12788 lines
722 KiB
Plaintext
12788 lines
722 KiB
Plaintext
1855
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BULFINCH'S MYTHOLOGY:
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THE AGE OF FABLE OR STORIES OF GODS AND HEROES
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by Thomas Bulfinch
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CHAPTER I.
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INTRODUCTION.
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THE religions of ancient Greece and Rome are extinct. The
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so-called divinities of Olympus have not a single worshipper among
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living men. They belong now not to the department of theology, but
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to those of literature and taste. There they still hold their place,
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and will continue to hold it, for they are too closely connected
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with the finest productions of poetry and art, both ancient and
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modern, to pass into oblivion.
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We propose to tell the stories relating to them which have come down
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to us from the ancients, and which are alluded to by modern poets,
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essayists, and orators. Our readers may thus at the same time be
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entertained by the most charming fictions which fancy has ever
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created, and put in possession of information indispensable to every
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one who would read with intelligence the elegant literature of his own
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day.
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In order to understand these stories, it will be necessary to
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acquaint ourselves with the ideas of the structure of the universe
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which prevailed among the Greeks- the people from whom the Romans, and
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other nations through them, received their science and religion.
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The Greeks believed the earth to be flat and circular, their own
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country occupying the middle of it, the central point being either
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Mount Olympus, the abode of the gods, or Delphi, so famous for its
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oracle.
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The circular disk of the earth was crossed from west to east and
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divided into two equal parts by the Sea, as they called the
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Mediterranean, and its continuation the Euxine, the only seas with
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which they were acquainted.
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Around the earth flowed the River Ocean, its course being from south
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to north on the western side of the earth, and in a contrary direction
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on the eastern side. It flowed in a steady, equable current, unvexed
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by storm or tempest. The sea, and all the rivers on earth, received
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their waters from it.
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The northern portion of the earth was supposed to be inhabited by
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a happy race named the Hyperboreans, dwelling in everlasting bliss and
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spring beyond the lofty mountains whose caverns were supposed to
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send forth the piercing blasts of the north wind, which chilled the
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people of Hellas (Greece). Their country was inaccessible by land or
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sea. They lived exempt from disease or old age, from toils and
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warfare. Moore has given us the "Song of a Hyperborean," beginning
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"I come from a land in the sun-bright deep,
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Where golden gardens glow,
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Where the winds of the north, becalmed in sleep,
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Their conch shells never blow."
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On the south side of the earth, close to the stream of Ocean,
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dwelt a people happy and virtuous as the Hyperboreans. They were named
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the AEthiopians. The gods favoured them so highly that they were
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wont to leave at times their Olympian abodes and go to share their
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sacrifices and banquets.
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On the western margin of the earth, by the stream of Ocean, lay a
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happy place named the Elysian Plain, whither mortals favoured by the
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gods were transported without tasting of death, to enjoy an
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immortality of bliss. This happy region was also called the "Fortunate
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Fields," and the "Isles of the Blessed."
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We thus see that the Greeks of the early ages knew little of any
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real people except those to the east and south of their own country,
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or near the coast of the Mediterranean. Their imagination meantime
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peopled the western portion of this sea with giants, monsters, and
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enchantresses, while they placed around the disk of the earth, which
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they probably regarded as of no great width, nations enjoying the
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peculiar favour of the gods, and blessed with happiness and longevity.
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The Dawn, the Sun, and the Moon were supposed to rise out of the
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Ocean, on the eastern side, and to drive through the air, giving light
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to gods and men. The stars, also, except those forming the Wain or
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Bear, and others near them, rose the stream of Ocean. There the
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sun-god embarked in a winged boat, which conveyed him round by the
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northern part of the earth, back to his place of rising in the east.
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Milton alludes to this in his "Comus":
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"Now the gilded car of day
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His golden axle doth allay
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In the steep Atlantic stream,
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And the slope Sun his upward beam
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Shoots against the dusky pole,
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Facing towards the other goal
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Of his chamber in the east."
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The abode of the gods was on the summit of Mount Olympus, in
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Thessaly. A gate of clouds, kept by the godesses named the Seasons,
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opened to permit the passage of the Celestials to earth, and to
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receive them on their return. The gods had their separate dwellings;
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but all, when summoned, repaired to the palace of Jupiter, as did also
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those deities whose usual abode was the earth, the waters, or the
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under-world. It was also in the great hall of the palace of the
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Olympian king that the gods feasted each day on ambrosia and nectar,
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their food and drink, the latter being handed round by the lovely
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goddess Hebe. Here they conversed of the affairs of heaven and
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earth; and as they quaffed their nectar, Apollo, the god of music,
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delighted them with the tones of his lyre, to which the Muses sang
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in responsive strains. When the sun was set, the gods retired to sleep
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in their respective dwellings.
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The following lines from the "Odyssey" will show how Homer conceived
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of Olympus:
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"So saying, Minerva, goddess azure-eyed,
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Rose to Olympus, the reputed seat
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Eternal of the gods, which never storms
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Disturb, rains drench, or snow invades, but calm
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The expanse and cloudless shines with purest day.
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There the inhabitants divine rejoice
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For ever." Cowper.
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The robes and other parts of the dress of the goddesses were woven
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by Minerva and the Graces, and everything of a more solid nature was
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formed of the various metals. Vulcan was architect, smith, armourer,
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chariot builder, and artist of all work in Olympus. He built of
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brass the houses of the gods; he made for them the golden shoes with
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which they trod the air or the water, and moved from place to place
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with the speed of the wind, or even of thought. He also shod with
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brass the celestial steeds, which whirled the chariots of the gods
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through the air, or along the surface of the sea. He was able to
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bestow on his workmanship self-motion, so that the tripods (chairs and
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tables) could move of themselves in and out of the celestial hall.
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He even endowed with intelligence the golden handmaidens whom he
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made to wait on himself.
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Jupiter, or Jove (Zeus*), though called the father of gods and
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men, had himself a beginning. Saturn (Cronos) was his father, and Rhea
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(Ops) his mother. Saturn and Rhea were of the race of Titans, who were
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the children of Earth and Heaven, which sprang from Chaos, of which we
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shall give a further account in our next chapter.
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* The names in parentheses are the Greek, the others being the Roman
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or Latin names.
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There is another cosmogony, or account of the creation, according to
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which Earth, Erebus, and Love were the first of beings. Love (Eros)
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issued from the egg of Night, which floated on Chaos. By his arrows
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and torch he pierced and vivified all things, producing life and joy.
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Saturn and Rhea were not the only Titans. There were others, whose
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names were Oceanus, Hyperion, Iapetus, and Ophion, males; and
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Themis, Mnemosyne, Eurynome, females. They are spoken of as the
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elder gods, whose dominion was afterwards transferred to others.
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Saturn yielded to Jupiter, Oceanus to Neptune, Hyperion to Apollo.
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Hyperion was the father of the Sun, Moon, and Dawn. He is therefore
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the original sun-god, and is painted with the splendour and beauty
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which were afterwards bestowed on Apollo.
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"Hyperion's curls, the front of Jove himself."
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Shakespeare.
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Ophion and Eurynome ruled over Olympus till they were dethroned by
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Saturn and Rhea. Milton alludes to them in "Paradise Lost." He says
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the heathens seem to have had some knowledge of the temptation and
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fall of man.
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"And fabled how the serpent, whom they called
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Ophion, with Eurynome, (the wide-
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Encroaching Eve perhaps,) had first the rule
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Of high Olympus, thence by Saturn driven."
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The representations given of Saturn are not very consistent; for
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on the one hand his reign is said to have been the golden age of
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innocence and purity, and on the other he is described as a monster
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who devoured his children.* Jupiter, however, escaped this fate, and
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when grown up espoused Metis (Prudence), who administered a draught to
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Saturn which caused him to disgorge his children. Jupiter, with his
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brothers and sisters, now rebelled against their father Saturn and his
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brothers the Titans; vanquished them, and imprisoned some of them in
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Tartarus, inflicting other penalties on others. Atlas was condemned to
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bear up the heavens on his shoulders.
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* This inconsistency arises from considering the Saturn of the
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Romans the same with the Grecian deity Cronos (Time), which, as it
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brings an end to all things which have had a beginning, may be said to
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devour its own offspring.
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On the dethronement of Saturn, Jupiter with his brothers Neptune
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(Poseidon) and Pluto (Dis) divided his dominions. Jupiter's portion
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was the heavens, Neptune's the ocean, and Pluto's the realms of the
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dead. Earth and Olympus were common property. Jupiter was king of gods
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and men. The thunder was his weapon, and he bore a shield called
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AEgis, made for him by Vulcan. The eagle was his favourite bird, and
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bore his thunderbolts.
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Juno (Hera) was the wife of Jupiter, and queen of the gods. Iris,
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the goddess of the rainbow, was her attendant and messenger. The
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peacock was her favourite bird.
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Vulcan (Hephaestos), the celestial artist, was the son of Jupiter
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and Juno. He was born lame, and his mother was so displeased at the
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sight of him that she flung him out of heaven. Other accounts say that
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Jupiter kicked him out for taking part with his mother in a quarrel
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which occurred between them. Vulcan's lameness, according to this
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account, was the consequence of his fall. He was a whole day
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falling, and at last alighted in the Island of Lemnos, which was
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thenceforth sacred to him. Milton alludes to this story in "Paradise
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Lost,"
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Book I.:
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"...From morn
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To noon he fell, from noon to dewy eve,
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A summer's day; and with the setting sun
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Dropped from the zenith, like a falling star,
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On Lemnos, the AEgean isle."
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Mars (Ares), the god of war, was the son of Jupiter and Juno,
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Phoebus Apollo, the god of archery, prophecy, and music, was the son
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of Jupiter and Latona, and brother of Diana (Artemis). He was god of
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the sun, as Diana, his sister, was the goddess of the moon.
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Venus (Aphrodite), the goddess of love and beauty, was the
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daughter of Jupiter and Dione. Others say that Venus sprang from the
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foam of the sea. The zephyr wafted her along the waves to the Isle
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of Cyprus, where she was received and attired by the Seasons, and then
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led to the assembly of the gods. All were charmed with her beauty, and
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each one demanded her for his wife. Jupiter gave her to Vulcan, in
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gratitude for the service he had rendered in forging thunderbolts.
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So the most beautiful of the goddesses became the wife of the most
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ill-favoured of gods. Venus possessed an embroidered girdle called
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Cestus, which had the power of inspiring love. Her favourite birds
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were swans and doves, and the plants sacred to her were the rose and
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the myrtle.
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Cupid (Eros), the god of love, was the son of Venus. He was her
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constant companion; and, armed with bow and arrows, he shot the
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darts of desire into the bosoms of both gods and men. There was a
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deity named Anteros, who was sometimes represented as the avenger of
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slighted love, and sometimes as the symbol of reciprocal affection.
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The following legend is told of him:
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Venus, complaining to Themis that her son Eros continued always a
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child, was told by her that it was because he was solitary, and that
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if he had a brother he would grow apace. Anteros was soon afterwards
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born, and Eros immediately was seen to increase rapidly in size and
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strength.
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Minerva (Pallas, Athene, the goddess of wisdom,) was the offspring
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of Jupiter, without a mother. She sprang forth from his head
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completely armed. Her favourite bird was the owl, and the plant sacred
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to her the olive.
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Byron, in "Childe Harold," alludes to the birth of Minerva thus:
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"Can tyrants but by tyrants conquered be,
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And Freedom find no champion and no child,
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Such as Columbia saw arise, when she
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Sprang forth a Pallas, armed and undefiled?
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Or must such minds be nourished in the wild,
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Deep in the unpruned forest, 'midst the roar
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Of cataracts, where nursing Nature smiled
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On infant Washington? Has earth no more
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Such seeds within her breast, or Europe no such shore?"
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Mercury (Hermes) was the son of Jupiter and Maia. He presided over
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commerce, wrestling, and other gymnastic exercises, even over
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thieving, and everything, in short, which required skill and
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dexterity. He was the messenger of Jupiter, and wore a winged cap
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and winged shoes. He bore in his hand a rod entwined with two
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serpents, called the caduceus.
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Mercury is said to have invented the lyre. He found, one day, a
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tortoise, of which he took the shell, made holes in the opposite edges
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of it, and drew cords of linen through them, and the instrument was
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complete. The cords were nine, in honour of the nine Muses. Mercury
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gave the lyre to Apollo, and received from him in exchange the
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caduceus.*
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* From this origin of the instrument, the word "shell" is often used
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as synonymous with "lyre," and figuratively for music and poetry. Thus
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Gray, in his ode on the "Progress of Poesy," says:
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"O Sovereign of the willing Soul,
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Parent of sweet and solemn-breathing airs,
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Enchanting shell! the sullen Cares
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And frantic Passions hear thy soft control."
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Ceres (Demeter) was the daughter of Saturn and Rhea. She had a
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daughter named Proserpine (Persephone), who became the wife of
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Pluto, and queen of the realms of the dead. Ceres presided over
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agriculture.
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Bacchus (Dionysus), the god of wine, was the son of Jupiter and
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Semele. He represents not only the intoxicating power of wine, but its
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social and beneficent influences likewise, so that he is viewed as the
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promoter of civilization, and a lawgiver and lover of peace.
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The Muses were the daughters of Jupiter and Mnemosyne (Memory). They
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presided over song, and prompted the memory. They were nine in number,
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to each of whom was assigned the presidence over some particular
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department of literature, art, or science. Calliope was the muse of
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epic poetry, Clio of history, Euterpe of lyric poetry, Melpomene of
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tragedy, Terpsichore of choral dance and song, Erato of love poetry,
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Polyhymnia of sacred poetry, Urania of astronomy, Thalia of comedy.
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The Graces were goddesses presiding over the banquet, the dance, and
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all social enjoyments and elegant arts. They were three in number.
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Their names were Euphrosyne, Aglaia, and Thalia.
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Spenser describes the office of the Graces thus:
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"These three on men all gracious gifts bestow
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Which deck the body or adorn the mind,
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To make them lovely or well-favoured show;
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As comely carriage, entertainment kind,
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Sweet semblance, friendly offices that bind,
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And all the complements of courtesy;
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They teach us how to each degree and kind
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We should ourselves demean, to low, to high,
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To friends, to foes; which skill men call Civility."
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The Fates were also three- Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos. Their
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office was to spin the thread of human destiny, and they were armed
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with shears, with which they cut it off when they pleased. They were
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the daughters of Themis (Law), who sits by Jove on his throne to
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give him counsel.
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The Erinnyes, or Furies, were three goddesses who punished by
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their secret stings the crimes of those who escaped or defied public
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justice. The heads of the Furies were wreathed with serpents, and
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their whole appearance was terrific and appalling. Their names were
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Alecto, Tisiphone, and Megaera. They were also called Eumenides.
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Nemesis was also an avenging goddess. She represents the righteous
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anger of the gods, particularly towards the proud and insolent.
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Pan was the god of flocks and shepherds. His favourite residence was
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in Arcadia.
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The Satyrs were deities of the woods and fields. They were conceived
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to be covered with bristly hair, their heads decorated with short,
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sprouting horns, and their feet like goats' feet.
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Momus was the god of laughter, and Plutus the god of wealth.
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ROMAN DIVINITIES.
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The preceding are Grecian divinities, though received also by the
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Romans. Those which follow are peculiar to Roman mythology:
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Saturn was an ancient Italian deity. It was attempted to identify
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him with the Grecian god Cronos, and fabled that after his
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dethronement by Jupiter he fled to Italy, where he reigned during what
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was called the Golden Age. In memory of his beneficent dominion, the
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feast of Saturnalia was held every year in the winter season. Then all
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public business was suspended, declarations of war and criminal
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executions were postponed, friends made presents to one another, and
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the slaves were indulged with great liberties. A feast was given
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them at which they sat at table, while their masters served them, to
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show the natural equality of men, and that all things belonged equally
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to all, in the reign of Saturn.
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Faunus,* the grandson of Saturn, was worshipped as the god of fields
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and shepherds, and also as a prophetic god. His name in the plural,
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Fauns, expressed a class of gamesome deities, like the Satyrs of the
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Greeks.
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* There was also a goddess called Fauna, or Bona Dea.
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Quirinus was a war god, said to be no other than Romulus, the
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founder of Rome, exalted after his death to a place among the gods.
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Bellona, a war goddess.
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Terminus, the god of landmarks. His statue was a rude stone or post,
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set in the ground to mark the boundaries of fields.
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Pales, the goddess presiding over cattle and pastures.
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Pomona presided over fruit trees.
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Flora, the goddess of flowers.
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Lucina, the goddess of childbirth.
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Vesta (the Hestia of the Greeks) was a deity presiding over the
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public and private hearth. A sacred fire, tended by six virgin
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priestesses called Vestals, flamed in her temple. As the safety of the
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city was held to be connected with its conservation, the neglect of
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the virgins, if they let it go out, was severely punished, and the
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fire was rekindled from the rays of the sun.
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Liber is the Latin name of Bacchus; and Mulciber of Vulcan.
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Janus was the porter of heaven. He opens the year, the first month
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being named after him. He is the guardian deity of gates, on which
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account he is commonly represented with two heads, because every
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door looks two ways. His temples at Rome were numerous. In war time
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the gates of the principal one were always open. In peace they were
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closed; but they were shut only once between the reign of Numa and
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that of Augustus.
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The Penates were the gods who were supposed to attend to the welfare
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and prosperity of the family. Their name is derived from Penus, the
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pantry, which was sacred to them. Every master of a family was the
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priest of the Penates of his own house.
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The Lares, or Lars, were also household gods, but differed from
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the Penates in being regarded as the deified spirits of mortals. The
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family Lars were held to be the souls of the ancestors, who watched
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over and protected their descendants. The words Lemur and Larva more
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nearly correspond to our word Ghost.
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The Romans believed that every man had his Genius, and every woman
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her Juno: that is, a spirit who had given them being, and was regarded
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as their protector through life. On their birthdays men made offerings
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to their Genius, women to their Juno.
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A modern poet thus alludes to some of the Roman gods:
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"Pomona loves the orchard,
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And Liber loves the vine,
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And Pales loves the straw-built shed;
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Warm with the breath of kine;
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And Venus loves the whisper
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Of plighted youth and maid,
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In April's ivory moonlight,
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Beneath the chestnut shade."
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Macaulay, "Prophecy of Capys."
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N.B.- It is to be observed that in proper names the final e and es
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are to be sounded. Thus Cybele and Penates are words of three
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syllables. But Proserpine and Thebes are exceptions and to be
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pronounced as English words.
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CHAPTER II.
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PROMETHEUS AND PANDORA.
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THE creation of the world is a problem naturally fitted to excite
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the liveliest interest of man, its inhabitant. The ancient pagans, not
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having the information on the subject which we derive from the pages
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of Scripture, had their own way of telling the story, which is as
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follows:
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Before earth and sea and heaven were created, all things wore one
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aspect, to which we give the name of Chaos- a confused and shapeless
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mass, nothing but dead weight, in which, however, slumbered the
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seeds of things. Earth, sea, and air were all mixed up together; so
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the earth was not solid, the sea was not fluid, and the air was not
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transparent. God and Nature at last interposed, and put an end to this
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discord, separating earth from sea, and heaven from both. The fiery
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part, being the lightest, sprang up, and formed the skies; the air was
|
|
next in weight and place. The earth, being heavier, sank below; and
|
|
the water took the lowest place, and buoyed up the earth.
|
|
Here some god- it is not known which- gave his good offices in
|
|
arranging and disposing the earth. He appointed rivers and bays
|
|
their places, raised mountains, scooped out valleys, distributed
|
|
woods, fountains, fertile fields. and stony plains. The air being
|
|
cleared, the stars began to appear, fishes took possession of the sea,
|
|
birds of the air, and four-footed beasts of the land.
|
|
But a nobler animal was wanted, and Man was made. It is not known
|
|
whether the creator made him of divine materials, or whether in the
|
|
earth, so lately separated from heaven, there lurked still some
|
|
heavenly seeds. Prometheus took some of this earth, and kneading it up
|
|
with water, made man in the image of the gods. He gave him an
|
|
upright stature, so that while all other animals turn their faces
|
|
downward, and look to the earth, he raises his to heaven, and gazes on
|
|
the stars.
|
|
Prometheus was one of the Titans, a gigantic race, who inhabited the
|
|
earth before the creation of man. To him and his brother Epimetheus
|
|
was committed the office of making man, and providing him and all
|
|
other animals with the faculties necessary for their preservation.
|
|
Epimetheus undertook to do this, and Prometheus was to overlook his
|
|
work, when it was done. Epimetheus accordingly proceeded to bestow
|
|
upon the different animals the various gifts of courage, strength,
|
|
swiftness, sagacity; wings to one, claws to another, a shelly covering
|
|
to a third, etc. But when man came to be provided for, who was to be
|
|
superior to all other animals, Epimetheus had been so prodigal of
|
|
his resources that he had nothing left to bestow upon him. In his
|
|
perplexity he resorted to his brother Prometheus, who, with the aid of
|
|
Minerva, went up to heaven, and lighted his torch at the chariot of
|
|
the sun. and brought down fire to man. With this gift man was more
|
|
than a match for all other animals. It enabled him to make weapons
|
|
wherewith to subdue them; tools with which to cultivate the earth;
|
|
to warm his dwelling, so as to be comparatively independent of
|
|
climate; and finally to introduce the arts and to coin money, the
|
|
means of trade and commerce.
|
|
Woman was not yet made. The story (absurd enough!) is that Jupiter
|
|
made her, and sent her to Prometheus and his brother, to punish them
|
|
for their presumption in stealing fire from heaven; and man, for
|
|
accepting the gift. The first woman was named Pandora. She was made in
|
|
heaven, every god contributing something to perfect her. Venus gave
|
|
her beauty, Mercury persuasion, Apollo music, etc. Thus equipped,
|
|
she was conveyed to earth, and presented to Epimetheus, who gladly
|
|
accepted her, though cautioned by his brother to beware of Jupiter and
|
|
his gifts. Epimetheus had in his house a jar, in which were kept
|
|
certain noxious articles for which, in fitting man for his new
|
|
abode, he had had no occasion. Pandora was seized with an eager
|
|
curiosity to know what this jar contained; and one day she slipped off
|
|
the cover and looked in. Forthwith there escaped a multitude of
|
|
plagues for hapless man,- such as gout, rheumatism, and colic for
|
|
his body, and envy, spite, and revenge for his mind,- and scattered
|
|
themselves far and wide. Pandora hastened to replace the lid! but,
|
|
alas! the whole contents of the jar had escaped, one thing only
|
|
excepted, which lay at the bottom, and that was hope. So we see at
|
|
this day, whatever evils are abroad, hope never entirely leaves us;
|
|
and while we have that, no amount of other ills can make us completely
|
|
wretched.
|
|
Another story is that Pandora was sent in good faith, by Jupiter, to
|
|
bless man; that she was furnished with a box containing her marriage
|
|
presents, into which every god had put some blessing, She opened the
|
|
box incautiously, and the blessings all escaped, hope only excepted.
|
|
This story seems more probable than the former; for how could hope, so
|
|
precious a jewel as it is, have been kept in a jar full of all
|
|
manner of evils, as in the former statement?
|
|
The world being thus furnished with inhabitants, the first age was
|
|
an age of innocence and happiness, called the Golden Age. Truth and
|
|
right prevailed, though not enforced by law, nor was there any
|
|
magistrate to threaten or punish. The forest had not yet been robbed
|
|
of its trees to furnish timbers for vessels, nor had men built
|
|
fortifications round their towns. There were no such things as swords,
|
|
spears, or helmets. The earth brought forth all things necessary for
|
|
man, without his labour in ploughing or sowing, Perpetual spring
|
|
reigned, flowers sprang up without seed, the rivers flowed with milk
|
|
and wine, and yellow honey distilled from the oaks.
|
|
Then succeeded the Silver Age, inferior to the golden, but better
|
|
than that of brass. Jupiter shortened the spring, and divided the year
|
|
into seasons. Then, first, men had to endure the extremes of heat
|
|
and cold, and houses became necessary. Caves were the first dwellings,
|
|
and leafy coverts of the woods, and huts woven of twigs. Crops would
|
|
no longer grow without planting. The farmer was obliged to sow the
|
|
seed, and the toiling ox to draw the plough.
|
|
Next came the Brazen Age, more savage of temper, and readier to
|
|
the strife of arms, yet not altogether wicked. The hardest and worst
|
|
was the Iron Age. Crime burst in like a flood; modesty, truth, and
|
|
honour fled. In their places came fraud and cunning, violence, and the
|
|
wicked love of gain. Then seamen spread sails to the wind, and the
|
|
trees were torn from the mountains to serve for keels to ships, and
|
|
vex the face of the ocean. The earth, which till now had been
|
|
cultivated in common, began to be divided off into possessions. Men
|
|
were not satisfied with what the surface produced, but must dig into
|
|
its bowels, and draw forth from thence the ores of metals. Mischievous
|
|
iron, and more mischievous gold, were produced. War sprang up, using
|
|
both as weapons; the guest was not safe in his friend's house; and
|
|
sons-in-law and fathers-in-law, brothers and sisters, husbands and
|
|
wives, could not trust one another. Sons wished their fathers dead,
|
|
that they might come to the inheritance; family love lay prostrate.
|
|
The earth was wet with slaughter, and the gods abandoned it, one by
|
|
one, till Astraea* alone was left, and finally she also took her
|
|
departure.
|
|
|
|
* The goddess of innocence and purity. After leaving earth, she
|
|
was placed among the stars, where she became the constellation
|
|
Virgo- the Virgin. Themis (Justice) was the mother of Astraea. She
|
|
is represented as holding aloft a pair of scales, in which she
|
|
weighs the claims of opposing parties.
|
|
It was a favourite idea of the old poets that these goddesses
|
|
would one day return, and bring back the Golden Age. Even in a
|
|
Christian hymn, the "Messiah" of Pope, this idea occurs:
|
|
|
|
"All crimes shall cease, and ancient fraud shall fail,
|
|
Returning Justice lift aloft her scale,
|
|
Peace o'er the world her olive wand extend,
|
|
And white-robed Innocence from heaven descend."
|
|
|
|
See, also, Milton's "Hymn on the Nativity," stanzas xiv. and xv.
|
|
|
|
Jupiter, seeing this state of things, burned with anger. He summoned
|
|
the gods to council. They obeyed the call, and took the road to the
|
|
palace of heaven. The road, which any one may see in a clear night,
|
|
stretches across the face of the sky, and is called the Milky Way.
|
|
Along the road stand the palaces of the illustrious gods; the common
|
|
people of the skies live apart, on either side. Jupiter addressed
|
|
the assembly. He set forth the frightful condition of things on the
|
|
earth, and closed by announcing his intention to destroy the whole
|
|
of its inhabitants, and provide a new race, unlike the first, who
|
|
would be more worthy of life, and much better worshippers of the gods.
|
|
So saying he took a thunderbolt, and was about to launch it at the
|
|
world, and destroy it by burning; but recollecting the danger that
|
|
such a conflagration might set heaven itself on fire, he changed his
|
|
plan, and resolved to drown it. The north wind, which scatters the
|
|
clouds, was chained up; the south was sent out, and soon covered all
|
|
the face of heaven with a cloak of pitchy darkness. The clouds, driven
|
|
together, resound with a crash; torrents of rain fall; the crops are
|
|
laid low; the year's labour of the husbandman perishes in an hour.
|
|
Jupiter, not satisfied with his own waters, calls on his brother
|
|
Neptune to aid him with his. He lets loose the rivers, and pours
|
|
them over the land. At the same time, he heaves the land with an
|
|
earthquake, and brings in the reflux of the ocean over the shores.
|
|
Flocks, herds, men, and houses are swept away, and temples, with their
|
|
sacred enclosures, profaned. If any edifice remained standing, it
|
|
was overwhelmed, and its turrets lay hid beneath the waves. Now all
|
|
was sea, sea without shore. Here and there an individual remained on a
|
|
projecting hilltop, and a few, in boats, pulled the oar where they had
|
|
lately driven the plough. The fishes swim among the tree-tops; the
|
|
anchor is let down into a garden. Where the graceful lambs played
|
|
but now. unwieldy sea calves gambol. The wolf swims among the sheep,
|
|
the yellow lions and tigers struggle in the water. The strength of the
|
|
wild boar serves him not, nor his swiftness the stag. The birds fall
|
|
with weary win, into the water, having found no land for a
|
|
resting-place. Those living beings whom the water spared fell a prey
|
|
to hunger.
|
|
Parnassus alone, of all the mountains, overtopped the waves; and
|
|
there Deucalion, and his wife Pyrrha, of the race of Prometheus, found
|
|
refuge- he a just man, and she a faithful worshipper of the gods.
|
|
Jupiter, when he saw none left alive but this pair, and remembered
|
|
their harmless lives and pious demeanour, ordered the north winds to
|
|
drive away the clouds, and disclose the skies to earth, and earth to
|
|
the skies. Neptune also directed Triton to blow on his shell, and
|
|
sound a retreat to the waters. The waters obeyed, and the sea returned
|
|
to its shores, and the rivers to their channels. Then Deucalion thus
|
|
addressed Pyrrha: "O wife, only surviving woman, joined to me first by
|
|
the ties of kindred and marriage, and now by a common danger, would
|
|
that we possessed the power of our ancestor Prometheus, and could
|
|
renew the race as he at first made it! But as we cannot, let us seek
|
|
yonder temple, and inquire of the gods what remains for us to do."
|
|
They entered the temple, deformed as it was with slime, and approached
|
|
the altar, where no fire burned. There they fell prostrate on the
|
|
earth, and prayed the goddess to inform them how they might retrieve
|
|
their miserable affairs. The oracle answered, "Depart from the
|
|
temple with head veiled and garments unbound, and cast behind you
|
|
the bones of your mother." They heard the words with astonishment.
|
|
Pyrrha first broke silence: "We cannot obey; we dare not profane the
|
|
remains of our parents." They sought the thickest shades of the
|
|
wood, and revolved the oracle in their minds. At length Deucalion
|
|
spoke: "Either my sagacity deceives me, or the command is one we may
|
|
obey without impiety. The earth is the great parent of all; the stones
|
|
are her bones; these we may cast behind us; and I think this is what
|
|
the oracle means. At least, it will do no harm to try." They veiled
|
|
their faces, unbound their garments, and picked up stones, and cast
|
|
them behind them. The stones (wonderful to relate) began to grow soft,
|
|
and assume shape. By degrees, they put on a rude resemblance to the
|
|
human form, like a block half finished in the hands of the sculptor.
|
|
The moisture and slime that were about them became flesh; the stony
|
|
part became bones; the veins remained veins, retaining their name,
|
|
only changing their use. Those thrown by the hand of the man became
|
|
men, and those by the woman became women. It was a hard race, and well
|
|
adapted to labour, as we find ourselves to be at this day, giving
|
|
plain indications of our origin.
|
|
The comparison of Eve to Pandora is too obvious to have escaped
|
|
Milton, who introduces it in Book IV. of "Paradise Lost":
|
|
|
|
"More lovely than Pandora, whom the gods
|
|
Endowed with all their gifts; and O, too like
|
|
In sad event, when to the unwiser son
|
|
Of Japhet brought by Hermes, she insnared
|
|
Mankind with her fair looks, to be avenged
|
|
On him who had stole Jove's authentic fire."
|
|
|
|
Prometheus and Epimetheus were sons of Iapetus, which Milton changes
|
|
to Japhet.
|
|
Prometheus has been a favourite subject with the poets. He is
|
|
represented as the friend of mankind, who interposed in their behalf
|
|
when Jove was incensed against them, and who taught them
|
|
civilization and the arts. But as, in so doing, he transgressed the
|
|
will of Jupiter, he drew down on himself the anger of the ruler of
|
|
gods and men. Jupiter had him chained to a rock on Mount Caucasus,
|
|
where a vulture preyed on his liver, which was renewed as fast as
|
|
devoured. This state of torment might have been brought to an end at
|
|
any time by Prometheus, if he had been willing, to submit to his
|
|
oppressor; for he possessed a secret which involved the stability of
|
|
Jove's throne, and if he would have revealed it, he might have been at
|
|
once taken into favour. But that he disdained to do. He has
|
|
therefore become the symbol of magnanimous endurance of unmerited
|
|
suffering, and strength of will resisting oppression.
|
|
Byron and Shelley have both treated this theme. The following are
|
|
Byron's lines:
|
|
|
|
"Titan! to whose immortal eyes
|
|
The sufferings of mortality,
|
|
Seen in their sad reality,
|
|
Were not as things that gods despise;
|
|
What was thy pity's recompense?
|
|
A silent suffering, and intense;
|
|
The rock, the vulture, and the chain;
|
|
All that the proud can feel of pain;
|
|
The agony they do not show;
|
|
The suffocating sense of woe.
|
|
|
|
"Thy godlike crime was to be kind;
|
|
To render with thy precepts less
|
|
The sum of human wretchedness,
|
|
And strengthen man with his own mind.
|
|
And, baffled as thou wert from high,
|
|
Still, in thy patient energy
|
|
In the endurance and repulse
|
|
Of thine impenetrable spirit,
|
|
Which earth and heaven could not convulse,
|
|
A mighty lesson we inherit."
|
|
|
|
Byron also employs the same allusion, in his "Ode to Napoleon
|
|
Bonaparte":
|
|
|
|
"Or, like the thief of fire from heaven,
|
|
Wilt thou withstand the shock?
|
|
And share with him- the unforgiven-
|
|
His vulture and his rock?"
|
|
CHAPTER III.
|
|
APOLLO AND DAPHNE- PYRAMUS AND THISBE- CEPHALUS
|
|
AND PROCRIS.
|
|
|
|
THE slime with which the earth was covered by the waters of the
|
|
flood produced an excessive fertility, which called forth every
|
|
variety of production, both bad and good. Among the rest, Python, an
|
|
enormous serpent, crept forth, the terror of the people, and lurked in
|
|
the caves of Mount Parnassus. Apollo slew him with his arrows- weapons
|
|
which he had not before used against any but feeble animals, hares,
|
|
wild goats, and such game. In commemoration of this illustrious
|
|
conquest he instituted the Pythian games, in which the victor in feats
|
|
of strength, swiftness of foot, or in the chariot race was crowned
|
|
with a wreath of beech leaves; for the laurel was not yet adopted by
|
|
Apollo as his own tree.
|
|
The famous statue of Apollo called the Belvedere represents the
|
|
god after this victory over the serpent Python. To this Byron
|
|
alludes in his "Childe Harold," iv. 161:
|
|
|
|
"...The lord of the unerring bow,
|
|
The god of life, and poetry, and light,
|
|
The Sun, in human limbs arrayed, and brow
|
|
All radiant from his triumph in the fight.
|
|
The shaft has just been shot; the arrow bright
|
|
With an immortal's vengeance; in his eye
|
|
And nostril, beautiful disdain, and might
|
|
And majesty flash their full lightnings by,
|
|
Developing in that one glance the Deity."
|
|
|
|
APOLLO AND DAPHNE.
|
|
|
|
Daphne was Apollo's first love. It was not brought about by
|
|
accident, but by the malice of Cupid. Apollo saw the boy playing
|
|
with his bow and arrows; and being himself elated with his recent
|
|
victory over Python, he said to him, "What have you to do with warlike
|
|
weapons, saucy boy? Leave them for hands worthy of them, Behold the
|
|
conquest I have won by means of them over the vast serpent who
|
|
stretched his poisonous body over acres of the plain! Be content
|
|
with your torch, child, and kindle up your flames, as you call them,
|
|
where you will, but presume not to meddle with my weapons." Venus's
|
|
boy heard these words, and rejoined, "Your arrows may strike all
|
|
things else, Apollo, but mine shall strike you." So saying, he took
|
|
his stand on a rock of Parnassus, and drew from his quiver two
|
|
arrows of different workmanship, one to excite love, the other to
|
|
repel it. The former was of gold and ship pointed, the latter blunt
|
|
and tipped with lead. With the leaden shaft he struck the nymph
|
|
Daphne, the daughter of the river god Peneus, and with the golden
|
|
one Apollo, through the heart. Forthwith the god was seized with
|
|
love for the maiden, and she abhorred the thought of loving. Her
|
|
delight was in woodland sports and in the spoils of the chase.
|
|
lovers sought her, but she spurned them all, ranging the woods, and
|
|
taking no thought of Cupid nor of Hymen. Her father often said to her,
|
|
"Daughter, you owe me a son-in-law; you owe me grandchildren." She,
|
|
hating the thought of marriage as a crime, with her beautiful face
|
|
tinged all over with blushes, threw her arms around her father's neck,
|
|
and said, "Dearest father, grant me this favour, that I may always
|
|
remain unmarried, like Diana." He consented, but at the same time
|
|
said, "Your own face will forbid it."
|
|
Apollo loved her, and longed to obtain her; and he who gives oracles
|
|
to all the world was not wise enough to look into his own fortunes. He
|
|
saw her hair flung loose over her shoulders, and said, "If so
|
|
charming, in disorder, what would it be if arranged?" He saw her
|
|
eyes bright as stars; he saw her lips, and was not satisfied with only
|
|
seeing them. He admired her hands and arms, naked to the shoulder, and
|
|
whatever was hidden from view he imagined more beautiful still. He
|
|
followed her; she fled, swifter than the wind, and delayed not a
|
|
moment at his entreaties. "Stay," said he, "daughter of Peneus; I am
|
|
not a foe. Do not fly me as a lamb flies the wolf, or a dove the hawk.
|
|
It is for love I pursue you. You make me miserable, for fear you
|
|
should fall and hurt yourself on these stones, and I should be the
|
|
cause. Pray run slower, and I will follow slower. I am no clown, no
|
|
rude peasant. Jupiter is my father, and I am lord of Delphos and
|
|
Tenedos, and know all things, present and future. I am the god of song
|
|
and the lyre. My arrows fly true to the mark; but, alas! an arrow more
|
|
fatal than mine has pierced my heart! I am the god of medicine, and
|
|
know the virtues of all healing plants. Alas! I suffer a malady that
|
|
no balm. can cure!"
|
|
The nymph continued her flight, and left his plea half uttered.
|
|
And even as she fled she charmed him. The wind blew her garments,
|
|
and her unbound hair streamed loose behind her. The god grew impatient
|
|
to find his wooings thrown away, and, sped by Cupid, gained upon her
|
|
in the race. It was like a hound pursuing a hare, with open jaws ready
|
|
to seize, while the feebler animal darts forward, slipping from the
|
|
very grasp. So flew the god and the virgin- he on the wings of love,
|
|
and she on those of fear. The pursuer is the more rapid, however,
|
|
and gains upon her, and his panting breath blows upon her hair. Her
|
|
strength begins to fail, and, ready to sink, she calls upon her
|
|
father, the river god: "Help me, Peneus! open the earth to enclose me,
|
|
or change my form, which has brought me into this danger!" Scarcely
|
|
had she spoken, when a stiffness seized all her limbs; her bosom began
|
|
to be enclosed in a tender bark; her hair became leaves; her arms
|
|
became branches; her foot stuck fast in the ground, as a root; her
|
|
face became a tree-top, retaining nothing of its former self but its
|
|
beauty, Apollo stood amazed. He touched the stem, and felt the flesh
|
|
tremble under the new bark. He embraced the branches, and lavished
|
|
kisses on the wood. The branches shrank from his lips. "Since you
|
|
cannot be my wife," said he, "you shall assuredly be my tree. I will
|
|
wear you for my crown; I will decorate with you my harp and my quiver;
|
|
and when the great Roman conquerors lead up the triumphal pomp to
|
|
the Capitol, you shall be woven into wreaths for their brows. And,
|
|
as eternal youth is mine, you also shall be always green, and your
|
|
leaf know no decay." The nymph, now changed into a Laurel tree,
|
|
bowed its head in grateful acknowledgment.
|
|
|
|
That Apollo should be the god both of music and poetry will not
|
|
appear strange, but that medicine should also be assigned to his
|
|
province, may. The poet Armstrong, himself a physician, thus
|
|
accounts for it:
|
|
|
|
"Music exalts each joy, allays each grief,
|
|
Expels diseases, softens every pain;
|
|
And hence the wise of ancient days adored
|
|
One power of physic, melody, and song."
|
|
|
|
The story of Apollo and Daphne is of ten alluded to by the poets.
|
|
Waller applies it to the case of one whose amatory verses, though they
|
|
did not soften the heart of his mistress, yet won for the poet
|
|
wide-spread fame:
|
|
|
|
"Yet what he sung in his immortal strain,
|
|
Though unsuccessful, was not sung in vain.
|
|
All but the nymph that should redress his wrong,
|
|
Attend his passion and approve his song.
|
|
Like Phoebus thus, acquiring unsought praise,
|
|
He caught at love and filled his arms with bays."
