How many mythical heroes does it take to pull off the concept of the Trojan Horse?
Robert Graves’s answer: 3.
• One to come up with the idea, inspired by the goddess Athene: Prylis.
• One to build it: Epeius.
• One to take credit for the whole thing: Odysseus.
Epeius was an interesting character. His father was caught embezzling temple funds, and the gods decided he should be punished by having a cowardly son.
Epeius’s name became an eponymous adjective. As the builder of the wooden horse, Epeius was the only one who knew how to operate the trapdoor and its lock. People enjoyed inventing stories about how he was persuaded to go along with the storm troopers.
Graves says the sense of the adjective changed with time.
In early saga Epeius’s reputation for courage was such that his name became ironically applied to a braggart; and from braggart to coward is only a short step.
I think something similar will happen when people make sense of the most notorious braggart of our own times.
• Source and note: Robert Graves, The Greek Myths: 2; Penguin Books, 1968, p. 336.