Demogorgon was taken up by Christian writers as a demon of Hell: Note, however, Milton does not refer to the inhabitants of Hell, but of an unformed region where
Chaos rules with Night. In Milton's epic poem Satan passes through this region while traveling from Hell to
Earth. Demogorgon's name was earlier invoked by
Faustus in Scene III of
Christopher Marlowe's
Doctor Faustus (1590) when the eponymous Doctor summons
Mephistopheles with a Latin incantation. The sixteenth-century Dutch demonologist
Johann Weyer described Demogorgon as the master of fate in Hell's hierarchy. According to
Ariosto's lesser work
I Cinque Canti, Demogorgon has a splendid temple palace in the Imavo mountains (today's Himalaya) where every five years
the Fates and
genii are all summoned to appear before him and give an account of their actions. They travel through the air in various strange conveyances, and it is no easy matter to distinguish between their convention and a
Witches' Sabbath. When elements of Ariosto's poem supplied
Philippe Quinault's libretto for
Jean-Baptiste Lully's opera
Roland, performed at
Versailles, 8 January 1685, Demogorgon was king of the fairies and master of ceremonies. Demogorgon also is mentioned in the Book II of the epic poem
El Bernardo, written in Mexico by
Bernardo de Balbuena and published in Spain in 1624. The passage tells how the fairy "Alcina" visits Demogorgon in his infernal palace: Aquí Demogorgon está sentadoen su banco fatal, cuyo decretode las supremas causas es guardadopor inviolable y celestial preceto.Las parcas y su estambre delicadoa cuyo huso el mundo está sujeto,la fea muerte y el vivir lucidoy el negro lago del oscuro olvido — (Libro II, estrofa 19) Demogorgon is mentioned in
Edmund Spenser's
The Faerie Queene: A bold bad man, that dar'd to call by nameGreat Gorgon, Prince of darknesse and dead night,At which
Cocytus quakes, and
Styx is put to flight. — (Canto I, stanza 37) and: Downe in the bottome of the deepe
AbysseWhere
Demogorgon in dull darknesse pent,Farre from the view of Gods and heauens blis,The hideous
Chaos keepes, their dreadfull dwelling is. — (Book IV, Canto ii, stanza 47) Demogorgon is the central character in
Voltaire's 1756 short story "
Plato's Dream" – a "lesser superbeing" who was responsible for creating the planet Earth. He is also the protagonist of an opera,
Il Demogorgone, ovvero il filosofo confuso ("Demogorgon, or the Confused Philosopher") by
Vincenzo Righini (1786), with a libretto by
Lorenzo da Ponte, which originally was written for
Mozart. One of the lead characters pretends to be Demogorgon in
Johann Karl August Musäus' literary fairy tale "" ('Roland's Squires') from (volume 1, 1782). In
Herman Melville's 1851 novel
Moby-Dick, the first mate of the ship
Pequod, Starbuck, describes
the white whale as the "demigorgon " of the ship's "heathen crew" (see ch. XXXVIII, paragraph 2). Demogorgon also appears as a character in
Percy Bysshe Shelley's
Prometheus Unbound. In this lyrical drama, Demogorgon is the offspring of
Jupiter and
Thetis who eventually dethrones Jupiter. It is never mentioned whether Demogorgon, portrayed as a dark, shapeless spirit, is female or male. The theory of Demogorgon's name originating from Greek
demos and
gorgos may be the foundation for its use in this text as an allusion to a politically active and revolutionary populace. Shelley's allusions to the
French Revolution support this. In the poem "Demogorgon" by
Álvaro de Campos, the writer is afraid of becoming mad by learning the true nature and unveiling the mystery of life. ==In popular culture==