|
|
|
|
The following stanza from Shelley's "Adonais" alludes to Byron's
|
|
early quarrel with the reviewers:
|
|
|
|
"The herded wolves, bold only to pursue;
|
|
The obscene ravens, clamorous o'er the dead;
|
|
The vultures, to the conqueror's banner true,
|
|
Who feed where Desolation first has fed,
|
|
And whose wings rain contagion: how they fled,
|
|
When like Apollo, from his golden bow,
|
|
The Pythian of the age one arrow sped
|
|
And smiled! The spoilers tempt no second blow;
|
|
They fawn on the proud feet that spurn them as they go."
|
|
|
|
PYRAMUS AND THISBE.
|
|
|
|
Pyramus was the handsomest youth, and Thisbe the fairest maiden,
|
|
in all Babylonia, where Semiramis reigned. Their parents occupied
|
|
adjoining houses; and neighbourhood brought the young people together,
|
|
and acquaintance ripened into love. They would gladly have married,
|
|
but their parents forbade. One thing, however, they could not
|
|
forbid- that love should glow with equal ardour in the bosoms of both.
|
|
They conversed by signs and glances, and the fire burned more
|
|
intensely for being covered up. In the wall that parted the two houses
|
|
there was a crack, caused by some fault in the structure. No one had
|
|
remarked it before, but the lovers discovered it. What will not love
|
|
discover! It afforded a passage to the voice; and tender messages used
|
|
to pass backward and forward through the gap. As they stood, Pyramus
|
|
on this side, Thisbe on that, their breaths would mingle. "Cruel
|
|
wall," they said, "why do you keep two lovers apart? But we will not
|
|
be ungrateful. We owe you, we confess, the privilege of transmitting
|
|
loving words to willing, ears." Such words they uttered on different
|
|
sides of the wall; and when night came and they must say farewell,
|
|
they pressed their lips upon the wall, she on her side, he on his,
|
|
as they could come no nearer.
|
|
Next morning, when Aurora had put out the stars, and the sun had
|
|
melted the frost from the grass, they met at the accustomed spot.
|
|
Then, after lamenting their hard fate, they agreed that next night,
|
|
when all was still, they would slip away from the watchful eyes, leave
|
|
their dwellings and walk out into the fields; and to insure a meeting,
|
|
repair to a well-known edifice standing without the city's bounds,
|
|
called the Tomb of Ninus, and that the one who came first should await
|
|
the other at the foot of a certain tree. It was a white mulberry tree,
|
|
and stood near a cool spring. All was agreed on, and they waited
|
|
impatiently for the sun to go down beneath the waters and night to
|
|
rise up from them. Then cautiously Thisbe stole forth, unobserved by
|
|
the family, her head covered with a veil, made her way to the monument
|
|
and sat down under the tree. As she sat alone in the dim light of
|
|
the evening she descried a lioness, her jaws reeking with recent
|
|
slaughter, approaching the fountain to slake her thirst. Thisbe fled
|
|
at the sight, and sought refuge in the hollow of a rock. As she fled
|
|
she dropped her veil. The lioness after drinking at the spring
|
|
turned to retreat to the woods, and seeing the veil on the ground,
|
|
tossed and rent it with her bloody mouth.
|
|
Pyramus, having been delayed, now approached the place of meeting.
|
|
He saw in the sand the footsteps of the lion, and the colour fled from
|
|
his cheeks at the sight. Presently he found the veil all rent and
|
|
bloody. "O hapless girl," said he, "I have been the cause of thy
|
|
death! Thou, more worthy of life than I, hast fallen the first victim.
|
|
I will follow. I am the guilty cause, in tempting thee forth to a
|
|
place of such peril, and not being myself on the spot to guard thee.
|
|
Come forth, ye lions, from the rocks, and tear this guilty body with
|
|
your teeth." He took up the veil, carried it with him to the appointed
|
|
tree, and covered it with kisses and with tears. "My blood also
|
|
shall stain your texture," said he, and drawing his sword plunged it
|
|
into his heart. The blood spurted from the wound, and tinged the white
|
|
mulberries of the tree all red; and sinking into the earth reached the
|
|
roots, so that the red colour mounted through the trunk to the fruit.
|
|
By this time Thisbe, still trembling with fear, yet wishing not to
|
|
disappoint her lover, stepped cautiously forth, looking anxiously
|
|
for the youth, eager to tell him the danger she had escaped. When
|
|
she came to the spot and saw the changed colour of the mulberries
|
|
she doubted whether it was the same place. While she hesitated she saw
|
|
the form of one struggling in the agonies of death. She started
|
|
back, a shudder ran through her frame as a ripple on the face of the
|
|
still water when a sudden breeze sweeps over it. But as soon as she
|
|
recognized her lover, she screamed and beat her breast, embracing
|
|
the lifeless body, pouring tears into its wounds, and imprinting
|
|
kisses on the cold lips. "O Pyramus," she cried, "what has done
|
|
this? Answer me, Pyramus; it is your own Thisbe that speaks. Hear
|
|
me, dearest, and lift that drooping head!" At the name of Thisbe
|
|
Pyramus opened his eyes, then closed them again. She saw her veil
|
|
stained blood and the scabbard empty of its sword. "Thy own hand has
|
|
slain thee, and for my sake," she said. "I too can be brave for
|
|
once, and my love is as strong as thine. I will follow thee in
|
|
death, for I have been the cause; and death which alone could part
|
|
us shall not prevent my joining thee. And ye, unhappy parents of us
|
|
both, deny us not our united request. As love and death have joined
|
|
us, let one tomb contain us. And thou, tree, retain the marks of
|
|
slaughter. Let thy berries still serve for memorials of our blood." So
|
|
saying she plunged the sword into her breast. Her parents ratified her
|
|
wish, the gods also ratified it. The two bodies were buried in one
|
|
sepulchre, and the tree ever after brought forth purple berries, as it
|
|
does to this day.
|
|
|
|
Moore, in the "Sylph's Ball," speaking of Davy's Safety Lamp, is
|
|
reminded of the wall that separated Thisbe and her lover:
|
|
|
|
"O for that Lamp's metallic gauze,
|
|
That curtain of protecting wire,
|
|
Which Davy delicately draws
|
|
Around illicit, dangerous fire!
|
|
|
|
The wall he sets 'twixt Flame and Air,
|
|
(Like that which barred young Thisbe's bliss,)
|
|
Through whose small holes this dangerous pair
|
|
May see each other, but not kiss."
|
|
|
|
In Mickle's translation of the "Lusiad" occurs the following
|
|
allusion to the story of Pyramus and Thisbe, and the metamorphosis
|
|
of the mulberries. The poet is describing the Island of Love:
|
|
|
|
"...here each gift of Pomona's hand bestows
|
|
In cultured garden, free uncultured flows,
|
|
The flavour sweeter and the hue more fair
|
|
Than e'er was fostered by the hand of care.
|
|
The cherry here in shining crimson glows,
|
|
And stained with lovers' blood, in pendent rows,
|
|
The mulberries o'erload the bending boughs."
|
|
|
|
If any of our young readers can be so hard-hearted as to enjoy a
|
|
laugh at the expense of poor Pyramus and Thisbe, they may find an
|
|
opportunity by turning to Shakespeare's play of the "Midsummer Night's
|
|
Dream," where it is most amusingly burlesqued.
|
|
|
|
CEPHALUS AND PROCRIS
|
|
|
|
Cephalus was a beautiful youth and fond of manly sports. He would
|
|
rise before the dawn to pursue the chase. Aurora saw him when she
|
|
first looked forth, fell in love with him, and stole him away But
|
|
Cephalus was just married to a charming wife whom he devotedly
|
|
loved. Her name was Procris. She was a favourite of Diana, the goddess
|
|
of hunting, who had given her a dog which could outrun every rival,
|
|
and a javelin which would never fail of its mark; and Procris gave
|
|
these presents to her husband. Cephalus was so happy in his wife
|
|
that he resisted all the entreaties of Aurora, and she finally
|
|
dismissed him in displeasure, saying, "Go, ungrateful mortal, keep
|
|
your wife, whom, if I am not much mistaken, you will one day be very
|
|
sorry you ever saw again."
|
|
Cephalus returned, and was as happy as ever in his wife and his
|
|
woodland sports. Now it happened some angry deity had sent a
|
|
ravenous fox to annoy the country; and the hunters turned out in great
|
|
strength to capture it. Their efforts were all in vain; no dog could
|
|
run it down; and at last they came to Cephalus to borrow his famous
|
|
dog, whose name was Lelaps. No sooner was the dog let loose than he
|
|
darted off, quicker than their eye could allow him. If they had not
|
|
seen his footprints in the sand they would have thought he flew.
|
|
Cephalus and others stood on a hill and saw the race. The fox tried
|
|
every art; he ran in a circle and turned on his track, the dog close
|
|
upon him, with open jaws, snapping at his heels, but biting only the
|
|
air. Cephalus was about to use his javelin, when suddenly he saw
|
|
both dog and game stop instantly, The heavenly powers who had given
|
|
both were not willing that either should conquer. In the very attitude
|
|
of life and action they were turned into stone. So lifelike and
|
|
natural did they look, you would have thought, as you looked at
|
|
them, that one was going to bark, the other to leap forward.
|
|
Cephalus, though he had lost his dog, still continued to take
|
|
delight in the chase. He would go out at early morning, ranging the
|
|
woods and hills unaccompanied by any one needing no help, for his
|
|
javelin was a sure weapon in all cases. Fatigued with hunting, when
|
|
the sun got high he would seek a shady nook where a cool stream
|
|
flowed, and, stretched on the grass, with his garments thrown aside,
|
|
would enjoy the breeze. Sometimes he would say aloud, "Come, sweet
|
|
breeze, come and fan my breast, come and, lily the heat that burns
|
|
me." Some one passing by one day heard him talking in this way to
|
|
the air, and, foolishly believing, that he was talking to some maiden,
|
|
went and told the secret to Procris, Cephalus's wife. Love is
|
|
credulous. Procris, at the sudden shock, fainted away. Presently
|
|
recovering, she said, "It cannot be true; I will not believe it unless
|
|
I myself am a witness to it." So she waited, with anxious heart,
|
|
till the next morning, when Cephalus went to hunt as usual. Then she
|
|
stole out after him, and concealed herself in the place where the
|
|
informer directed her. Cephalus came as he was wont when tired with
|
|
sport, and stretched himself on the green bank, saying, "Come, sweet
|
|
breeze, come and fan me; you know how I love you! you make the
|
|
groves and my solitary rambles delightful." He was running on in
|
|
this way when he heard, or thought he heard, a sound as of a sob in
|
|
the bushes. Supposing it some wild animal, he threw his javelin at the
|
|
spot. A cry from his beloved Procris told him that the weapon had
|
|
too surely met its mark. He rushed to the place, and found her
|
|
bleeding, and with sinking strength endeavouring to draw forth from
|
|
the wound the javelin, her own gift. Cephalus raised her from the
|
|
earth, strove to stanch the blood, and called her to revive and not to
|
|
leave him miserable, to reproach himself with her death. She opened
|
|
her feeble eyes, and forced herself to utter these few words: "I
|
|
implore you, if you have ever loved me, if I have ever deserved
|
|
kindness at your hands, my husband, grant me this last request; do not
|
|
marry that odious Breeze!" This disclosed the whole mystery: but alas!
|
|
what advantage to disclose it now? She died; but her face wore a
|
|
calm expression, and she looked pityingly and forgivingly on her
|
|
husband when he made her understand the truth.
|
|
Moore, in his "Legendary Ballads," has one on Cephalus and
|
|
Procris, beginning thus:
|
|
|
|
"A hunter once in a grove reclined,
|
|
To shun the noon's bright eye,
|
|
And oft he wooed the wandering wind
|
|
To cool his brow with its sigh.
|
|
While mute lay even the wild bee's hum,
|
|
Nor breath could stir the aspen's hair,
|
|
His song was still, 'Sweet Air, O come!'
|
|
While Echo answered, 'Come, sweet Air!'"
|
|
CHAPTER IV.
|
|
JUNO AND HER RIVALS, IO AND CALLISTO- DIANA AND ACTAEON-
|
|
LATONA AND THE RUSTICS.
|
|
|
|
JUNO one day perceived it suddenly grow dark, and immediately
|
|
suspected that her husband had raised a cloud to hide some of his
|
|
doings that would not bear the light. She brushed away the cloud,
|
|
and saw her husband on the banks of a glassy river, with a beautiful
|
|
heifer standing near him. Juno suspected the heifer's form concealed
|
|
some fair nymph of mortal mould- as was, indeed, the case; for it
|
|
was Io, the daughter of the river god Inachus, whom Jupiter had been
|
|
flirting with, and, when he became aware of the approach of his
|
|
wife, had changed into that form.
|
|
Juno joined her husband, and noticing the heifer praised its beauty,
|
|
and asked whose it was, and of what herd. Jupiter, to stop
|
|
questions, replied that it was a fresh creation from the earth. Juno
|
|
asked to have it as a gift. What could Jupiter do? He was loath to
|
|
give his mistress to his wife; yet how refuse so trifling a present as
|
|
a simple heifer? He could not, without exciting suspicion; so he
|
|
consented. The goddess was not yet relieved of her suspicions; so
|
|
she delivered the heifer to Argus, to be strictly watched.
|
|
Now Argus bad a hundred eyes in his head, and never went to sleep
|
|
with more than two at a time, so that he kept watch of Io constantly
|
|
He suffered her to feed through the day, and at night tied her up with
|
|
a vile rope round her neck. She would have stretched out her arms to
|
|
implore freedom of Argus, but she had no arms to stretch out, and
|
|
her voice was a bellow that frightened even herself. She saw her
|
|
father and her sisters, went near them, and suffered them to pat her
|
|
back, and heard them admire her beauty. Her father reached her a
|
|
tuft of grass, and she licked the outstretched hand. She longed to
|
|
make herself known to him and would have uttered her wish; but,
|
|
alas! words were wanting At length she bethought herself of writing,
|
|
and inscribed her name- it was a short one- with her hoof on the sand.
|
|
Inachus recognized it, and discovering that his daughter, whom he
|
|
had long sought in vain, was hidden under this disguise, mourned
|
|
over her, and, embracing her white neck, exclaimed, "Alas! my
|
|
daughter, it would have been a less grief to have lost you
|
|
altogether!" While he thus lamented, Argus, observing, came and
|
|
drove her away, and took his seat on a high bank, from whence he could
|
|
see all round in every direction.
|
|
Jupiter was troubled at beholding the sufferings of his mistress,
|
|
and calling, Mercury told him to go and despatch Argus. Mercury made
|
|
haste, put his winged slippers on his feet, and cap on his head,
|
|
took his sleep-producing wand, and leaped down from the heavenly
|
|
towers to the earth. There he laid aside his wings, and kept only
|
|
his wand, with which he presented himself as a shepherd driving his
|
|
flock. As he strolled on he blew upon his pipes. These were what are
|
|
called the Syrinx or Pandean pipes. Argus listened with delight, for
|
|
he had never seen the instrument before. "Young man," said he, "come
|
|
and take a seat by me on this stone. There is no better place for your
|
|
flocks to graze in than hereabouts, and here is a pleasant shade
|
|
such as shepherds love." Mercury sat down, talked, and told stories
|
|
till it grew late, and played upon his pipes his most soothing
|
|
strains, hoping to lull the watchful eyes to sleep, but all in vain;
|
|
for Argus still contrived to keep some of his eyes open though he shut
|
|
the rest.
|
|
Among other stories, Mercury told him how the instrument on which he
|
|
played was invented. "There was a certain nymph, whose name was
|
|
Syrinx, who was much beloved by the satyrs and spirits of the wood;
|
|
but she would have none of them, but was a faithful worshipper of
|
|
Diana, and followed the chase. You would have thought it was Diana
|
|
herself, had you seen her in her hunting dress, only that her bow
|
|
was of horn and Diana's of silver. One day, as she was returning
|
|
from the chase, Pan met her, told her just this, and added more of the
|
|
same sort. She ran away, without stopping to hear his compliments, and
|
|
he pursued till she came to the bank of the river, where be overtook
|
|
her, and she had only time to call for help on her friends the water
|
|
nymphs. They heard and consented. Pan threw his arms around what he
|
|
supposed to be the form of the nymph and found he embraced only a tuft
|
|
of reeds! As he breathed a sigh, the air sounded through the reeds,
|
|
and produced a plaintive melody. The god, charmed with the novelty and
|
|
with the sweetness of the music, said, 'Thus, then, at least, you
|
|
shall be mine.' And he took some of the reeds, and placing them
|
|
together of unequal lengths, side by side, made an instrument which he
|
|
called Syrinx, in honour of the nymph." Before Mercury had finished
|
|
his story he saw Argus's eyes all asleep. As his head nodded forward
|
|
on his breast, Mercury with one stroke cut his neck through, and
|
|
tumbled his head down the rocks. O hapless Argus! the light of your
|
|
hundred eyes is quenched at once! Juno took them and put them as
|
|
ornaments on the tail of her peacock, where they remain to this day.
|
|
But the vengeance of Juno was not yet satiated. She sent a gadfly to
|
|
torment Io, who fled over the whole world from its pursuit. She swam
|
|
through the Ionian sea, which derived its name from her, then roamed
|
|
over the plains of Illyria, ascended Mount Haemus, and crossed the
|
|
Thracian strait, thence named the Bosphorus (cowford), rambled on
|
|
through Scythia, and the country of the Cimmerians, and arrived at
|
|
last on the banks of the Nile. At length Jupiter interceded for her,
|
|
and upon his promising not to pay her any more attentions Juno
|
|
consented to restore her to her form. It was curious to see her
|
|
gradually recover her former self. The coarse hairs fell from her
|
|
body, her horns shrank up, her eyes grew narrower, her mouth
|
|
shorter; hands and fingers came instead of hoofs to her forefeet; in
|
|
fine there was nothing left of the heifer, except her beauty. At first
|
|
she was afraid to speak, for fear she should low, but gradually she
|
|
recovered her confidence and was restored to her father and sisters.
|
|
In a poem dedicated to Leigh Hunt, by Keats, the following
|
|
allusion to the story of Pan and Syrinx occurs:
|
|
|
|
"So did he feel who pulled the bough aside,
|
|
That we might look into a forest wide,
|
|
|
|
. . . . . . . .
|
|
|
|
Telling us how fair trembling Syrinx fled
|
|
Arcadian Pan, with such a fearful dread.
|
|
Poor nymph- poor Pan- how he did weep to find
|
|
Nought but a lovely sighing of the wind
|
|
Along the reedy stream; a half-heard strain,
|
|
Full of sweet desolation, balmy pain."
|
|
|
|
CALLISTO.
|
|
|
|
Callisto was another maiden who excited the jealousy of Juno, and
|
|
the goddess changed her into a bear. "I will take away," said she,
|
|
"that beauty with which you have captivated my husband." Down fell
|
|
Callisto on her hands and knees; she tried to stretch out her arms
|
|
in supplication- they were already beginning to be covered with
|
|
black hair. Her hands grew rounded, became armed with crooked claws,
|
|
and served for feet; her mouth, which Jove used to praise for its
|
|
beauty, became a horrid pair of jaws; her voice, which if unchanged
|
|
would have moved the heart to pity, became a growl, more fit to
|
|
inspire terror. Yet her former disposition remained, and with
|
|
continual groaning, she bemoaned her fate, and stood upright as well
|
|
as she could, lifting up her paws to be, for mercy, and felt that Jove
|
|
was unkind, though she could not tell him so. Ah, how often, afraid to
|
|
stay in the woods all night alone, she wandered about the
|
|
neighbourhood of her former haunts; how often, frightened by the dogs,
|
|
did she, so lately a huntress, fly in terror from the hunters! Often
|
|
she fled from the wild beasts, forgetting that she was now a wild
|
|
beast herself; and, bear as she was, was afraid of the bears.
|
|
One day a youth espied her as he was hunting. She saw him and
|
|
recognized him as her own son, now grown a young man. She stopped
|
|
and felt inclined to embrace him. As she was about to approach, he,
|
|
alarmed, raised his hunting spear, and was on the point of transfixing
|
|
her, when Jupiter, beholding, arrested the crime, and snatching,
|
|
away both of them, placed them in the heavens as the Great and
|
|
Little Bear.
|
|
Juno was in a rage to see her rival so set in honour, and hastened
|
|
to ancient Tethys and Oceanus, the powers of ocean, and in answer to
|
|
their inquiries thus told the cause of her coming: "Do you ask why
|
|
I, the queen of the gods, have left the heavenly plains and sought
|
|
your depths? Learn that I am supplanted in heaven- my place is given
|
|
to another. You will hardly believe me; but look when night darkens
|
|
the world, and you shall see the two of whom I have so much reason
|
|
to complain exalted to the heavens, in that part where the circle is
|
|
the smallest, in the neighborbood of the pole. Why should any one
|
|
hereafter tremble at the thought of offending Juno when such rewards
|
|
are the consequence of my displeasure? See what I have been able to
|
|
effect! I forbade her to wear the human form- she is placed among
|
|
the stars! So do my punishments result- such is the extent of my
|
|
power! Better that she should have resumed her former shape, as I
|
|
permitted Io to do. Perhaps he means to marry her, and put me away!
|
|
But you, my foster-parents, if you feel for me, and see with
|
|
displeasure this unworthy treatment of me, show it, I beseech you,
|
|
by forbidding this couple from coming into your waters." The powers of
|
|
the ocean assented and consequently the two constellations of the
|
|
Great and Little Bear move round and round in heaven, but never
|
|
sink, as the other stars do, beneath the ocean.
|
|
|
|
Milton alludes to the fact that the constellation of the Bear
|
|
never sets, when he says:
|
|
|
|
"Let my lamp at midnight hour
|
|
Be seen in some high lonely tower,
|
|
Where I may oft outwatch the Bear," etc.
|
|
|
|
And Prometheus, in J. R. Lowell's poem, says:
|
|
|
|
"One after one the stars have risen and set,
|
|
Sparkling upon the hoar frost of my chain;
|
|
The Bear that prowled all night about the fold
|
|
Of the North-star, hath shrunk into his den,
|
|
Scared by the blithesome footsteps of the Dawn."
|
|
|
|
The last star in the tail of the Little Bear is the Polestar, called
|
|
also the Cynosure. Milton says:
|
|
|
|
"Straight mine eye hath caught new pleasures
|
|
While the landscape round it measures.
|
|
|
|
. . . . . . . .
|
|
|
|
Towers and battlements it sees
|
|
Bosomed high in tufted trees,
|
|
Where perhaps some beauty lies
|
|
The Cynosure of neighbouring eyes."
|
|
|
|
The reference here is both to the Polestar as the guide of mariners,
|
|
and to the magnetic attraction of the North. He calls it also the
|
|
"Star of Arcady," because Callisto's boy was named Arcas, and they
|
|
lived in Arcadia. In "Comus," the brother, benighted in the woods,
|
|
says:
|
|
|
|
"...Some gentle taper!
|
|
Though a rush candle, from the wicker hole
|
|
Of some clay habitation, visit us
|
|
With thy long levelled rule of streaming light,
|
|
And thou shalt be our star of Arcady,
|
|
Or Tyrian Cynosure."
|
|
|
|
DIANA AND ACTAEON
|
|
|
|
Thus in two instances we have seen Juno's severity to her rivals;
|
|
now let us learn how a virgin goddess punished an invader of her
|
|
privacy.
|
|
It was midday, and the sun stood equally distant from either goal,
|
|
when young Actaeon, son of King Cadmus, thus addressed the youths
|
|
who with him were hunting the stag in the mountains:
|
|
"Friends, our nets and our weapons are wet with the blood of our
|
|
victims; we have had sport enough for one day, and to-morrow we can
|
|
renew our labours. Now, while Phoebus parches the earth, let us put by
|
|
our implements and indulge ourselves with rest."
|
|
There was a valley thick enclosed with cypresses and pines, sacred
|
|
to the huntress queen, Diana. In the extremity of the valley was a
|
|
cave, not adorned with art, but nature had counterfeited art in its
|
|
construction, for she had turned the arch of its roof with stones,
|
|
as delicately fitted as if by the hand of man. A fountain burst out
|
|
from one side, whose open basin was bounded by a grassy rim. Here
|
|
the goddess of the woods used to come when weary with hunting and lave
|
|
her virgin limbs in the sparkling water.
|
|
One day, having repaired thither with her nymphs, she handed her
|
|
javelin, her quiver, and her bow to one, her robe to another, while
|
|
a third unbound the sandals from her feet. Then Crocale, the most
|
|
skilful of them, arranged her hair, and Nephele, Hyale, and the rest
|
|
drew water in capacious urns. While the goddess was thus employed in
|
|
the labours of the toilet, behold Actaeon, having quitted his
|
|
companions, and rambling without any especial object, came to the
|
|
place, led thither by his destiny. As he presented himself at the
|
|
entrance of the cave, the nymphs, seeing a man, screamed and rushed
|
|
towards the goddess to hide her with their bodies, but she was
|
|
taller than the rest and overtopped them all by a head. Such a
|
|
colour as tinges the clouds at sunset or at dawn came over the
|
|
countenance of Diana thus taken by surprise. Surrounded as she was
|
|
by her nymphs, she yet turned half away, and sought with a sudden
|
|
impulse for her arrows. As they were not at hand, she dashed the water
|
|
into the face of the intruder, adding these words: "Now go and tell,
|
|
if you can, that you have seen Diana unapparelled." Immediately a pair
|
|
of branching stag's horns grew out of his head, his neck gained in
|
|
length, his ears grew sharp-pointed, his hands became feet, his arms
|
|
long legs, his body was covered with a hairy spotted hide. Fear took
|
|
the place of his former boldness, and the hero fled. He could not
|
|
but admire his own speed; but when he saw his horns in the water, "Ah,
|
|
wretched me!" he would have said, but no sound followed the effort. He
|
|
groaned, and tears flowed down the face which had taken the place of
|
|
his own. Yet his consciousness remained. What shall he do?- go home to
|
|
seek the palace, or lie hid in the woods? The latter he was afraid,
|
|
the former he was ashamed to do. While he hesitated the dogs saw
|
|
him. First Melampus, a Spartan dog, gave the signal with his bark,
|
|
then Pamphagus, Dorceus, Lelaps, Theron, Nape, Tigris, and all the
|
|
rest, rushed after him swifter than the wind. Over rocks cliffs,
|
|
through mountain gorges seemed impracticable, he fled and they
|
|
followed. Where he had often chased the stag and cheered on his
|
|
pack, his pack now chased him, cheered on by his huntsmen. He longed
|
|
to cry out, "I am Actaeon; recognize your master!" but the words
|
|
came not at his will. The air resounded with the bark of the dogs.
|
|
Presently one fastened on his back, another seized his shoulder. While
|
|
they held their master, the rest of the pack came up and buried
|
|
their teeth in his flesh. He groaned,- not in a human voice, yet
|
|
certainly not in a stag's,- and falling on his knees, raised his eyes,
|
|
and would have raised his arms in supplication, if he had had them.
|
|
His friends and fellow-huntsmen cheered on the dogs, and looked
|
|
everywhere for Actaeon calling on him to join the sport. At the
|
|
sound of his name he turned his head, and heard them regret that he
|
|
should be away. He earnestly wished he was. He would have been well
|
|
pleased to see the exploits of his dogs, but to feel them was too
|
|
much. They were all around him, rending and tearing; and it was not
|
|
till they had torn his life out that the anger of Diana was satisfied.
|
|
|
|
In Shelley's poem "Adonais" is the following allusion to the story
|
|
of Actaeon:
|
|
|
|
"Midst others of less note came one frail form,
|
|
A phantom among men: companionless
|
|
As the last cloud of an expiring storm,
|
|
Whose thunder is its knell; he, as I guess,
|
|
Had gazed on Nature's naked loveliness,
|
|
Actaeon-like, and now he fled astray
|
|
With feeble steps o'er the world's wilderness;
|
|
And his own Thoughts, along that rugged way,
|
|
Pursued like raging hounds their father and their prey."
|
|
Stanza 31.
|
|
|
|
The allusion is probably to Shelley himself.
|
|
|
|
LATONA AND THE RUSTICS.
|
|
|
|
Some thought the goddess in this instance more severe than was just,
|
|
while others praised her conduct as strictly consistent with her
|
|
virgin dignity. As usual, the recent event brought older ones to mind,
|
|
and one of the bystanders told this story: "Some countrymen of Lycia
|
|
once insulted the goddess Latona, but not with impunity. When I was
|
|
young, my father, who had grown too old for active labours, sent me to
|
|
Lycia to drive thence some choice oxen, and there I saw the very
|
|
pond and marsh where the wonder happened. Near by stood an ancient
|
|
altar, black with the smoke of sacrifice and almost buried among the
|
|
reeds. I inquired whose altar it might be, whether of Faunus or the
|
|
Naiads, or some god of the neighbouring mountain, and one of the
|
|
country people replied, 'No mountain or river god possesses this
|
|
altar, but she whom royal Juno in her jealousy drove from land to
|
|
land, denying her any spot of earth whereon to rear her twins. Bearing
|
|
in her arms the infant deities, Latona reached this land, weary with
|
|
her burden and parched with thirst. By chance she espied in the bottom
|
|
of the valley this pond of clear water, where the country people
|
|
were at work gathering willows and osiers. The goddess approached, and
|
|
kneeling on the bank would have slaked her thirst in the cool
|
|
stream, but the rustics forbade her. "Why do you refuse me water?"
|
|
said she; "water is free to all. Nature allows no one to claim as
|
|
property the sunshine, the air, or the water. I come to take my
|
|
share of the common blessing. Yet I ask it of you as a favour. I
|
|
have no intention of washing my limbs in it, weary though they be, but
|
|
only to quench my thirst. My mouth is so dry that I can hardly
|
|
speak. A draught of water would be nectar to me; it would revive me,
|
|
and I would own myself indebted to you for life itself. Let these
|
|
infants move your pity, who stretch out their little arms as if to
|
|
plead for me;" and the children, as it happened, were stretching out
|
|
their arms.
|
|
"'Who would not have been moved with these gentle words of the
|
|
goddess? But these clowns persisted in their rudeness; they even added
|
|
jeers and threats of violence if she did not leave the place. Nor
|
|
was this all. They waded into the pond and stirred up the mud with
|
|
their feet, so as to make the water unfit to drink. Latona was so
|
|
angry that she ceased to mind her thirst. She no longer supplicated
|
|
the clowns, but lifting her hands to heaven exclaimed, "May they never
|
|
quit that pool, but pass their lives there!" And it came to pass
|
|
accordingly. They now live in the water, sometimes totally
|
|
submerged, then raising their heads above the surface or swimming upon
|
|
it. Sometimes they come out upon the bank, but soon leap back again
|
|
into the water. They still use their base voices in railing, and
|
|
though they have the water all to themselves, are not ashamed to croak
|
|
in the midst of it. Their voices are harsh, their throats bloated,
|
|
their mouths have become stretched by constant railing, their necks
|
|
have shrunk up and disappeared, and their heads are joined to their
|
|
bodies. Their backs are green, their disproportioned bellies white,
|
|
and in short they are now frogs, and dwell in the slimy pool.'"
|
|
|
|
This story explains the allusion in one of Milton's sonnets, "On the
|
|
detraction which followed upon his writing certain treatises."
|
|
|
|
"I did but prompt the age to quit their clogs
|
|
By the known laws of ancient liberty,
|
|
When straight a barbarous noise environs me
|
|
Of owls and cuckoos, asses, apes and dogs.
|
|
As when those hinds that were transformed to frogs
|
|
Railed at Latona's twin-born progeny,
|
|
Which after held the sun and moon in fee."
|
|
|
|
The persecution which Latona experienced from Juno is alluded to
|
|
in the story. The tradition was that the future mother of Apollo and
|
|
Diana, flying from the wrath of Juno, besought all the islands of
|
|
the AEgean to afford her a place of rest, but all feared too much
|
|
the potent queen of heaven to assist her rival. Delos alone
|
|
consented to become the birthplace of the future deities. Delos was
|
|
then a floating island; but when Latona arrived there, Jupiter
|
|
fastened it with adamantine chains to the bottom of the sea, that it
|
|
might be a secure resting-place for his beloved. Byron alludes to
|
|
Delos in his "Don Juan":
|
|
|
|
"The isles of Greece! the isles of Greece!
|
|
Where burning Sappho loved and sung,
|
|
Where grew the arts of war and peace,
|
|
Where Delos rose and Phoebus sprung!"
|
|
CHAPTER V.
|
|
PHAETON.
|
|
|
|
PHAETON was the son of Apollo and the nymph Clymene. One day a
|
|
schoolfellow laughed at the idea of his being the son of the god,
|
|
and Phaeton went in rage and shame and reported it to his mother.
|
|
"If," said he, "I am indeed of heavenly birth, give me, mother, some
|
|
proof of it, and establish my claim to the honour." Clymene
|
|
stretched forth her hands towards the skies, and said, "I call to
|
|
witness the Sun which looks down upon us, that I have told you the
|
|
truth. If I speak falsely, let this be the last time I behold his
|
|
light. But it needs not much labour to go and inquire for yourself;
|
|
the land whence the Sun rises lies next to ours. Go and demand of
|
|
him whether he will own you as a son." Phaeton heard with delight.
|
|
He travelled to India, which lies directly in the regions of
|
|
sunrise; and, full of hope and pride, approached the goal whence his
|
|
parent begins his course.
|
|
The palace of the Sun stood reared aloft on columns, glittering with
|
|
gold and precious stones, while polished ivory formed the ceilings,
|
|
and silver the doors. The workmanship surpassed the material;* for
|
|
upon the walls Vulcan had represented earth, sea, and skies, with
|
|
their inhabitants. In the sea were the nymphs, some sporting in the
|
|
waves, some riding on the backs of fishes, while others sat upon the
|
|
rocks and dried their sea-green hair. Their faces were not all
|
|
alike, nor yet unlike,- but such as sisters' ought to be.*(2) The
|
|
earth had its towns and forests and rivers and rustic divinities. Over
|
|
all was carved the likeness of the glorious heaven; and on the
|
|
silver doors the twelve signs of the zodiac, six on each side.
|
|
|
|
* See Proverbial Expressions, no. 1.
|
|
*(2) See Proverbial Expressions, no. 2.
|
|
|
|
Clymene's son advanced up the steep ascent, and entered the halls of
|
|
his disputed father. He approached the paternal presence, but
|
|
stopped at a distance, for the light was more than he could bear.
|
|
Phoebus, arrayed in a purple vesture, sat on a throne, which glittered
|
|
as with diamonds. On his right hand and his left stood the Day, the
|
|
Month, and the Year, and, at regular intervals, the Hours. Spring
|
|
stood with her head crowned with flowers, and Summer, with garment
|
|
cast aside, and a garland formed of spears of ripened grain, and
|
|
Autumn, with his feet stained with grape-juice, and icy Winter, with
|
|
his hair stiffened with hoar frost. Surrounded by these attendants,
|
|
the Sun, with the eye that sees everything, beheld the youth dazzled
|
|
with the novelty and splendour of the scene, and inquired the
|
|
purpose of his errand. The youth replied, "O light of the boundless
|
|
world, Phoebus, my father,- if you permit me to use that name,- give
|
|
me some proof, I beseech you, by which I may be known as yours." He
|
|
ceased; and his father, laying aside the beams that shone all around
|
|
his head, bade him approach, and embracing him, said, "My son, you
|
|
deserve not to be disowned, and I confirm what your mother has told
|
|
you. To put an end to your doubts, ask what you will, the gift shall
|
|
be yours. I call to witness that dreadful lake, which I never saw, but
|
|
which we gods swear by in our most solemn engagements." Phaeton
|
|
immediately asked to be permitted for one day to drive the chariot
|
|
of the sun. The father repented of his promise; thrice and four
|
|
times he shook his radiant head in warning. "I have spoken rashly,"
|
|
said he; "this only request I would fain deny. I beg you to withdraw
|
|
it. It is not a safe boon, nor one, my Phaeton, suited to your youth
|
|
and strength, Your lot is mortal, and you ask what is beyond a
|
|
mortal's power. In your ignorance you aspire to do that which not even
|
|
the gods themselves may do. None but myself may drive the flaming
|
|
car of day. Not even Jupiter, whose terrible right arm hurls the
|
|
thunderbolts. The first part of the way is steep, and such as the
|
|
horses when fresh in the morning can hardly climb; the middle is
|
|
high up in the heavens, whence I myself can scarcely, without alarm,
|
|
look down and behold the earth and sea stretched beneath me. The
|
|
last part of the road descends rapidly, and requires most careful
|
|
driving. Tethys, who is waiting to receive me, often trembles for me
|
|
lest I should fall headlong. Add to all this, the heaven is all the
|
|
time turning round and carrying the stars with it. I have to be
|
|
perpetually on my guard lest that movement, which sweeps everything
|
|
else along, should hurry me also away. Suppose I should lend you the
|
|
chariot, what would you do? Could you keep your course while the
|
|
sphere was revolving under you? Perhaps you think that there are
|
|
forests and cities, the abodes of gods, and palaces and temples on the
|
|
way. On the contrary, the road is through the midst of frightful
|
|
monsters. You pass by the horns of the Bull, in front of the Archer,
|
|
and near the Lion's jaws, and where the Scorpion stretches its arms in
|
|
one direction and the Crab in another. Nor will you find it easy to
|
|
guide those horses, with their breasts full of fire that they
|
|
breathe forth from their mouths and nostrils. I can scarcely govern
|
|
them myself, when they are unruly and resist the reins. Beware, my
|
|
son, lest I be the donor of a fatal gift; recall your request while
|
|
yet you may. Do you ask me for a proof that you are sprung from my
|
|
blood? I give you a proof in my fears for you. Look at my face- I
|
|
would that you could look into my breast, you would there see all a
|
|
father's anxiety. Finally," he continued, "look round the world and
|
|
choose whatever you will of what earth or sea contains most
|
|
precious- ask it and fear no refusal. This only I pray you not to
|
|
urge. It is not honour, but destruction you seek. Why do you hang
|
|
round my neck and still entreat me? You shall have it if you persist,-
|
|
the oath is sworn and must be kept,- but I beg you to choose more
|
|
wisely."
|
|
He ended; but the youth rejected all admonition and held to his
|
|
demand. So, having resisted as long as he could, Phoebus at last led
|
|
the way to where stood the lofty chariot.
|
|
It was of gold, the gift of Vulcan; the axle was of gold, the pole
|
|
and wheels of gold, the spokes of silver. Along the seat were rows
|
|
of chrysolites and diamonds which reflected all around the
|
|
brightness of the sun. While the daring youth gazed in admiration, the
|
|
early Dawn threw open the purple doors of the east, and showed the
|
|
pathway strewn with roses. The stars withdrew, marshalled by the
|
|
Day-star, which last of all retired also. The father, when he saw
|
|
the earth beginning to glow, and the Moon preparing to retire, ordered
|
|
the Hours to harness up the horses. They obeyed, and led forth from
|
|
the lofty stalls the Steeds full fed with ambrosia, and attached the
|
|
reins. Then the father bathed the face of his son with a powerful
|
|
unguent, and made him capable of enduring the brightness of the flame.
|
|
He set the rays on his head, and, with a foreboding sigh, said, "If,
|
|
my son, you will in this at least heed my advice, spare the whip and
|
|
hold tight the reins. They go fast enough of their own accord; the
|
|
labour is to hold them in. You are not to take the straight road
|
|
directly between the five circles, but turn off to the left. Keep
|
|
within the limit of the middle zone, and avoid the northern and the
|
|
southern alike. You will see the marks of the northern and the
|
|
southern alike. You will see the marks of the wheels, and they will
|
|
serve to guide you. And, that the skies and the earth may each receive
|
|
their due share of heat, go not too high, or you will burn the
|
|
heavenly dwellings, nor too low, or you will set the earth on fire;
|
|
the middle course is safest and best.* And now I leave you to your
|
|
chance, which I hope will plan better for you than you have done for
|
|
yourself. Night is passing out of the western gates and we can delay
|
|
no longer. Take the reins; but if at last your heart fails you, and
|
|
you will benefit by my advice, stay where you are in safety, and
|
|
suffer me to light and warm the earth." The agile youth, sprang into
|
|
the chariot, stood erect, and grasped the reins with delight pouring
|
|
out thanks to his reluctant parent.
|
|
|
|
* See Proverbial Expressions, no. 3.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile the horses fill the air with their snortings and fiery
|
|
breath, and stamp the ground impatient. Now the bars are let down, and
|
|
the boundless plain of the universe lies open before them. They dart
|
|
forward and cleave the opposing clouds, and outrun the morning breezes
|
|
which started from the same eastern goal. The steeds soon perceived
|
|
that the load they drew was lighter than usual; and as a ship
|
|
without ballast is tossed hither and thither on the sea, so the
|
|
chariot, without its accustomed weight, was dashed about as if
|
|
empty. They rush headlong and leave the travelled road. He is alarmed,
|
|
and knows not how to guide them; nor, if he knew, has he the power.
