall of Daedalus

Book 8 

Daedalus, the father of Icarus, is a master craftsman.  A celebrated figure for over 1400 years before Ovid, in Metamorphoses he is the archvillain whose technological genius leads to one disaster after another.  In the face of these, Daedalus’ response is always to apply more technology. Or to kill his own nephew, Perdix, and steal his ideas. Daedalus’ final invention is human flight, using wings of feather and wax to escape the island on which he and his son had been imprisoned. Icarus’ wings have a design fault, however. The wax melts in the sun’s heat, and he falls headlong from the sky and drowns in the green waters of the Aegean. 

This event is portrayed by Pieter Bruegel the Elder in Landscape with the Fall of Icarus, a painting that is the subject of W H Auden’s poem, ‘Musée des Beaux Arts’. 

 

 

The Fall of Daedalus

 

 

I am Daedalus

known before Homer

stone and woodcarver

inventor gizmo-cobbler

collaborator fixer backstabber

biohacker

lab-leak monster maker

[parental advisory alert]

pervert

scientist

species splicer

monstrous Minotaur project supervisor

quarantine enforcer

labyrinth architect

construction site manager

power broker victim seeker

side switcher prison breaker

mechanic magician metallurgist

for whom every answer to a hitch

is always more

Vorsprung Durch Technik

why steal fire from the gods

like Prometheus

I am Daedalus

I can make it with a *click*

materialist

envious devious genius

copyright stealing

death dealing

nephew killing

as in: Hey Perdix

come and take a look at this

then pushed him off the Acropolis

saw him transform into a bird

a partridge flying just above the ground

even with a pea-brain his ideas were sound

each one a little gem

stole them

feather and wax wing assembly worker

aeronautical pioneer

flight instructor

pilot cabin crew

is there anything I can’t do

justice dodger

technologist

sky walker

fugitive

father

exile

liar

 

ex-father.

 

 

O Icarus, Icarus, my son,

what have I done?