Editing Yiffiverse:Ba(Soul)

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= Epithumetikon =
 
= Epithumetikon =
 
The Epithumetikon has been referred to as “the friend of insolence and pride, shaggy-eared and deaf, hardly obedient to whip and spurs.” While the Thumoeides is white and shining, the Epithumetikon is dark with grey, bloodshot eyes and walks crookedly. It is described as “heavy and ill put together,” with other unflattering characteristics, such as a flat nose and short neck. The Epithumetikon is not a horse that would sell well on the horse-trading market. This is not an easy to miss metaphor: the Epithumetikon is undesirable because of its disobedience and lustfulness, which never ceases.
 
The Epithumetikon has been referred to as “the friend of insolence and pride, shaggy-eared and deaf, hardly obedient to whip and spurs.” While the Thumoeides is white and shining, the Epithumetikon is dark with grey, bloodshot eyes and walks crookedly. It is described as “heavy and ill put together,” with other unflattering characteristics, such as a flat nose and short neck. The Epithumetikon is not a horse that would sell well on the horse-trading market. This is not an easy to miss metaphor: the Epithumetikon is undesirable because of its disobedience and lustfulness, which never ceases.
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It serves as a striking contrast to the well-behaved Thumoeides, who follows each tug of the reins immediately and does not stray. The Epithumetikon, on the other hand, is the stallion who cannot be broken under any duress or maltreatment. It seizes the moment when the erastes is at his weakest—specifically that moment when he has just laid eyes on his eromenos again—to thrust forward and corrupt the restraint of its companions, the obedient horse and its ever-rational chariot driver.
 
It serves as a striking contrast to the well-behaved Thumoeides, who follows each tug of the reins immediately and does not stray. The Epithumetikon, on the other hand, is the stallion who cannot be broken under any duress or maltreatment. It seizes the moment when the erastes is at his weakest—specifically that moment when he has just laid eyes on his eromenos again—to thrust forward and corrupt the restraint of its companions, the obedient horse and its ever-rational chariot driver.
  
 
The Epithumetikon is the embodiment of that hungering part of the soul. Particularly, this left, black horse is the part of the soul that urges the erastes to sexually pursue his partner, to convince the eromenos to lay with him in bed without chastity. Socrates tells that when the erastes is near to his eromenos—contrary to the Thumoeides which obeys itself—the Epithumetikon “springs wildly forward” and tries to drag along its companion and charioteer closer towards the younger man. At every pull the Logistikon makes on the reins in attempts to bring the horse to heel, the Epithumetikon resists.
 
The Epithumetikon is the embodiment of that hungering part of the soul. Particularly, this left, black horse is the part of the soul that urges the erastes to sexually pursue his partner, to convince the eromenos to lay with him in bed without chastity. Socrates tells that when the erastes is near to his eromenos—contrary to the Thumoeides which obeys itself—the Epithumetikon “springs wildly forward” and tries to drag along its companion and charioteer closer towards the younger man. At every pull the Logistikon makes on the reins in attempts to bring the horse to heel, the Epithumetikon resists.
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It is single-minded in its lust; lusting is all that the Epithumetikon exists to do. It is completely irrational and driven utterly by instinct. Like all instincts, by its very nature, it detests all attempts to civilize it. Anthropomorphically, one might think of this horse as a drunken man with his inhibitions long gone, ruled only by his whims and the desires of the flesh without concern for societal propriety or individual respect.
 
It is single-minded in its lust; lusting is all that the Epithumetikon exists to do. It is completely irrational and driven utterly by instinct. Like all instincts, by its very nature, it detests all attempts to civilize it. Anthropomorphically, one might think of this horse as a drunken man with his inhibitions long gone, ruled only by his whims and the desires of the flesh without concern for societal propriety or individual respect.

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