|
|
Then, for the first time, the Great and Little Bear were scorched with
|
|
heat, and would fain, if it were possible, have plunged into the
|
|
water; and the Serpent which lies coiled up round the north pole,
|
|
torpid and harmless, grew warm, and with warmth felt its rage
|
|
revive. Bootes, they say, fled away, though encumbered with his
|
|
plough, and all unused to rapid motion.
|
|
When hapless Phaeton looked down upon the earth, now spreading in
|
|
vast extent beneath him, he grew pale and his knees shook with terror.
|
|
In spite of the glare all around him, the sight of his eyes grew
|
|
dim. He wished he had never touched his father's horses, never learned
|
|
his parentage, never prevailed in his request. He is borne along
|
|
like a vessel that flies before a tempest, when the pilot can do no
|
|
more and betakes himself to his prayers. What shall he do? Much of the
|
|
heavenly road is left behind, but more remains before. He turns his
|
|
eyes from one direction to the other; now to the goal whence he
|
|
began his course, now to the realms of sunset which he is not destined
|
|
to reach. He loses his self-command, and knows not what to do,-
|
|
whether to draw tight the reins or throw them loose; he forgets the
|
|
names of the horses. He sees with terror the monstrous forms scattered
|
|
over the surface of heaven. Here the Scorpion extended his two great
|
|
arms, with his tail and crooked claws stretching over two signs of the
|
|
zodiac. When the boy beheld him, reeking with poison and menacing with
|
|
his fangs, his course failed, and the reins fell from his hands. The
|
|
horses, when they felt them loose on their backs, dashed headlong, and
|
|
unrestrained went off into unknown regions of the sky, in among the
|
|
stars, hurling the chariot over pathless places, now up in high
|
|
heaven, now down almost to the earth. The moon saw with astonishment
|
|
her brother's chariot running beneath her own. The clouds begin to
|
|
smoke, and the mountain tops take fire; the fields are parched with
|
|
heat, the plants wither, the trees with their leafy branches burn, the
|
|
harvest is ablaze! But these are small things. Great cities
|
|
perished, with their walls and towers; whole nations with their people
|
|
were consumed to ashes! The forest-clad mountains burned, Athos and
|
|
Taurus and Tmolus and OEte; Ida, once celebrated for fountains, but
|
|
now all dry; the Muses' mountain Helicon, and Haemus; AEtna, with
|
|
fires within and without, and Parnassus, with his two peaks, and
|
|
Rhodope, forced at last to part with his snowy crown. Her cold climate
|
|
was no protection to Scythia, Caucasus burned, and Ossa and Pindus,
|
|
and, greater than both, Olympus; the Alps high in air, and the
|
|
Apennines crowned with clouds.
|
|
Then Phaeton beheld the world on fire, and felt the heat
|
|
intolerable. The air he breathed was like the air of a furnace and
|
|
full of burning ashes, and the smoke was of a pitchy darkness. He
|
|
dashed forward he knew not whither. Then, it is believed, the people
|
|
of AEthiopia became black by the blood being forced so suddenly to the
|
|
surface, and the Libyan desert was dried up to the condition in
|
|
which it remains to this day. The Nymphs of the fountains, with
|
|
dishevelled hair, mourned their waters, nor were the rivers safe
|
|
beneath their banks: Tanais smoked, and Caicus, Xanthus, and
|
|
Meander; Babylonian Euphrates and Ganges, Tagus with golden sands, and
|
|
Cayster where the swans resort. Nile fled away and hid his head in the
|
|
desert, and there it still remains concealed. Where he used to
|
|
discharge his waters through seven mouths into the sea, there seven
|
|
dry channels alone remained. The earth cracked open, and through the
|
|
chinks light broke into Tartarus, and frightened the king of shadows
|
|
and his queen. The sea shrank up. Where here before was water, it
|
|
became a dry plain; and the mountains that lie beneath the waves
|
|
lifted up their heads and became islands. The fishes sought the lowest
|
|
depths, and the dolphins no longer ventured as usual to sport on the
|
|
surface. Even Nereus, and his wife Doris, with the Nereids, their
|
|
daughters, sought the deepest caves for refuge. Thrice Neptune essayed
|
|
to raise his head above the surface, and thrice was driven back by the
|
|
heat. Earth, surrounded as she was by waters, yet with head and
|
|
shoulders bare, screening her face with her hand, looked up to heaven,
|
|
and with a husky voice called on Jupiter:
|
|
"O ruler of the gods, if I have deserved this treatment, and it is
|
|
your will that I perish with fire, why withhold your thunderbolts? Let
|
|
me at least fall by your hand. Is this the reward of my fertility,
|
|
of my obedient service? Is it for this that I have supplied herbage
|
|
for cattle, and fruits for men, and frankincense for your altars?
|
|
But if I am unworthy of regard, what has my brother Ocean done to
|
|
deserve such a fate? If neither of us can excite your pity, think, I
|
|
pray you, of your own heaven, and behold how both the poles are
|
|
smoking which sustain your palace, which must fall if they be
|
|
destroyed. Atlas faints, and scarce holds up his burden. If sea,
|
|
earth, and heaven perish, we fall into ancient Chaos. Save what yet
|
|
remains to us from the devouring flame. O, take thought for our
|
|
deliverance in this awful moment!"
|
|
Thus spoke Earth, and overcome with heat and thirst, could say no
|
|
more. Then Jupiter omnipotent, calling to witness all the gods,
|
|
including him who had lent the chariot, and showing them that all
|
|
was lost unless some speedy remedy were applied, mounted the lofty
|
|
tower from whence he diffuses clouds over the earth, and hurls the
|
|
forked lightnings. But at that time not a cloud was to be found to
|
|
interpose for a screen to earth, nor was a shower remaining
|
|
unexhausted. He thundered, and brandishing a lightning bolt in his
|
|
right hand launched it against the charioteer, and struck him at the
|
|
same moment from his seat and from existence! Phaeton, with his hair
|
|
on fire, fell headlong, like a shooting star which marks the heavens
|
|
with its brightness as it falls, and Eridanus, the great river,
|
|
received him and cooled his burning frame.* The Italian Naiads
|
|
reared a tomb for him, and inscribed these words upon the stone:
|
|
|
|
"Driver of Phoebus' chariot, Phaeton,
|
|
Struck by Jove's thunder, rests beneath this stone.
|
|
He could not rule his father's car of fire,
|
|
Yet was it much so nobly to aspire."
|
|
|
|
* See Proverbial Expressions, no. 4.
|
|
|
|
His sisters, the Heliades, as they lamented his fate, were turned
|
|
into poplar trees, on the banks of the river, and their tears, which
|
|
continued to flow, became amber as they dropped into the stream.
|
|
|
|
Milman, in his poem of "Samor," makes the following allusion to
|
|
Phaeton's story:
|
|
|
|
"As when the palsied universe aghast
|
|
Lay... mute and still,
|
|
When drove, so poets sing, the Sun-born youth
|
|
Devious through Heaven's affrighted signs his sire's
|
|
Ill-granted chariot. Him the Thunderer hurled
|
|
From th' empyrean headlong to the gulf
|
|
Of thee half-parched Eridanus, where weep
|
|
Even now the sister trees their amber tears
|
|
O'er Phaeton untimely dead."
|
|
|
|
In the beautiful lines of Walter Savage Landor, descriptive of the
|
|
Sea-shell, there is an allusion to the Sun's palace and chariot. The
|
|
water-nymph says:
|
|
|
|
"...I have sinuous shells of pearly hue
|
|
Within, and things that lustre have imbibed
|
|
In the sun's palace porch, where when unyoked
|
|
His chariot wheel stands midway on the wave.
|
|
Shake one and it awakens; then apply
|
|
Its polished lip to your attentive ear,
|
|
And it remembers its august abodes,
|
|
And murmurs as the ocean murmurs there."
|
|
Gebir, Book 1.
|
|
CHAPTER VI.
|
|
MIDAS- BAUCIS AND PHILEMON.
|
|
|
|
BACCHUS, on a certain occasion, found his old schoolmaster and
|
|
foster-father, Silenus, missing. The old man had been drinking, and in
|
|
that state wandered away, and was found by some peasants, who
|
|
carried him to their king, Midas. Midas recognized him, and treated
|
|
him hospitably, entertaining him for ten days and nights with an
|
|
unceasing round of jollity. On the eleventh day he brought Silenus
|
|
back, and restored him in safety to his pupil. Whereupon Bacchus
|
|
offered Midas his choice of a reward, whatever he might wish. He asked
|
|
that whatever he might touch should be changed into gold. Bacchus
|
|
consented, though sorry that he had not made a better choice. Midas
|
|
went his way, rejoicing in his new-acquired power, which he hastened
|
|
to put to the test. He could scarce believe his eyes when he found a
|
|
twig of an oak, which he plucked from the branch, become gold in his
|
|
hand. He took up a stone; it changed to gold. He touched a sod; it did
|
|
the same. He took up an apple from the tree; you would have thought he
|
|
had robbed the garden of the Hesperides. His joy knew no bounds, and
|
|
as soon as he got home, he ordered the servants to set a splendid
|
|
repast on the table. Then he found to his dismay that whether he
|
|
touched bread, it hardened in his hand; or put a morsel to his lip, it
|
|
defied his teeth. He took a glass of wine, but it flowed down his
|
|
throat like melted gold.
|
|
In consternation at the unprecedented affliction, he strove to
|
|
divest himself of his power; he hated the gift he had lately
|
|
coveted. But all in vain; starvation seemed to await him. He raised
|
|
his arms, all shining with gold, in prayer to Bacchus, begging to be
|
|
delivered from his glittering destruction. Bacchus, merciful deity,
|
|
herd and consented. "Go," said he, "to River Pactolus, trace its
|
|
fountain-head, there plunge yourself and body in, and wash away your
|
|
fault and its punishment." He did so, and scarce had he touched the
|
|
waters before the gold-creating power passed into them, and the
|
|
river sands became changed into gold, as they remain to this day.
|
|
Thenceforth Midas, hating wealth and splendour, dwelt in the
|
|
country, and became a worshipper of Pan, the god of the fields. On a
|
|
certain occasion Pan had the temerity to compare his music with that
|
|
of Apollo, and to challenge the god of the lyre to a trial of skill.
|
|
The challenge was accepted, and Tmolus, the mountain god, was chosen
|
|
umpire. The senior took his seat, and cleared away the trees from
|
|
his ears to listen. At a given signal Pan blew on his pipes, and
|
|
with his rustic melody gave great satisfaction to himself and his
|
|
faithful follower Midas, who happened to be present. Then Tmolus
|
|
turned his head toward the Sun-god, and all his trees turned with him.
|
|
Apollo rose, his brow wreathed with Parnassian laurel, while his
|
|
robe of Tyrian purple swept the ground. In his left hand he held the
|
|
lyre, and with his right hand struck the strings. Ravished with the
|
|
harmony, Tmolus at once awarded the victory to the god of the lyre,
|
|
and all but Midas acquiesced in the judgment. He dissented, and
|
|
questioned the justice of the award. Apollo would not suffer such a
|
|
depraved pair of ears any longer to wear the human form, but caused
|
|
them to increase in length, grow hairy, within and without, and
|
|
movable on their roots; in short, to be on the perfect pattern of
|
|
those of an ass.
|
|
Mortified enough was King Midas at this mishap: but he consoled
|
|
himself with the thought that it was possible to hide his
|
|
misfortune, which he attempted to do by means of an ample turban or
|
|
head-dress. But his hair-dresser of course knew the secret. He was
|
|
charged not to mention it, and threatened with dire punishment if he
|
|
presumed to disobey. But he found it too much for his discretion to
|
|
keep such a secret; so he went out into the meadow, dug a hole in
|
|
the ground, and stooping down, whispered the story, and covered it up.
|
|
Before long a thick bed of reeds sprang up in the meadow, and as
|
|
soon as it had gained its growth, began whispering the story, and
|
|
has continued to do so, from that day to this, every time a breeze
|
|
passes over the place.
|
|
|
|
The story of King Midas has been told by others with some
|
|
variations. Dryden, in the "Wife of Bath's Tale," makes Midas's
|
|
queen the betrayer of the secret:
|
|
|
|
"This Midas knew, and durst communicate
|
|
To none but to his wife his ears of state."
|
|
|
|
Midas was king of Phrygia. He was the son of Gordius, a poor
|
|
countryman, who was taken by the people and made king, in obedience to
|
|
the command of the oracle, which had said that their future king
|
|
should come in a wagon. While the people were deliberating, Gordius
|
|
with his wife and son came driving his wagon into the public square.
|
|
Gordius, being made king, dedicated his wagon to the deity of the
|
|
oracle, and tied it up in its place with a fast knot. This was the
|
|
celebrated Gordian knot, which, in after times it was said, whoever
|
|
should untie should become lord of all Asia. Many tried to untie it,
|
|
but none succeeded, till Alexander the Great, in his career of
|
|
conquest, came to Phrygia. He tried his skill with as ill success as
|
|
others, till growing impatient he drew his sword and cut the knot.
|
|
When he afterwards succeeded in subjecting all Asia to his sway,
|
|
people began to think that he had complied with the terms of the
|
|
oracle according to its true meaning.
|
|
|
|
BAUCIS AND PHILEMON.
|
|
|
|
On a certain hill in Phrygia stands a linden tree and an oak,
|
|
enclosed by a low wall. Not far from the spot is a marsh, formerly
|
|
good habitable land, but now indented with pools, the resort of
|
|
fen-birds and cormorants. Once on a time Jupiter, in human shape,
|
|
visited this country, and with him his son Mercury (he of the
|
|
caduceus), without his wings. They presented themselves, as weary
|
|
travellers, at many a door, seeking rest and shelter, but found all
|
|
closed, for it was late, and the inhospitable inhabitants would not
|
|
rouse themselves to open for their reception. At last a humble mansion
|
|
received them, a small thatched cottage, where Baucis, a pious old
|
|
dame, and her husband Philemon, united when young, had grown old
|
|
together. Not ashamed of their poverty, they made it endurable by
|
|
moderate desires and kind dispositions. One need not look there for
|
|
master or for servant; they two were the whole household, master and
|
|
servant alike. When the two heavenly guests crossed the humble
|
|
threshold, and bowed their heads to pass under the low door, the old
|
|
man placed a seat, on which Baucis, bustling and attentive, spread a
|
|
cloth, and begged them to sit down. Then she raked out the coals
|
|
from the ashes, and kindled up a fire, fed it with leaves and dry
|
|
bark, and with her scanty breath blew it into a flame. She brought out
|
|
of a corner split sticks and dry branches, broke them up, and placed
|
|
them under the small kettle. Her husband collected some pot-herbs in
|
|
the garden, and she shred them from the stalks, and prepared them
|
|
for the pot. He reached down with a forked stick a flitch of bacon
|
|
hanging in the chimney, cut a small piece, and put it in the pot to
|
|
boil with the herbs, setting away the rest for another time. A beechen
|
|
bowl was filled with warm water, that their guests might wash. While
|
|
all was doing, they beguiled the time with conversation.
|
|
On the bench designed for the guests was laid a cushion stuffed with
|
|
sea-weed; and a cloth, only produced on great occasions, but ancient
|
|
and coarse enough, was spread over that. The old lady, with her
|
|
apron on, with trembling hand set the table. One leg was shorter
|
|
than the rest, but a piece of slate put under restored the level. When
|
|
fixed, she rubbed the table down with some sweet-smelling herbs.
|
|
Upon it she set some of chaste Minerva's olives, some cornel berries
|
|
preserved in vinegar, and added radishes and cheese, with eggs lightly
|
|
cooked in the ashes. All were served in earthen dishes, and an
|
|
earthenware pitcher, with wooden cups, stood beside them. When all was
|
|
ready, the stew, smoking hot, was set on the table. Some wine, not
|
|
of the oldest, was added; and for dessert, apples and wild honey;
|
|
and over and above all, friendly faces, and simple but hearty welcome.
|
|
Now while the repast proceeded, the old folks were astonished to see
|
|
that the wine, as fast as it was poured out, renewed itself in the
|
|
pitcher, of its own accord. Struck with terror, Baucis and Philemon
|
|
recognized their heavenly guests, fell on their knees, and with
|
|
clasped hands implored forgiveness for their poor entertainment. There
|
|
was an old goose, which they kept as the guardian of their humble
|
|
cottage; and they bethought them to make this a sacrifice in honour of
|
|
their guests. But the goose, too nimble, with the aid of feet and
|
|
wings, for the old folks, eluded their pursuit, and at last took
|
|
shelter between the gods themselves. They forbade it to be slain;
|
|
and spoke in these words: "We are gods. This inhospitable village
|
|
shall pay the penalty of its impiety; you alone shall go free from the
|
|
chastisement. Quit your house, and come with us to the top of yonder
|
|
hill." They hastened to obey, and, staff in hand, laboured up the
|
|
steep ascent. They had reached to within an arrow's flight of the top,
|
|
when, turning their eyes below, they beheld all the country sunk in
|
|
a lake, only their own house left standing. While they gazed with
|
|
wonder at the sight, and lamented the fate of their neighbours, that
|
|
old house of theirs was changed into a temple. Columns took the
|
|
place of the corner posts, the thatch grew yellow and appeared a
|
|
gilded roof, the floors became marble, the doors were enriched with
|
|
carving and ornaments of old. Then spoke Jupiter in benignant accents:
|
|
"Excellent old man, and woman worthy of such a husband, speak, tell us
|
|
your wishes; what favour have you to ask of us?" Philemon took counsel
|
|
with Baucis a few moments; then declared to the gods their united
|
|
wish, "We ask to be priests and guardians of this your temple; and
|
|
since here we have passed our lives in love and concord, we wish
|
|
that one and the same hour may take us both from life, that I may
|
|
not live to see her grave, nor be laid in my own by her." Their prayer
|
|
was granted. They were the keepers of the temple as long as they
|
|
lived. When grown very old, as they stood one day before the steps
|
|
of the sacred edifice, and were telling the story of the place, Baucis
|
|
saw Philemon begin to put forth leaves, and old Philemon saw Baucis
|
|
changing in like manner. And now a leafy crown had grown over their
|
|
heads, while exchanging parting words, as long as they could speak.
|
|
"Farewell, dear spouse," they said, together, and at the same moment
|
|
the bark closed over their mouths. The Tyanean shepherd still shows
|
|
the two trees, standing side by side, made out of the two good old
|
|
people.
|
|
|
|
The story of Baucis and Philemon has been imitated by Swift, in a
|
|
burlesque style, the actors in the change being two wandering
|
|
saints, and the house being changed into a church, of which Philemon
|
|
is made the parson. The following may serve as a specimen:
|
|
|
|
"They scarce had spoke, when, fair and soft,
|
|
The root began to mount aloft;
|
|
Aloft rose every beam and rafter;
|
|
The heavy wall climbed slowly after.
|
|
The chimney widened and grew higher,
|
|
Became a steeple with a spire.
|
|
The kettle to the top was hoist,
|
|
And there stood fastened to a joist,
|
|
But with the upside down, to show,
|
|
Its inclination for below;
|
|
In vain, for a superior force,
|
|
Applied at bottom, stops its course;
|
|
Doomed ever in suspense to dwell,
|
|
'Tis now no kettle, but a bell.
|
|
A wooden jack, which had almost
|
|
Lost by disuse the art to roast,
|
|
A sudden alteration feels.
|
|
Increased by new intestine wheels;
|
|
And, what exalts the wonder more,
|
|
The number made the motion slower;
|
|
The flier, though 't had leaden feet,
|
|
Turned round so quick you scarce could see 't;
|
|
But slackened by some secret power,
|
|
Now hardly moves an inch an hour.
|
|
The jack and chimney, near allied,
|
|
Had never left each other's side:
|
|
The chimney to a steeple grown,
|
|
The jack would not be left alone;
|
|
But up against the steeple reared,
|
|
Became a clock, and still adhered;
|
|
And still its love to household cares
|
|
By a shrill voice at noon declares,
|
|
Warning the cook-maid not to burn
|
|
That roast meat which it cannot turn.
|
|
The groaning chair began to crawl,
|
|
Like a huge snail, along the wall;
|
|
There stuck aloft in public view,
|
|
And with small change, a pulpit grew.
|
|
A bedstead of the antique mode,
|
|
Compact of timber many a load,
|
|
Such as our ancestors did use,
|
|
Was metamorphosed into pews,
|
|
Which still their ancient nature keep
|
|
By lodging folks disposed to sleep."
|
|
CHAPTER VII.
|
|
PROSERPINE- GLAUCUS AND SCYLLA.
|
|
|
|
WHEN Jupiter and his brothers had defeated the Titars and banished
|
|
them to Tartarus, a new enemy rose up against the gods. They were
|
|
the giants Typhon, Briareus, Enceladus, and others. Some of them had a
|
|
hundred arms, others breathed out fire. They were finally subdued
|
|
and buried alive under Mount AEtna, where they still sometimes
|
|
struggle to get loose, and shake the whole island with earthquakes.
|
|
Their breath comes up through the mountain, and is what men call the
|
|
eruption of the volcano.
|
|
The fall of these monsters shook the earth, so that Pluto was
|
|
alarmed, and feared that his kingdom would be laid open to the light
|
|
of day. Under this apprehension, he mounted his chariot, drawn by
|
|
black horses, and took a circuit of inspection to satisfy himself of
|
|
the extent of the damage. While he was thus engaged, Venus, who was
|
|
sitting on Mount Eryx playing with her boy Cupid, espied him, and
|
|
said, "My son, take your darts with which you conquer all, even Jove
|
|
himself, and send one into the breast of yonder dark monarch, who
|
|
rules the realm of Tartarus. Why should he alone escape? Seize the
|
|
opportunity to extend your empire and mine. Do you not see that even
|
|
in heaven some despise our power? Minerva the wise, and Diana the
|
|
huntress, defy us; and there is that daughter of Ceres, who
|
|
threatens to follow their example. Now do you, if you have any
|
|
regard for your own interest or mine, join these two in one." The
|
|
boy unbound his quiver, and selected his sharpest and truest arrow;
|
|
then straining the bow against his knee, he attached the string,
|
|
and, having made ready, shot the arrow with its barbed point right
|
|
into the heart of Pluto.
|
|
In the vale of Enna there is a lake embowered in woods, which screen
|
|
it from the fervid rays of the sun, while the moist ground is
|
|
covered with flowers, and Spring reigns perpetual. Here Proserpine was
|
|
playing with her companions, gathering lilies and violets, and filling
|
|
her basket and her apron with them, when Pluto saw her, loved her, and
|
|
carried her off. She screamed for help to her mother and companions;
|
|
and when in her fright she dropped the corners of her apron and let
|
|
the flowers fall, childlike she felt the loss of them as an addition
|
|
to her grief. The ravisher urged on his steeds, calling them each by
|
|
name, and throwing loose over their heads and necks his
|
|
iron-coloured reins. When he reached the River Cyane, and it opposed
|
|
his passage, he struck the river-bank with his trident, and the
|
|
earth opened and gave him a passage to Tartarus.
|
|
Ceres sought her daughter all the world over. Bright-haired
|
|
Aurora, when she came forth in the morning, and Hesperus when he led
|
|
out the stars in the evening, found her still busy in the search.
|
|
But it was all unavailing. At length, weary and sad, she sat down upon
|
|
a stone, and continued sitting nine days and nights, in the open
|
|
air, under the sunlight and moonlight and falling showers. It was
|
|
where now stands the city of Eleusis, then the home of an old man
|
|
named Celeus. He was out on the field, gathering acorns and
|
|
blackberries, and sticks for his fire. His little girl was driving
|
|
home their two goats, and as she passed the goddess, who appeared in
|
|
the guise of an old woman, she said to her, "Mother,"- and the name
|
|
was sweet to the ears of Ceres,- "why do you sit here alone upon the
|
|
rocks?" The old man also stopped, though his load was heavy, and
|
|
begged her to come into his cottage, such as it was. She declined, and
|
|
he urged her. "Go in peace," she replied, "and be happy in your
|
|
daughter; I have lost mine." As she spoke, tears- or something like
|
|
tears, for the gods never weep- fell down her cheeks upon her bosom.
|
|
The compassionate old man and his child wept with her. Then said he,
|
|
"Come with us, and despise not our humble roof; so may your daughter
|
|
be restored to you in safety." "Lead on," said she, "I cannot resist
|
|
that appeal!" So she rose from the stone and went with them. As they
|
|
walked he told her that his only son, a little boy, lay very sick,
|
|
feverish, and sleepless. She stooped and gathered some poppies. As
|
|
they entered the cottage, they found all in great distress, for the
|
|
boy seemed past hope of recovery. Metanira, his mother, received her
|
|
kindly, and the goddess stooped and kissed the lips of the sick child.
|
|
Instantly the paleness left his face, and healthy vigour returned to
|
|
his body. The whole family were delighted- that is, the father,
|
|
mother, and little girl, for they were all; they had no servants. They
|
|
spread the table, and put upon it curds and cream, apples, and honey
|
|
in the comb. While they ate, Ceres mingled poppy juice in the milk
|
|
of the boy. When night came and all was still, she arose, and taking
|
|
the sleeping boy, moulded his limbs with her hands, and uttered over
|
|
him three times a solemn charm, then went and laid him in the ashes.
|
|
His mother, who had been watching what her guest was doing, sprang
|
|
forward with a cry and snatched the child from the fire. Then Ceres
|
|
assumed her own form, and a divine splendour shone all around. While
|
|
they were overcome with astonishment, she said, "Mother, you have been
|
|
cruel in your fondness to your son. I would have made him immortal,
|
|
but you have frustrated my attempt. Nevertheless, he shall be great
|
|
and useful. He shall teach men the use of the plough, and the
|
|
rewards which labour can win from the cultivated soil." So saying, she
|
|
wrapped a cloud about her, and mounting her chariot rode away.
|
|
Ceres continued her search for her daughter, passing from land to
|
|
land, and across seas and rivers, till at length she returned to
|
|
Sicily, whence she at first set out, and stood by the banks of the
|
|
River Cyane, where Pluto made himself a passage with his prize to
|
|
his own dominions. The river nymph would have told the goddess all she
|
|
had witnessed, but dared not, for fear of Pluto; so she only
|
|
ventured to take up the girdle which Proserpine had dropped in her
|
|
flight, and waft it to the feet of the mother. Ceres, seeing this, was
|
|
no longer in doubt of her loss, but she did not yet know the cause,
|
|
and laid the blame on the innocent land. "Ungrateful soil," said
|
|
she, "which I have endowed with fertility and clothed with herbage and
|
|
nourishing grain, no more shall you enjoy my favours." Then the cattle
|
|
died, the plough broke in the furrow, the seed failed to come up;
|
|
there was too much sun, there was too much rain; the birds stole the
|
|
seeds- thistles and brambles were the only growth. Seeing this, the
|
|
fountain Arethusa interceded for the land. "Goddess," said she, "blame
|
|
not the land; it opened unwillingly to yield a passage to your
|
|
daughter. I can tell you of her fate, for I have seen her. This is not
|
|
my native country; I came hither from Elis. I was a woodland nymph,
|
|
and delighted in the chase. They praised my beauty, but I cared
|
|
nothing for it, and rather boasted of my hunting exploits. One day I
|
|
was returning from the wood, heated with exercise, when I came to a
|
|
stream silently flowing, so clear that you might count the pebbles
|
|
on the bottom. The willows shaded it, and the grassy bank sloped
|
|
down to the water's edge. I approached, I touched the water with my
|
|
foot. I stepped in knee-deep, and not content with that, I laid my
|
|
garments on the willows and went in. While I sported in the water, I
|
|
heard an indistinct murmur coming up as out of the depths of the
|
|
stream; and made haste to escape to the nearest bank. The voice
|
|
said, 'Why do you fly, Arethusa? I am Alpheus, the god of this
|
|
stream.' I ran, he pursued; he was not more swift than I, but he was
|
|
stronger, and gained upon me, as my strength failed. At last,
|
|
exhausted, I cried for help to Diana. 'Help me, goddess! help your
|
|
votary!' The goddess heard, and wrapped me suddenly in a thick
|
|
cloud. The river god looked now this way and now that, and twice
|
|
came close to me, but could not find me. 'Arethusa! Arethusa!' he
|
|
cried. Oh, how I trembled,- like a lamb that hears the wolf growling
|
|
outside the fold. A cold sweat came over me, my hair flowed down in
|
|
streams; where my foot stood there was a pool. In short, in less
|
|
time than it takes to tell it, I became a fountain. But in this form
|
|
Alpheus knew me and attempted to mingle his stream with mine. Diana
|
|
cleft the ground, and I, endeavouring to escape him, plunged into
|
|
the cavern, and through the bowels of the earth came out here in
|
|
Sicily. While I passed through the lower parts of the earth, I saw
|
|
your Proserpine. She was sad, but no longer showing alarm in her
|
|
countenance. Her look was such as became a queen- the queen of Erebus;
|
|
the powerful bride of the monarch of the realms of the dead."
|
|
When Ceres heard this, she stood for a while like one stupefied;
|
|
then turned her chariot towards heaven, and hastened to present
|
|
herself before the throne of Jove. She told the story of her
|
|
bereavement, and implored Jupiter to interfere to procure the
|
|
restitution of her daughter. Jupiter consented on one condition,
|
|
namely, that Proserpine should not during her stay in the lower
|
|
world have taken any food; otherwise, the Fates forbade her release.
|
|
Accordingly, Mercury was sent, accompanied by Spring, to demand
|
|
Proserpine of Pluto. The wily monarch consented; but, alas! the maiden
|
|
had taken a pomegranate which Pluto offered her, and had sucked the
|
|
sweet pulp from a few of the seeds. This was enough to prevent her
|
|
complete release; but a compromise was made, by which she was to
|
|
pass half the time with her mother, and the rest with her husband
|
|
Pluto.
|
|
Ceres allowed herself to be pacified with this arrangement, and
|
|
restored the earth to her favour. Now she remembered Celeus and his
|
|
family, and her promise to his infant son Triptolemus. When the boy
|
|
grew up, she taught him the use of the plough, and how to sow the
|
|
seed. She took him in her chariot, drawn by winged dragons, through
|
|
all the countries of the earth, imparting to mankind valuable
|
|
grains, and the knowledge of agriculture. After his return,
|
|
Triptolemus built a magnificent temple to Ceres in Eleusis, and
|
|
established the worship of the goddess, under the name of the
|
|
Eleusinian mysteries, which, in the splendour and solemnity of their
|
|
observance, surpassed all other religious celebrations among the
|
|
Greeks.
|
|
There can be little doubt of this story of Ceres and Proserpine
|
|
being an allegory. Proserpine signifies the seed-corn which when
|
|
cast into the ground lies there concealed- that is, she is carried off
|
|
by the god of the underworld. It reappears- that is, Proserpine is
|
|
restored to her mother. Spring leads her back to the light of day.
|
|
|
|
Milton alludes to the story of Proserpine in "Paradise Lost," Book
|
|
IV.:
|
|
|
|
"...Not that fair field
|
|
Of Enna where Proserpine gathering flowers,
|
|
Herself a fairer flower, by gloomy Dis
|
|
Was gathered, which cost Ceres all that pain
|
|
To seek her through the world,-
|
|
...might with this Paradise
|
|
Of Eden strive."
|
|
|
|
Hood, in his "Ode to Melancholy," uses the same allusion very
|
|
beautifully:
|
|
|
|
"Forgive, if somewhile I forget,
|
|
In woe to come the present bliss;
|
|
As frighted Proserpine let fall
|
|
Her flowers at the sight of Dis."
|
|
|
|
The River Alpheus does in fact disappear underground, in part of its
|
|
course, finding its way through subterranean channels till it again
|
|
appears on the surface. It was said that the Sicilian fountain
|
|
Arethusa was the same stream, which, after passing under the sea, came
|
|
up again in Sicily. Hence the story ran that a cup thrown into the
|
|
Alpheus appeared again in Arethusa. It is this fable of the
|
|
underground course of Alpheus that Coleridge alludes to in his poem of
|
|
"Kubla Khan":
|
|
|
|
"In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
|
|
A stately pleasure-dome decree,
|
|
Where Alph, the sacred river, ran
|
|
Through caverns measureless to man,
|
|
Down to a sunless sea."
|
|
|
|
In one of Moore's juvenile poems he thus alludes to the same
|
|
story, and to the practice of throwing garlands or other light objects
|
|
on his stream to be carried downward by it, and afterwards
|
|
reproduced at its emerging:
|
|
|
|
"O my beloved, how divinely sweet
|
|
Is the pure joy when kindred spirits meet!
|
|
Like him the river god, whose waters flow,
|
|
With love their only light, through caves below,
|
|
Wafting in triumph all the flowery braids
|
|
And festal rings, with which Olympic maids
|
|
Have decked his current, as an offering meet
|
|
To lay at Arethusa's shining feet.
|
|
Think, when he meets at last his fountain bride,
|
|
What perfect love must thrill the blended tide!
|
|
Each lost in each, till mingling into one,
|
|
Their lot the same for shadow or for sun,
|
|
A type of true love, to the deep they run."
|
|
|
|
The following extract from Moore's "Rhymes on the Road" gives an
|
|
account of a celebrated picture by Albano, at Milan, called a Dance of
|
|
Loves:
|
|
|
|
"'Tis for the theft of Enna's flower from earth
|
|
These urchins celebrate their dance of mirth,
|
|
Round the green tree, like fays upon a heath;-
|
|
Those that are nearest Linked in order bright,
|
|
Cheek after cheek, like rosebuds in a wreath;
|
|
And those more distant showing from beneath
|
|
The others' wings their little eyes of light.
|
|
While see! among the clouds, their eldest brother,
|
|
But just flown up, tells with a smile of bliss,
|
|
This prank of Pluto to his charmed mother,
|
|
Who turns to greet the tidings with a kiss."
|
|
|
|
GLAUCUS AND SCYLLA.
|
|
|
|
Glaucus was a fisherman. One day he had drawn his nets to land,
|
|
and had taken a great many fishes of various kinds. So he emptied
|
|
his net, and. proceeded to sort the fishes on the grass. The place
|
|
where he stood was a beautiful island in the river, a solitary spot,
|
|
uninhabited, and not used for pasturage of cattle, not ever visited by
|
|
any but himself. On a sudden, the fishes, which had been laid on the
|
|
grass, began to revive and move their fins as if they were in the
|
|
water; and while he looked on astonished, they one and all moved off
|
|
to the water, plunged in, and swam away. He did not know what to
|
|
make of this, whether some god had done it or some secret power in the
|
|
herbage. "What herb has such a power?" he exclaimed; and gathering
|
|
some of it, he tasted it. Scarce had the juices of the plant reached
|
|
his palate when he found himself agitated with a longing desire for
|
|
the water. He could no longer restrain himself, but bidding farewell
|
|
to earth, he plunged into the stream. The gods of the water received
|
|
him graciously, and admitted him to the honour of their society.
|
|
They obtained the consent of Oceanus and Tethys, the sovereigns of the
|
|
sea, that all that was mortal in him should be washed away. A
|
|
hundred rivers poured their waters over him. Then he lost all sense of
|
|
his former nature and all consciousness. When he recovered, he found
|
|
himself changed in form and mind. His hair was sea-green, and
|
|
trailed behind him on the water; his shoulders grew broad, and what
|
|
had been thighs and legs assumed the form of a fish's tail. The
|
|
sea-gods complimented him on the change of his appearance, and he
|
|
fancied himself rather a good-looking personage.
|
|
One day Glaucus saw the beautiful maiden Scylla, the favourite of
|
|
the water-nymphs, rambling on the shore, and when she had found a
|
|
sheltered nook, laving her limbs in the clear water. He fell in love
|
|
with her, and showing himself on the surface, spoke to her, saying
|
|
such things as he thought most likely to win her to stay; for she
|
|
turned to run immediately on the sight of him, and ran till she had
|
|
gained a cliff overlooking the sea. Here she stopped and turned
|
|
round to see whether it was a god or a sea animal, and observed with
|
|
wonder his shape and colour. Glaucus partly emerging from the water,
|
|
and supporting himself against a rock, said, "Maiden, I am no monster,
|
|
nor a sea animal, but a god: and neither Proteus nor Triton ranks
|
|
higher than I. Once I was a mortal, and followed the sea for a living;
|
|
but now I belong wholly to it." Then he told the story of his
|
|
metamorphosis, and how he had been promoted to his present dignity,
|
|
and added, "But what avails all this if it fails to move your
|
|
heart?" He was going on in this strain, but Scylla turned and hastened
|
|
away.
|
|
Glaucus was in despair, but it occurred to him to consult the
|
|
enchantress Circe. Accordingly he repaired to her island- the same
|
|
where afterwards Ulysses landed, as we shall see in one of our later
|
|
stories. After mutual salutations, he said, "Goddess, I entreat your
|
|
pity; you alone can relieve the pain I suffer. The power of herbs I
|
|
know as well as any one, for it is to them I owe my change of form.
|
|
I love Scylla. I am ashamed to tell you how I have sued and promised
|
|
to her, and how scornfully she has treated me. I beseech you to use
|
|
your incantations, or potent herbs, if they are more prevailing, not
|
|
to cure me of my love,- for that I do not wish,- but to make her share
|
|
it and yield me a like return." To which Circe replied, for she was
|
|
not insensible to the attractions of the sea-green deity, "You had
|
|
better pursue a willing object; you are worthy to be sought, instead
|
|
of having to seek in vain. Be not diffident, know your own worth. I
|
|
protest to you that even I, goddess though I be, and learned in the
|
|
virtues of plants and spells, should not know how to refuse you. If
|
|
she scorns you scorn her; meet one who is ready to meet you half
|
|
way, and thus make a due return to both at once." To these words
|
|
Glaucus replied, "Sooner shall trees grow at the bottom of the
|
|
ocean, and sea-weed on the top of the mountains, than I will cease
|
|
to love Scylla, and her alone."
|
|
The goddess was indignant, but she could not punish him, neither did
|
|
she wish to do so, for she liked him too well; so she turned all her
|
|
wrath against her rival, poor Scylla. She took plants of poisonous
|
|
powers and mixed them together, with incantations and charms. Then she
|
|
passed through the crowd of gambolling beasts, the victims of her art,
|
|
and proceeded to the coast of Sicily, where Scylla lived. There was
|
|
a little bay on the shore to which Scylla used to resort, in the
|
|
heat of the day, to breathe the air of the sea, and to bathe in its
|
|
waters. Here the goddess poured her poisonous mixture, and muttered
|
|
over it incantations of mighty power. Scylla came as usual and plunged
|
|
into the water up to her waist. What was her horror to perceive a
|
|
brood of serpents and barking monsters surrounding her! At first she
|
|
could not imagine they were a part of herself, and tried to run from
|
|
them, and to drive them away; but as she ran she carried them with
|
|
her, and when she tried to touch her limbs, she found her hands
|
|
touch only the yawning jaws of monsters. Scylla remained rooted to the
|
|
spot. Her temper grew as ugly as her form, and she took pleasure in
|
|
devouring hapless mariners who came within her grasp. Thus she
|
|
destroyed six of the companions of Ulysses, and tried to wreck the
|
|
ships of AEneas, till at last she was turned into a rock, and as
|
|
such still continues to be a terror to mariners.
|
|
|
|
Keats, in his "Endymion," has given a new version of the ending of
|
|
"Glaucus and Scylla." Glaucus consents to Circe's blandishments,
|
|
till he by chance is witness to her transactions with her beasts.
|
|
Disgusted with her treachery and cruelty, he tries to escape from her,
|
|
but is taken and brought back, when with reproaches she banishes
|
|
him, sentencing him to pass a thousand years in decrepitude and
|
|
pain. He returns to the sea, and there finds the body of Scylla,
|
|
whom the goddess has not transformed but drowned. Glaucus learns
|
|
that his destiny is that, if he passes his thousand years in
|
|
collecting all the bodies of drowned lovers, a youth beloved of the
|
|
gods will appear and help him. Endymion fulfils this prophecy, and
|
|
aids in restoring Glaucus to youth, and Scylla and all the drowned
|
|
lovers to life.
|
|
The following is Glaucus's account of his feelings after his
|
|
"sea-change":
|
|
|
|
"I plunged for life or death. To interknit
|
|
One's senses with so dense a breathing stuff
|
|
Might seem a work of pain; so not enough
|
|
Can I admire how crystal-smooth it felt,
|
|
And buoyant round my limbs. At first I dwelt
|
|
Whole days and days in sheer astonishment;
|
|
Forgetful utterly of self-intent,
|
|
Moving but with the mighty ebb and flow.
|
|
Then like a new-fledged bird that first doth show
|
|
His spreaded feathers to the morrow chill,
|
|
I tried in fear the pinions of my will.
