![]() The inclusion of a continuous solo (from the tuba to the piccolo through various other instruments) evokes the variety of ideas that Heracles should consider to decide on the most appropriate, ending in the shout of a hundred headed dragon and their disappearance in the ashes of its own fire.The third section, Nymphs, is the story of a great betrayal, of a father to his daughters. ![]() After the initial thought, the obsession with the dragon becomes more evident (Con fuoco) to reach the point of meditation and the research of ideas for solving his problem (Vivace) describing a series of thoughts to return to the thematic re-exhibition as an encounter of the final idea. ![]() The work is built in four sections.The first section, The Search is divided into three sub-sections that describe the path of departure, the uncertainty and the one that will lead to meet his goal.Ladon, the second section, is the dilemma by Heracles of how to overcome the dragon. Atlas agreed, and then Heracles took the apples and left. Atlas could get them by cheating on the Hesperides, as they were his daughters, but first he had to kill Ladón, the guardian dragon of the tree.On his return, Atlas decided not to accept to hold up the sky, and instead he offered to take the apples to Eurystheus, but Heracles tricked him again by asking Atlas to hold the sky a moment while he put his cloak more comfortably. Heracles tricked the Titan Atlas to steal some golden apples offering to hold the sky as he went to look for them. The eleventh work commissioned by King Eurystheus was to steal apples from the Garden of the Hesperides.Without knowing the path, Heracles walked through Greece, Macedonia and Egypt until finding the Garden of the Hesperides. When Heracles was punished for killing his own children, Hera forced him to make ten missions end up being twelve. So valued the garden turned for Hera who sent the hundred headed dragon, Ladón. This garden had a tree that produced golden apples that provided eternal youth.The tree had been a wedding gift from the goddess Gaia (Earth) to Hera, who commissioned the Hesperides, three nymphs of the West (Hesperetusta, Egle and Eritia) to take care of the garden. It describes a beautiful garden belonging to the goddess Hera, located in the westernmost point of the Greek world, probably in the Atlas mountain range or in a mythical island.
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