Name the Myth
Meanings and Morals
Context is King
That's Symbolic!
Fatal Flaws
100

About another boy who flies "too close" to the sun.

What is "Phaethon" (extra pts: who was the other boy?)

100

In which the goddess of Love is really at fault for a kidnapping...

What is "The Rape of Proserpina"

100

Ovid grew up under this Roman ruler.

Who is Caesar Augustus (extra pts: who ushered in what era in Roman history?)

100

Symbolic of the patchwork nature of myths (and human nature).

What is "tapestry"

100

The ancient word for fatal flaw.

What is Hamartia

200

Makes a god human soup...and turns into a wolf (doggo!).

Who is "Lycaon" 

200

In which Divine power is shown to be dangerous, not something to be wished for... (two possible answers)

"Semele" or "Phaethon"

200

Ovid's parents wanted him to be this when he grew up...but instead he became this. (two-parter)

What is a politician...and a poet.

200

Symbolic of the power of art to express the self's worth...

What is the "lyre"

200

The hero whose fatal flaw was rage.

Who is Achilles

300

Gets torn apart by his own doggos. :(

Who is "Actaeon"

300

In which Venus falls in love, showing that the gods are not immune to human desires...

What is "Venus and Adonis"
300

What Ovid tended to write about...

What is Love (baby don't hurt me)

300

MOST OFTEN symbolic of (or resulting from) humans not worshipping the gods properly...

What is Transformation (or a loss of selfhood)
300

The hero whose fatal flaw was arrogance

Who is Odysseus

400

In which someone talks too much...and someone else falls in love with their reflection.

Who are "Echo and Narcissus"
400

In which the Big and Little Dippers are created...

What is "Callisto and Arcas"

400

This happened to Ovid's books, and this is why.

Ovid's books were banned because they stood against the moral purity that Augustus tried to usher in.

400

Symbolic of crushed or broken innocence...

What is "flowers" or "cut flowers"
400

The ancient word for Aeneas' (potential) fatal flaw

What is Furor

500

In which a con-man goes forever hungry...

What is "Erysichthon" (extra pts: how does he try to feed his hunger?)

500

In which Ovid claims that wickedness finds its root in humankind...

What is "Creation"

500

Another reason that the authorities of Ovid's day did not take kindly to Ovid's writings...

Ovid criticized political authority, in the form of his critique of the Roman gods...

500
What the "axe hurtling toward them on its parabola" is symbolic of...
What is the gods' wrath and judgement.
500

The fatal flaw in Ovid's world...

What is "placing your worth in the wrong things" OR "trying to steal someone else's worth"