|
|
'Twas freedom! and at once I visited
|
|
The ceaseless wonders of his ocean-bed,"
|
|
etc.- Keats.
|
|
CHAPTER VIII.
|
|
PYGMALION- DRYOPE- VENUS AND ADONIS- APOLLO AND
|
|
HYACINTHUS.
|
|
|
|
PYGMALION saw so much to blame in women that he came at last to
|
|
abhor the sex, and resolved to live unmarried. He was a sculptor,
|
|
and had made with wonderful skill a statue of ivory, so beautiful that
|
|
no living woman came anywhere near it. It was indeed the perfect
|
|
semblance of a maiden that seemed to be alive, and only prevented from
|
|
moving by modesty. His art was so perfect that it concealed itself and
|
|
its product looked like the workmanship of nature. Pygmalion admired
|
|
his own work, and at last fell in love with the counterfeit
|
|
creation. Oftentimes he laid his hand upon it as if to assure
|
|
himself whether it were living or not, and could not even then believe
|
|
that it was only ivory. He caressed it, and gave it presents such as
|
|
young girls love,- bright shells and polished stones, little birds and
|
|
flowers of various hues, beads and amber. He put raiment on its limbs,
|
|
and jewels on its fingers, and a necklace about its neck. To the
|
|
ears he hung earrings, and strings of pearls upon the breast. Her
|
|
dress became her, and she looked not less charming than when
|
|
unattired. He laid her on a couch spread with cloths of Tyrian dye,
|
|
and called her his wife, and put her head upon a pillow of the softest
|
|
feathers, as if she could enjoy their softness.
|
|
The festival of Venus was at hand- a festival celebrated with
|
|
great pomp at Cyprus. Victims were offered, the altars smoked, and the
|
|
odour of incense filled the air. When Pygmalion had performed his part
|
|
in the solemnities, he stood before the altar and timidly said, "Ye
|
|
gods, who can do all things, give me, I pray you, for my wife"- he
|
|
dared not say "my ivory virgin," but said instead- "one like my
|
|
ivory virgin." Venus, who was present at the festival, heard him and
|
|
knew the thought he would have uttered; and as an omen of her
|
|
favour, caused the flame on the altar to shoot up thrice in a fiery
|
|
point into the air. When he returned home, he went to see his
|
|
statue, and leaning over the couch, gave a kiss to the mouth. It
|
|
seemed to be warm. He pressed its lips again, he laid his hand upon
|
|
the limbs; the ivory felt soft to his touch and yielded to his fingers
|
|
like the wax of Hymettus. While he stands astonished and glad,
|
|
though doubting, and fears he may be mistaken, again and again with
|
|
a lover's ardour he touches the object of his hopes. It was indeed
|
|
alive! The veins when pressed yielded to the finger and again
|
|
resumed their roundness. Then at last the votary of Venus found
|
|
words to thank the goddess, and pressed his lips upon lips as real
|
|
as his own. The virgin felt the kisses and blushed, and opening her
|
|
timid eyes to the light, fixed them at the same moment on her lover.
|
|
Venus blessed the nuptials she had formed, and from this union
|
|
Paphos was born, from whom the city, sacred to Venus, received its
|
|
name.
|
|
|
|
Schiller, in his poem the "Ideals," applies this tale of Pygmalion
|
|
to the love of nature in a youthful heart. The following translation
|
|
is furnished by a friend:
|
|
|
|
"As once with prayers in passion flowing,
|
|
Pygmalion embraced the stone,
|
|
Till from the frozen marble glowing,
|
|
The light of feeling o'er him shone,
|
|
So did I clasp with young devotion.
|
|
Bright nature to a poet's heart;
|
|
Till breath and warmth and vital motion
|
|
Seemed through the statue form to dart.
|
|
|
|
"And then, in all my ardour sharing,
|
|
The silent form expression found;
|
|
Returned my kiss of youth daring,
|
|
And understood my heart's quick sound.
|
|
Then lived for me the bright creation,
|
|
The silver rill with song was rife;
|
|
The trees, the roses shared sensation,
|
|
An echo of my boundless life."- S. G. B.
|
|
|
|
DRYOPE.
|
|
|
|
Dryope and Iole were sisters. The former was the wife of
|
|
Andraemon, beloved by her husband, and happy in the birth of her first
|
|
child. One day the sisters strolled to the bank of a stream that
|
|
sloped gradually down to the water's edge, while the upland was
|
|
overgrown with myrtles. They were intending to gather flowers for
|
|
forming garlands for the altars of the nymphs, and Dryope carried
|
|
her child at her bosom, precious burden, and nursed him as she walked.
|
|
Near the water grew a lotus plant, full of purple flowers. Dryope
|
|
gathered some and offered them to the baby, and Iole was about to do
|
|
the same, when she perceived blood dropping from the places where
|
|
her sister had broken them off the stem. The plant was no other than
|
|
the nymph Lotis, who, running from a base pursuer, had been changed
|
|
into this form. This they learned from the country people when it
|
|
was too late.
|
|
Dryope, horror-struck when she perceived what she had done, would
|
|
gladly have hastened from the spot, but found her feet rooted to the
|
|
ground. She tried to pull them away, but moved nothing but her upper
|
|
limbs. The woodiness crept upward and by degrees invested her body. In
|
|
anguish she attempted to tear her hair, but found her hands filled
|
|
with leaves. The infant felt his mother's bosom begin to harden, and
|
|
the milk cease to flow. Iole looked on at the sad fate of her
|
|
sister, and could render no assistance. She embraced the growing
|
|
trunk, as if she would hold back the advancing wood, and would
|
|
gladly have been enveloped in the same bark. At this moment Andraemon,
|
|
the husband of Dryope, with her father, approached; and when they
|
|
asked for Dryope, Iole pointed them to the new-formed lotus. They
|
|
embraced the trunk of the yet warm tree, and showered their kisses
|
|
on its leaves.
|
|
Now there was nothing left of Dryope but her face. Her tears still
|
|
flowed and fell on her leaves, and while she could she spoke. "I am
|
|
not guilty. I deserve not this fate. I have injured no one. If I speak
|
|
falsely, may my foliage perish with drought and my trunk be cut down
|
|
and burned. Take this infant and give it to a nurse. Let it often be
|
|
brought and nursed under my branches, and play in my shade; and when
|
|
he is old enough to talk, let him be taught to call me mother, and
|
|
to say with sadness, 'My mother lies hid under this bark.' But bid him
|
|
be careful of river banks, and beware how he plucks flowers,
|
|
remembering that every bush he sees may be a goddess in disguise.
|
|
Farewell, dear husband, and sister, and father. If you retain any love
|
|
for me, let not the axe wound me, nor the flocks bite and tear my
|
|
branches. Since I cannot stoop to you, climb up hither and kiss me;
|
|
and while my lips continue to feel, lift up my child that I may kiss
|
|
him. I can speak no more, for already the bark advances up my neck,
|
|
and will soon shoot over me. You need not close my eyes, the bark will
|
|
close them without your aid." Then the lips ceased to move, and life
|
|
was extinct: but the branches retained for some time longer the
|
|
vital heat.
|
|
|
|
Keats, in "Endymion," alludes to Dryope thus:
|
|
|
|
"She took a lute from which there pulsing came
|
|
A lively prelude, fashioning the way
|
|
In which her voice should wander. 'Twas a lay
|
|
More subtle-cadenced, more forest-wild
|
|
Than Dryope's lone lulling of her child;" etc.
|
|
|
|
VENUS AND ADONIS
|
|
|
|
Venus, playing one day with her boy Cupid, wounded her bosom with
|
|
one of his arrows. She pushed him away, but the wound was deeper
|
|
than she thought. Before it healed she beheld Adonis, and was
|
|
captivated with him. She no longer took any interest in her
|
|
favourite resorts- Paphos, and Cnidos, and Amathos, rich in metals.
|
|
She absented herself even from heaven, for Adonis was dearer to her
|
|
than heaven. Him she followed and bore him company. She who used to
|
|
love to recline in the shade, with no care but to cultivate her
|
|
charms, now rambles through the woods and over the hills, dressed like
|
|
the huntress Diana; and calls her dogs, and chases hares and stags, or
|
|
other game that it is safe to hunt, but keeps clear of the wolves
|
|
and bears, reeking with the slaughter of the herd. She charged Adonis,
|
|
too, to beware of such dangerous animals. "Be brave towards the
|
|
timid," said she; "courage against the courageous is not safe.
|
|
Beware how you expose yourself to danger and put my happiness to risk.
|
|
Attack not the beasts that Nature has armed with weapons. I do not
|
|
value your glory so high as to consent to purchase it by such
|
|
exposure. Your youth, and the beauty that charms Venus, will not touch
|
|
the hearts of lions and bristly boars. Think of their terrible claws
|
|
and prodigious strength! I hate the whole race of them. Do you ask
|
|
me why?" Then she told him the story of Atalanta and Hippomenes, who
|
|
were changed into lions for their ingratitude to her.
|
|
Having given him this warning, she mounted her chariot drawn by
|
|
swans, and drove away through the air. But Adonis was too noble to
|
|
heed such counsels. The dogs had roused a wild boar from his lair, and
|
|
the youth threw his spear and wounded the animal with sidelong stroke.
|
|
The beast drew out the weapon with his jaws, and rushed after
|
|
Adonis, who turned and ran; but the boar overtook him, and buried
|
|
his tusks in his side, and stretched him dying upon the plain.
|
|
Venus, in her swan-drawn chariot, had not yet reached Cyprus, when
|
|
she heard coming up through mid-air the groans of her beloved, and
|
|
turned her white-winged coursers back to earth. As she drew near and
|
|
saw from on high his lifeless body bathed in blood, she alighted
|
|
and, bending over it, beat her breast and tore her hair. Reproaching
|
|
the Fates, she said, "Yet theirs shall be but a partial triumph;
|
|
memorials of my grief shall endure, and the spectacle of your death,
|
|
my Adonis, and of my lamentation shall be annually renewed. Your blood
|
|
shall be changed into a flower; that consolation none can envy me."
|
|
Thus speaking, she sprinkled nectar on the blood; and as they mingled,
|
|
bubbles rose as in a pool on which raindrops fall, and in an hour's
|
|
time there sprang up a flower of bloody hue like that of the
|
|
pomegranate. But it is short-lived. It is said the wind blows the
|
|
blossoms open, and afterwards blows the petals away; so it is called
|
|
Anemone, or Wind Flower, from the cause which assists equally in its
|
|
production and its decay.
|
|
|
|
Milton alludes to the story of Venus and Adonis in his "Comus":
|
|
|
|
"Beds of hyacinth and roses
|
|
Where young Adonis oft reposes,
|
|
Waxing well of his deep wound
|
|
In slumber soft, and on the ground
|
|
Sadly sits th' Assyrian queen;" etc.
|
|
|
|
APOLLO AND HYACINTHUS.
|
|
|
|
Apollo was passionately fond of a youth named Hyacinthus. He.
|
|
accompanied him in his sports, carried the nets when he went
|
|
fishing, led the dogs when he went to hunt, followed him in his
|
|
excursions in the mountains, and neglected for him his lyre and his
|
|
arrows. One day they played a game of quoits together, and Apollo,
|
|
heaving aloft the discus, with strength mingled with skill, sent it
|
|
high and far. Hyacinthus watched it as it flew, and excited with the
|
|
sport ran forward to seize it, eager to make his throw, when the quoit
|
|
bounded from the earth and struck him in the forehead. He fainted
|
|
and fell. The god, as pale as himself, raised him and tried all his
|
|
art to stanch the wound and retain the flitting life, but all in vain;
|
|
the hurt was past the power of medicine. As when one has broken the
|
|
stem of a lily in the garden it hangs its head and turns its flowers
|
|
to the earth, so the head of the dying boy, as if too heavy for his
|
|
neck, fell over on his shoulder. "Thou diest, Hyacinth," so spoke
|
|
Phoebus, "robbed of thy youth by me. Thine is the suffering, mine
|
|
the crime. Would that I could die for thee! But since that may not be,
|
|
thou shalt live with me in memory and in song. My lyre shall celebrate
|
|
thee, my song shall tell thy fate, and thou shalt become a flower
|
|
inscribed with my regrets." While Apollo spoke, behold the blood which
|
|
had flowed on the ground and stained the herbage ceased to be blood;
|
|
but a flower of hue more beautiful than the Tyrian sprang up,
|
|
resembling the lily, if it were not that this is purple and that
|
|
silvery white.* And this was not enough for Phoebus; but to confer
|
|
still greater honour, he marked the petals with his sorrow, and
|
|
inscribed "Ah! ah!" upon them, as we see to this day. The flower bears
|
|
the name of Hyacinthus, and with every returning spring revives the
|
|
memory of his fate.
|
|
|
|
* It is evidently not our modern hyacinth that is here described. It
|
|
is perhaps some species of iris, or perhaps of larkspur or pansy.
|
|
|
|
It was said that Zephyrus (the West wind), who was also fond of
|
|
Hyacinthus and jealous of his preference of Apollo, blew the quoit out
|
|
of its course to make it strike Hyacinthus. Keats alludes to this in
|
|
his "Endymion," where he describes the lookers-on at the game of
|
|
quoits:
|
|
|
|
"Or they might watch the quoit-pitchers, intent
|
|
On either side, pitying the sad death
|
|
Of Hyacinthus, when the cruel breath
|
|
Of Zephyr slew him; Zephyr penitent,
|
|
Who now ere Phoebus mounts the firmament,
|
|
Fondles the flower amid the sobbing rain."
|
|
|
|
An allusion to Hyacinthus will also be recognized in Milton's
|
|
"Lycidas":
|
|
|
|
"Like to that sanguine flower inscribed with woe."
|
|
CHAPTER IX.
|
|
CEYX AND HALCYONE: OR, THE HALCYON BIRDS.
|
|
|
|
CEYX was king of Thessaly, where he reigned in peace, without
|
|
violence or wrong. He was son of Hesperus, the Day-star, and the
|
|
glow of his beauty reminded one of his father. Halcyone, the
|
|
daughter of AEolus, was his wife, and devotedly attached to him. Now
|
|
Ceyx was in deep affliction for the loss of his brother, and direful
|
|
prodigies following his brother's death made him feel as if the gods
|
|
were hostile to him. He thought best, therefore, to make a voyage to
|
|
Carlos in Ionia, to consult the oracle of Apollo. But as soon as he
|
|
disclosed his intention to his wife Halcyone, a shudder ran through
|
|
her frame, and her face grew deadly pale. "What fault of mine, dearest
|
|
husband, has turned your affection from me? Where is that love of me
|
|
that used to be uppermost in your thoughts? Have you learned to feel
|
|
easy in the absence of Halcyone? Would you rather have me away;" She
|
|
also endeavoured to discourage him, by describing the violence of
|
|
the winds, which she had known familiarly when she lived at home in
|
|
her father's house,- AEolus being the god of the winds, and having
|
|
as much as he could do to restrain them. "They rush together," said
|
|
she, "with such fury that fire flashes from the conflict. But if you
|
|
must go," she added, "dear husband, let me go with you, otherwise I
|
|
shall suffer not only the real evils which you must encounter, but
|
|
those also which my fears suggest."
|
|
These words weighed heavily on the mind of King Ceyx, and it was
|
|
no less his own wish than hers to take her with him, but he could
|
|
not bear to expose her to the dangers of the sea. He answered.
|
|
therefore, consoling her as well as he could, and finished with
|
|
these words: "I promise, by the rays of my father the Day-star, that
|
|
if fate permits I will return before the moon shall have twice rounded
|
|
her orb." When he had thus spoken, he ordered the vessel to be drawn
|
|
out of the shiphouse, and the oars and sails to be put aboard When
|
|
Halcyone saw these preparations she shuddered, as if with a
|
|
presentiment of evil. With tears and sobs she said farewell, and
|
|
then fell senseless to the ground.
|
|
Ceyx would still have lingered, but now the young men grasped
|
|
their oars and pulled vigorously through the waves, with long and
|
|
measured strokes. Halcyone raised her streaming eyes, and saw her
|
|
husband standing on the deck, waving his hand to her. She answered his
|
|
signal till the vessel had receded so far that she could no longer
|
|
distinguish his form from the rest. When the vessel itself could no
|
|
more be seen, she strained her eyes to catch the last glimmer of the
|
|
sail, till that too disappeared. Then, retiring to her chamber, she
|
|
threw herself on her solitary couch.
|
|
Meanwhile they glide out of the harbour, and the breeze plays
|
|
among the ropes. The seamen draw in their oars, and hoist their sails.
|
|
When half or less of their course was passed, as night drew on, the
|
|
sea began to whiten with swelling waves, and the east wind to blow a
|
|
gale. The master gave the word to take in sail, but the storm
|
|
forbade obedience, for such is the roar of the winds and waves his
|
|
orders are unheard. The men, of their own accord, busy themselves to
|
|
secure the oars, to strengthen the ship, to reef the sail. While
|
|
they thus do what to each one seems best, the storm increases. The
|
|
shouting of the men, the rattling of the shrouds, and the dashing of
|
|
the waves, mingle with the roar of the thunder. The swelling sea seems
|
|
lifted up to the heavens, to scatter its foam among the clouds; then
|
|
sinking away to the bottom assumes the colour of the shoal-a Stygian
|
|
blackness.
|
|
The vessel shares all these changes. It seems like a wild beast that
|
|
rushes on the spears of the hunters. Rain falls in torrents, as if the
|
|
skies were coming down to unite with the sea. When the lightning
|
|
ceases for a moment, the night seems to add its own darkness to that
|
|
of the storm; then comes the flash, rending the darkness asunder,
|
|
and lighting up all with a glare. Skill fails, courage sinks, and
|
|
death seems to come on every wave. The men are stupefied with
|
|
terror. The thought of parents, and kindred, and pledges left at home,
|
|
comes over their minds. Ceyx thinks of Halcyone. No name but hers is
|
|
on his lips, and while he yearns for her, he yet rejoices in her
|
|
absence. Presently the mast is shattered by a stroke of lightning, the
|
|
rudder broken, and the triumphant surge curling over looks down upon
|
|
the wreck, then falls, and crushes it to fragments. Some of the
|
|
seamen, stunned by the stroke, sink, and rise no more; others cling to
|
|
fragments of the wreck. Ceyx, with the hand that used to grasp the
|
|
sceptre, holds fast to a plank, calling for help,- alas, in vain,-upon
|
|
his father and his father-in-law. But oftenest on his lips was the
|
|
name of Halcyone. To her his thoughts cling. He prays that the waves
|
|
may bear his body to her sight, and that it may receive burial at
|
|
her hands. At length the waters overwhelm him, and he sinks. The
|
|
Day-star looked dim that night. Since it could not leave the
|
|
heavens, it shrouded its face with clouds.
|
|
In the meanwhile Halcyone, ignorant of all these horrors, counted
|
|
the days till her husband's promised return. Now she gets ready the
|
|
garments which he shall put on, and now what she shall wear when he
|
|
arrives. To all the gods she offers frequent incense, but more than
|
|
all to Juno. For her husband, who was no more, she prayed incessantly:
|
|
that be might be safe; that he might come home; that he might not,
|
|
in his absence, see any one that he would love better than her. But of
|
|
all these prayers, the last was the only one destined to be granted.
|
|
The goddess, at length, could not bear any longer to be pleaded with
|
|
for one already dead, and to have hands raised to her altars that
|
|
ought rather to be offering funeral rites. So, calling Iris, she said,
|
|
"Iris, my faithful messenger, go to the drowsy dwelling of Somnus, and
|
|
tell him to send a vision to Halcyone in the form of Ceyx, to make
|
|
known to her the event."
|
|
Iris puts on her robe of many colours, and tinging the sky with
|
|
her bow, seeks the palace of the King of Sleep. Near the Cimmerian
|
|
country, a mountain cave is the abode of the dull god Somnus. Here
|
|
Phoebus dares not come, either rising, at midday, or setting. Clouds
|
|
and shadows are exhaled from the ground, and the light glimmers
|
|
faintly. The bird of dawning, with crested head, never there calls
|
|
aloud to Aurora, nor watchful dog, nor more sagacious goose disturbs
|
|
the silence. No wild beast, nor cattle, nor branch moved with the
|
|
wind, nor sound of human conversation, breaks the stillness. Silence
|
|
reigns there; but from the bottom of the rock the River Lethe flows,
|
|
and by its murmur invites to sleep. Poppies grow abundantly before the
|
|
door of the cave, and other herbs, from whose juices Night collects
|
|
slumbers, which she scatters over the darkened earth. There is no gate
|
|
to the mansion, to creak on its hinges, nor any watchman; but in the
|
|
midst a couch of black ebony, adorned with black plumes and black
|
|
curtains. There the god reclines, his limbs relaxed with sleep. Around
|
|
him lie dreams, resembling all various forms, as many as the harvest
|
|
bears stalks, or the forest leaves, or the seashore sand grains.
|
|
As soon as the goddess entered and brushed away the dreams that
|
|
hovered around her, her brightness lit up all the cave. The god,
|
|
scarce opening his eyes, and ever and anon dropping his beard upon his
|
|
breast, at last shook himself free from himself, leaning on his arm,
|
|
inquired her errand,- for he knew who she was. She answered,
|
|
"Somnus, gentlest of the gods, tranquillizer of minds and soother of
|
|
care-worn hearts, Juno sends you her commands that you despatch a
|
|
dream to Halcyone, in the city of Trachine, representing her lost
|
|
husband and all the events of the wreck."
|
|
Having delivered her message, Iris hasted away, for she could not
|
|
longer endure the stagnant air, and as she felt drowsiness creep.
|
|
ing over her, she made her escape, and returned by her bow the way she
|
|
came. Then Somnus called one of his numerous sons,- Morpheus,- the
|
|
most expert in counterfeiting forms, and in imitating the walk, the
|
|
countenance, and mode of speaking, even the clothes and attitudes most
|
|
characteristic of each. But he only imitates men, leaving it to
|
|
another to personate birds, beasts, and serpents. Him they call
|
|
Icelos; and Phantasos is a third, who turns himself into rocks,
|
|
waters, woods, and other things without life. These wait upon kings
|
|
and great personages in their sleeping hours, while others move
|
|
among the common people. Somnus chose, from all the brothers,
|
|
Morpheus, to perform the command of Iris; then laid his head on his
|
|
pillow and yielded himself to grateful repose.
|
|
Morpheus flew, making no noise with his wings, and soon came to
|
|
the Haemonian city, where, laying aside his wings, he assumed the form
|
|
of Ceyx. Under that form, but pale like a dead man, naked, he stood
|
|
before the couch of the wretched wife. His beard seemed soaked with
|
|
water, and water trickled from his drowned locks. Leaning over the
|
|
bed, tears streaming from his eyes, he said, "Do you recognize your
|
|
Ceyx, unhappy wife, or has death too much changed my visage? Behold
|
|
me, know me, your husband's shade, instead of himself. Your prayers,
|
|
Halcyone, availed me nothing. I am dead. No more deceive yourself with
|
|
vain hopes of my return. The stormy winds sunk my ship in the AEgean
|
|
Sea, waves filled my mouth while it called aloud on you. No
|
|
uncertain messenger tells you this, no vague rumour brings it to
|
|
your ears. I come in person, a shipwrecked man, to tell you my fate.
|
|
Arise! give me tears, give me lamentations, let me not go down to
|
|
Tartarus unwept." To these words Morpheus added the voice, which
|
|
seemed to be that of her husband; he seemed to pour forth genuine
|
|
tears; his hands had the gestures of Ceyx.
|
|
Halcyone, weeping, groaned, and stretched out her arms in her sleep,
|
|
striving to embrace his body, but grasping only the air. "Stay!" she
|
|
cried; "whither do you fly? let us go together." Her own voice
|
|
awakened her. Starting up, she gazed eagerly around, to see if he
|
|
was still present, for the servants, alarmed by her cries, had brought
|
|
a light. When she found him not, she smote her breast and rent her
|
|
garments. She cares not to unbind her hair, but tears it wildly. Her
|
|
nurse asks what is the cause of her grief. "Halcyone is no more,"
|
|
she answers, "she perished with her Ceyx. Utter not words of
|
|
comfort, he is shipwrecked and dead. I have seen him, I have
|
|
recognized him. I stretched out my hands to seize him and detain
|
|
him. His shade vanished, but it was the true shade of my husband.
|
|
Not with the accustomed features, not with the beauty that was his,
|
|
but pale, naked, and with his hair wet with sea water, he appeared
|
|
to wretched me. Here, in this very spot, the sad vision stood,"- and
|
|
she looked to find the mark of his footsteps. "This it was, this
|
|
that my presaging mind foreboded, when I implored him not to leave me,
|
|
to trust himself to the waves. Oh, how I wish, since thou wouldst
|
|
go, thou hadst taken me with thee! It would have been far better. Then
|
|
I should have had no remnant of life to spend without thee, nor a
|
|
separate death to die. If I could bear to live and struggle to endure,
|
|
I should be more cruel to myself than the sea has been to me. But I
|
|
will not struggle, I will not be separated from thee, unhappy husband.
|
|
This time, at least, I will keep thee company. In death, if one tomb
|
|
may not include us, one epitaph shall; if I may not lay my ashes
|
|
with thine, my name, at least, shall not be separated." Her grief
|
|
forbade more words, and these were broken with tears and sobs.
|
|
It was now morning. She went to the seashore, and sought the spot
|
|
where she last saw him, on his departure. "While he lingered here, and
|
|
cast off his tacklings, he gave me his last kiss." While she reviews
|
|
every object, and strives to recall every incident, looking out over
|
|
the sea, she descries an indistinct object floating in the water. At
|
|
first she was in doubt what it was, but by degrees the waves bore it
|
|
nearer, and it was plainly the body of a man. Though unknowing of
|
|
whom, yet, as it was of some shipwrecked one, she was deeply moved,
|
|
and gave it her tears, saying, "Alas! unhappy one, and unhappy, if
|
|
such there be, thy wife!" Borne by the waves, it came nearer. As she
|
|
more and more nearly views it, she trembles more and more. Now, now it
|
|
approaches the shore. Now marks that she recognizes appear. it is
|
|
her husband! Stretching out her trembling hands towards it, she
|
|
exclaims, "O dearest husband, is it thus you return to me?"
|
|
There was built out from the shore a mole, constructed to break
|
|
the assaults of the sea, and stem its violent ingress. She leaped upon
|
|
this barrier and (it was wonderful she could do so) she flew, and
|
|
striking the air with wings produced on the instant, skimmed along the
|
|
surface of the water, an unhappy bird. As she flew, her throat
|
|
poured forth sounds full of grief, and like the voice of one
|
|
lamenting. When she touched the mute and bloodless body, she
|
|
enfolded its beloved limbs with her new-formed wings, and tried to
|
|
give kisses with her horny beak. Whether Ceyx felt it, or whether it
|
|
was only the action of the waves, those who looked on doubted, but the
|
|
body seemed to raise its head. But indeed he did feel it, and by the
|
|
pitying gods both of them were changed into birds. They mate and
|
|
have their young ones. For seven placid days, in winter time, Halcyone
|
|
broods over her nest, which floats upon the sea. Then the way is
|
|
safe to seamen. AEolus guards the winds and keeps them from disturbing
|
|
the deep. The sea is given up, for the time, to his grandchildren.
|
|
|
|
The following lines from Byron's "Bride of Abydos" might seem
|
|
borrowed from the concluding part of this description, if it were
|
|
not stated that the author derived the suggestion from observing the
|
|
motion of a floating corpse:
|
|
|
|
"As shaken on his restless pillow,
|
|
His head heaves with the heaving billow;
|
|
That hand, whose motion is not life,
|
|
Yet feebly seems to menace strife,
|
|
Flung by the tossing tide on high,
|
|
Then levelled with the wave..."
|
|
|
|
Milton, in his "Hymn on the Nativity," thus alludes to the fable
|
|
of the Halcyon:
|
|
|
|
"But peaceful was the night
|
|
Wherein the Prince of light
|
|
His reign of peace upon the earth began;
|
|
The winds with wonder whist
|
|
Smoothly the waters kist
|
|
Whispering new joys to the mild ocean,
|
|
Who now hath quite forgot to rave
|
|
While birds of calm sit brooding on the charmed wave."
|
|
|
|
Keats also, in "Endymion," says:
|
|
|
|
"O magic sleep! O comfortable bird
|
|
That broodest o'er the troubled sea of the mind
|
|
Till it is hushed and smooth."
|
|
CHAPTER X.
|
|
VERTUMNUS AND POMONA.
|
|
|
|
THE Hamadryads were Wood-nymphs. Pomona was of this class. and no
|
|
one excelled her in love of the garden and the culture of fruit. She
|
|
cared not for forests and rivers, but loved the cultivated country,
|
|
and trees that bear delicious apples. Her right hand bore for its
|
|
weapon not a javelin, but a pruning-knife. Armed with this, she busied
|
|
herself at one time to repress the too luxuriant growths: and
|
|
curtail the branches that straggled out of place; at another, to split
|
|
the twig and insert therein a graft, making the branch adopt a
|
|
nursling not its own. She took care, too, that her favourites should
|
|
not suffer from drought, and led streams of water by them, that the
|
|
thirsty roots might drink. This occupation was her pursuit, her
|
|
passion; and she was free from that which Venus inspires. She was
|
|
not without fear of the country people, and kept her orchard locked,
|
|
and allowed not men to enter. The Fauns and Satyrs would have given
|
|
all they possessed to win her, and so would old Sylvanus, who looks
|
|
young for his years, and Pan, who wears a garland of pine leaves
|
|
around his head. But Vertumnus loved her best of all; yet he sped no
|
|
better than the rest. O how often, in the disguise of a reaper, did he
|
|
bring her corn in a basket, and looked the very image of a reaper!
|
|
With a hay band tied round him, one would think he had just come
|
|
from turning over the grass. Sometimes he would have an ox-goad in his
|
|
hand, and you would have said he had just unyoked his weary oxen.
|
|
Now he bore a pruning-hook, and personated a vine-dresser; and
|
|
again, with a ladder on his shoulder, he seemed as if he was going
|
|
to gather apples. Sometimes he trudged along as a discharged
|
|
soldier, and again he bore a fishing-rod, as if going to fish. In this
|
|
way he gained admission to her again and again, and fed his passion
|
|
with the sight of her.
|
|
One day he came in the guise of an old woman, her grey hair
|
|
surmounted with a cap, and a staff in her hand. She entered the garden
|
|
and admired the fruit. "It does you credit, my dear," she said, and
|
|
kissed her not exactly with an old woman's kiss. She sat down on a
|
|
bank, and looked up at the branches laden with fruit which hung over
|
|
her. Opposite was an elm entwined with a vine loaded with swelling
|
|
grapes. She praised the tree and its associated vine, equally.
|
|
"But," said she, "if the tree stood alone, and had no vine clinging to
|
|
it, it would have nothing to attract or offer us but its useless
|
|
leaves. And equally the vine, if it were not twined round the elm,
|
|
would lie prostrate on the ground. Why will you not take a lesson from
|
|
the tree and the vine, and consent to unite yourself with some one?
|
|
I wish you would. Helen herself had not more numerous suitors, nor
|
|
Penelope, the wife of shrewd Ulysses. Even while you spurn them,
|
|
they court you,- rural deities and others of every kind that
|
|
frequent these mountains. But if you are prudent and want to make a
|
|
good alliance, and will let an old woman advise you,- who loves you
|
|
better than you have any idea of,- dismiss all the rest and accept
|
|
Vertumnus, on my recommendation. I know him as well as he knows
|
|
himself. He is not a wandering deity, but belongs to these
|
|
mountains. Nor is he like too many of the lovers nowadays, who love
|
|
any one they happen to see; he loves you, and you only. Add to this,
|
|
he is young and handsome, and has the art of assuming any shape he
|
|
pleases, and can make himself just what you command him. Moreover,
|
|
he loves the same things that you do, delights in gardening, and
|
|
handles your apples with admiration. But now he cares nothing for
|
|
fruits nor flowers, nor anything else, but only yourself. Take pity on
|
|
him, and fancy him speaking now with my mouth. Remember that the
|
|
gods punish cruelty, and that Venus hates a hard heart, and will visit
|
|
such offences sooner or later. To prove this, let me tell you a story,
|
|
which is well known in Cyprus to be a fact; and I hope it will have
|
|
the effect to make you more merciful.
|
|
"Iphis was a young man of humble parentage, who saw and loved
|
|
Anaxarete, a noble lady of the ancient family of Teucer. He
|
|
struggled long with his passion, but when he found he could not subdue
|
|
it, he came a suppliant to her mansion. First he told his passion to
|
|
her nurse, and begged her as she loved her foster-child to favour
|
|
his suit. And then he tried to win her domestics to his side.
|
|
Sometimes he committed his vows to written tablets, and often hung
|
|
at her door garlands which he had moistened with his tears. He
|
|
stretched himself on her threshold, and uttered his complaints to
|
|
the cruel bolts and bars. She was deafer than the surges which rise in
|
|
the November gale; harder than steel from the German forges, or a rock
|
|
that still clings to its native cliff. She mocked and laughed at
|
|
him, adding cruel words to her ungentle treatment, and gave not the
|
|
slightest gleam of hope.
|
|
"Iphis could not any longer endure the torments of hopeless love,
|
|
and, standing before her doors, he spake these last words: 'Anaxarete,
|
|
you have conquered, and shall no longer have to bear my importunities.
|
|
Enjoy your triumph! Sing songs of joy, and bind your forehead with
|
|
laurel,- you have conquered! I die; stony heart, rejoice! This at
|
|
least I can do to gratify you, and force you to praise me; and thus
|
|
shall I prove that the love of you left me but with life. Nor will I
|
|
leave it to rumour to tell you of my death. I will come myself, and
|
|
you shall see me die, and feast your eyes on the spectacle. Yet, O
|
|
ye Gods, who look down on mortal woes, observe my fate! I ask but
|
|
this: let me be remembered in coming ages, and add those years to my
|
|
fame which you have reft from my life.' Thus he said, and, turning his
|
|
pale face and weeping eyes towards her mansion, he fastened a rope
|
|
to the gate-post, on which he had often hung garlands, and putting his
|
|
head into the noose, he murmured, 'This garland at least will please
|
|
you, cruel girl!' and falling hung suspended with his neck broken.
|
|
As he fell he struck against the gate, and the sound was as the
|
|
sound of a groan. The servants opened the door and found him dead, and
|
|
with exclamations of pity raised him and carried him home to his
|
|
mother, for his father was not living. She received the dead body of
|
|
her son, and folded the cold form to her bosom, while she poured forth
|
|
the sad words which bereaved mothers utter. The mournful funeral
|
|
passed through the town, and the pale corpse was borne on a bier to
|
|
the place of the funeral pile. By chance the home of Anaxarete was
|
|
on the street where the procession passed, and the lamentations of the
|
|
mourners met the ears of her whom the avenging deity had already
|
|
marked for punishment.
|
|
"'Let us see this sad procession,' said she, and mounted to a
|
|
turret, whence through an open window she looked upon the funeral.
|
|
Scarce had her eyes rested upon the form of Iphis stretched on the
|
|
bier, when they began to stiffen, and the warm blood in her body to
|
|
become cold. Endeavouring to step back, she found she could not move
|
|
her feet; trying to turn away her face, she tried in vain; and by
|
|
degrees all her limbs became stony like her heart. That you may not
|
|
doubt the fact, the statue still remains, and stands in the temple
|
|
of Venus at Salamis, in the exact form of the lady. Now think of these
|
|
things, my dear, and lay aside your scorn and your delays, and
|
|
accept a lover. So may neither the vernal frosts blight your young
|
|
fruits, nor furious winds scatter your blossoms!"
|
|
When Vertumnus had spoken thus, be dropped the disguise of an old
|
|
woman, and stood before her in his proper person, as a comely youth.
|
|
It appeared to her like the sun bursting through a cloud. He would
|
|
have renewed his entreaties, but there was no need; his arguments
|
|
and the sight of his true form prevailed, and the Nymph no longer
|
|
resisted, but owned a mutual flame.
|
|
|
|
Pomona was the especial patroness of the Apple-orchard, and as
|
|
such she was invoked by Phillips, the author of a poem on Cider, in
|
|
blank verse. Thomson in the "Seasons" alludes to him:
|
|
|
|
"Phillips, Pomona's bard, the second thou
|
|
Who nobly durst, in rhyme-unfettered verse,
|
|
With British freedom, sing the British song."
|
|
|
|
But Pomona was also regarded as presiding over other fruits, and
|
|
as such is invoked by Thomson:
|
|
|
|
"Bear me, Pomona, to thy citron groves,
|
|
To where the lemon and the piercing lime,
|
|
With the deep orange, glowing through the green,
|
|
Their lighter glories blend. Lay me reclined
|
|
Beneath the spreading tamarind, that shakes,
|
|
Fanned by the breeze, its fever-cooling fruit."
|
|
CHAPTER XI.
|
|
CUPID AND PSYCHE.
|
|
|
|
A CERTAIN king and queen had three daughters. The charms of the
|
|
two elder were more than common, but the beauty of the youngest was so
|
|
wonderful that the poverty of language is unable to express its due
|
|
praise. The fame of her beauty was so great that strangers from
|
|
neighbouring countries came in crowds to enjoy the sight, and looked
|
|
on her with amazement, paying her that homage which is due only to
|
|
Venus herself. In fact Venus found her altars deserted, while men
|
|
turned their devotion to this young virgin. As she passed along, the
|
|
people sang her praises, and strewed her way with chaplets and
|
|
flowers.
|
|
This perversion of homage due only to the immortal powers to the
|
|
exaltation of a mortal gave great offence to the real Venus. Shaking
|
|
her ambrosial locks with indignation, she exclaimed, "Am I then to
|
|
be eclipsed in my honours by a mortal girl? In vain then did that
|
|
royal shepherd, whose judgment was approved by Jove himself, give me
|
|
the palm of beauty over my illustrious rivals, Pallas and Juno. But
|
|
she shall not so quietly usurp my honours. I will give her cause to
|
|
repent of so unlawful a beauty."
|
|
Thereupon she calls her winged son Cupid, mischievous enough in
|
|
his own nature, and rouses and provokes him yet more by her
|
|
complaints. She points out Psyche to him and says, "My dear son,
|
|
punish that contumacious beauty; give thy mother a revenge as sweet as
|
|
her injuries are great; infuse into the bosom of that haughty girl a
|
|
passion for some low, mean, unworthy being, so that she may reap a
|
|
mortification as great as her present exultation and triumph."
|
|
Cupid prepared to obey the commands of his mother. There are two
|
|
fountains in Venus's garden, one of sweet waters, the other of bitter.
|
|
Cupid filled two amber vases, one from each fountain, and suspending
|
|
them from the top of his quiver, hastened to the chamber of Psyche,
|
|
whom he found asleep. He shed a few drops from the bitter fountain
|
|
over her lips, though the sight of her almost moved him to pity;
|
|
then touched her side with the point of his arrow. At the touch she
|
|
awoke, and opened eyes upon Cupid (himself invisible), which so
|
|
startled him that in his confusion he wounded himself with his own
|
|
arrow. Heedless of his wound, his whole thought now was to repair
|
|
the mischief he had done, and he poured the balmy drops of joy over
|
|
all her silken ringlets.
|
|
Psyche, henceforth frowned upon by Venus, derived no benefit from
|
|
all her charms. True, all eyes were cast eagerly upon her, and every
|
|
mouth spoke her praises; but neither king, royal youth, nor plebeian
|
|
presented himself to demand her in marriage. Her two elder sisters
|
|
of moderate charms had now long been married to two royal princes; but
|
|
Psyche, in her lonely apartment, deplored her solitude, sick of that
|
|
beauty which, while it procured abundance of flattery, had failed to
|
|
awaken love.
|
|
Her parents, afraid that they had unwittingly incurred the anger
|
|
of the gods, consulted the oracle of Apollo, and received this answer:
|
|
"The virgin is destined for the bride of no mortal lover. Her future
|
|
husband awaits her on the top of the mountain. He is a monster whom
|
|
neither gods nor men can resist."
|
|
This dreadful decree of the oracle filled all the people with
|
|
dismay, and her parents abandoned themselves to grief. But Psyche
|
|
said, "Why, my dear parents, do you now lament me? You should rather
|
|
have grieved when the people showered upon me undeserved honours,
|
|
and with one voice called me a Venus. I now perceive that I am a
|
|
victim to that name. I submit. Lead me to that rock to which my
|
|
unhappy fate has destined me." Accordingly, all things being prepared,
|
|
the royal maid took her place in the procession, which more
|
|
resembled a funeral than a nuptial pomp, and with her parents, amid
|
|
the lamentations of the people, ascended the mountain, on the summit
|
|
of which they left her alone, and with sorrowful hearts returned home.
