Epimetheus

Tradition / Region: Greek mythology
Alternate Names: Afterthought, Late Counsel
Category: Titan god


The Myth

Epimetheus was one of the Titan sons of Iapetos, brother to Prometheus, Atlas, and Menoitios. Where Prometheus was clever and foresighted, Epimetheus was slow to consider consequences, acting first and understanding only afterward. Because of this nature, the gods named him Afterthought.

When the time came for the mortal world to be filled with life, the gods entrusted Prometheus and Epimetheus with the task. Epimetheus asked that he be allowed to distribute the gifts of survival himself, while Prometheus would later inspect his work. Prometheus agreed.

Epimetheus moved eagerly among the creatures of the earth. To some he gave great strength, to others speed. He armed some with claws, tusks, and horns, and gave thick hides and fur to those who would face cold and heat. Birds received wings, beasts received burrows, hooves, shells, or venom. To preserve balance, he ensured that prey multiplied quickly while predators were few. By the time he had finished, every animal was well equipped for life.

Only then did Epimetheus come to mankind.

And he found that he had nothing left.

Humans stood naked and unarmed, without claws or fur, without swiftness or strength, unable to defend themselves from beasts or the harshness of the world. Epimetheus was struck with terror at what he had done. He could not undo his mistake, and the appointed hour for humanity’s emergence had already arrived.

When Prometheus came to inspect the work, he saw at once the disaster. To save mankind, he climbed secretly into the workshops of the gods and stole fire, along with the arts of metalwork, craft, and skill. With these gifts, humans learned to build, to cook, to forge weapons, and to survive.

But Zeus saw the theft, and his anger was terrible.

As punishment, Zeus devised a slow and beautiful ruin for mankind. He commanded Hephaistos to shape a woman from earth, and Athena clothed her in fine garments and taught her weaving. Aphrodite gave her beauty and longing, Hermes placed cunning words and deception in her heart, and the other gods each bestowed a gift. Because of this, she was named Pandora, the All-Gifted.

Zeus sent Pandora to Epimetheus as a gift.

Prometheus warned his brother again and again: never accept gifts from Zeus. But Epimetheus did not heed him. Captivated by Pandora’s beauty, he welcomed her into his house and took her as his wife.

Pandora carried with her a sealed jar, entrusted to her by the gods. One day, moved by curiosity placed in her by divine design, she lifted the lid. From the jar burst sickness, pain, hunger, toil, madness, old age, and every misery that had never before existed. They spread across the earth and entered the lives of all mortals.

Only one thing remained inside the jar when Pandora closed it again.

Hope.

From that day onward, humans lived with suffering, yet were not entirely without comfort.

Epimetheus understood his error only after the evils had already escaped. He had failed mankind twice: first by leaving them helpless, and again by welcoming the instrument of their sorrow. Because of him, Prometheus was later chained and punished, and humanity inherited a world of labor and grief.

The poets said that Epimetheus was the father of Excuse, for he always understood too late. And so his name endured as a warning: wisdom that comes only afterward is no wisdom at all.


Gallery


Sources

Theoi.com contributors. (n.d.). Epimetheus. In Theoi Greek Mythology, from https://www.theoi.com/Titan/TitanEpimetheus.html


Interpretive Lenses

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