Ten Commandments for Reading Myth


Joseph Campbell



I

Read myths with the eyes of wonder:
the myths transparent to their  universal  meaning,
their  meaning  transparent  to  its  mysterious source.

II

Read myths in the present tense: Eternity is now.

III

Read myths in the first person plural: the Gods and Goddesses
 of ancient mythology still live within you.

IV

Any myth worth its  salt exerts a powerful  magnetism. Notice
 the images and stories  that you are  drawn to and  repelled by.
 Investigate the field of associated images and stories

V

Look for  patterns; don't  get lost in  the details. 
What is needed  is   not   more   specialized  scholarship,
   but   more   interdisciplinary vision. Make connections;
break old patterns of parochial thought.

VI

Resacralize  the  secular:
 even  a  dollar  bill reveals the  imprint of Eternity.

VII

If God is everywhere,  then myths can be  generated anywhere,
 anytime, by  anything.  Don't  let  your  Romantic  aversion  to 
 science blind you to the Buddha in the computer chip. 

VIII

Know your tribe! Myths never arise in a  vacuum;
they are the connective tissue of  the social  body
which  enjoys synergistic relations with
dreams (private myths) and rituals (the enactment of myth).

IX

Expand your horizons! Any mythology worth remembering
will be global in scope.  The earth  is our  home
and  humankind is  our family.

X

Read  between  the  lines!  Literalism kills;
Imagination  quickens.