|
|
While Psyche stood on the ridge of the mountain, panting with fear
|
|
and with eyes full of tears, the gentle Zephyr raised her from the
|
|
earth and bore her with an easy motion into a flowery dale. By degrees
|
|
her mind became composed, and she laid herself down on the grassy bank
|
|
to sleep. When she awoke refreshed with sleep, she looked round and
|
|
beheld near by a pleasant grove of tall and stately trees. She entered
|
|
it, and in the midst discovered a fountain, sending forth clear and
|
|
crystal waters, and fast by, a magnificent palace whose august front
|
|
impressed the spectator that it was not the work of mortal hands,
|
|
but the happy retreat of some god. Drawn by admiration and wonder, she
|
|
approached the building and ventured to enter. Every object she met
|
|
filled her with pleasure and amazement. Golden pillars supported the
|
|
vaulted roof, and the walls were enriched with carvings and
|
|
paintings representing beasts of the chase and rural scenes, adapted
|
|
to delight the eye of the beholder. Proceeding onward, she perceived
|
|
that besides the apartments of state there were others filled with all
|
|
manner of treasures, and beautiful and precious productions of
|
|
nature and art.
|
|
While her eyes were thus occupied, a voice addressed her, though she
|
|
saw no one, uttering these words: "Sovereign lady, all that you see is
|
|
yours. We whose voices you hear are your servants and shall obey all
|
|
your commands with our utmost care and diligence. Retire, therefore,
|
|
to your chamber and repose on your bed of down, and when you see fit
|
|
repair to the bath. Supper awaits you in the adjoining alcove when
|
|
it pleases you to take your seat there."
|
|
Psyche gave ear to the admonitions of her vocal attendants, and
|
|
after repose and the refreshment of the bath, seated herself in the
|
|
alcove, where a table immediately presented itself, without any
|
|
visible aid from waiters or servants, and covered with the greatest
|
|
delicacies of food and the most nectareous wines. Her ears too were
|
|
feasted with music from invisible performers; of whom one sang,
|
|
another played on the lute, and all closed in the wonderful harmony of
|
|
a full chorus.
|
|
She had not yet seen her destined husband. He came only in the hours
|
|
of darkness and fled before the dawn of morning, but his accents
|
|
were full of love, and inspired a like passion in her. She often
|
|
begged him to stay and let her behold him, but he would not consent.
|
|
On the contrary he charged her to make no attempt to see him, for it
|
|
was his pleasure, for the best of reasons, to keep concealed. "Why
|
|
should you wish to behold me?" he said; "have you any doubt of my
|
|
love? have you any wish ungratified? If you saw me, perhaps you
|
|
would fear me, perhaps adore me, but all I ask of you is to love me. I
|
|
would rather you would love me as an equal than adore me as a god."
|
|
This reasoning somewhat quieted Psyche for a time, and while the
|
|
novelty lasted she felt quite happy. But at length the thought of
|
|
her parents, left in ignorance of her fate, and of her sisters,
|
|
precluded from sharing with her the delights of her situation,
|
|
preyed on her mind and made her begin to feel her palace as but a
|
|
splendid prison, When her husband came one night, she told him her
|
|
distress, and at last drew from him an unwilling consent that her
|
|
sisters should be brought to see her.
|
|
So, calling Zephyr, she acquainted him with her husband's
|
|
commands, and he, promptly obedient, soon brought them across the
|
|
mountain down to their sister's valley. They embraced her and she
|
|
returned their caresses. "Come," said Psyche, "enter with me my
|
|
house and refresh yourselves with whatever your sister has to
|
|
offer." Then taking their hands she led them into her golden palace,
|
|
and committed them to the care of her numerous train of attendant
|
|
voices, to refresh them in her baths and at her table, and to show
|
|
them all her treasures. The view of these celestial delights caused
|
|
envy to enter their bosoms, at seeing their young sister possessed
|
|
of such state and splendour so much exceeding their own.
|
|
They asked her numberless questions, among others what sort of a
|
|
person her husband was. Psyche replied that he was a beautiful
|
|
youth, who generally spent the daytime in hunting upon the
|
|
mountains. The sisters, not satisfied with this reply, soon made her
|
|
confess that she had never seen him. Then they proceeded to fill her
|
|
bosom with dark suspicions. "Call to mind," they said, "the Pythian
|
|
oracle that declared you destined to marry a direful and tremendous
|
|
monster. The inhabitants of this valley say that your husband is a
|
|
terrible and monstrous serpent, who nourishes you for a while with
|
|
dainties that he may by and by devour you. Take our advice. Provide
|
|
yourself with a lamp and a sharp knife; put them in concealment that
|
|
your husband may not discover them, and when he is sound asleep,
|
|
slip out of bed, bring forth your lamp, and see for yourself whether
|
|
what they say is true or not. If it is, hesitate not to cut off the
|
|
monster's head, and thereby recover your liberty."
|
|
Psyche resisted these persuasions as well as she could, but they did
|
|
not fail to have their effect on her mind, and when her sisters were
|
|
gone, their words and her own curiosity were too strong for her to
|
|
resist. So she prepared her lamp and a sharp knife, and hid them out
|
|
of sight of her husband. When he had fallen into his first sleep,
|
|
she silently rose and uncovering her lamp beheld not a hideous
|
|
monster, but the most beautiful and charming of the gods, with his
|
|
golden ringlets wandering over his snowy neck and crimson cheek,
|
|
with two dewy wings on his shoulders, whiter than snow, and with
|
|
shining feathers like the tender blossoms of spring. As she leaned the
|
|
lamp over to have a nearer view of his face a drop of burning oil fell
|
|
on the shoulder of the god, startled with which he opened his eyes and
|
|
fixed them full upon her; then, without saying one word, he spread his
|
|
white wings and flew out of the window. Psyche, in vain endeavouring
|
|
to follow him, fell from the window to the ground. Cupid, beholding
|
|
her as she lay in the dust, stopped his flight for an instant and
|
|
said, "O foolish Psyche, is it thus you repay my love? After having
|
|
disobeyed my mother's commands and made you my wife, will you think me
|
|
a monster and cut off my head? But go; return to your sisters, whose
|
|
advice you seem to think preferable to mine. I inflict no other
|
|
punishment on you than to leave you for ever. Love cannot dwell with
|
|
suspicion." So saying, he fled away, leaving poor Psyche prostrate
|
|
on the ground, filling the place with mournful lamentations.
|
|
When she had recovered some degree of composure she looked around
|
|
her, but the palace and gardens had vanished, and she found herself in
|
|
the open field not far from the city where her sisters dwelt. She
|
|
repaired thither and told them the whole story of her misfortunes,
|
|
at which, pretending to grieve, those spiteful creatures inwardly
|
|
rejoiced. "For now," said they, "he will perhaps choose one of us."
|
|
With this idea, without saying a word of her intentions, each of
|
|
them rose early the next morning and ascended the mountain, and having
|
|
reached the top, called upon Zephyr to receive her and bear her to his
|
|
lord; then leaping up, and not being sustained by Zephyr, fell down
|
|
the precipice and was dashed to pieces.
|
|
Psyche meanwhile wandered day and night, without food or repose,
|
|
in search of her husband. Casting her eyes on a lofty mountain
|
|
having on its brow a magnificent temple, she sighed and said to
|
|
herself, "Perhaps my love, my lord, inhabits there," and directed
|
|
her steps thither.
|
|
She had no sooner entered than she saw heaps of corn, some in
|
|
loose ears and some in sheaves, with mingled ears of barley. Scattered
|
|
about, lay sickles and rakes, and all the instruments of harvest,
|
|
without order, as if thrown carelessly out of the weary reapers' hands
|
|
in the sultry hours of the day.
|
|
This unseemly confusion the pious Psyche put an end to, by
|
|
separating and sorting everything to its proper place and kind,
|
|
believing that she ought to neglect none of the gods, but endeavour by
|
|
her piety to engage them all in her behalf. The holy Ceres, whose
|
|
temple it was, finding her so religiously employed, thus spoke to her:
|
|
"O Psyche, truly worthy of our pity, though I cannot shield you from
|
|
the frowns of Venus, yet I can teach you how best to allay her
|
|
displeasure. Go, then, and voluntarily surrender yourself to your lady
|
|
and sovereign, and try by modesty and submission to win her
|
|
forgiveness, and perhaps her favour will restore you the husband you
|
|
have lost."
|
|
Psyche obeyed the commands of Ceres and took her way to the temple
|
|
of Venus, endeavouring to fortify her mind and ruminating on what
|
|
she should say and how best propitiate the angry goddess, feeling that
|
|
the issue was doubtful and perhaps fatal.
|
|
Venus received her with angry countenance. "Most undutiful and
|
|
faithless of servants," said she, "do you at last remember that you
|
|
really have a mistress? Or have you rather come to see your sick
|
|
husband, yet laid up of the wound given him by his loving wife? You
|
|
are so ill-favoured and disagreeable that the only way you can merit
|
|
your lover must be by dint of industry and diligence. I will make
|
|
trial of your housewifery." Then she ordered Psyche to be led to the
|
|
storehouse of her temple, where was laid up a great quantity of wheat,
|
|
barley, millet, vetches, beans, and lentils prepared for food for
|
|
her pigeons, and said, "Take and separate all these grains, putting
|
|
all of the same kind in a parcel by themselves, and see that you get
|
|
it done before evening." Then Venus departed and left her to her task.
|
|
But Psyche, in a perfect consternation at the enormous work, sat
|
|
stupid and silent, without moving a finger to the inextricable heap.
|
|
While she sat despairing, Cupid stirred up the little ant, a
|
|
native of the fields, to take compassion on her. The leader of the
|
|
ant-hill, followed by whole hosts of his six-legged subjects,
|
|
approached the heap, and with the utmost diligence taking grain by
|
|
grain, they separated the pile, sorting each kind to its parcel; and
|
|
when it was all done, they vanished out of sight in a moment.
|
|
Venus at the approach of twilight returned from the banquet of the
|
|
gods. breathing odours and crowned with roses. Seeing the task done,
|
|
she exclaimed, "This is no work of yours, wicked one, but his, whom to
|
|
your own and his misfortune you have enticed." So saying, she threw
|
|
her a piece of black bread for her supper and went away.
|
|
Next morning Venus ordered Psyche to be called and said to her,
|
|
"Behold yonder grove which stretches along the margin of the water.
|
|
There you will find sheep feeding without a shepherd, with
|
|
golden-shining fleeces on their backs. Go, fetch me a sample of that
|
|
precious wool gathered from every one of their fleeces."
|
|
Psyche obediently went to the riverside, prepared to do her best
|
|
to execute the command. But the river god inspired the reeds with
|
|
harmonious murmurs, which seemed to say, "O maiden, severely tried,
|
|
tempt not the dangerous flood, nor venture among the formidable rams
|
|
on the other side, for as long as they are under the influence of
|
|
the rising sun, they burn with a cruel rage to destroy mortals with
|
|
their sharp horns or rude teeth. But when the noontide sun has
|
|
driven the cattle to the shade, and the serene spirit of the flood has
|
|
lulled them to rest, you may then cross in safety, and you will find
|
|
the woolly gold sticking to the bushes and the trunks of the trees."
|
|
Thus the compassionate river god gave Psyche instructions how to
|
|
accomplish her task, and by observing his directions she soon returned
|
|
to Venus with her arms full of the golden fleece; but she received not
|
|
the approbation of her implacable mistress, who said, "I know very
|
|
well it is by none of your own doings that you have succeeded in
|
|
this task, and I am not satisfied yet that you have any capacity to
|
|
make yourself useful. But I have another task for you. Here, take this
|
|
box and go your way to the infernal shades, and give this box to
|
|
Proserpine and say, 'My mistress Venus desires you to send her a
|
|
little of your beauty, for in tending her sick son she has lost some
|
|
of her own.' Be not too long on your errand, for I must paint myself
|
|
with it to appear at the circle of the gods and goddesses this
|
|
evening."
|
|
Psyche was now satisfied that her destruction was at hand, being
|
|
obliged to go with her own feet directly down to Erebus. Wherefore, to
|
|
make no delay of what was not to be avoided, she goes to the top of
|
|
a high tower to precipitate herself headlong, thus to descend the
|
|
shortest way to the shades below. But a voice from the tower said to
|
|
her, "Why, poor unlucky girl, dost thou design to put an end to thy
|
|
days in so dreadful a manner? And what cowardice makes thee sink under
|
|
this last danger who hast been so miraculously supported in all thy
|
|
former?" Then the voice told her how by a certain cave she might reach
|
|
the realms of Pluto, and how to avoid all the dangers of the road,
|
|
to pass by Cerberus, the three-headed dog, and prevail on Charon,
|
|
the ferryman, to take her across the black river and bring her back
|
|
again. But the voice added, "When Proserpine has given you the box
|
|
filled with her beauty, of all things this is chiefly to be observed
|
|
by you, that you never once open or look into the box nor allow your
|
|
curiosity to pry into the treasure of the beauty of the goddesses."
|
|
Psyche, encouraged by this advice, obeyed it in all things, and
|
|
taking heed to her ways travelled safely to the kingdom of Pluto.
|
|
She was admitted to the palace of Proserpine, and without accepting
|
|
the delicate seat or delicious banquet that was offered her, but
|
|
contented with coarse bread for her food, she delivered her message
|
|
from Venus. Presently the box was returned to her, shut and filled
|
|
with the precious commodity. Then she returned the way she came, and
|
|
glad was she to come out once more into the light of day.
|
|
But having got so far successfully through her dangerous task a
|
|
longing desire seized her to examine the contents of the box,
|
|
"What," said she, "shall I, the carrier of this divine beauty, not
|
|
take the least bit to put on my cheeks to appear to more advantage
|
|
in the eyes of my beloved husband!" So she carefully opened the box,
|
|
but found nothing there of any beauty at all, but an infernal and
|
|
truly Stygian sleep, which being thus set free from its prison, took
|
|
possession of her, and she fell down in the midst of the road, a
|
|
sleepy corpse without sense or motion.
|
|
But Cupid, being now recovered from his wound, and not able longer
|
|
to bear the absence of his beloved Psyche, slipping through the
|
|
smallest crack of the window of his chamber which happened to be
|
|
left open, flew to the spot where Psyche lay, and gathering up the
|
|
sleep from her body closed it again in the box, and waked Psyche
|
|
with a light touch of one of his arrows. "Again," said he, "hast
|
|
thou almost perished by the same curiosity. But now perform exactly
|
|
the task imposed on you by my mother, and I will take care of the
|
|
rest.
|
|
Then Cupid, as swift as lightning penetrating the heights of heaven,
|
|
presented himself before Jupiter with his supplication. Jupiter lent a
|
|
favouring ear, and pleaded the cause of the lovers so earnestly with
|
|
Venus that he won her consent. On this he sent Mercury to bring Psyche
|
|
up to the heavenly assembly, and when she arrived, handing her a cup
|
|
of ambrosia, he said, "Drink this, Psyche, and be immortal; nor
|
|
shall Cupid ever break away from the knot in which he is tied, but
|
|
these nuptials shall be perpetual."
|
|
Thus Psyche became at last united to Cupid, and in due time they had
|
|
a daughter born to them whose name was Pleasure.
|
|
The fable of Cupid and Psyche is usually considered allegorical. The
|
|
Greek name for a butterfly is Psyche, and the same word means the
|
|
soul. There is no illustration of the immortality of the soul so
|
|
striking and beautiful as the butterfly, bursting on brilliant wings
|
|
from the tomb in which it has lain, after a dull, grovelling,
|
|
caterpillar existence, to flutter in the blaze of day and feed on
|
|
the most fragrant and delicate productions of the spring. Psyche,
|
|
then, is the human soul, which is purified by sufferings and
|
|
misfortunes, and is thus prepared for the enjoyment of true and pure
|
|
happiness.
|
|
In works of art Psyche is represented as a maiden with the wings
|
|
of a butterfly, along with Cupid, in the different situations
|
|
described in the allegory.
|
|
Milton alludes to the story of Cupid and Psyche in the conclusion of
|
|
his "Comus":
|
|
|
|
"Celestial Cupid, her famed son, advanced,
|
|
Holds his dear Psyche sweet entranced,
|
|
After her wandering labours long,
|
|
Till free consent the gods among
|
|
Make her his eternal bride;
|
|
And from her fair unspotted side
|
|
Two blissful twins are to be born,
|
|
Youth and Joy; so Jove hath sworn."
|
|
|
|
The allegory of the story of Cupid and Psyche is well presented in
|
|
the beautiful lines of T. K. Harvey:
|
|
|
|
"They wove bright fables in the days of old,
|
|
When reason borrowed fancy's painted wings;
|
|
When truth's clear river flowed o'er sands of gold,
|
|
And told in song its high and mystic things!
|
|
And such the sweet and solemn tale of her
|
|
The pilgrim heart, to whom a dream was given,
|
|
That led her through the world,- Love's worshipper,-
|
|
To seek on earth for him whose home was heaven!
|
|
|
|
"In the full city,- by the haunted fount,-
|
|
Through the dim grotto's tracery of spars,-
|
|
'Mid the pine temples, on the moonlit mount,
|
|
Where silence sits to listen to the stars;
|
|
In the deep glade where dwells the brooding dove,
|
|
The painted valley, and the scented air,
|
|
She heard far echoes of the voice of Love,
|
|
And found his footsteps' traces everywhere.
|
|
|
|
"But nevermore they met! since doubts and fears,
|
|
Those phantom shapes that haunt and blight the earth,
|
|
Had come 'twixt her, a child of sin and tears,
|
|
And that bright spirit of immortal birth;
|
|
Until her pining soul and weeping eyes
|
|
Had learned to seek him only in the skies;
|
|
Till wings unto the weary heart were given,
|
|
And she became Love's angel bride in heaven!"
|
|
|
|
The story of Cupid and Psyche first appears in the works of
|
|
Apuleius, a writer of the second century of our era. It is therefore
|
|
of much more recent date than most of the legends of the Age of Fable.
|
|
It is this that Keats alludes to in his "Ode to Psyche":
|
|
|
|
"O latest born and loveliest vision far
|
|
Of all Olympus' faded hierarchy!
|
|
Fairer than Phoebe's sapphire-regioned star
|
|
Or Vesper, amorous glow-worm of the sky;
|
|
Fairer than these, though temple thou hast none,
|
|
Nor altar heaped with flowers;
|
|
Nor virgin choir to make delicious moan
|
|
Upon the midnight hours;
|
|
No voice, no lute, no pipe, no incense sweet,
|
|
From chain-swung censer teeming;
|
|
No shrine, no grove, no oracle, no heat
|
|
Of pale-mouthed prophet dreaming."
|
|
|
|
In Moore's "Summer Fete" a fancy ball is described, in which one
|
|
of the characters personated is Psyche-
|
|
|
|
"...not in dark disguise to-night
|
|
Hath our young heroine veiled her light;-
|
|
For see, she walks the earth, Love's own.
|
|
His wedded bride, by holiest vow
|
|
Pledged in Olympus, and made known
|
|
To mortals by the type which now
|
|
Hangs glittering on her snowy brow,
|
|
That butterfly, mysterious trinket,
|
|
Which means the soul, (though few would think it,)
|
|
And sparkling thus on brow so white
|
|
Tells us we've Psyche here to-night."
|
|
CHAPTER XII.
|
|
CADMUS- THE MYRMIDONS.
|
|
|
|
JUPITER, under the disguise of a bull, had carried away Europa,
|
|
the daughter of Agenor, king of Phoenicia. Agenor commanded his son
|
|
Cadmus to go in search of his sister, and not to return without her.
|
|
Cadmus went and sought long and far for his sister, but could not find
|
|
her, and not daring to return unsuccessful, consulted the oracle of
|
|
Apollo to know what country he should settle in. The oracle informed
|
|
him that he should find a cow in the field, and should follow her
|
|
wherever she might wander, and where she stopped, should build a
|
|
city and call it Thebes. Cadmus had hardly left the Castalian cave,
|
|
from which the oracle was delivered, when he saw a young cow slowly
|
|
walking before him. He followed her close, offering at the same time
|
|
his prayers to Phoebus. The cow went on till she passed the shallow
|
|
channel of Cephisus and came out into the plain of Panope. There she
|
|
stood still, raising her broad forehead to the sky filled the air with
|
|
her lowings. Cadmus gave thanks, and stooping down kissed the
|
|
foreign soil, then lifting his eyes, greeted the surrounding
|
|
mountains. Wishing to offer a sacrifice to Jupiter, he sent his
|
|
servants to seek pure water for a libation. Near by there stood an
|
|
ancient grove which had never been profaned by the axe, in the midst
|
|
of which there was a cave, thick covered with the growth of bushes,
|
|
its roof forming a low arch, from beneath which burst forth a fountain
|
|
of purest water. In the cave lurked a horrid serpent with a crested
|
|
head and scales glittering like gold. His eyes shone like fire, his
|
|
body was swollen with venom, he vibrated a triple tongue, and showed a
|
|
triple row of teeth. No sooner had the Tyrians dipped their pitchers
|
|
in the fountain, and the in-gushing waters made a sound, than the
|
|
glittering serpent raised his head out of the cave and uttered a
|
|
fearful hiss. The vessels fell from their hands, the blood left
|
|
their cheeks, they trembled in every limb. The serpent, twisting his
|
|
scaly body in a huge coil, raised his head so as to overtop the
|
|
tallest trees, and while the Tyrians from terror could neither fight
|
|
nor fly, slew some with his fangs, others in his folds, and others
|
|
with his poisonous breath.
|
|
Cadmus, having waited for the return of his men till midday, went in
|
|
search of them. His covering was a lion's hide, and besides his
|
|
Javelin he carried in his hand a lance, and in his breast a bold
|
|
heart, a surer reliance than either. When he entered the wood and
|
|
saw the lifeless bodies of his men, and the monster with his bloody
|
|
jaws, he exclaimed, "O faithful friends, I will avenge you, or share
|
|
your death." So saying he lifted a huge stone and threw it with all
|
|
his force at the serpent. Such a block would have shaken the wall of a
|
|
fortress, but it made no impression on the monster. Cadmus next
|
|
threw his javelin, which met with better success, for it penetrated
|
|
the serpent's scales, and pierced through to his entrails. Fierce with
|
|
pain, the monster turned back his head to view the wound, and
|
|
attempted to draw out the weapon with his mouth, but broke it off,
|
|
leaving the iron point rankling in his flesh. His neck swelled with
|
|
rage, bloody foam covered his jaws, and the breath of his nostrils
|
|
poisoned the air around. Now he twisted himself into a circle, then
|
|
stretched himself out on the ground like the trunk of a fallen tree.
|
|
As he moved onward, Cadmus retreated before him, holding his spear
|
|
opposite to the monster's opened jaws. The serpent snapped at the
|
|
weapon and attempted to bite its iron point. At last Cadmus,
|
|
watching his chance, thrust the spear at a moment when the animal's
|
|
head thrown back came against the trunk of a tree, and so succeeded in
|
|
pinning him to its side. His weight bent the tree as he struggled in
|
|
the agonies of death.
|
|
While Cadmus stood over his conquered foe, contemplating its vast
|
|
size, a voice was heard (from whence he knew not, but he heard it
|
|
distinctly) commanding him to take the dragon's teeth and sow them
|
|
in the earth. He obeyed. He made a furrow in the ground, and planted
|
|
the teeth, destined to produce a crop of men. Scarce had he done so
|
|
when the clods began to move, and the points of spears to appear above
|
|
the surface. Next helmets with their nodding plumes came up, and
|
|
next the shoulders and breasts and limbs of men with weapons, and in
|
|
time a harvest of armed warriors. Cadmus, alarmed, prepared to
|
|
encounter a new enemy, but one of them said to him, "Meddle not with
|
|
our civil war." With that he who had spoken smote one of his
|
|
earth-born brothers with a sword, and he himself fell pierced with
|
|
an arrow from another. The latter fell victim to a fourth, and in like
|
|
manner the whole crowd dealt with each other till all fell, slain with
|
|
mutual wounds, except five survivors. One of these cast away his
|
|
weapons and said, "Brothers, let us live in peace!" These five
|
|
joined with Cadmus in building his city, to which they gave the name
|
|
of Thebes.
|
|
Cadmus obtained in marriage Harmonia, the daughter of Venus. The
|
|
gods left Olympus to honour the occasion with their presence, and
|
|
Vulcan presented the bride with a necklace of surpassing brilliancy,
|
|
his own workmanship. But a fatality hung over the family of Cadmus
|
|
in consequence of his killing the serpent sacred to Mars. Semele and
|
|
Ino, his daughters, and Actaeon and Pentheus, his grandchildren, all
|
|
perished unhappily, and Cadmus and Harmonia quitted Thebes, now
|
|
grown odious to them, and emigrated to the country of the
|
|
Enchelians, who received them with honour and made Cadmus their
|
|
king. But the misfortunes of their children still weighed upon their
|
|
minds; and one day Cadmus exclaimed, "If a serpent's life is so dear
|
|
to the gods, I would I were myself a serpent." No sooner had he
|
|
uttered the words than he began to change his form. Harmonia beheld it
|
|
and prayed to the gods to let her share his fate. Both became
|
|
serpents. They live in the woods, but mindful of their origin, they
|
|
neither avoid the presence of man nor do they ever injure any one.
|
|
|
|
There is a tradition that Cadmus introduced into Greece the
|
|
letters of the alphabet which were invented by the Phoenicians. This
|
|
is alluded to by Byron, where, addressing the modern Greeks, he says:
|
|
|
|
"You have the letters Cadmus gave,
|
|
Think you he meant them for a slave?"
|
|
|
|
Milton, describing the serpent which tempted Eve, is reminded of the
|
|
serpents of the classical stories and says:
|
|
|
|
..."-pleasing was his shape,
|
|
And lovely: never since the serpent kind
|
|
Lovelier; not those that in Illyria changed
|
|
Hermione and Cadmus, nor the god
|
|
In Epidaurus."
|
|
|
|
For an explanation of the last allusion, see EPIDAURUS.
|
|
|
|
THE MYRMIDONS.
|
|
|
|
The Myrmidons were the solders of Achilles, in the Trojan war.
|
|
From them all zealous and unscrupulous followers of a political
|
|
chief are called by that name, down to this day. But the origin of the
|
|
Myrmidons would not give one the idea of a fierce and bloody race, but
|
|
rather of a laborious and peaceful one.
|
|
Cephalus, king of Athens, arrived in the island of AEgina to seek
|
|
assistance of his old friend and ally AEacus, the king, in his war
|
|
with Minos, king of Crete. Cephalus was most kindly received, and
|
|
the desired assistance readily promised. "I have people enough,"
|
|
said AEacus, "to protect myself and spare you such a force as you
|
|
need." "I rejoice to see it," replied Cephalus, "and my wonder has
|
|
been raised, I confess, to find such a host of youths as I see
|
|
around me, all apparently of about the same age. Yet there are many
|
|
individuals whom I previously knew, that I look for now in vain.
|
|
What has become of them?" AEacus groaned, and replied with a voice
|
|
of sadness, "I have been intending to tell you, and will now do so,
|
|
without more delay, that you may see how from the saddest beginning
|
|
a happy result sometimes flows. Those whom you formerly knew are now
|
|
dust and ashes! A plague sent by angry Juno devastated the land. She
|
|
hated it because it bore the name of one of her husband's female
|
|
favourites. While the disease appeared to spring from natural causes
|
|
we resisted it as we best might, by natural remedies; but it soon
|
|
appeared that the pestilence was too powerful for our efforts, and
|
|
we yielded. At the beginning the sky seemed to settle down upon the
|
|
earth, and thick clouds shut in the heated air. For four months
|
|
together a deadly south wind prevailed. The disorder affected the
|
|
wells and springs; thousands of snakes crept over the land and shed
|
|
their poison in the fountains. The force of the disease was first
|
|
spent on the lower animals- dogs, cattle, sheep, and birds. The
|
|
luckless ploughman wondered to see his oxen fall in the midst of their
|
|
work, and lie helpless in the unfinished furrow. The wool fell from
|
|
the bleating sheep, and their bodies pined away. The horse, once
|
|
foremost in the race, contested the palm no more, but groaned at his
|
|
stall and died an inglorious death. The wild boar forgot his rage, the
|
|
stag his swiftness, the bears no longer attacked the herds. Everything
|
|
languished; dead bodies lay in the roads, the fields, and the woods;
|
|
the air was poisoned by them. I tell you what is hardly credible,
|
|
but neither dogs nor birds would touch them, nor starving wolves.
|
|
Their decay spread the infection. Next the disease attacked the
|
|
country people, and then the dwellers in the city. At first the
|
|
cheek was flushed, and the breath drawn with difficulty. The tongue
|
|
grew rough and swelled, and the dry mouth stood open with its veins
|
|
enlarged and gasped for the air. Men could not bear the heat of
|
|
their clothes or their beds, but preferred to lie on the bare
|
|
ground; and the ground did not cool them, but, on the contrary, they
|
|
heated the spot where they lay. Nor could the physicians help, for the
|
|
disease attacked them also, and the contact of the sick gave them
|
|
infection, so that the most faithful were the first victims. At last
|
|
all hope of relief vanished, and men learned to look upon death as the
|
|
only deliverer from disease. Then they gave way to every
|
|
inclination, and cared not to ask what was expedient, for nothing
|
|
was expedient. All restraint laid aside, they crowded around the wells
|
|
and fountains and drank till they died, without quenching thirst. Many
|
|
had not strength to get away from the water, but died in the midst
|
|
of the stream, and others would drink of it notwithstanding. Such
|
|
was their weariness of their sick beds that some would creep forth,
|
|
and if not strong enough to stand, would die on the ground. They
|
|
seemed to hate their friends, and got away from their homes, as if,
|
|
not knowing the cause of their sickness, they charged it on the
|
|
place of their abode. Some were seen tottering along the road, as long
|
|
as they could stand, while others sank on the earth, and turned
|
|
their dying eyes around to take a last look, then closed them in
|
|
death.
|
|
"What heart had I left me, during all this, or what ought I to
|
|
have had, except to hate life and wish to be with my dead subjects? On
|
|
all sides lay my people strewn like over-ripened apples beneath the
|
|
tree, or acorns under the storm-shaken oak. You see yonder a temple on
|
|
the height. It is sacred to Jupiter. O how many offered prayers there,
|
|
husbands for wives, fathers for sons, and died in the very act of
|
|
supplication! How often, while the priest made ready for sacrifice,
|
|
the victim fell, struck down by disease without waiting for the
|
|
blow. At length all reverence for sacred things was lost. Bodies
|
|
were thrown: out unburied, wood was wanting for funeral piles, men
|
|
fought with one another for the possession of them. Finally there were
|
|
none left to mourn; sons and husbands, old men and youths, Perished
|
|
alike unlamented.
|
|
"Standing before the altar I raised my eyes to heaven. 'O
|
|
Jupiter,' I said, 'if thou art indeed my father, and art not ashamed
|
|
of thy offspring, give me back my people, or take me also away!' At
|
|
these words a clap of thunder was heard. 'I accept the omen,' I cried;
|
|
'O may it be a sign of a favourable disposition towards me!' By chance
|
|
there grew by the place where I stood an oak with wide-spreading
|
|
branches, sacred to Jupiter. I observed a troop of ants busy with
|
|
their labour, carrying minute grains in their mouths and following one
|
|
another in a line up the trunk of the tree. Observing their numbers
|
|
with admiration, I said, 'Give me, O father, citizens as numerous as
|
|
these, and replenish my empty city.' The tree shook and gave a
|
|
rustling sound with its branches, though no wind agitated them. I
|
|
trembled in every limb, yet I kissed the earth and the tree. I would
|
|
not confess to myself that I hoped, yet I did hope. Night came on
|
|
and sleep took possession of my frame oppressed with cares. The tree
|
|
stood before me in my dreams, with its numerous branches all covered
|
|
with living, moving creatures. It seemed to shake its limbs and
|
|
throw down over the ground a multitude of those industrious
|
|
grain-gathering animals, which appeared to gain in size, and grow
|
|
larger and larger, and by and by to stand erect, lay aside their
|
|
superfluous legs and their black colour, and finally to assume the
|
|
human form. Then I awoke, and my first impulse was to chide the gods
|
|
who had robbed me of a sweet vision and given me no reality in its
|
|
place. Being still in the temple, my attention was caught by the sound
|
|
of many voices without; a sound of late unusual to my ears. While I
|
|
began to think I was yet dreaming, Telamon, my son, throwing open
|
|
the temple gates, exclaimed: 'Father, approach, and behold things
|
|
surpassing even your hopes!' I went forth; I saw a multitude of men
|
|
such as I had seen in my dream, and they were passing in procession in
|
|
the same manner. While I gazed with wonder and delight they
|
|
approached, and kneeling hailed me as their king. I paid my vows to
|
|
Jove, and proceeded to allot the vacant city to the new-born race, and
|
|
to parcel out the fields among them. I called them Myrmidons, from the
|
|
ant (myrmex) from which they sprang. You have seen these persons;
|
|
their dispositions resemble those which they had in their former
|
|
shape. They are a diligent and industrious race, eager to gain, and
|
|
tenacious of their gains. Among them you may recruit your forces. They
|
|
will follow you to the war, young in years and bold in heart."
|
|
This description of the plague is coped by Ovid from the account
|
|
which Thucydides, the Greek historian, gives of the plague of
|
|
Athens. The historian drew from life, and all the poets and writers of
|
|
fiction since his day, when they have had occasion to describe a
|
|
similar scene, have borrowed their details from him.
|
|
CHAPTER XIII.
|
|
NISUS AND SCYLLA- ECHO AND NARCISSUS- CLYTIE-
|
|
HERO AND LEANDER.
|
|
|
|
NISUS AND SCYLLA.
|
|
|
|
MINOS, king of Crete, made war upon Megara. Nisus was king of
|
|
Megara, and Scylla was his daughter. The siege had now lasted six
|
|
months and the city still held out, for it was decreed by fate that it
|
|
should not be taken so long as a certain purple lock, which
|
|
glittered among the hair of King Nisus, remained on his head. There
|
|
was a tower on the city walls, which overlooked the plain where
|
|
Minos and his army were encamped. To this tower Scylla used to repair,
|
|
and look abroad over the tents of the hostile army. The siege had
|
|
lasted so long that she had learned to distinguish the persons of
|
|
the leaders. Minos, in particular, excited her admiration. Arrayed
|
|
in his helmet, and bearing his shield, she admired his graceful
|
|
deportment; if he threw his javelin skill seemed combined with force
|
|
in the discharge; if he drew his bow Apollo himself could not have
|
|
done it more gracefully. But when he laid aside his helmet, and in his
|
|
purple robes bestrode his white horse with its gay caparisons, and
|
|
reined in its foaming mouth, the daughter of Nisus was hardly mistress
|
|
of herself; she was almost frantic with admiration. She envied the
|
|
weapon that he grasped, the reins that he held. She felt as if she
|
|
could, if it were possible, go to him through the hostile ranks; she
|
|
felt an impulse to cast herself down from the tower into the midst
|
|
of his camp, or to open the gates to him, or to do anything else, so
|
|
only it might gratify Minos. As she sat in the tower, she talked
|
|
thus with herself: "I know not whether to rejoice or grieve at this
|
|
sad war. I grieve that Minos is our enemy; but I rejoice at any
|
|
cause that brings him to my sight. Perhaps he would be willing to
|
|
grant us peace, and receive me as a hostage. I would fly down, if I
|
|
could, and alight in his camp, and tell him that we yield ourselves to
|
|
his mercy. But then, to betray my father! No! rather would I never see
|
|
Minos again. And yet no doubt it is sometimes the best thing for a
|
|
city to be conquered, when the conqueror is clement and generous.
|
|
Minos certainly has right on his side. I think we shall be
|
|
conquered; and if that must be the end of it, why should not love
|
|
unbar the gates to him, instead of leaving it to be done by war?
|
|
Better spare delay and slaughter if we can. And O if any one should
|
|
wound or kill Minos! No one surely would have the heart to do it;
|
|
yet ignorantly, not knowing him, one might. I will, I will surrender
|
|
myself to him, with my country as a dowry, and so put an end to the
|
|
war. But how? The gates are guarded, and my father keeps the keys;
|
|
he only stands in my way. O that it might please the gods to take
|
|
him away! But why ask the gods to do it? Another woman, loving as I
|
|
do, would remove with her own hands whatever stood in the way of her
|
|
love. And can any other woman dare more than I? I would encounter fire
|
|
and sword to gain my object; but here there is no need of fire and
|
|
sword. I only need my father's purple lock. More precious than gold to
|
|
me, that will give me all I wish."
|
|
While she thus reasoned night came on, and soon the whole palace was
|
|
buried in sleep. She entered her father's bedchamber and cut off the
|
|
fatal lock; then passed out of the city and entered the enemy's
|
|
camp. She demanded to be led to the king, and thus addressed him: "I
|
|
am Scylla, the daughter of Nisus. I surrender to you my country and my
|
|
father's house. I ask no reward but yourself: for love of you I have
|
|
done it. See here the purple lock! With this I give you my father
|
|
and his kingdom." She held out her hand with the fatal spoil. Minos
|
|
shrunk back and refused to touch it. "The gods destroy thee,
|
|
infamous woman," he exclaimed; "disgrace of our time! May neither
|
|
earth nor sea yield thee a resting-place! Surely, my Crete, where Jove
|
|
himself was cradled, shall not be polluted with such a monster!"
|
|
Thus he said, and gave orders that equitable terms should be allowed
|
|
to the conquered city, and that the fleet should immediately sail from
|
|
the island.
|
|
Scylla was frantic. "Ungrateful man," she exclaimed, "is it thus you
|
|
leave me?- me who have given you victory,- who have sacrificed for you
|
|
parent and country! I am guilty, I confess, and deserve to die, but
|
|
not by your hand." As the ships left the shore, she leaped into the
|
|
water, and seizing the rudder of the one which carried Minos, she
|
|
was borne along an unwelcome companion of their course. A sea-eagle
|
|
soaring aloft,- it was her father who had been changed into that
|
|
form,- seeing her, pounced down upon her, and struck her with his beak
|
|
and claws. In terror she let go the ship and would have fallen into
|
|
the water, but some pitying deity changed her into a bird. The
|
|
sea-eagle still cherishes the old animosity; and whenever he espies
|
|
her in his lofty flight you may see him dart down upon her, with
|
|
beak and claws, to take vengeance for the ancient crime.
|
|
|
|
ECHO AND NARCISSUS.
|
|
|
|
Echo was a beautiful nymph, fond of the woods and hills, where she
|
|
devoted herself to woodland sports. She was a favourite of Diana,
|
|
and attended her in the chase. But Echo had one failing; she was
|
|
fond of talking, and whether in chat or argument, would have the
|
|
last word. One day Juno was seeking her husband, who, she had reason
|
|
to fear, was amusing himself among the nymphs. Echo by her talk
|
|
contrived to detain the goddess till the nymphs made their escape.
|
|
When Juno discovered it, she passed sentence upon Echo in these words:
|
|
"You shall forfeit the use of that tongue with which you have
|
|
cheated me, except for that one purpose you are so fond of- reply. You
|
|
shall still have the last word, but no power to speak first."
|
|
This nymph saw Narcissus, a beautiful youth, as he pursued the chase
|
|
upon the mountains. She loved him and followed his footsteps. O how
|
|
she longed to address him in the softest accents, and win him to
|
|
converse! but it was not in her power. She waited with impatience
|
|
for him to speak first, and had her answer ready. One day the youth,
|
|
being separated from his companions, shouted aloud, "Who's here?" Echo
|
|
replied, "Here." Narcissus looked around, but seeing no one, called
|
|
out, "Come." Echo answered, "Come." As no one came, Narcissus called
|
|
again, "Why do you shun me?" Echo asked the same question. "Let us
|
|
join one another," said the youth. The maid answered with all her
|
|
heart in the same words, and hastened to the spot, ready to throw
|
|
her arms about his neck. He started back, exclaiming, "Hands off! I
|
|
would rather die than you should have me!" "Have me," said she; but it
|
|
was all in vain. He left her, and she went to hide her blushes in
|
|
the recesses of the woods. From that time forth she lived in caves and
|
|
among mountain cliffs. Her form faded with grief, till at last all her
|
|
flesh shrank away. Her bones were changed into rocks and there was
|
|
nothing left of her but her voice. With that she is still ready to
|
|
reply to any one who calls her, and keeps up her old habit of having
|
|
the last word.
|
|
Narcissus's cruelty in this case was not the only instance. He
|
|
shunned all the rest of the nymphs, as he had done poor Echo. One
|
|
day a maiden who had in vain endeavoured to attract him uttered a
|
|
prayer that he might some time or other feel what it was to love and
|
|
meet no return of affection. The avenging goddess heard and granted
|
|
the prayer.
|
|
There was a clear fountain, with water like silver, to which the
|
|
shepherds never drove their flocks, nor the mountain goats resorted,
|
|
nor any of the beasts of the forests; neither was it defaced with
|
|
fallen leaves or branches; but the grass grew fresh around it, and the
|
|
rocks sheltered it from the sun. Hither came one day the youth,
|
|
fatigued with hunting, heated and thirsty. He stooped down to drink,
|
|
and saw his own image in the water; he thought it was some beautiful
|
|
water-spirit living in the fountain. He stood gazing with admiration
|
|
at those bright eyes, those locks curled like the locks of Bacchus
|
|
or Apollo, the rounded cheeks, the ivory neck, the parted lips, and
|
|
the glow of health and exercise over all. He fell in love with
|
|
himself. He brought his lips near to take a kiss; he plunged his
|
|
arms in to embrace the beloved object. It fled at the touch, but
|
|
returned again after a moment and renewed the fascination. He could
|
|
not tear himself away; he lost all thought of food or rest. while he
|
|
hovered over the brink of the fountain gazing upon his own image. He
|
|
talked with the supposed spirit: "Why, beautiful being, do you shun
|
|
me? Surely my face is not one to repel you. The nymphs love me, and
|
|
you yourself look not indifferent upon me. When I stretch forth my
|
|
arms you do the same; and you smile upon me and answer my beckonings
|
|
with the like." His tears fell into the water and disturbed the image.
|
|
As he saw it depart, he exclaimed, "Stay, I entreat you! Let me at
|
|
least gaze upon you, if I may not touch you." With this, and much more
|
|
of the same kind, he cherished the flame that consumed him, so that by
|
|
degrees be lost his colour, his vigour, and the beauty which
|
|
formerly had so charmed the nymph Echo. She kept near him, however,
|
|
and when he exclaimed, "Alas! alas! she answered him with the same
|
|
words. He pined away and died; and when his shade passed the Stygian
|
|
river, it leaned over the boat to catch a look of itself in the
|
|
waters. The nymphs mourned for him, especially the water-nymphs; and
|
|
when they smote their breasts Echo smote hers also. They prepared a
|
|
funeral pile and would have burned the body, but it was nowhere to
|
|
be found; but in its place a flower, purple within, and surrounded
|
|
with white leaves, which bears the name and preserves the memory of
|
|
Narcissus.
|
|
Milton alludes to the story of Echo and Narcissus in the Lady's song
|
|
in "Comus." She is seeking her brothers in the forest, and sings to
|
|
attract their attention:
|
|
|
|
"Sweet Echo, sweetest nymph, that liv'st unseen
|
|
Within thy aery shell
|
|
By slow Meander's margent green,
|
|
And in the violet-embroidered vale,
|
|
Where the love-lorn nightingale
|
|
Nightly to thee her sad song mourneth well;
|
|
Canst thou not tell me of a gentle pair
|
|
That likest thy Narcissus are?
|
|
O, if thou have
|
|
Hid them in some flowery cave,
|
|
Tell me but where,
|
|
Sweet queen of parly, daughter of the sphere,
|
|
So may'st thou be translated to the skies,
|
|
And give resounding grace to all heaven's harmonies."
|
|
|
|
Milton has imitated the story of Narcissus in the account which he
|
|
makes Eve give of the first sight of herself reflected in the
|
|
fountain.
|
|
|
|
"That day I oft remember when from sleep
|
|
I first awaked, and found myself reposed
|
|
Under a shade on flowers, much wondering where
|
|
And what I was, whence thither brought, and how
|
|
Not distant far from thence a murmuring sound
|
|
Of waters issued from a cave, and spread
|
|
Into a liquid plain, then stood unmoved
|
|
Pure as the expanse of heaven; I tither went
|
|
With unexperienced thought, and laid me down
|
|
On the green bank, to look into the clear
|
|
Smooth lake that to me seemed another sky.
|
|
As I bent down to look, just opposite
|
|
A shape within the watery gleam appeared,
|
|
Bending to look on me. I started back;
|
|
It started back; but pleased I soon returned,
|
|
Pleased it returned as soon with answering looks
|
|
Of sympathy and love. There had I fixed
|
|
Mine eyes till now, and pined with vain desire,
|
|
Had not a voice thus warned me: 'What thou seest,
|
|
What there thou seest, fair creature, is thyself;" etc.
|
|
Paradise Lost, Book IV.
|
|
|
|
No one of the fables of antiquity has been oftener alluded to by the
|
|
poets than that of Narcissus. Here are two epigrams which treat it
|
|
in different ways. The first is by Goldsmith:
|
|
|
|
"ON A BEAUTIFUL YOUTH, STRUCK BLIND BY LIGHTNING.
|
|
|
|
"Sure 'twas by Providence designed
|
|
Rather in pity than in hate,
|
|
That he should be like Cupid blind,
|
|
To save him from Narcissus' fate."
|
|
|
|
The other is by Cowper:
|
|
|
|
"ON AN UGLY FELLOW.
|
|
|
|
"Beware, my friend, of crystal brook
|
|
Or fountain, lest that hideous hook,
|
|
Thy nose, thou chance to see;
|
|
Narcissus' fate would then be thine,
|
|
And self-detested thou would'st pine,
|
|
As self-enamoured he."
|
|
|
|
CLYTIE.
|
|
|
|
Clytie was a water-nymph and in love with Apollo, who made her no
|
|
return. So she pined away, sitting all day long upon the cold
|
|
ground, with her unbound tresses streaming over her shoulders. Nine
|
|
days she sat and tasted neither food nor drink, her own tears, and the
|
|
chilly dew her only food. She gazed on the sun when he rose, and as he
|
|
passed through his daily course to his setting; she saw no other
|
|
object, her face turned constantly on him. At last, they say, her
|
|
limbs rooted in the ground, her face became a flower,* which turns
|
|
on its stem so as always to face the sun throughout its daily
|
|
course; for it retains to that extent the feeling of the nymph from
|
|
whom it sprang.
|
|
|
|
* The sunflower.
|
|
|
|
Hood, in his "Flowers," thus alludes to Clytie:
|
|
|
|
"I will not have the mad Clytie:
|
|
Whose head is turned by the sun;
|
|
The tulip is a courtly quean,
|
|
Whom therefore I will shun;
|
|
|
|
The cowslip is a country wench,
|
|
The violet is a nun;-
|
|
But I will woo the dainty rose,
|
|
The queen of every one."
|
|
|
|
The sunflower is a favourite emblem of constancy. Thus Moore uses
|
|
it:
|
|
|
|
"The heart that has truly loved never forgets,
|
|
But as truly loves on to the close;
|
|
As the sunflower turns on her god when he sets
|
|
The same look that she turned when he rose."
|
|
|
|
HERO AND LEANDER.
|
|
|
|
Leander was a youth of Abydos, a town of the Asian side of the
|
|
strait which separates Asia and Europe. On the opposite shore, in
|
|
the town of Sestos, lived the maiden Hero, a priestess of Venus.
|
|
Leander loved her, and used to swim the strait nightly to enjoy the
|
|
company of his mistress, guided by a torch which she reared upon the
|
|
tower for the purpose. But one night a tempest arose and the sea was
|
|
rough; his strength failed, and he was drowned. The waves bore his
|
|
body to the European shore, where Hero became aware of his death,
|
|
and in her despair cast herself down from the tower into the sea and
|
|
perished.
|
|
|
|
The following sonnet is by Keats:
|
|
|
|
"ON A PICTURE OF LEANDER.
|
|
|
|
"Come hither all sweet Maidens soberly
|
|
Down looking aye, and with a chasten'd light
|
|
Hid in the fringes of your eyelids white,
|
|
And meekly let your fair hands joined be,
|
|
As if so gentle that ye could not see,
|
|
Untouch'd, a victim of your beauty bright,
|
|
Sinking away to his young spirit's night,
|
|
Sinking bewilder'd 'mid the dreary sea.
|
|
'Tis young Leander toiling to his death.
|
|
Nigh swooning he doth purse his weary lips
|
|
For Hero's cheek, and smiles against her smile.
|
|
O horrid dream! see how his body dips
|
|
Dead-heavy; arms and shoulders gleam awhile;
|
|
He's gone; up bubbles all his amorous breath!"
|
|
|
|
The story of Leander's swimming the Hellespont was looked upon as
|
|
fabulous, and the feat considered impossible, till Lord Byron proved
|
|
its possibility by performing it himself. In the "Bride of Abydos"
|
|
he says,
|
|
|
|
"These limbs that buoyant wave hath borne."
|
|
|
|
The distance in the narrowest part is almost a mile, and there is
|
|
a constant current setting out from the Sea of Marmora into the
|
|
Archipelago. Since Byron's time the feat has been achieved by
|
|
others; but it yet remains a test of strength and skill in the art
|
|
of swimming sufficient. to give a wide and lasting celebrity to any
|
|
one of our readers who may dare to make the attempt and succeed in
|
|
accomplishing it.
|
|
|
|
In the beginning, of the second canto of the same poem, Byron thus
|
|
alludes to this story:
|
|
|
|
"The winds are high on Helle's wave,
|
|
As on that night of stormiest water,
|
|
When Love, who sent, forgot to save
|
|
The young, the beautiful, the brave,
|
|
The lonely hope of Sestos' daughter.
|
|
O, when alone along the sky
|
|
The turret-torch was blazing high,
|
|
Though rising gale and breaking foam,
|
|
And shrieking sea-birds warned him home;
|
|
And clouds aloft and tides below,
|
|
With signs and sounds forbade to go,
|
|
He could not see, he would not hear
|
|
Or sound or sight foreboding fear.
|
|
His eye but saw that light of love,
|
|
The only star it hailed above;
|
|
His ear but rang with Hero's song,
|
|
'Ye waves, divide not lovers long.'
|
|
That tale is old, but love anew
|
|
May nerve young hearts to prove as true."
|
|
Chapter XIV.
|
|
MINERVA- NIOBE.
|
|
|
|
MINERVA.
|
|
|
|
MINERVA, the goddess of wisdom, was the daughter of Jupiter. She was
|
|
said to have leaped forth from his brain, mature, and in complete
|
|
armour. She presided over the useful and ornamental arts, both those
|
|
of men- such as agriculture and navigation- and those of women,-
|
|
spinning, weaving, and needlework. She was also a warlike divinity;
|
|
but it was defensive war only that she patronized, and she had no
|
|
sympathy with Mars's savage love of violence and bloodshed. Athens was
|
|
her chosen seat, her own city, awarded to her as the prize of a
|
|
contest with Neptune, who also aspired to it, The tale ran that in the
|
|
reign of Cecrops, the first king of Athens, the two deities
|
|
contended for the possession of the city. The gods decreed that it
|
|
should be awarded to that one who produced the gift most useful to
|
|
mortals. Neptune gave the horse; Minerva produced the olive. The
|
|
gods gave judgment that the olive was the more useful of the two,
|
|
and awarded the city to the goddess; and it was named after her,
|
|
Athens, her name in Greek being Athene.
|
|
There was another contest, in which a mortal dared to come in
|
|
competition with Minerva. That mortal was Arachne, a maiden who had
|
|
attained such skill in the arts of weaving and embroidery that the
|
|
nymphs themselves would leave their groves and fountains to come and
|
|
gaze upon her work. It was not only beautiful when it was done, but
|
|
beautiful also in the doing. To watch her, as she took the wool in its
|
|
rude state and formed it into rolls, or separated it with her
|
|
fingers and carded it till it looked as light and soft as a cloud,
|
|
or twirled the spindle with skilful touch, or wove the web, or,
|
|
after it was woven, adorned it with her needle, one would have said
|
|
that Minerva herself had taught her. But this she denied, and could
|
|
not bear to be thought a pupil even of a goddess. "Let Minerva try her
|
|
skill with mine," said she; "if beaten I will pay the penalty."
|
|
Minerva heard this and was displeased. She assumed the form of an
|
|
old woman and went and gave Arachne some friendly advice. "I have
|
|
had much experience," said she, "and I hope you will not despise my
|
|
counsel. Challenge your fellow-mortals as you will, but do not compete
|
|
with a goddess. On the contrary, I advise you to ask her forgiveness
|
|
for what you have said, and as she is merciful perhaps she will pardon
|
|
you." Arachne stopped her spinning and looked at the old dame with
|
|
anger in her countenance. "Keep your counsel," said she, "for your
|
|
daughters or handmaids; for my part I know what I say, and I stand
|
|
to it. I am not afraid of the goddess; let her try her skill, if she
|
|
dare venture." "She comes," said Minerva; and dropping her disguise
|
|
stood confessed. The nymphs bent low in homage, and all the bystanders
|
|
paid reverence. Arachne alone was unterrified. She blushed, indeed;
|
|
a sudden colour dyed her cheek, and then she grew pale. But she
|
|
stood to her resolve, and with a foolish conceit of her own skill
|
|
rushed on her fate. Minerva forbore no longer nor interposed any
|
|
further advice. They proceed to the contest. Each takes her station
|
|
and attaches the web to the beam. Then the slender shuttle is passed
|
|
in and out among the threads. The reed with its fine teeth strikes the
|
|
woof into its place and compacts the web. Both work with speed;
|
|
their skilful hands move rapidly, and the excitement of the contest
|
|
makes the labour light. Wool of Tyrian dye is contrasted with that
|
|
of other colours, shaded off into one another so adroitly that the
|
|
joining deceives the eye. Like the bow, whose long arch tinges the
|
|
heavens, formed by sunbeams reflected from the shower,* in which,
|
|
where the colours meet they seem as one, but a little distance from
|
|
the point of contact are wholly different.
|
|
|
|
* This correct description of the rainbow is literally translated
|
|
from Ovid.
|
|
|
|
Minerva wrought on her web the scene of her contest with Neptune.
|
|
Twelve of the heavenly powers are represented, Jupiter, with august
|
|
gravity, sitting in the midst. Neptune, the ruler of the sea, holds
|
|
his trident, and appears to have just smitten the earth, from which
|
|
a horse has leaped forth. Minerva depicted herself with helmed head,
|
|
her AEgis covering her breast. Such was the central circle; and in the
|
|
four corners were represented incidents illustrating the displeasure
|
|
of the gods at such presumptuous mortals as had dared to contend
|
|
with them. These were meant as warnings to her rival to give up the
|
|
contest before it was too late.
|
|
Arachne filled her web with subjects designedly chosen to exhibit
|
|
the failings and errors of the gods. One scene represented Leda
|
|
caressing the swan, under which form Jupiter had disguised himself;
|
|
and another, Danae, in the brazen tower in which her father had
|
|
imprisoned her, but where the god effected his entrance in the form of
|
|
a golden shower. Still another depicted Europa deceived by Jupiter
|
|
under the disguise of a bull. Encouraged by the tameness of the animal
|
|
Europa ventured to mount his back, whereupon Jupiter advanced into the
|
|
sea and swam with her to Crete, You would have thought it was a real
|
|
bull, so naturally was it wrought, and so natural the water in which
|
|
it swam. She seemed to look with longing eyes back upon the shore
|
|
she was leaving, and to call to her companions for help. She
|
|
appeared to shudder with terror at the sight of the heaving waves, and
|
|
to draw back her feel, from the water.
|
|
Arachne filled her canvas with similar subjects, wonderfully well
|
|
done, but strongly marking her presumption and impiety. Minerva
|
|
could not forbear to admire, yet felt indignant at the insult. She
|
|
struck the web with her shuttle and rent it in pieces; she then
|
|
touched the forehead of Arachne and made her feel her guilt and shame.
|
|
She could not endure it and went and hanged herself. Minerva pitied
|
|
her as she saw her suspended by a rope. "Live," she said, "guilty
|
|
woman! and that you may preserve the memory of this lesson, continue
|
|
to hang, both you and your descendants, to all future times." She
|
|
sprinkled her with the juices of aconite, and immediately her hair
|
|
came off, and her nose and ears likewise. Her form shrank up, and
|
|
her head grew smaller yet; her fingers cleaved to her side and
|
|
served for legs. All the rest of her is body, out of which she spins
|
|
her thread, often hanging suspended by it, in the same attitude as
|
|
when Minerva touched her and transformed her into a spider.
|
|
|
|
Spenser tells the story of Arachne in his "Muiopotmos," adhering
|
|
very closely to his master Ovid, but improving upon him in the
|
|
conclusion of the story. The two stanzas which follow tell what was
|
|
done after the goddess had depicted her creation of the olive tree:
|
|
|
|
"Amongst these leaves she made a Butterfly,
|
|
With excellent device and wondrous slight,
|
|
Fluttering among the olives wantonly,
|
|
That seemed to live, so like it was in sight;
|
|
The velvet nap which on his wings doth lie,
|
|
The silken down with which his back is dight,
|
|
His broad outstretched horns, his hairy thighs,
|
|
His glorious colours, and his glistening eyes."*
|
|
|
|
"Which when Arachne saw, as overlaid
|
|
And mastered with workmanship so rare,
|
|
She stood astonied long, ne aught gainsaid;
|
|
And with fast-fixed eyes on her did stare,
|
|
And by her silence, sign of one dismayed,
|
|
The victory did yield her as her share:
|
|
Yet did she inly fret and felly burn,
|
|
And all her blood to poisonous rancour turn."
|
|
|
|
* Sir James Mackintosh says of this, "Do you think that even a
|
|
Chinese could paint the gay colours of a butterfly with more minute
|
|
exactness than the following lines: 'The velvet nap,' etc.?"- Life,
|
|
Vol. II. 246.
|
|
|
|
And so the metamorphosis is caused by Arachne's own mortification
|
|
and vexation, and not by any direct act of the goddess.
|
|
|
|
The following specimen of old-fashioned gallantry is by Garrick:
|
|
|
|
"UPON A LADY'S EMBROIDERY
|
|
|
|
"Arachne once, as poets tell,
|
|
A goddess at her art defied,
|
|
And soon the daring mortal fell
|
|
The hapless victim of her pride.
|
|
|
|
"O, then beware Arachne's fate;
|
|
Be prudent, Chloe, and submit,
|
|
For you'll most surely meet her hate,
|
|
Who rival both her art and wit."
|
|
|
|
Tennyson, in his "Palace of Art," describing the works of art with
|
|
which the palace was adorned, thus alludes to Europa:
|
|
|
|
"...sweet Europa's mantle blew unclasped
|
|
From off her shoulder, backward borne,
|
|
From one hand drooped a crocus, one hand grasped
|
|
The mild bull's golden horn."
|
|
|
|
In his "Princess" there is this allusion to Danae:
|
|
|
|
"Now lies the earth all Danae to the stars,
|
|
And all thy heart lies open unto me."
|
|
|
|
NIOBE.
|
|
|
|
The fate of Arachne was noised abroad through all the country, and
|
|
served as a warning to all presumptuous mortals not to compare
|
|
themselves with the divinities. But one, and she a matron too,
|
|
failed to learn the lesson of humility. It was Niobe, the queen of
|
|
Thebes. She had indeed much to be proud of; but it was not her
|
|
husband's fame, nor her own beauty, nor their great descent, nor the
|
|
power of their kingdom that elated her. It was her children; and truly
|
|
the happiest of mothers would Niobe have been if only she had not
|
|
claimed to be so. It was on occasion of the annual celebration in
|
|
honour of Latona and her offspring, Apollo and Diana,- when the people
|
|
of Thebes were assembled, their brows crowned with laurel, bearing
|
|
frankincense to the altars and paying their vows,- that Niobe appeared
|
|
among the crowd. Her attire was splendid with gold and gems, and her
|
|
aspect beautiful as the face of an angry woman can be. She stood and
|
|
surveyed the people with haughty looks. "What folly," said she, "is
|
|
this!- to prefer beings whom you never saw to those who stand before
|
|
your eyes! Why should Latona be honoured with worship, and none be
|
|
paid to me? My father was Tantalus, who was received as a guest at the
|
|
table of the gods; my mother was a goddess. My husband built and rules
|
|
this city, Thebes, and Phrygia is my paternal inheritance. Wherever
|
|
I turn my eyes I survey the elements of my power; nor is my form and
|
|
presence unworthy of a goddess. To all this let me add I have seven
|
|
sons and seven daughters, and look for sons-in-law and
|
|
daughters-in-law of pretensions worthy of my alliance. Have I not
|
|
cause for pride? Will you prefer to me this Latona, the Titan's
|
|
daughter, with her two children? I have seven times as many. Fortunate
|
|
indeed am I, and fortunate I shall remain! Will any one deny this?
|
|
My abundance is my security. I feel myself too strong for Fortune to
|
|
subdue. She may take from me much; I shall still have much left.
|
|
Were I to lose some of my children, I should hardly be left as poor as
|
|
Latona with her two only. Away with you from these solemnities,- put
|
|
off the laurel from your brows,- have done with this worship!" The
|
|
people obeyed, and left the sacred services uncompleted.
|
|
The goddess was indignant. On the Cynthian mountain top where she
|
|
dwelt she thus addressed her son and daughter: "My children, I who
|
|
have been so proud of you both, and have been used to hold myself
|
|
second to none of the goddesses except Juno alone, begin now to
|
|
doubt whether I am indeed a goddess. I shall be deprived of my worship
|
|
altogether unless you protect me." She was proceeding in this
|
|
strain, but Apollo interrupted her. "Say no more," said he; "speech
|
|
only delays punishment." So said Diana also. Darting through the
|
|
air, veiled in clouds, they alighted on the towers of the city. Spread
|
|
out before the gates was a broad plain, where the youth of the city
|
|
pursued their warlike sports. The sons of Niobe were there with the
|
|
rest,- some mounted on spirited horses richly caparisoned, some
|
|
driving gay chariots, Ismenos, the first-born, as he guided his
|
|
foaming steeds, struck with an arrow from above, cried out, "Ah me!"
|
|
dropped the reins, and fell lifeless. Another, hearing the sound of
|
|
the bow,- like the boatman who sees the storm gathering and makes
|
|
all sail for the port,- gave the reins to his horses and attempted
|
|
to escape. The inevitable arrow overtook him, as he fled. Two
|
|
others, younger boys, just from their tasks, had gone to the
|
|
playground to have a game of wrestling. As they stood breast to
|
|
breast, one arrow pierced them both. They uttered a cry together,
|
|
together cast a parting look around them, and together breathed
|
|
their last. Alphenor, an elder brother, seeing them fall, hastened
|
|
to the spot to render assistance, and fell stricken in the act of
|
|
brotherly duty. One only was left, Ilioneus. He raised his arms to
|
|
heaven to try whether prayer might not avail. "Spare me, ye gods!"
|
|
he cried, addressing all, in his ignorance that all needed not his
|
|
intercessions; and Apollo would have spared him, but the arrow had
|
|
already left the string, and it was too late.
|
|
The terror of the people and grief of the attendants soon made Niobe
|
|
acquainted with what had taken place. She could hardly think it
|
|
possible; she was indignant that the gods had dared, and amazed that
|
|
they had been able to do it. Her husband, Amphion, overwhelmed with
|
|
the blow, destroyed himself. Alas! how different was this Niobe from
|
|
her who had so lately driven away the people from the sacred rites,
|
|
and held her stately course through the city, the envy of her friends,
|
|
now the pity even of her foes! She knelt over the lifeless bodies, and
|
|
kissed now one, now another of her dead sons. Raising her pallid
|
|
arms to heaven, "Cruel Latona," said she, "feed full your rage with my
|
|
anguish! Satiate your hard heart, while I follow to the grave my seven
|
|
sons. Yet where is your triumph? Bereaved as I am, I am still richer
|
|
than you, my conqueror." Scarce had she spoken, when the bow sounded
|
|
and struck terror into all hearts except Niobe's alone. She was
|
|
brave from excess of grief, The sisters stood in garments of
|
|
mourning over the biers of their dead brothers. One fell, struck by an
|
|
arrow, and died on the corpse she was bewailing. Another, attempting
|
|
to console her mother, suddenly ceased to speak, and sank lifeless
|
|
to the earth. A third tried to escape by flight, a fourth by
|
|
concealment, another stood trembling, uncertain what course to take.
|
|
Six were now dead, and only one remained, whom the mother held clasped
|
|
in her arms, and covered as it were with her whole body. "Spare me
|
|
one, and that the youngest! O spare me one of so many!" she cried; and
|
|
while she spoke, that one fell dead. Desolate she sat, among sons,
|
|
daughters, husband, all dead, and seemed torpid with grief. The breeze
|
|
moved not her hair, no colour was on her cheek, her eyes glared
|
|
fixed and immovable, there was no sign of life about her. Her very
|
|
tongue cleaved to the roof of her mouth, and her veins ceased to
|
|
convey the tide of life. Her neck bent not, her arms made no
|
|
gesture, her foot no step. She was changed to stone, within and
|
|
without. Yet tears continued to flow; and borne on a whirlwind to
|
|
her native mountain, she still remains, a mass of rock, from which a
|
|
trickling stream flows, the tribute of her never-ending grief.
|
|
|
|
The story of Niobe has furnished Byron with a fine illustration of
|
|
the fallen condition of modern Rome:
|
|
|
|
"The Niobe of nations! there she stands,
|
|
Childless and crownless in her voiceless woe;
|
|
An empty urn within her withered hands,
|
|
Whose holy dust was scattered long ago;
|
|
The Scipios' tomb contains no ashes now:
|
|
The very sepulchres lie tenantless
|
|
Of their heroic dwellers; dost thou flow,
|
|
Old Tiber! through a marble wilderness?
|
|
Rise with thy yellow waves, and mantle her distress."
|
|
Childe Harold, IV. 79.
|
|
|
|
As an illustration of this story there is a celebrated statue in the
|
|
imperial gallery of Florence. It is the principal figure of a group
|
|
supposed to have been originally arranged in the pediment of a temple.
|
|
The figure of the mother clasped by the arm of her terrified child
|
|
is one of the most admired of the ancient statues. It ranks with the
|
|
Laocoon and the Apollo among the masterpieces of art. The following is
|
|
a translation of a Greek epigram supposed to relate to this statue:
|
|
|
|
"To stone the gods have changed her, but in vain;
|
|
The sculptor's art has made her breathe again."
|
|
|
|
Tragic as is the Story of Niobe, we cannot forbear to smile at the
|
|
use Moore has made of it in "Rhymes on the Road":
|
|
|
|
"'Twas in his carriage the sublime
|
|
Sir Richard Blackmore used to rhyme,
|
|
And, if the wits don't do him wrong,
|
|
'Twixt death and epics passed his time,
|
|
Scribbling and killing all day long;
|
|
Like Phoebus in his car at ease,
|
|
Now warbling forth a lofty song,
|
|
Now murdering the young Niobes."
|
|
|
|
Sir Richard Blackmore was a physician, and at same time a very
|
|
prolific and very tasteless poet, whose works are now forgotten,
|
|
unless when recalled to mind by some wit like Moore for the sake of
|
|
a joke.
|
|
CHAPTER XV.
|
|
THE GRAEAE AND GORGONS- PERSEUS- MEDUSA- ATLAS-
|
|
ANDROMEDA.
|
|
|
|
THE GRAEAE AND GORGONS.
|
|
|
|
THE Graeae were three sisters who were gray-haired from their birth,
|
|
whence their name. The Gorgons were monstrous females with huge
|
|
teeth like those of swine, brazen claws, and snaky hair. None of these
|
|
beings make much figure in mythology except Medusa, the Gorgon,
|
|
whose story we shall next advert to. We mention them chiefly to
|
|
introduce an ingenious theory of some modern writers, namely, that the
|
|
Gorgons and Graeae were only personifications of the terrors of the
|
|
sea, the former denoting the strong billows of the wide open main, and
|
|
the latter the white-crested waves that dash against the rocks of
|
|
the coast. Their names in Greek signify the above epithets.
|
|
|
|
PERSEUS AND MEDUSA.
|
|
|
|
Perseus was the son of Jupiter and Danae. His grandfather
|
|
Acrisius, alarmed by an oracle which had told him that his
|
|
daughter's child would be the instrument of his death, caused the
|
|
mother and child to be shut up in a chest and set adrift on the sea.
|
|
The chest floated towards Seriphus, where it was found by a
|
|
fisherman who conveyed the mother and infant to Polydectes, the king
|
|
of the country, by whom they were treated with kindness. When
|
|
Perseus was grown up Polydectes sent him to attempt the conquest of
|
|
Medusa, a terrible monster who had laid waste the country. She was
|
|
once a beautiful maiden whose hair was her chief glory but as she
|
|
dared to vie in beauty with Minerva, the goddess deprived her of her
|
|
charms and changed her beautiful ringlets into hissing serpents. She
|
|
became a cruel monster of so frightful an aspect that no living
|
|
thing could behold her without being turned into stone. All around the
|
|
cavern where she dwelt might be seen the stony figures of men and
|
|
animals which had chanced to catch a glimpse of her and had been
|
|
petrified with the sight. Perseus, favoured by Minerva and Mercury,
|
|
the former of whom lent him her shield and the latter his winged
|
|
shoes, approached Medusa while she slept and taking care not to look
|
|
directly at her, but guided by her image reflected in the bright
|
|
shield which he bore, he cut off her head and gave it to Minerva,
|
|
who fixed it in the middle of her AEgis.
|
|
|
|
Milton, in his "Comus," thus alludes to the AEgis:
|
|
|
|
"What thus snaky-headed Gorgon-shield
|
|
That wise Minerva wore, unconquered virgin,
|
|
Wherewith she freezed her foes to congealed stone,
|
|
But rigid looks of chaste austerity,
|
|
And noble grace that dashed brute violence
|
|
With sudden adoration and blank awe!"
|
|
|
|
Armstrong, the poet of the "Art of Preserving Health," thus
|
|
describes the effect of frost upon the waters:
|
|
|
|
"Now blows the surly North and chills throughout
|
|
The stiffening regions, while by stronger charms
|
|
Than Circe e'er or fell Medea brewed,
|
|
Each brook that wont to prattle to its banks
|
|
Lies all bestilled and wedged betwixt its banks,
|
|
Nor moves the withered reeds...
|
|
The surges baited by the fierce North-east,
|
|
Tossing with fretful spleen their angry heads,
|
|
E'en in the foam of all their madness struck
|
|
To monumental ice.
|
|
|
|
. . . . . . . .
|
|
Such execution,
|
|
So stern, so sudden, wrought the grisly aspect
|
|
Of terrible Medusa,
|
|
When wandering through the woods she turned to stone
|
|
Their savage tenants; just as the foaming Lion
|
|
Sprang furious on his prey, her speedier power
|
|
Outran his haste,
|
|
And fixed in that fierce attitude he stands
|
|
Like Rage in marble!"- Imitations of Shakespeare.
|
|
|
|
PERSEUS AND ATLAS.
|
|
|
|
After the slaughter of Medusa, Perseus, bearing with him the head of
|
|
the Gorgon, flew far and wide, over land and sea. As night came on, he
|
|
reached the western limit of the earth, where the sun goes down.
|
|
Here he would gladly have rested till morning. It was the realm of
|
|
King Atlas, whose bulk surpassed that of all other men. He was rich
|
|
iii flocks and herds and had no neighbour or rival to dispute his
|
|
state. But his chief pride was in his gardens whose fruit was of gold,
|
|
hanging from golden branches, half hid with golden leaves. Perseus
|
|
said to him, "I come as a guest. If you honour illustrious descent,
|
|
I claim Jupiter for my father; if mighty deeds, I plead the conquest
|
|
of the Gorgon. I seek rest and food." But Atlas remembered that an
|
|
ancient prophecy had warned him that a son of Jove should one day
|
|
rob him of His golden apples. So he answered, "Begone! or neither your
|
|
false claims of glory nor parentage shall protect you;" and he
|
|
attempted to thrust him out. Perseus, finding the giant too strong for
|
|
him, said, "Since you value my friendship so little, deign to accept a
|
|
present;" and turning his face away, he held up the Gorgon's head.
|
|
Atlas, with all his bulk, was changed into stone. His beard and hair
|
|
became forests, his arms and shoulders cliffs, his head a summit,
|
|
and his bones rocks. Each part increased in bulk till be became a
|
|
mountain, and (such was the pleasure of the gods) heaven with all
|
|
its stars rests upon his shoulders.
|
|
|
|
THE SEA-MONSTER.
|
|
|
|
Perseus, continuing his flight, arrived at the country of the
|
|
AEthiopians, of which Cepheus was king. Cassiopeia his queen, proud of
|
|
her beauty, had dared to compare herself to the Sea-nymphs, which
|
|
roused their indignation to such a degree that they sent a
|
|
prodigious sea-monster to ravage the coast. To appease the deities,
|
|
Cepheus was directed by the oracle to expose his daughter Andromeda to
|
|
be devoured by the monster. As Perseus looked down from his aerial
|
|
height he beheld the virgin chained to a rock, and waiting the
|
|
approach of the serpent. She was so pale and motionless that if it had
|
|
not been for her flowing tears and her hair that moved in the
|
|
breeze, he would have taken her for a marble statue. He was so
|
|
startled at the sight that he almost forgot to wave his wings. As he
|
|
hovered over her he said, "O virgin, undeserving of those chains,
|
|
but rather of such as bind fond lovers together, tell me, I beseech
|
|
you, your name, and the name of your country, and why you are thus
|
|
bound." At first she was silent from modesty, and, if she could, would
|
|
have hid her face with her hands; but when he repeated his
|
|
questions, for fear she might be thought guilty of some fault which
|
|
she dared not tell, she disclosed her name And that of her country,
|
|
and her mother's pride of beauty. Before she had done speaking, a
|
|
sound was heard off upon the water, and the sea-monster appeared, with
|
|
his head raised above the surface, cleaving the waves with his broad
|
|
breast. The virgin shrieked, the father and mother who had now arrived
|
|
at the scene, wretched both, but the mother more justly so, stood
|
|
by, not able to afford protection, but only to pour forth lamentations
|
|
and to embrace the victim. Then spoke Perseus; "There will be time
|
|
enough for tears; this hour is all we have for rescue. My rank as
|
|
the son of Jove and my renown as the slayer of the Gorgon might make
|
|
me acceptable as a suitor; but I will try to win her by services
|
|
rendered, if the gods will only be propitious. If she be rescued by my
|
|
valour, I demand that she be my reward." The parents consent (how
|
|
could they hesitate?) and promise a royal dowry with her.
|
|
And now the monster was within the range of a stone thrown by a
|
|
skilful slinger, when with a sudden bound the youth soared into the
|
|
air. As an eagle, when from his lofty flight he sees a serpent basking
|
|
in the sun, pounces upon him and seizes him by the neck to prevent him
|
|
from turning his head round and using his fangs, so the youth darted
|
|
down upon the back of the monster and plunged his sword into its
|
|
shoulder. Irritated by the wound, the monster raised himself into
|
|
the air, then plunged into the depth; then, like a wild boar
|
|
surrounded by a pack of barking dogs, turned swiftly from side to
|
|
side, while the youth eluded its attacks by means of his wings.
|
|
Wherever he can find a passage for his sword between the scales he
|
|
makes a wound, piercing now the side, now the flank, as it slopes
|
|
towards the tail. The brute spouts from his nostrils water mixed
|
|
with blood. The wings of the hero are wet with it, and he dares no
|
|
longer trust to them. Alighting on a rock which rose above the
|
|
waves, and holding on by a projecting fragment, as the monster floated
|
|
near he gave him a death stroke. The people who had gathered on the
|
|
shore shouted so that the hills reechoed with the sound. The
|
|
parents, transported with joy, embraced their future son-in-law,
|
|
calling him their deliverer and the saviour of their house, and the
|
|
virgin, both cause and reward of the contest, descended from the rock.
|
|
|
|
Cassiopeia was an AEthiopian, and consequently, in spite of her
|
|
boasted beauty, black; at least so Milton seems to have thought, who
|
|
alludes to this story in his "Penseroso," where he addresses
|
|
Melancholy as the
|
|
|
|
"...goddess, sage and holy,
|
|
Whose saintly visage is too bright
|
|
To hit the sense of human sight,
|
|
And, therefore, to our weaker view,
|
|
O'erlaid with black, staid Wisdom's hue.
|
|
Black, but such as in esteem
|
|
Prince Memnon's sister might beseem.
|
|
Or that starred AEthiop queen that strove
|
|
To set her beauty's praise above
|
|
The sea-nymphs, and their powers offended."
|
|
|
|
Cassiopeia is called "the starred AEthiop, queen" because after
|
|
her death she was placed among the stars, forming the constellation of
|
|
that name. Though she attained this honour, yet the Sea-Nymphs, her
|
|
old enemies, prevailed so far as to cause her to be placed in that
|
|
part of the heaven near the pole, where every night she is half the
|
|
time held with her head downward, to give her a lesson of humility.
|
|
Memnon was an AEthiopian prince, of whom we shall tell in a future
|
|
chapter.
|
|
|
|
THE WEDDING FEAST.
|
|
|
|
The joyful parents, with Perseus and Andromeda, repaired to the
|
|
palace, where a banquet was spread for them, and all was joy and
|
|
festivity. But suddenly a noise was heard of warlike clamour, and
|
|
Phineus, the betrothed of the virgin, with a party of his adherents,
|
|
burst in, demanding the maiden as his own. It was in vain that Cepheus
|
|
remonstrated- "You should have claimed her when she lay bound to the
|
|
rock, the monster's victim. The sentence of the gods dooming her to
|
|
such a fate dissolved all engagements, as death itself would have
|
|
done." Phineus made no reply, but hurled his javelin at Perseus, but
|
|
it missed its mark and fell harmless. Perseus would have thrown his in
|
|
turn, but the cowardly assailant ran and took shelter behind the
|
|
altar. But his act was a signal for an onset by his hand upon the
|
|
guests of Cepheus. They defended themselves and a general conflict
|
|
ensued, the old king retreating from the scene after fruitless
|
|
expostulations, calling the gods to witness that he was guiltless of
|
|
this outrage on the rights of hospitality.
|
|
Perseus and his friends maintained for some time the unequal
|
|
contest; but the numbers of the assailants were too great for them,
|
|
and destruction seemed inevitable, when a sudden thought struck
|
|
Perseus,- "I will make my enemy defend me." Then with a loud voice
|
|
he exclaimed, "If I have any friend here let him turn away his
|
|
eyes!" and held aloft the Gorgon's head. "Seek not to frighten us with
|
|
your jugglery," said Thescelus, and raised his javelin in the act to
|
|
throw, and became stone in the very attitude. Ampyx was about to
|
|
plunge his sword into the body of a prostrate foe, but his arm
|
|
stiffened and he could neither thrust forward nor withdraw it.
|
|
Another, in the midst of a vociferous challenge, stopped, his mouth
|
|
open, but no sound issuing. One of Perseus's friends, Aconteus, caught
|
|
sight of the Gorgon and stiffened like the rest. Astyages struck him
|
|
with his sword, but instead of wounding, it recoiled with a ringing
|
|
noise.
|
|
Phineus beheld this dreadful result of his unjust aggression, and
|
|
felt confounded. He called aloud to his friends, but got no answer; he
|
|
touched them and found them stone. Falling on his knees and stretching
|
|
out his hands to Perseus, but turning his head away, he begged for
|
|
mercy. "Take all," said he, "give me but my life." "Base coward," said
|
|
Perseus, "thus much I will grant you; no weapon shall touch you;
|
|
moreover, you shall be preserved in my house as a memorial of these
|
|
events." So saying, he held the Gorgon's head to the side where
|
|
Phineus was looking, and in the very form which he knelt, with his
|
|
hands outstretched and face averted, he became fixed immovably, a mass
|
|
of stone!
|
|
|
|
The following allusion to Perseus is from Milman's "Samor":
|
|
|
|
"As 'mid the fabled Libyan bridal stood
|
|
Perseus in stern tranquillity of wrath,
|
|
Half stood, half floated on his ankle-plumes
|
|
Out-swelling, while the bright face on his shield
|
|
Looked into stone the raging fray; so rose,
|
|
But with no magic arms, wearing alone
|
|
Th' appalling and control of his firm look,
|
|
The Briton Samor; at his rising awe
|
|
Went abroad, and the riotous hall was mute."
|
|
Chapter XVI.
|
|
MONSTERS.
|
|
|
|
GIANTS, SPHINX, PEGASUS, AND CHIMAERA, CENTAURS, GRIFFIN,
|
|
AND PYGMIES.
|
|
|
|
MONSTERS, in the language of mythology, were beings of unnatural
|
|
proportions or parts, usually regarded with terror, as possessing
|
|
immense strength and ferocity, which they employed for the injury
|
|
and annoyance of men. Some of them were supposed to combine the
|
|
members of different animals; such were the Sphinx and Chimaera and to
|
|
these all the terrible qualities of wild beasts were attributed,
|
|
together with human sagacity and faculties. Others, as the giants,
|
|
differed from men chiefly in their size; and in this particular we
|
|
must recognize a wide distinction among them. The human giants, if
|
|
so they may be called, such as the Cyclops, Antaeus, Orion, and
|
|
others, must be supposed not to be altogether disproportioned to human
|
|
beings, for they mingled in love and strife with them. But the
|
|
super-human giants, who warred with the gods, were of vastly larger
|
|
dimensions. Tityus, we are told, when stretched on the plain,
|
|
covered nine acres, and Enceladus required the whole of Mount AEtna to
|
|
be laid upon him to keep him down.
|
|
We have already spoken of the war which the giants waged against the
|
|
gods, and of its result. While this war lasted the giants proved a
|
|
formidable enemy. Some of them, like Briareus, had a hundred arms;
|
|
others, like Typhon, breathed out fire. At one time they put the
|
|
gods to such fear that they fled into Egypt and hid themselves under
|
|
various forms. Jupiter took the form of a ram, whence he was
|
|
afterwards worshipped in Egypt as the god Ammon, with curved horns.
|
|
Apollo became a crow, Bacchus a goat, Diana a cat, Juno a cow, Venus a
|
|
fish, Mercury a bird. At another time the giants attempted to climb up
|
|
into heaven, and for that purpose took up the mountain Ossa and
|
|
piled it on Pelion.* They were at last subdued by thunderbolts,
|
|
which Minerva invented, and taught Vulcan and his Cyclops to make
|
|
for Jupiter.
|
|
|
|
* See Proverbial Expressions, no. 5.
|
|
|
|
THE SPHINX.
|
|
|
|
Laius, king of Thebes, was warned by an oracle that there was danger
|
|
to his throne and life if his new-born son should be suffered to
|
|
grow up. He therefore committed the child to the care of a herdsman
|
|
with orders to destroy him; but the herdsman, moved with pity, yet not
|
|
daring entirely to disobey, tied up the child by the feet and left him
|
|
hanging to the branch of a tree. In this condition the infant was
|
|
found by a peasant, who carried him to his master and mistress, by
|
|
whom he was adopted and called OEdipus, or Swollen-foot.
|
|
Many years afterwards Laius being on his way to Delphi,
|
|
accompanied only by one attendant, met in a narrow road a young man
|
|
also driving in a chariot. On his refusal to leave the way at their
|
|
command the attendant killed one of his horses, and the stranger,
|
|
filled with rage, slew both Laius and his attendant. The young man was
|
|
OEdipus who thus unknowingly became the slayer of his own father.
|
|
Shortly after this event the city of Thebes was afflicted with a
|
|
monster which infested the highroad. It was called the Sphinx. It
|
|
had the body of a lion and the upper part of a woman. It lay
|
|
crouched on the top of a rock, and arrested all travellers who came
|
|
that way, proposing to them a riddle, with the condition that those
|
|
who could solve it should pass safe, but those who failed should be
|
|
killed. Not one had yet succeeded in solving it, and all had been
|
|
slain. OEdipus was not daunted by these alarming accounts, but
|
|
boldly advanced to the trial. The Sphinx asked him, "What animal is
|
|
that which in the morning goes on feet, at noon on two, and in the
|
|
evening upon three?" Oedipus replied, "Man, who in childhood creeps on
|
|
hands and knees, in manhood walks erect, and in old age with the aid
|
|
of a staff." The Sphinx was so mortified at the solving of her
|
|
riddle that she cast herself down from the rock and perished.
|
|
The gratitude of the people for their deliverance was so great
|
|
that they made OEdipus their king, giving him in marriage their
|
|
queen Jocasta. OEdipus, ignorant of his parentage, had already
|
|
become the slayer of his father; in marrying the queen he became the
|
|
husband of his mother. These horrors remained undiscovered, till at
|
|
length Thebes was afflicted with famine and pestilence, and the oracle
|
|
being consulted, the double crime of Oedipus came to light. Jocasta
|
|
put an end to her own life, and Oedipus, seized with madness, tore out
|
|
his eyes and wandered away from Thebes, dreaded and abandoned by all
|
|
except his daughters, who faithfully adhered to him, till after a
|
|
tedious period of miserable wandering he found the termination of
|
|
his wretched life.
|
|
|
|
PEGASUS AND THE CHIMAERA.
|
|
|
|
When Perseus cut off Medusa's head, the blood sinking into the earth
|
|
produced the winged horse Pegasus. Minerva caught and tamed him and
|
|
presented him to the Muses. The fountain Hippocrene, on the Muse's
|
|
mountain Helicon, was opened by a kick from his hoof.
|
|
The Chimaera was a fearful monster, breathing fire. The fore part of
|
|
its body was a compound of the lion and the goat, and the hind part
|
|
a dragon's. It made great havoc in Lycia, so that the king, Iobates,
|
|
sought for some hero to destroy it. At that time there arrived at
|
|
his court a gallant young warrior, whose name was Bellerophon. He
|
|
brought letters from Proetus, the son-in-law of Iobates,
|
|
recommending Bellerophon in the warmest terms as an unconquerable
|
|
hero, but added at the close a request to his father-in-law to put him
|
|
to death. The reason was that Proetus was jealous of him, suspecting
|
|
that his wife Antea looked with too much admiration on the young
|
|
warrior. From this instance of Bellerophon being unconsciously the
|
|
bearer of his own death warrant, the expression "Bellerophontic
|
|
letters" arose, to describe any species of communication which a
|
|
person is made the bearer of, containing matter prejudicial to
|
|
himself.
|
|
Iobates, on perusing the letters, was puzzled what to do, not
|
|
willing to violate the claims of hospitality, yet wishing to oblige
|
|
his son-in-law. A lucky thought occurred to him, to send Bellerophon
|
|
to combat with the Chimaera. Bellerophon accepted the proposal, but
|
|
before proceeding to the combat consulted the soothsayer Polyidus, who
|
|
advised him to procure if possible the horse Pegasus for the conflict.
|
|
For this purpose he directed him to pass the night in the temple of
|
|
Minerva. He did so, and as he slept Minerva came to him and gave him a
|
|
golden bridle. When he awoke the bridle remained in his hand.
|
|
Minerva also showed him Pegasus drinking at the well of Pirene, and at
|
|
sight of the bridle the winged steed came willingly and suffered
|
|
himself to be taken. Bellerophon mounted him, rose with him into the
|
|
air, soon found the Chimaera, and gained an easy victory over the
|
|
monster.
|
|
After the conquest of the Chimaera Bellerophon was exposed to
|
|
further trials and labours by his unfriendly host, but by the aid of
|
|
Pegasus he triumphed in them all, till at length Iobates, seeing
|
|
that the hero was a special favourite of the gods, gave him his
|
|
daughter in marriage and made him his successor on the throne. At last
|
|
Bellerophon by his pride and presumption drew upon himself the anger
|
|
of the gods; it is said he even attempted to fly up into heaven on his
|
|
winged steed, but Jupiter sent a gadfly which stung Pegasus and made
|
|
him throw his rider, who became lame and blind in consequence. After
|
|
this Bellerophon wandered lonely through the Aleian field, avoiding
|
|
the paths of men, and died miserably.
|
|
|
|
Milton alludes to Bellerophon in the beginning of the seventh book
|
|
of "Paradise Lost":
|
|
|
|
"Descend from Heaven, Urania, by that name
|
|
If rightly thou art called, whose voice divine
|
|
Following, above the Olympian hill I soar,
|
|
Above the flight of Pegasean wing.
|
|
Upled by thee,
|
|
Into the Heaven of Heavens I have presumed,
|
|
An earthly guest, and drawn empyreal air
|
|
(Thy tempering); with like safety guided down
|
|
Return me to my native element;
|
|
Lest, from this flying steed unreined (as once
|
|
Bellerophon, though from a lower clime),
|
|
Dismounted, on the Aleian field I fall,
|
|
Erroneous there to wander and forlorn."
|
|
|
|
Young, in his "Night Thoughts," speaking of the sceptic, says:
|
|
|
|
"He whose blind thought futurity denies,
|
|
Unconscious bears, Bellerophon, like thee
|
|
His own indictment; he condemns himself.
|
|
Who reads his bosom reads immortal life,
|
|
Or nature there, imposing on her sons,
|
|
Has written fables; man was made a lie."
|
|
Vol. II., p. 12.
|
|
|
|
Pegasus, being the horse of the Muses, has always been at the
|
|
service of the poets. Schiller tells a pretty story of his having been
|
|
sold by a needy poet and put to the cart and the plough. He was not
|
|
fit for such service, and his clownish master could make nothing of
|
|
him. But a youth stepped forth and asked leave to try him. As soon
|
|
as he was seated on his back the horse, which had appeared at first
|
|
vicious, and afterwards spirit-broken, rose kingly, a spirit, a god,
|
|
unfolded the splendour of his wings, and soared towards heaven. Our
|
|
own poet Longfellow also records adventure of this famous steed in his
|
|
"Pegasus in Pound."
|
|
|
|
Shakespeare alludes to Pegasus in "Henry IV.," where Vernon
|
|
describes Prince Henry:
|
|
|
|
"I saw young Harry, with his beaver on,
|
|
His cuishes on this thighs, gallantly armed,
|
|
Rise from the ground like feathered Mercury,
|
|
And vaulted with such ease into his seat,
|
|
As if an angel dropped down from the clouds,
|
|
To turn and wind a fiery Pegasus,
|
|
And witch the world with noble horsemanship."
|
|
|
|
THE CENTAURS.
|
|
|
|
These monsters were represented as men from the head to the loins,
|
|
while the remainder of the body was that of a horse. The ancients were
|
|
too fond of a horse to consider the union of his nature with man's
|
|
as forming a very degraded compound, and accordingly the Centaur is
|
|
the only one of the fancied monsters of antiquity to which any good
|
|
traits are assigned. The Centaurs were admitted to the companionship
|
|
of man, and at the marriage of Pirithous with Hippodamia they were
|
|
among the guests. At the feast Eurytion, one of the Centaurs, becoming
|
|
intoxicated with the wine, attempted to offer violence to the bride;
|
|
the other Centaurs followed his example, and a dreadful conflict arose
|
|
in which several of them were slain. This is the celebrated battle
|
|
of the Lapithae and Centaurs, a favourite subject with the sculptors
|
|
and poets of antiquity.
|
|
But not all the Centaurs were like the rude guests of Pirithous.
|
|
Chiron was instructed by Apollo and Diana, and was renowned for his
|
|
skill in hunting, medicine, music, and the art of prophecy. The most
|
|
distinguished heroes of Grecian story were his pupils. Among the
|
|
rest the infant AEsculapius was intrusted to his charge by Apollo, his
|
|
father. When the sage returned to his home bearing the infant, his
|
|
daughter Ocyrhoe came forth to meet him, and at sight of the child
|
|
burst forth into a prophetic strain (for she was a prophetess),
|
|
foretelling the glory that he was to achieve. AEsculapius when grown
|
|
up became a renowned physician, and even in one instance succeeded
|
|
in restoring the dead to life. Pluto resented this, and Jupiter, at
|
|
his request, struck the bold physician with lightning, and killed him,
|
|
but after his death received him into the number of the gods.
|
|
Chiron was the wisest and justest of all the Centaurs, and at his
|
|
death Jupiter placed him among the stars as the constellation
|
|
Sagittarius.
|
|
|
|
THE PYGMIES
|
|
|
|
The Pygmies were a nation of dwarfs, so called from a Greek word
|
|
which means the cubit or measure of about thirteen inches, which was
|
|
said to be the height of these people. They lived near the sources
|
|
of the Nile, or according to others, in India. Homer tells us that the
|
|
cranes used to migrate every winter to the Pygmies' country, and their
|
|
appearance was the signal of bloody warfare to the puny inhabitants,
|
|
who had to take up arms to defend their cornfields against the
|
|
rapacious strangers. The Pygmies and their enemies the Cranes form the
|
|
subject of several works of art.
|
|
Later writers tell of an army of Pygmies which finding Hercules
|
|
asleep, made preparations to attack him, as if they were about to
|
|
attack a city. But the hero, awaking, laughed at the little
|
|
warriors, wrapped some of them up in his lion's skin, and carried them
|
|
to Eurystheus.
|
|
|
|
Milton uses the Pygmies for a simile, "Paradise Lost," Book I.:
|
|
|
|
"...like that Pygmaean race
|
|
Beyond the Indian mount, of fairy elves
|
|
Whose midnight revels by a forest side,
|
|
Or fountain, some belated peasant sees
|
|
(Or dreams he sees), while overhead the moon
|
|
Sits arbitress, and nearer to the earth
|
|
Wheels her pale course; they on their mirth and dance
|
|
Intent, with jocund music charm his ear.
|
|
At once with joy and fear his heart rebounds."
|
|
|
|
THE GRIFFIN, OR GRYPHON.
|
|
|
|
The Griffin is a monster with the body of a lion, the head and wings
|
|
of an eagle, and back covered with feathers. Like birds it builds
|
|
its nest, and instead of an egg lays an agate therein. It has long
|
|
claws and talons of such a size that the people of that country make
|
|
them into drinking-cups. India was assigned as the native country of
|
|
the Griffins. They found gold in the mountains and built their nests
|
|
of it, for which reason their nests were very tempting to the hunters,
|
|
and they were forced to keep vigilant guard over them. Their
|
|
instinct led them to know where buried treasures lay, and they did
|
|
their best to keep plunderers at a distance. The Arimaspians, among
|
|
whom the Griffins flourished, were a one-eyed people of Scythia.
|
|
Milton borrows a simile from the Griffins, "Paradise Lose," Book
|
|
II.:
|
|
|
|
"As when a Gryphon through the wilderness
|
|
With winged course, o'er hill and moory dale,
|
|
Pursues the Arimaspian, who by stealth
|
|
Had from his wakeful custody purloined
|
|
The guarded gold," etc.
|
|
CHAPTER XVII.
|
|
THE GOLDEN FLEECE- MEDEA
|
|
|
|
THE GOLDEN FLEECE
|
|
|
|
IN very ancient times there lived in Thessaly a king and queen
|
|
name Athamas and Nephele. They had two children, a boy and a girl.
|
|
After a time Athamas grew indifferent to his wife, put her away, and
|
|
took another. Nephele suspected danger to her children from the
|
|
influence of the step-mother, and took measures to send them out of
|
|
her reach. Mercury assisted her, and gave her a ram with a golden
|
|
fleece, on which she set the two children, trusting that the ram would
|
|
convey them to a place of safety. The ram vaulted into the air with
|
|
the children on his back, taking his course to the East, till when
|
|
crossing the strait that divides Europe and Asia, the girl, whose name
|
|
was Helle, fell from his back into the sea, which from her was
|
|
called the Hellespont,- now the Dardanelles. The ram continued his
|
|
career till he reached the kingdom of Colchis, on the eastern shore of
|
|
the Black Sea, where he safely landed the boy Phryxus, who was
|
|
hospitably received by AEetes, king of the country. Phryxus sacrificed
|
|
the ram to Jupiter, and gave the Golden Fleece to AEetes, who placed
|
|
it in a consecrated rove, under the care of a sleepless dragon.
|
|
There was another kingdom in Thessaly near to that of Athamas, and
|
|
ruled over by a relative of his. The king AEson, being tired of the
|
|
cares of government, surrendered his crown to his brother Pelias on
|
|
condition that he should hold it only during the minority of Jason,
|
|
the son of AEson. When Jason was grown up and came to demand the crown
|
|
from his uncle, Pelias pretended to be willing to yield it, but at the
|
|
same time suggested to the young man the glorious adventure of going
|
|
in quest of the Golden Fleece, which it was well known was in the
|
|
kingdom of Colchis, and was, as Pelias pretended, the rightful
|
|
property of their family. Jason was pleased, with the thought and
|
|
forthwith made preparations for the expedition. At that time the
|
|
only species of navigation known to the Greeks consisted of small
|
|
boats or canoes hollowed out from trunks of trees, so that when
|
|
Jason employed Argus to build him a vessel capable of containing fifty
|
|
men, it was considered a gigantic undertaking. It was accomplished,
|
|
however, and the vessel named "Argo," from the name of the builder.
|
|
Jason sent his invitation to all the adventurous young men of
|
|
Greece, and soon found himself at the head of a band of bold youths,
|
|
many of whom afterwards were renowned among the heroes and demigods of
|
|
Greece. Hercules, Theseus, Orpheus, and Nestor were among them. They
|
|
are called the Argonauts, from the name of their vessel.
|
|
The "Argo" with her crew of heroes of Thessaly and having touched at
|
|
the Island of Lemnos, thence crossed to Mysia and thence to Thrace.
|
|
Here they found the sage Phineus, and from him received instruction as
|
|
to their future course. It seems the entrance of the Euxine Sea was
|
|
impeded by two small rocky islands, which floated on the surface,
|
|
and in their tossings and heavings occasionally came together,
|
|
crushing and grinding to atoms any object that might be caught between
|
|
them. They were called the Symplegades, or Clashing Islands. Phineus
|
|
instructed the Argonauts how to pass this dangerous strait. When
|
|
they reached the islands they let go a dove, which took her way
|
|
between the rocks, and passed in safety, only losing some feathers
|
|
of her tail. Jason and his men seized the favourable moment of the
|
|
rebound, plied their oars with vigour, and passed safe through, though
|
|
the islands closed behind them, and actually grazed their stern.
|
|
They now rowed along the shore till they arrived at the eastern end of
|
|
the sea, and landed at the kingdom of Colchis.
|
|
Jason made known his message to the Colchian king, AEetes, who
|
|
consented to give tip the golden fleece if Jason would yoke to the
|
|
plough two fire-breathing bulls with brazen feet, and sow the teeth of
|
|
the dragon which Cadmus had slain, and from which it was well known
|
|
that a crop of armed men would spring up, who would turn their weapons
|
|
against their producer. Jason accepted the conditions, and a time
|
|
was set for making the experiment. Previously, however, he found means
|
|
to plead his cause to Medea, daughter of the king. He promised her
|
|
marriage, and as they stood before the altar of Hecate, called the
|
|
goddess to witness his oath. Medea yielded, and by her aid, for she
|
|
was a potent sorceress, he was furnished with a charm, by which he
|
|
could encounter safely the breath of the fire-breathing bulls and
|
|
the weapons of the armed men.
|
|
At the time appointed, the people assembled at the grove of Mars,
|
|
and the king assumed his royal seat, while the multitude covered the
|
|
hill-sides. The brazen-footed bulls rushed in, breathing fire from
|
|
their nostrils that burned up the herbage as they passed. The sound
|
|
was like the roar of a furnace, and the smoke like that of water
|
|
upon quick-lime. Jason advanced boldly to meet them. His friends,
|
|
the chosen heroes of Greece, trembled to behold him. Regardless of the
|
|
burning breath, he soothed their rage with his voice, patted their
|
|
necks with fearless hand, and adroitly slipped over them the yoke, and
|
|
compelled them to drag the plough. The Colchians were amazed; the
|
|
Greeks shouted for joy. Jason next proceeded to sow the dragon's teeth
|
|
and plough them in. And soon the crop of armed men sprang up, and,
|
|
wonderful to relate! no sooner had they reached the surface than
|
|
they began to brandish their weapons and rush upon Jason. The Greeks
|
|
trembled for their hero, and even she who had provided him a way of
|
|
safety and taught him how to use it, Medea herself, grew pale with
|
|
fear. Jason for a time kept his assailants at bay with his sword and
|
|
shield, till, finding their numbers overwhelming, he resorted to the
|
|
charm which Medea had taught him, seized a stone and threw it in the
|
|
midst of his foes. They immediately turned their arms against one
|
|
another, and soon there was not one of the dragon's brood left
|
|
alive. The Greeks embraced their hero, and Medea, if she dared,
|
|
would have embraced him too.
|
|
It remained to lull to sleep the dragon that guarded the fleece, and
|
|
this was done by scattering over him a few drops of a preparation
|
|
which Medea had supplied. At the smell he relaxed his rage, stood
|
|
for a moment motionless, then shut those great round eyes, that had
|
|
never been known to shut before, and turned over on his side, fast
|
|
asleep. Jason seized the fleece and with his friends and Medea
|
|
accompanying, hastened to their vessel before AEetes the king could
|
|
arrest their departure, and made the best of their way back to
|
|
Thessaly, where they arrived safe, and Jason delivered the fleece to
|
|
Pelias, and dedicated the "Argo" to Neptune. What became of the fleece
|
|
afterwards we do not know, but perhaps it was found after all, like
|
|
many other golden prizes, not worth the trouble it had cost to procure
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
This is one of those mythological tales, says a late writer, in
|
|
which there is reason to believe that a substratum of truth exists,
|
|
though overlaid by a mass of fiction. It probably was the first
|
|
important maritime expedition, and like the first attempts of the kind
|
|
of all nations, as we know from history, was probably of a
|
|
half-piratical character. If rich spoils were the result it was enough
|
|
to give rise to the idea of the golden fleece.
|
|
Another suggestion of a learned mythologist, Bryant, is that it is a
|
|
corrupt tradition of the story of Noah and the ark. The name "Argo"
|
|
seems to countenance this, and the incident of the dove is another
|
|
confirmation.
|
|
|
|
Pope, in his "Ode on St. Cecilia's Day," thus celebrates the
|
|
launching of the ship "Argo," and the power of the music of Orpheus,
|
|
whom he calls the Thracian:
|
|
|
|
"So when the first bold vessel dared the seas,
|
|
High on the stern the Thracian raised his strain,
|
|
While Argo saw her kindred trees
|
|
Descend from Pelion to the main.
|
|
Transported demigods stood round,
|
|
And men grew heroes at the sound."
|
|
|
|
In Dyer's poem of "The Fleece" there is an account of the ship
|
|
"Argo" and her crew, which gives a good picture of this primitive
|
|
maritime adventure:
|
|
|
|
"From every region of AEgea's shore
|
|
The brave assembled; those illustrious twins
|
|
Castor and Pollux; Orpheus, tuneful bard;
|
|
Zetes and Calais, as the wind in speed;
|
|
Strong Hercules and many a chief renowned.
|
|
On deep Ioclos' sandy shore they thronged,
|
|
Gleaming in armour, ardent of exploits;
|
|
And soon, the laurel cord and the huge stone
|
|
Uplifting to the deck, unmoored the bark;
|
|
Whose keel of wondrous length the skilful hand
|
|
Of Argus fashioned for the proud attempt;
|
|
And in the extended keel a lofty mast
|
|
Upraised, and sails full swelling; to the chiefs
|
|
Unwonted objects. Now first, now they learned
|
|
Their bolder steerage over ocean wave,
|
|
Led by the golden stars, as Chiron's art
|
|
Had marked the sphere celestial," etc.
|
|
|
|
Hercules left the expedition at Mysia, for Hylas, a youth beloved by
|
|
him, having gone for water, was laid hold of and kept by the nymphs of
|
|
the spring, who were fascinated by his beauty. Hercules went in
|
|
quest of the lad, and while he was absent the "Argo" put to sea and
|
|
left him. Moore, in one of his songs, makes a beautiful allusion to
|
|
this incident:
|
|
|
|
"When Hylas was sent with his urn to the fount,
|
|
Through fields of light and with heart full of play,
|
|
Light rambled the boy over meadow and mount,
|
|
And neglected his task for the flowers in the way.
|
|
|
|
"Thus many like me, who in youth should have tasted
|
|
The fountain that runs by Philosophy's shrine,
|
|
Their time with the flowers on the margin have wasted,
|
|
And left their light urns all as empty as mine."
|
|
|
|
MEDEA AND AESON
|
|
|
|
Amid the rejoicings for the recovery of the Golden Fleece, Jason
|
|
felt that one thing was wanting, the presence of AEson, his father,
|
|
who was prevented by his age and infirmities from taking part in them.
|
|
Jason said to Medea, "My spouse, would that your arts, whose power I
|
|
have seen so mighty for my aid, could do me one further service,
|
|
take some years from my life and add them to my father's." Medea
|
|
replied, "Not at such a cost shall it be done, but if my art avails
|
|
me, his life shall be lengthened without abridging yours." The next
|
|
full moon she issued forth alone, while all creatures slept; not a
|
|
breath stirred the foliage, and all was still, To the stars she
|
|
addressed her incantations, and to the moon; to Hecate,* the goddess
|
|
of the under-world, and to Tellus the goddess of the earth, by whose
|
|
power plants potent for enchantment are produced. She invoked the gods
|
|
of the woods and caverns, of mountains and valleys, of lakes and
|
|
rivers, of winds and vapours. While she spoke the stars shone
|
|
brighter, and presently a chariot descended through the air, drawn
|
|
by flying serpents. She ascended it, and borne aloft made her way to
|
|
distant regions, where potent plants grew which she knew how to select
|
|
for her purpose. Nine nights she employed in her search, and during
|
|
that time came not within the doors of her palace nor under any
|
|
roof, and shunned all intercourse with mortals.
|
|
|
|
* Hecate was a mysterious divinity sometimes identified with Diana
|
|
and sometimes with Proserpine. As Diana represents the moonlight
|
|
splendour of night, so Hecate represents its darkness and terrors. She
|
|
was the goddess of sorcery and witchcraft, and was believed to
|
|
wander by night along the earth, seen only by the dogs, whose
|
|
barking told her approach.
|
|
|
|
She next erected two altars, the one to Hecate, the other to Hebe,
|
|
the goddess of youth, and sacrificed a black sheep, pouring
|
|
libations of milk and wine. She implored Pluto and his stolen bride
|
|
that they would not hasten to take the old man's life. Then she
|
|
directed that AEson should be led forth, and having thrown him into
|
|
a deep sleep by a charm, had him laid on a bed of herbs, like one
|
|
dead. Jason and all others were kept away from the place, that no
|
|
profane eyes might look upon her mysteries. Then, with streaming hair,
|
|
she thrice moved round the altars, dipped flaming twigs in the
|
|
blood, and laid them thereon to burn. Meanwhile the cauldron with
|
|
its contents was got ready. In it she put magic herbs, with seeds
|
|
and flowers of acrid juice, stones from the distant east, and sand
|
|
from the shore of all-surrounding ocean; hoar frost, gathered by
|
|
moonlight, a screech owl's head and wings, and the entrails of a wolf.
|
|
She added fragments of the shells of tortoises, and the liver of
|
|
stags- animals tenacious of life- and the head and beak of a crow,
|
|
that outlives nine generations of men. These with many other things
|
|
"without a name" she boiled together for her purposed work, stirring
|
|
them up with a dry olive branch; and behold! the branch when taken out
|
|
instantly became green, and before long was covered with leaves and
|
|
a plentiful growth of young olives; and as the liquor boiled and
|
|
bubbled, and sometimes ran over, the grass wherever the sprinklings
|
|
fell shot forth with a verdure like that of spring.
|
|
Seeing that all was ready, Medea cut the throat of the old man and
|
|
let out all his blood, and poured into his mouth and into his wound
|
|
the juices of her cauldron. As soon as he had completely imbibed them,
|
|
his hair and beard laid by their whiteness and assumed the blackness
|
|
of youth; his paleness and emaciation were gone; his veins were full
|
|
of blood, his limbs of vigour and robustness. AEson is amazed at
|
|
himself, and remembers that such as he now is, he was in his
|
|
youthful days, forty years before.
|
|
Medea used her arts here for a good purpose, but not so in another
|
|
instance, where she made them the instruments of revenge. Pelias,
|
|
our readers will recollect, was the usurping uncle of Jason, and had
|
|
kept him out of his kingdom. Yet he must have had some good qualities,
|
|
for his daughters loved him, and when they saw what Medea had done for
|
|
AEson, they wished her to do the same for their father. Medea
|
|
pretended to consent, and prepared her cauldron as before. At her
|
|
request an old sheep was brought and plunged into the cauldron. Very
|
|
soon a bleating was heard in the kettle, and when the cover was
|
|
removed, a lamb jumped forth and ran frisking away into the meadow.
|
|
The daughters of Pelias saw the experiment with delight, and appointed
|
|
a time for their father to undergo the same operation. But Medea
|
|
prepared her cauldron for him in a very different way. She put in only
|
|
water and a few simple herbs. In the night she with the sisters
|
|
entered the bed chamber of the old king, while he and his guards slept
|
|
soundly under the influence of a spell cast upon them by Medea. The
|
|
daughters stood by the bedside with their weapons drawn, but hesitated
|
|
to strike, till Medea chid their irresolution. Then turning away their
|
|
faces, and giving random blows they smote him with their weapons.
|
|
He, starting from his sleep, cried out, "My daughters, what are you
|
|
doing? Will you kill your father?" Their hearts failed them and
|
|
their weapons fell from their hands, but Medea struck him a fatal
|
|
blow, and prevented his saying more.
|
|
Then they placed him in the cauldron, and Medea hastened to depart
|
|
in her serpent-drawn chariot before they discovered her treachery or
|
|
their vengeance would have been terrible. She escaped, however, but
|
|
had little enjoyment of the fruits of her crime. Jason, for whom she
|
|
had done so much, wishing to marry Creusa, princess of Corinth, put
|
|
away Medea. She, enraged at his ingratitude, called on the gods for
|
|
vengeance, sent a poisoned robe as a gift to the bride, and then
|
|
killing her own children, and setting fire to the palace, mounted
|
|
her serpent-drawn chariot and fled to Athens, where she married King
|
|
AEgeus, the father of Theseus, and we shall meet her again when we
|
|
come to the adventures of that hero.
|
|
|
|
The incantations of Medea will remind the reader of those of the
|
|
witches in "Macbeth." The following lines are those which seem most
|
|
strikingly to recall the ancient model:
|
|
|
|
"Round about the cauldron go;
|
|
In the poisoned entrails throw.
|
|
|
|
Fillet of a fenny snake
|
|
In the cauldron boil and bake;
|
|
Eye of newt and toe of frog,
|
|
Wool of bat and tongue of dog,
|
|
Adder's fork and blind-worm's sting,
|
|
Lizard's leg and howlet's wing;
|
|
|
|
Maw of ravening salt-sea shark,
|
|
Root of hemlock digged in the dark," etc.
|
|
Macbeth, Act IV. Scene I.
|
|
|
|
And again:
|
|
|
|
Macbeth.- What is't you do?
|
|
Witches.- A deed without a name.
|
|
|
|
There is another story of Medea almost too revolting for record even
|
|
of a sorceress, a class of persons to whom both ancient and modern
|
|
poets have been accustomed to attribute every degree of atrocity. In
|
|
her flight from Colchis she had taken her young brother Absyrtus
|
|
with her. Finding the pursuing vessels of AEetes gaining upon the
|
|
Argonauts, she caused the lad to be killed and his limbs to be
|
|
strewn over the sea. AEetes on reaching the place found these
|
|
sorrowful traces of his murdered son; but while he tarried to
|
|
collect the scattered fragments and bestow upon them an honourable
|
|
interment, the Argonauts escaped.
|
|
In the poems of Campbell will be found a translation of one of the
|
|
choruses of the tragedy of "Medea," where the poet Euripides has taken
|
|
advantage of the occasion to pay a glowing tribute to Athens, his
|
|
native city. It begins thus:
|
|
|
|
"O haggard queen! to Athens dost thou guide
|
|
Thy glowing chariot, steeped in kindred gore;
|
|
Or seek to hide thy damned parricide
|
|
Where peace and justice dwell for evermore?"
|
|
CHAPTER XVIII.
|
|
MELEAGER AND ATALANTA.
|
|
|
|
ONE of the heroes of the Argonautic expedition was Meleager, son
|
|
of OEneus and Althea, king and queen of Calydon. Althea, when her
|
|
son was born, beheld the three destinies, who as they spun their fatal
|
|
thread, foretold that the life of the child should last no longer than
|
|
a brand then burning upon the hearth. Althea seized and quenched the
|
|
brand, and carefully preserved it for years, while Meleager grew to
|
|
boyhood, youth and manhood. It chanced, then, that OEneus, as he
|
|
offered sacrifices to the gods, omitted to pay due honours to Diana;
|
|
and she, indignant at the neglect, sent a wild boar of enormous size
|
|
to lay waste the fields of Calydon. Its eyes shone with blood and
|
|
fire, its bristles stood like threatening spears, its tusks were
|
|
like those of Indian elephants. The growing corn was trampled, the
|
|
vines and olive trees laid waste, the flocks and herds were driven
|
|
in wild confusion by the slaughtering foe. All common aid seemed vain;
|
|
but Meleager called on the heroes of Greece to join in a bold hunt for
|
|
the ravenous monster. Theseus and his friend Pirithous, Jason, Peleus,
|
|
afterwards the father of Achilles, Telamon the father of Ajax, Nestor,
|
|
then a youth, but who in his age bore arms with Achilles and Ajax in
|
|
the Trojan war- these and many more joined in the enterprise. With
|
|
them came Atalanta, the daughter of Iasius, king of Arcadia. A
|
|
buckle of polished gold confined her vest, an ivory quiver hung on her
|
|
left shoulder, and her left hand bore the bow. Her face blent feminine
|
|
beauty with the best graces of martial youth. Meleager saw and loved.
|
|
But now already they were near the monster's lair. They stretched
|
|
strong nets from tree to tree; they uncoupled their dogs, they tried
|
|
to find the footprints of their quarry in the grass. From the wood was
|
|
a descent to marshy grounds. Here the boar, as he lay among the reeds,
|
|
heard the shouts of his pursuers, and rushed forth against them. One
|
|
and another is thrown down and slain. Jason throws his spear, with a
|
|
prayer to Diana for success; and the favouring goddess allows the
|
|
weapon to touch, but not to wound, removing the steel point of the
|
|
spear in its flight. Nestor, assailed, seeks and finds safety in the
|
|
branches of a tree. Telamon rushes on, but stumbling at a projecting
|
|
root, falls prone. But an arrow from Atalanta at length for the
|
|
first time tastes the monster's blood. It is a slight wound, but
|
|
Meleager sees and joyfully proclaims it. Anceus, excited to envy by
|
|
the praise given to a female, loudly Proclaims his own valour, and
|
|
defies alike the boar and the goddess who had sent it; but as he
|
|
rushes on, the infuriated beast lays him low with a mortal wound.
|
|
Theseus throws his lance, but it is turned aside by a projecting
|
|
bough. The dart of Jason misses its object, and kills instead one of
|
|
their own dogs. But Meleager, after one unsuccessful stroke, drives
|
|
his spear into the monster's side, then rushes on and despatches him
|
|
with repeated blows.
|
|
Then rose a shout from those around; they congratulated the
|
|
conqueror, crowding to touch his hand. He, placing his foot upon the
|
|
head of the slain boar, turned to Atalanta and bestowed on her the
|
|
head and the rough hide which were the trophies of his success. But at
|
|
this, envy excited the rest to strife. Plexippus and Toxeus, the
|
|
brothers of Meleager's mother, beyond the rest opposed the gift, and
|
|
snatched from the maiden the trophy she had received. Meleager,
|
|
kindling with rage at the wrong done to himself, and still more at the
|
|
insult offered to her whom he loved, forgot the claims of kindred, and
|
|
plunged his sword into the offenders' hearts.
|
|
As Althea bore gifts of thankfulness to the temples for the
|
|
victory of her son, the bodies of her murdered brothers met her sight.
|
|
She shrieks, and beats her breast, and hastens to change the
|
|
garments of rejoicing for those of mourning. But when the author of
|
|
the deed is known, grief gives way to the stern desire of vengeance on
|
|
her son. The fatal brand, which once she rescued from the flames,
|
|
the brand which the destinies had linked with Meleager's life, she
|
|
brings forth, and commands a fire to be prepared. Then four times
|
|
she essays to place the brand upon the pile; four times draws back,
|
|
shuddering at the thought of bringing destruction on her son. The
|
|
feelings of the mother and the sister contend within her. Now she is
|
|
pale at the thought of the proposed deed, now flushed again with anger
|
|
at the act of her son. As a vessel, driven in one direction by the
|
|
wind, and in the opposite by the tide, the mind of Althea hangs
|
|
suspended in uncertainty. But now the sister prevails above the
|
|
mother, and she begins as she holds the fatal wood: "Turn, ye
|
|
Furies, goddesses of punishment! turn to behold the sacrifice I bring!
|
|
Crime must atone for crime. Shall OEneus rejoice in his victor son,
|
|
while the house of Thestius is desolate? But, alas! to what deed am
|
|
I borne along? Brothers, forgive a mother's weakness! my hand fails
|
|
me. He deserves death, but not that I should destroy him. But shall he
|
|
then live, and triumph, and reign over Calydon, while you, my
|
|
brothers, wander unavenged among the shades? No! thou hast lived by my
|
|
gift; die, now, for thine own crime. Return the life which twice I
|
|
gave thee, first at thy birth, again when I snatched this brand from
|
|
the flames. O that thou hadst then died! Alas! evil is the conquest;
|
|
but, brothers, ye have conquered." And, turning away her face, she
|
|
threw the fatal wood upon the burning pile.
|
|
It gave, or seemed to give, a deadly groan. Meleager, absent and
|
|
unknowing of the cause, felt a sudden pang. He burns, and only by
|
|
courageous pride conquers the pain which destroys him. He mourns
|
|
only that he perishes by a bloodless and unhonoured death. With his
|
|
last breath he calls upon his aged father, his brother, and his fond
|
|
sisters, upon his beloved Atalanta, and upon his mother, the unknown
|
|
cause of his fate. The flames increase, and with them the pain of
|
|
the hero. Now both subside; now both are quenched. The brand is ashes,
|
|
and the life of Meleager is breathed forth to the wandering winds.
|
|
Althea, when the deed was done, laid violent hands upon herself. The
|
|
sisters of Meleager mourned their brother with uncontrollable grief;
|
|
till Diana, pitying the sorrows of the house that once had aroused her
|
|
anger, turned them into birds.
|
|
|
|
ATALANTA.
|
|
|
|
The innocent cause of so much sorrow was a maiden whose face you
|
|
might truly say was boyish for a girl, yet too girlish for a boy.
|
|
Her fortune had been told, and it was to this effect: "Atalanta, do
|
|
not marry; marriage will be your ruin." Terrified by this oracle,
|
|
she fled the society of men, and devoted herself to the sports of
|
|
the chase. To all suitors (for she had many) she imposed a condition
|
|
which was generally effectual in relieving her of their
|
|
persecutions- "I will be the prize of him who shall conquer me in
|
|
the race; but death must be the penalty of all who try and fail." In
|
|
spite of this hard condition some would try. Hippomenes was to be
|
|
judge of the race. "Can it be possible that any will be so rash as
|
|
to risk so much for a wife?" said he. But when he saw her lay aside
|
|
her robe for the race, he changed his mind, and said, "Pardon me,
|
|
youths, I knew not the prize you were competing for." As he surveyed
|
|
them he wished them all to be beaten, and swelled with envy of any one
|
|
that seemed at all likely to win. While such were his thoughts, the
|
|
virgin darted forward. As she ran she looked more beautiful than ever.
|
|
The breezes seemed to give wings to her feet; her hair flew over her
|
|
shoulders, and the gay fringe of her garment fluttered behind her. A
|
|
ruddy hue tinged the whiteness of her skin, such as a crimson
|
|
curtain casts on a marble wall. All her competitors were distanced,
|
|
and were put to death without mercy. Hippomenes, not daunted by this
|
|
result, fixing his eyes on the virgin, said, "Why boast of beating
|
|
those laggards? I offer myself for the contest." Atalanta looked at
|
|
him with a pitying countenance, and hardly knew whether she would
|
|
rather conquer him or not. "What god can tempt one so young and
|
|
handsome to throw himself away? I pity him, not for his beauty (yet he
|
|
is beautiful), but for his youth. I wish he would give up the race, or
|
|
if he will be so mad, I hope he may outrun me." While she hesitates,
|
|
revolving these thoughts, the spectators grow impatient for the
|
|
race, and her father prompts her to prepare. Then Hippomenes addressed
|
|
a prayer to Venus: "Help me, Venus, for you have led me on." Venus
|
|
heard and was propitious.
|
|
In the garden of her temple, in her own island of Cyprus, is a
|
|
tree with yellow leaves and yellow branches and golden fruit. Hence
|
|
she gathered three golden apples, and unseen by any one else, gave
|
|
them to Hippomenes, and told him how to use them. The signal is given;
|
|
each starts from the goal and skims over the sand. So light their
|
|
tread, you would almost have thought they might run over the river
|
|
surface or over the waving grain without sinking. The cries of the
|
|
spectators cheered Hippomenes,- "Now, now, do your best! haste, haste!
|
|
you gain on her! relax not! one more effort!" It was doubtful
|
|
whether the youth or the maiden heard these cries with the greater
|
|
pleasure. But his breath began to fail him, his throat was dry, the
|
|
goal yet far off. At that moment be threw down one of the golden
|
|
apples. The virgin was all amazement. She stopped to pick it up.
|
|
Hippomenes shot ahead. Shouts burst forth from all sides. She
|
|
redoubled her efforts, and soon overtook him. Again he threw an apple.
|
|
She stopped again, but again came up with him. The goal was near;
|
|
one chance only remained. "Now, goddess," said he, "prosper your
|
|
gift!" and threw the last apple off at one side. She looked at it, and
|
|
hesitated; Venus impelled her to turn aside for it. She did so, and
|
|
was vanquished. The youth carried off his prize.
|
|
But the lovers were so full of their own happiness that they
|
|
forgot to pay due honour to Venus; and the goddess was provoked at
|
|
their ingratitude. She caused them to give offence to Cybele. That
|
|
powerful goddess was not to be insulted with impunity. She took from
|
|
them their human form and turned them into animals of characters
|
|
resembling their own: of the huntress-heroine, triumphing in the blood
|
|
of her lovers, she made a lioness, and of her lord and master a
|
|
lion, and yoked them to her car, where they are still to be seen in
|
|
all representations, in statuary or painting, of the goddess Cybele.
|
|
|
|
Cybele is the Latin name of the goddess called by the Greeks Rhea
|
|
and Ops. She was the wife of Cronos and mother of Zeus. In works of
|
|
art she exhibits the matronly air which distinguishes Juno and
|
|
Ceres. Sometimes she is veiled, and seated on a throne with lions at
|
|
her side, at other times riding in a chariot drawn by lions. She wears
|
|
a mural crown, that is, a crown whose rim is carved in the form of
|
|
towers and battlements. Her priests were called Corybantes.
|
|
|
|
Byron, in describing the city of Venice, which is built on a low
|
|
island in the Adriatic Sea, borrows an illustration from Cybele:
|
|
|
|
"She looks a sea-Cybele fresh from ocean,
|
|
Rising with her tiara of proud towers
|
|
At airy distance, with majestic motion,
|
|
A ruler of the waters and their powers."
|
|
Childe Harold, IV.
|
|
|
|
In Moore's "Rhymes on the Road," the poet, speaking of Alpine
|
|
scenery, alludes to the story of Atalanta and Hippomenes thus:
|
|
|
|
"Even here, in this region of wonders, I find
|
|
That light-footed Fancy leaves Truth far behind,
|
|
Or at least, like Hippomenes, turns her astray
|
|
By the golden illusions he flings in her way."
|
|
CHAPTER XIX.
|
|
HERCULES- HEBE AND GANYMEDE.
|
|
|
|
HERCULES.
|
|
|
|
HERCULES was the son of Jupiter and Alcmena. As Juno was always
|
|
hostile to the offspring of her husband by mortal mothers, she
|
|
declared war against Hercules from his birth. She sent two serpents to
|
|
destroy him as he lay in his cradle, but the precocious infant
|
|
strangled them with his own hands. He was, however, by the arts of
|
|
Juno rendered subject to Eurystheus and compelled to perform all his
|
|
commands. Eurystheus enjoined upon him a succession of desperate
|
|
adventures, which are called the "Twelve Labours of Hercules." The
|
|
first was the fight with the Nemean lion. The valley of Nemea was
|
|
infested by a terrible lion. Eurystheus ordered Hercules to bring
|
|
him the skin of this monster. After using in vain his club and
|
|
arrows against the lion, Hercules strangled the animal with his hands.
|
|
He returned carrying the dead lion on his shoulders; but Eurystheus
|
|
was so frightened at the sight of it and at this proof of the
|
|
prodigious strength of the hero, that he ordered him to deliver the
|
|
account of his exploits in future outside the town.
|
|
His next labour was the slaughter of the Hydra. This monster ravaged
|
|
the country of Argos, and dwelt in a swamp near the well of Amymone.
|
|
This well had been discovered by Amymone when the country was
|
|
suffering from drought, and the story was that Neptune, who loved her,
|
|
had permitted her to touch the rock with his trident, and a spring
|
|
of three outlets burst forth. Here the Hydra took up his position, and
|
|
Hercules was sent to destroy him. The Hydra had nine heads, of which
|
|
the middle one was immortal. Hercules struck off its heads with his
|
|
club, but in the place of the head knocked off, two new ones grew
|
|
forth each time. At length with the assistance of his faithful servant
|
|
Iolaus, he burned away the heads of the Hydra, and buried the ninth or
|
|
immortal one under a huge rock.
|
|
Another labour was the cleaning of the Augean stables. Augeas,
|
|
king of Elis, had a herd of three thousand oxen, whose stalls had
|
|
not been cleansed for thirty years. Hercules brought the rivers
|
|
Alpheus and Peneus through them, and cleansed them thoroughly in one
|
|
day.
|
|
His next labour was of a more delicate kind. Admeta, the daughter of
|
|
Eurystheus, longed to obtain the girdle of the queen of the Amazons,
|
|
and Eurystheus ordered Hercules to go and get it. The Amazons were a
|
|
nation of women. They were very warlike and held several flourishing
|
|
cities. It was their custom to bring up only the female children;
|
|
the boys were either sent away to the neighbouring nations or put to
|
|
death. Hercules was accompanied by a number of volunteers, and after
|
|
various adventures at last reached the country of the Amazons.
|
|
Hippolyta, the queen, received him kindly, and consented to yield
|
|
him her girdle, but Juno, taking the form of an Amazon, went and
|
|
persuaded the rest that the strangers were carrying off their queen.
|
|
They instantly armed and came in great numbers down to the ship.
|
|
Hercules, thinking that Hippolyta, had acted treacherously, slew
|
|
her, and taking her girdle made sail homewards.
|
|
Another task enjoined him was to bring to Eurystheus the oxen of
|
|
Geryon, a monster with three bodies, who dwelt in the island of
|
|
Erytheia (the red), so called because it lay at the west, under the
|
|
rays of the setting sun. This description is thought to apply to
|
|
Spain, of which Geryon was king. After traversing various countries,
|
|
Hercules reached at length the frontiers of Libya and Europe, where he
|
|
raised the two mountains of Calpe and Abyla, as monuments of his
|
|
progress, or, according to another account, rent one mountain into two
|
|
and left half on each side, forming the straits of Gibraltar, the
|
|
two mountains being called the Pillars of Hercules. The oxen were
|
|
guarded by the giant Eurytion and his two-headed dog, but Hercules
|
|
killed the giant and his dog and brought away the oxen in safety to
|
|
Eurystheus.
|
|
The most difficult labour of all was getting the golden apples of
|
|
the Hesperides, for Hercules did not know where to find them. These
|
|
were the apples which Juno had received at her wedding from the
|
|
goddess of the Earth, and which she had intrusted to the keeping of
|
|
the daughters of Hesperus, assisted by a watchful dragon. After
|
|
various adventures Hercules arrived at Mount Atlas in Africa. Atlas
|
|
was one of the Titans who had warred against the gods, and after
|
|
they were subdued, Atlas was condemned to bear on his shoulders the
|
|
weight of the heavens. He was the father of the Hesperides, and
|
|
Hercules thought might, if any one could, find the apples and bring
|
|
them to him. But how to send Atlas away from his post, or bear up
|
|
the heavens while he was gone? Hercules took the burden on his own
|
|
shoulders, and sent Atlas to seek the apples. He returned with them,
|
|
and though somewhat reluctantly, took his burden upon his shoulders
|
|
again, and let Hercules return with the apples to Eurystheus.
|
|
|
|
Milton, in his "Comus," makes the Hesperides the daughters of
|
|
Hesperus and niece of Atlas:
|
|
|
|
"...amidst the gardens fair
|
|
Of Hesperus and his daughters three,
|
|
That sing about the golden tree."
|
|
|
|
The poets, led by the analogy of the lovely appearance of the
|
|
western sky at sunset, viewed the west as a region of brightness and
|
|
glory. Hence they placed in it the Isles of the Blest, the ruddy
|
|
Isle Erytheia, on which the bright oxen of Geryon were pastured, and
|
|
the Isle of the Hesperides. The apples are supposed by some to be
|
|
the oranges of Spain, of which the Greeks had heard some obscure
|
|
accounts.
|
|
|
|
A celebrated exploit of Hercules was his victory over Antaeus.
|
|
Antaeus, the son of Terra, the Earth, was a mighty giant and wrestler,
|
|
whose strength was invincible so long as he remained in contact with
|
|
his mother Earth. He compelled all strangers who came to his country
|
|
to wrestle with him, on condition that if conquered (as they all were)
|
|
they should be put to death. Hercules encountered him, and finding
|
|
that it was of no avail to throw him, for he always rose with
|
|
renewed strength from every fall, he lifted him up from the earth
|
|
and strangled him in the air.
|
|
Cacus was a huge giant, who inhabited a cave on Mount Aventine,
|
|
and plundered the surrounding country. When Hercules was driving
|
|
home the oxen of Geryon, Cacus stole part of the cattle, while the
|
|
hero slept. That their footprints might not serve to show where they
|
|
had been driven, be dragged them backward by their tails to his
|
|
cave; so their tracks all seemed to show that they had gone in the
|
|
opposite direction. Hercules was deceived by this stratagem, and would
|
|
have failed to find his oxen, if it had not happened that in driving
|
|
the remainder of the herd past the cave where the stolen ones were
|
|
concealed, those within began to low, and were thus discovered.
|
|
Cacus was slain by Hercules.
|
|
The last exploit we shall record was bringing Cerberus from the
|
|
lower world. Hercules descended into Hades, accompanied by Mercury and
|
|
Minerva. He obtained permission from Pluto to carry Cerberus to the
|
|
upper air, provided he could do it without the use of weapons; and
|
|
in spite of the monster's struggling, he seized him, held him fast,
|
|
and carried him to Eurystheus, and afterwards brought him back
|
|
again. When he was in Hades he obtained the liberty of Theseus, his
|
|
admirer and imitator, who had been detained a prisoner there for an
|
|
unsuccessful attempt to carry off Proserpine.
|
|
Hercules in a fit of madness killed his friend Iphitus, and was
|
|
condemned for this offence to become the slave of Queen Omphale for
|
|
three years. While in this service the hero's nature seemed changed.
|
|
He lived effeminately, wearing at times the dress of a woman, and
|
|
spinning wool with the hand-maidens of Omphale, while the queen wore
|
|
his lion's skin. When this service was ended he married Dejanira and
|
|
lived in peace with her three years. On one occasion as he was
|
|
travelling with his wife, they came to a river, across which the
|
|
Centaur Nessus carried travellers for a stated fee. Hercules himself
|
|
forded the river, but gave Dejanira to Nessus to be carried across.
|
|
Nessus attempted to run away with her, but Hercules heard her cries
|
|
and shot an arrow into the heart of Nessus. The dying Centaur told
|
|
Dejanira to take a portion of his blood and keep it, as it might be
|
|
used as a charm to preserve the love of her husband.
|
|
Dejanira did so, and before long fancied she had occasion to use it.
|
|
Hercules in one of his conquests had taken prisoner a fair maiden,
|
|
named Iole, of whom he seemed more fond than Dejanira approved. When
|
|
Hercules was about to offer sacrifices to the gods in honour of his
|
|
victory, he sent to his wife for a white robe to use on the
|
|
occasion. Dejanira, thinking it a good opportunity to try her
|
|
love-spell, steeped the garment in the blood of Nessus. We are to
|
|
suppose she took care to wash out all traces of it, but the magic
|
|
power remained, and as soon as the garment became warm on the body
|
|
of Hercules the poison penetrated into all his limbs and caused him
|
|
the most intense agony. In his frenzy he seized Lichas, who had
|
|
brought him the fatal robe, and hurled him into the sea. He wrenched
|
|
off the garment, but it stuck to his flesh, and with it he tore away
|
|
whole pieces of his body. In this state he embarked on board a ship
|
|
and was conveyed home. Dejanira, on seeing what she had unwittingly
|
|
done, hung herself. Hercules, prepared to die, ascended Mount OEta,
|
|
where he built a funeral pile of trees, gave his bow and arrows to
|
|
Philoctetes, and laid himself down on the pile, his head resting on
|
|
his club, and his lion's skin spread over him. With a countenance as
|
|
serene as if he were taking his place at a festal board he commanded
|
|
Philoctetes to apply the torch. The flames spread apace and soon
|
|
invested the whole mass.
|
|
|
|
Milton thus alludes to the frenzy of Hercules:
|
|
|
|
"As when Alcides* from OEchalia crowned
|
|
With conquest, felt the envenomed robe, and tore,
|
|
Through pain, up by the roots Thessalian pines
|
|
And Lichas from the top of OEta threw
|
|
Into the Euboic Sea."
|
|
|
|
* Alcides. a name of Hercules.
|
|
|
|
The gods themselves felt troubled at seeing the champion of the
|
|
earth so brought to his end. But Jupiter with cheerful countenance
|
|
thus addressed them: "I am pleased to see your concern, my princes,
|
|
and am gratified to perceive that I am the ruler of a loyal people,
|
|
and that my son enjoys your favour. For although your interest in
|
|
him arises from his noble deeds, yet it is not the less gratifying
|
|
to me. But now I say to you, Fear not. He who conquered all else is
|
|
not to be conquered by those flames which you see blazing on Mount
|
|
OEta. Only his mother's share in him can perish; what he derived
|
|
from me is immortal. I shall take him, dead to earth, to the
|
|
heavenly shores, and I require of you all to receive him kindly. If
|
|
any of you feel grieved at his attaining this honour, yet no one can
|
|
deny that he has deserved it." The gods all gave their assent; Juno
|
|
only heard the closing words with some displeasure that she should
|
|
be so particularly pointed at, yet not enough to make her regret the
|
|
determination of her husband. So when the flames had consumed the
|
|
mother's share of Hercules, the diviner part, instead of being injured
|
|
thereby, seemed to start forth with new vigour, to assume a more lofty
|
|
port and a more awful dignity. Jupiter enveloped him in a cloud, and
|
|
took him up in a four-horse chariot to dwell among the stars. As he
|
|
took his place in heaven, Atlas felt the added weight.
|
|
Juno, now reconciled to him, gave him her daughter Hebe in marriage.
|
|
|
|
The poet Schiller, in one of his pieces called the "Ideal and Life,"
|
|
illustrates the contrast between the practical and the imaginative
|
|
in some beautiful stanzas, of which the last two may be thus
|
|
translated:
|
|
|
|
"Deep degraded to a coward's slave,
|
|
Endless contests bore Alcides brave,
|
|
Through the thorny path of suffering led;
|
|
Slew the Hydra, crushed the lion's might,
|
|
Threw himself, to bring his friend to light,
|
|
Living, in the skiff that bears the dead.
|
|
All the torments, every toil of earth
|
|
Juno's hatred on him could impose,
|
|
Well he bore them, from his fated birth
|
|
To life's grandly mournful close.
|
|
|
|
"Till the god, the earthly part forsaken,
|
|
From the man in flames asunder taken,
|
|
Drank the heavenly ether's purer breath.
|
|
Joyous in the new unwonted lightness,
|
|
Soared he upwards to celestial brightness,
|
|
Earth's dark heavy burden lost in death.
|
|
High Olympus gives harmonious greeting
|
|
To the hall where reigns his sire adored;
|
|
Youth's bright goddess, with a blush at meeting,
|
|
Gives the nectar to her lord."
|
|
S. G. B.
|
|
|
|
HEBE AND GANYMEDE.
|
|
|
|
Hebe, the daughter of Juno, and goddess of youth, was cup-bearer
|
|
to the gods. The usual story is that she resigned her office on
|
|
becoming the wife of Hercules. But there is another statement which
|
|
our countryman Crawford, the sculptor, has adopted in his group of
|
|
Hebe and Ganymede, now in the Athenaeum gallery. According to this,
|
|
Hebe was dismissed from her office in consequence of a fall which
|
|
she met with one day when in attendance on the gods. Her successor was
|
|
Ganymede, a Trojan boy, whom Jupiter, in the disguise of an eagle,
|
|
seized and carried off from the midst of his play-fellows on Mount
|
|
Ida, bore up to heaven, and installed in the vacant place.
|
|
|
|
Tennyson, in his "Palace of Art," describes among the decorations on
|
|
the walls a picture representing this legend:
|
|
|
|
"There, too, flushed Ganymede, his rosy thigh
|
|
Half buried in the eagle's down,
|
|
Sole as a flying star shot through the sky
|
|
Above the pillared town."
|
|
|
|
And in Shelley's "Prometheus" Jupiter calls to his cup-bearer thus:
|
|
|
|
"Pour forth heaven's wine, Idaean Ganymede,
|
|
And let it fill the Daedal cups like fire."
|
|
|
|
The beautiful legend of the "Choice of Hercules" may be found in the
|
|
"Tatler," No. 97.
|
|
CHAPTER XX.
|
|
THESEUS- DAEDALUS- CASTOR AND POLLUX.
|
|
|
|
THESEUS
|
|
|
|
THESEUS was the son of AEgeus, king of Athens, and of AEthra,
|
|
daughter of the king of Troezen. He was brought up at Troezen, and
|
|
when arrived at manhood was to proceed to Athens and present himself
|
|
to his father. AEgeus on parting from AEthra, before the birth of
|
|
his son, placed his sword and shoes under a large stone and directed
|
|
her to send his son to him when he became strong enough to roll away
|
|
the stone and take them from under it. When she thought the time had
|
|
come, his mother led Theseus to the stone, and he removed it with ease
|
|
and took the sword and shoes. As the roads were infested with robbers,
|
|
his grandfather pressed him earnestly to take the shorter and safer
|
|
way to his father's country- by sea; but the youth, feeling in himself
|
|
the spirit and the soul of a hero, and eager to signalize himself like
|
|
Hercules, with whose fame all Greece then rang, by destroying the
|
|
evil-doers and monsters that oppressed the country, determined on
|
|
the more perilous and adventurous journey by land.
|
|
His first day's journey brought him to Epidaurus, where dwelt a
|
|
man named Periphetes, a son of Vulcan. This ferocious savage always
|
|
went armed with a club of iron, and all travellers stood in terror
|
|
of his violence. When he saw Theseus approach he assailed him, but
|
|
speedily fell beneath the blows of the young hero, who took possession
|
|
of his club and bore it ever afterwards as a memorial of his first
|
|
victory.
|
|
Several similar contests with the petty tyrants and marauders of the
|
|
country followed, in all of which Theseus was victorious. One of these
|
|
evil-doers was called Procrustes, or the Stretcher. He had an iron
|
|
bedstead, on which he used to tie all travellers who fell into his
|
|
hands. If they were shorter than the bed, he stretched their limbs
|
|
to make them fit it; if they were longer than the bed, he lopped off a
|
|
portion. Theseus served him as he had served others.
|
|
Having overcome all the perils of the road, Theseus at length
|
|
reached Athens, where new dangers awaited him. Medea, the sorceress,
|
|
who had fled from Corinth after her separation from Jason, had
|
|
become the wife of AEgeus, the father of Theseus. Knowing by her
|
|
arts who he was, and fearing the loss of her influence with her
|
|
husband if Theseus should be acknowledged as his son, she filled the
|
|
mind of AEgeus with suspicions of the young stranger, and induced
|
|
him to present him a cup of poison; but at the moment when Theseus
|
|
stepped forward to take it, the sight of the sword which he wore
|
|
discovered to his father who he was, and prevented the fatal
|
|
draught. Medea, detected in her arts, fled once more from deserved
|
|
punishment, and arrived in Asia, where the country afterwards called
|
|
Media, received its name from her. Theseus was acknowledged by his
|
|
father, and declared his successor.
|
|
The Athenians were at that time in deep affliction, on account of
|
|
the tribute which they were forced to pay to Minos, king of Crete.
|
|
This tribute consisted of seven youths and seven maidens, who were
|
|
sent every year to be devoured by the Minotaur, a monster with a
|
|
bull's body and a human head. It was exceedingly strong and fierce,
|
|
and was kept in a labyrinth constructed by Daedalus, so artfully
|
|
contrived that whoever was enclosed in it could by no means find his
|
|
way out unassisted. Here the Minotaur roamed, and was fed with human
|
|
victims.
|
|
Theseus resolved to deliver his countrymen from this calamity, or to
|
|
die in the attempt. Accordingly, when the time of sending off the
|
|
tribute came, and the youths and maidens were, according to custom,
|
|
drawn by lot to be sent, he offered himself as one of the victims,
|
|
in spite of the entreaties of his father. The ship departed under
|
|
black sails, as usual, which Theseus promised his father to change for
|
|
white, in case of his returning victorious. When they arrived in
|
|
Crete, the youths and maidens were exhibited before Minos; and
|
|
Ariadne, the daughter of the king, being present, became deeply
|
|
enamoured of Theseus, by whom her love was readily returned. She
|
|
furnished him with a sword, with which to encounter the Minotaur,
|
|
and with a clue of thread by which he might find his way out of the
|
|
labyrinth. He was successful, slew the Minotaur, escaped from the
|
|
labyrinth, and taking Ariadne as the companion of his way, with his
|
|
rescued companions sailed for Athens. On their way they stopped at the
|
|
island of Naxos, where Theseus abandoned Ariadne, leaving her asleep.*
|
|
His excuse for this ungrateful treatment of his benefactress was
|
|
that Minerva appeared to him in a dream and commanded him to do so.
|
|
|
|
* One of the finest pieces of sculpture in Italy, the recumbent
|
|
Ariadne of the Vatican, represents this incident. A copy is in the
|
|
Athenaeum gallery, Boston.
|
|
|
|
On approaching the coast of Attica, Theseus forgot the signal
|
|
appointed by his father, and neglected to raise the white sails, and
|
|
the old king, thinking his son had perished, put an end to his own
|
|
life. Theseus thus became king of Athens.
|
|
One of the most celebrated of the adventures of Theseus is his
|
|
expedition against the Amazons. He assailed them before they had
|
|
recovered from the attack of Hercules, and carried off their queen
|
|
Antiope. The Amazons in their turn invaded the country of Athens and
|
|
penetrated into the city itself; and the final battle in which Theseus
|
|
overcame them was fought in the very midst of the city. This battle
|
|
was one of the favourite subjects of the ancient sculptors, and is
|
|
commemorated in several works of art that are still extant.
|
|
The friendship between Theseus and Pirithous was of a most
|
|
intimate nature, yet it originated in the midst of arms. Pirithous had
|
|
made an irruption into the plain of Marathon, and carried off the
|
|
herds of the king of Athens. Theseus went to repel the plunderers. The
|
|
moment Pirithous beheld him, he was seized with admiration; he
|
|
stretched out his hand as a token of peace, and cried, "Be judge
|
|
thyself- what satisfaction dost thou require?" "Thy friendship,"
|
|
replied the Athenian, and they swore inviolable fidelity. Their
|
|
deeds corresponded to their professions, and they ever continued
|
|
true brothers in arms. Each of them aspired to espouse a daughter of
|
|
Jupiter. Theseus fixed his choice on Helen, then but a child,
|
|
afterwards so celebrated as the cause of the Trojan war, and with
|
|
the aid of his friend he carried her off. Pirithous aspired to the
|
|
wife of the monarch of Erebus; and Theseus, though aware of the
|
|
danger, accompanied the ambitious lover in his descent to the
|
|
underworld. But Pluto seized and set them on an enchanted rock at
|
|
his palace gate, where they remained till Hercules arrived and
|
|
liberated Theseus, leaving Pirithous to his fate.
|
|
After the death of Antiope, Theseus married Phaedra, daughter of
|
|
Minos, king of Crete. Phaedra saw in Hippolytus, the son of Theseus, a
|
|
youth endowed with all the graces and virtues of his father, and of an
|
|
age corresponding to her own. She loved him, but he repulsed her
|
|
advances, and her love was changed to hate. She used her influence
|
|
over her infatuated husband to cause him to be jealous of his son, and
|
|
he imprecated the vengeance of Neptune upon him. As Hippolytus was one
|
|
day driving his chariot along the shore, a sea-monster raised
|
|
himself above the waters, and frightened the horses so that they ran
|
|
away and dashed the chariot to pieces. Hippolytus was killed, but by
|
|
Diana's assistance AEsculapius restored him to life. Diana removed
|
|
Hippolytus from the power of his deluded father and false
|
|
stepmother, and placed him in Italy under the protection of the
|
|
nymph Egeria.
|
|
Theseus at length lost the favour of his people, and retired to
|
|
the court of Lycomedes, king of Scyros, who at first received him
|
|
kindly, but afterwards treacherously slew him. In a later age the
|
|
Athenian general Cimon discovered the place where his remains were
|
|
laid, and caused them to be removed to Athens, where they were
|
|
deposited in a temple called the Theseum, erected in honour of the
|
|
hero.
|
|
The queen of the Amazons whom Theseus espoused is by some called
|
|
Hippolyta. That is the name she bears in Shakespeare's "Midsummer
|
|
Night's Dream,"- the subject of which is the festivities attending the
|
|
nuptials of Theseus and Hippolyta.
|
|
Mrs. Hemans has a poem on the ancient Greek tradition that the
|
|
"Shade of Theseus" appeared strengthening his countrymen at the battle
|
|
of Marathon.
|
|
Theseus is a semi-historical personage. It is recorded of him that
|
|
he united the several tribes by whom the territory of Attica was
|
|
then possessed into one state, of which Athens was the capital. In
|
|
commemoration of this important event, he instituted the festival of
|
|
Panathenaea, in honour of Minerva, the patron deity of Athens. This
|
|
festival differed from the other Grecian games chiefly in two
|
|
particulars. It was peculiar to the Athenians, and its chief feature
|
|
was a solemn procession in which the Peplus, or sacred robe of
|
|
Minerva, was carried to the Parthenon, and suspended be, fore the
|
|
statue of the goddess. The Peplus was covered with embroidery,
|
|
worked by select virgins of the noblest families in Athens. The
|
|
procession consisted of persons of all ages and both sexes. The old
|
|
men carried olive branches in their hands, and the young men bore
|
|
arms. The young women carried baskets on their heads, containing the
|
|
sacred utensils, cakes, and all things necessary for the sacrifices.
|
|
The procession formed the subject of the bas-reliefs which embellished
|
|
the outside of the temple of the Parthenon. A considerable portion
|
|
of these sculptures is now in the British Museum among those known
|
|
as the "Elgin marbles."
|
|
|
|
OLYMPIC AND OTHER GAMES.
|
|
|
|
It seems not inappropriate to mention here the other celebrated
|
|
national games of the Greeks. The first and most distinguished were
|
|
the Olympic, founded, it was said, by Jupiter himself. They were
|
|
celebrated at Olympia in Elis. Vast numbers of spectators flocked to
|
|
them from every part of Greece, and from Asia, Africa and Sicily. They
|
|
were repeated every fifth year in midsummer, and continued five
|
|
days. They gave rise to the custom of reckoning time and dating events
|
|
by Olympiads. The first Olympiad is generally considered as
|
|
corresponding with the year 776 B.C. The Pythian games were celebrated
|
|
in the vicinity of Delphi, the Isthmian on the Corinthian Isthmus, the
|
|
Nemean at Nemea, a city of Argolis.
|
|
The exercises in these games were of five sorts: running, leaping,
|
|
wrestling, throwing the quoit, and hurling the javelin, or boxing.
|
|
Besides these exercises of bodily strength and agility there were
|
|
contests in music, poetry and eloquence. Thus these games furnished
|
|
poets, musicians and authors the best opportunities to present their
|
|
productions to the public, and the fame of the victors was diffused
|
|
far and wide.
|
|
|
|
DAEDALUS.
|
|
|
|
The labyrinth from which Theseus escaped by means of the clew of
|
|
Ariadne was built by Daedalus, a most skilful artificer. It was an
|
|
edifice with numberless winding passages and turnings opening into one
|
|
another, and seeming to have neither beginning nor end, like the river
|
|
Maeander, which returns on itself, and flows now onward, now backward,
|
|
in its course to the sea. Daedalus built the labyrinth for King Minos,
|
|
but afterwards lost the favour of the king, and was shut up in a
|
|
tower. He contrived to make his escape from his prison, but could
|
|
not leave the island by sea, as the king kept strict watch on all
|
|
the vessels, and permitted none to sail without being carefully
|
|
searched. "Minos may control the land and sea," said Daedalus, "but
|
|
not the regions of the air. I will try that way." So he set to work to
|
|
fabricate wings for himself and his young son Icarus. He wrought
|
|
feathers together, beginning with the smallest and adding larger, so
|
|
as to form an increasing surface. The larger ones he secured with
|
|
thread and the smaller with wax, and gave the whole a gentle curvature
|
|
like the wings of a bird. Icarus, the boy, stood and looked on,
|
|
sometimes running to gather up the feathers which the wind had blown
|
|
away, and then handling the wax and working it over with his
|
|
fingers, by his play impeding his father in his labours. When at
|
|
last the work was done, the artist, waving his wings, found himself
|
|
buoyed upward, and hung suspended, poising himself on the beaten
|
|
air. He next equipped his son in the same manner and taught him how to
|
|
fly, as a bird tempts her young ones from the lofty nest into the air.
|
|
When all was prepared for flight he said, "Icarus, my son, I charge
|
|
you to keep at a moderate height, for if you fly too low the damp will
|
|
clog your wings, and if too high the heat will melt them. Keep near me
|
|
and you will be safe." While he gave him these instructions and fitted
|
|
the wings to his shoulders, the face of the father was wet with tears,
|
|
and his hands trembled. He kissed the boy, not knowing that it was for
|
|
the last time. Then rising on his wings, he flew off, encouraging
|
|
him to follow, and looked back from his own flight to see how his
|
|
son managed his wings. As they flew the ploughman stopped his work
|
|
to gaze, aid the shepherd leaned on his staff and watched them,
|
|
astonished at the sight, and thinking they were gods who could thus
|
|
cleave the air.
|
|
They passed Samos and Delos on the left and Lebynthos on the
|
|
right, when the boy, exulting in his career, began to leave the
|
|
guidance of his companion and soar upward as if to reach heaven. The
|
|
nearness of the blazing sun softened the wax which held the feathers
|
|
together, and they came off. He fluttered with his arms, but no
|
|
feathers remained to hold the air. While his mouth uttered cries to
|
|
his father it was submerged in the blue waters of the sea which
|
|
thenceforth was called by his name. His father cried, "Icarus, Icarus,
|
|
where are you?" At last he saw the feathers floating on the water, and
|
|
bitterly lamenting his own arts, he buried the body and called the
|
|
land Icaria in memory of his child. Daedalus arrived safe in Sicily,
|
|
where he built a temple to Apollo, and hung up his wings, an
|
|
offering to the god.
|
|
Daedalus was so proud of his achievements that he could not bear the
|
|
idea of a rival. His sister had placed her son Perdix under his charge
|
|
to be taught the mechanical arts. He was an apt scholar and gave
|
|
striking evidences of ingenuity. Walking on the seashore he picked
|
|
up the spine of a fish. Imitating it, he took a piece of iron and
|
|
notched it on the edge, and thus invented the saw. He, put two
|
|
pieces of iron together, connecting them at one end with a rivet,
|
|
and sharpening the other ends, and made a pair of compasses.
|
|
Daedalus was so envious of his nephew's performances that he took an
|
|
opportunity, when they were together one day on the top of a high
|
|
tower to push him off. But Minerva, who favours ingenuity, saw him
|
|
falling, and arrested his fate by changing him into a bird called
|
|
after his name, the Partridge. This bird does not build his nest in
|
|
the trees, nor take lofty flights, but nestles in the hedges, and
|
|
mindful of his fall, avoids high places.
|
|
|
|
The death of Icarus is told in the following lines by Darwin:
|
|
|
|
"...with melting wax and loosened strings
|
|
Sunk hapless Icarus on unfaithful wings;
|
|
Headlong he rushed through the affrighted air,
|
|
With limbs distorted and dishevelled hair;
|
|
His scattered plumage danced upon the wave,
|
|
And sorrowing Nereids decked his watery grave;
|
|
O'er his pale corse their pearly sea-flowers shed,
|
|
And strewed with crimson moss his marble bed;
|
|
Struck in their coral towers the passing bell,
|
|
And wide in ocean tolled his echoing knell."
|
|
|
|
CASTOR AND POLLUX.
|
|
|
|
Castor and Pollux were the offspring of Leda and the Swan, under
|
|
which disguise Jupiter had concealed himself. Leda gave, birth to an
|
|
egg from which sprang the twins. Helen, so famous afterwards as the
|
|
cause of the Trojan war, was their sister.
|
|
When Theseus and his friend Pirithous had carried off Helen from
|
|
Sparta, the youthful heroes, Castor and Pollux, with their
|
|
followers, hastened to her rescue. Theseus was absent from Attica
|
|
and the brothers were successful in recovering their sister.
|
|
Castor was famous for taming and managing horses, and Pollux for
|
|
skill in boxing. They were united by the warmest affection and
|
|
inseparable in all their enterprises. They accompanied the
|
|
Argonautic expedition. During the voyage a storm arose, and Orpheus
|
|
prayed to the Samothracian gods, and played on his harp, whereupon the
|
|
storm ceased and stars appeared on the heads of the brothers. From
|
|
this incident, Castor and Pollux came afterwards to be considered
|
|
the patron deities of seamen and voyagers, and the lambent flames,
|
|
which in certain states of the atmosphere play round the sails and
|
|
masts of vessels, were called by their names.
|
|
After the Argonautic expedition, we find Castor and Pollux engaged
|
|
in a war with Idas and Lynceus. Castor was slain, and Pollux,
|
|
inconsolable for the loss of his brother, besought Jupiter to be
|
|
permitted to give his own life as a ransom for him. Jupiter so far
|
|
consented as to allow the two brothers to enjoy the boon of life
|
|
alternately, passing one day under the earth and the next in the
|
|
heavenly abodes. According to another form of the story, Jupiter
|
|
rewarded the attachment of the brothers by placing them among the
|
|
stars as Gemini the Twins.
|
|
They received divine honours under the name of Dioscuri (sons of
|
|
Jove). They were believed to have appeared occasionally in later
|
|
times, taking part with one side or the other, in hard-fought
|
|
fields, and were said on such occasions to be mounted on magnificent
|
|
white steeds. Thus in the early history of Rome they are said to
|
|
have assisted the Romans at the battle of Lake Regillus, and after the
|
|
victory a temple was erected in their honour on the spot where they
|
|
appeared.
|
|
|
|
Macaulay, in his "Lays of Ancient Rome," thus alludes to the legend:
|
|
|
|
"So like they were, no mortal
|
|
Might one from other know;
|
|
White as snow their armour was,
|
|
Their steeds were white as snow.
|
|
Never on earthly anvil
|
|
Did such rare armour gleam,
|
|
And never did such gallant steeds
|
|
Drink of an earthly stream.
|
|
|
|
"Back comes the chief in triumph
|
|
Who in the hour of fight
|
|
Hath seen the great twin Brethren
|
|
In harness on his right.
|
|
Safe comes the ship to haven,
|
|
Through billows and through gales,
|
|
If once the great Twin Brethren
|
|
Sit shining on the sails."
|
|
CHAPTER XXI.
|
|
BACCHUS- ARIADNE.
|
|
|
|
BACCHUS.
|
|
|
|
BACCHUS was the son of Jupiter and Semele. Juno, to gratify her
|
|
resentment against Semele, contrived a plan for her destruction.
|
|
Assuming the form of Beroe, her aged nurse, she insinuated doubts
|
|
whether it was indeed Jove himself who came as a lover. Heaving a
|
|
sigh, she said, "I hope it will turn out so, but I can't help being
|
|
afraid. People are not always what they pretend to be. If he is indeed
|
|
Jove, make him give some proof of it. Ask him to come arrayed in all
|
|
his splendours, such as he wears in heaven. That will put the matter
|
|
beyond a doubt." Semele was persuaded to try the experiment. She
|
|
asks a favour, without naming what it is. Jove gives his promise,
|
|
and confirms it with the irrevocable oath, attesting the river Styx,
|
|
terrible to the gods themselves. Then she made known her request.
|
|
The god would have stopped her as she spake, but she was too quick for
|
|
him. The words escaped, and he could neither unsay his promise nor her
|
|
request. In deep distress he left her and returned to the upper
|
|
regions. There he clothed himself in his splendours, not putting on
|
|
all his terrors, as when he overthrew the giants, but what is known
|
|
among the gods as his lesser panoply. Arrayed in this, he entered
|
|
the chamber of Semele. Her mortal frame could not endure the
|
|
splendours of the immortal radiance. She was consumed to ashes.
|
|
Jove took the infant Bacchus and gave him in charge to the Nysaean
|
|
nymphs, who nourished his infancy and childhood, and for their care
|
|
were rewarded by Jupiter by being placed, as the Hyades, among the
|
|
stars. When Bacchus grew up he discovered the culture of the vine
|
|
and the mode of extracting its precious juice; but Juno struck him
|
|
with madness, and drove him forth a wanderer through various parts
|
|
of the earth. In Phrygia the goddess Rhea cured him and taught him her
|
|
religious rites, and he set out on a progress through Asia, teaching
|
|
the people the cultivation of the vine. The most famous part of his
|
|
wanderings is his expedition to India, which is said to have lasted
|
|
several years. Returning in triumph, he undertook to introduce his
|
|
worship into Greece, but was opposed by some princes, who dreaded
|
|
its introduction on account of the disorder and madness it brought
|
|
with it.
|
|
As he approached his native city Thebes, Pentheus the king, who
|
|
had no respect for the new worship, forbade its rites to be performed.
|
|
But when it was known that Bacchus was advancing, men and women, but
|
|
chiefly the latter, young and old, poured forth to meet him and to
|
|
join his triumphal march.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Longfellow in his "Drinking Song" thus describes the march of
|
|
Bacchus:
|
|
|
|
"Fauns with youthful Bacchus follow;
|
|
Ivy crowns that brow, supernal
|
|
As the forehead of Apollo,
|
|
And possessing youth eternal.
|
|
|
|
"Round about him fair Bacchantes,
|
|
Bearing cymbals, flutes and thyrses,
|
|
Wild from Naxian groves of Zante's
|
|
Vineyards, sing delirious verses."
|
|
|
|
It was in vain Pentheus remonstrated, commanded and threatened.
|
|
"Go," said he to his attendants, "seize this vagabond leader of the
|
|
rout and bring him to me. I will soon make him confess his false claim
|
|
of heavenly parentage and renounce his counterfeit worship." It was in
|
|
vain his nearest friends and wisest counsellors remonstrated and
|
|
begged him not to oppose the god. Their remonstrances only made him
|
|
more violent.
|
|
But now the attendants returned whom he had despatched to seize
|
|
Bacchus. They had been driven away by the Bacchanals, but had
|
|
succeeded in taking one of them prisoner, whom, with his hands tied
|
|
behind him, they brought before the king. Pentheus, beholding him with
|
|
wrathful countenance, said "Fellow! you shall speedily be put to
|
|
death, that your fate may be a warning to others; but though I
|
|
grudge the delay of your punishment, speak, tell us who you are, and
|
|
what are these new rites you presume to celebrate."
|
|
The prisoner, unterrified, responded, "My name is Acetes; my country
|
|
is Maeonia; my parents were poor people, who had no fields or flocks
|
|
to leave me, but they left me their fishing rods and nets and their
|
|
fisherman's trade. This I followed for some time, till growing weary
|
|
of remaining in one place, I learned the pilot's art and how to
|
|
guide my course by the stars. It happened as I was sailing for Delos
|
|
we touched at the island of Dia and went ashore. Next morning I sent
|
|
the men for fresh water, and myself mounted the hill to observe the
|
|
wind; when my men returned bringing with them a prize, as they
|
|
thought, a boy of delicate appearance, whom they had found asleep.
|
|
They judged he was a noble youth, perhaps a king's son, and they might
|
|
get a liberal ransom for him. I observed his dress, his walk, his
|
|
face, There was something in them which I felt sure was more than
|
|
mortal. I said to my men, 'What god there is concealed in that form
|
|
I know not, but some one there certainly is. Pardon us, gentle
|
|
deity, for the violence we have done you, and give success to our
|
|
undertakings.' Dictys, one of my best hands for climbing the mast
|
|
and coming down by the ropes, and Melanthus, my steersman, and
|
|
Epopeus, the leader of the sailor's cry, one and all exclaimed, 'Spare
|
|
your prayers for us.' So blind is the lust of gain! When they
|
|
proceeded to put him on board I resisted them. 'This ship shall not be
|
|
profaned by such impiety,' said I. 'I have a greater share in her than
|
|
any of you.' But Lycabas, a turbulent fellow, seized me by the
|
|
throat and attempted to throw my overboard, and I scarcely saved
|
|
myself by clinging to the ropes. The rest approved the deed.
|
|
"Then Bacchus (for it was indeed he), as if shaking off his
|
|
drowsiness, exclaimed, 'What are you doing with me? What is this
|
|
fighting about? Who brought me here? Where are you going to carry me?'
|
|
One of them replied, 'Fear nothing; tell us where you wish to go and
|
|
we will take you there.' 'Naxos is my home,' said Bacchus; 'take me
|
|
there and you shall be well rewarded.' They promised so to do, and
|
|
told me to pilot the ship to Naxos. Naxos lay to the right, and I
|
|
was trimming the sails to carry us there, when some by signs and
|
|
others by whispers signified to me their will that I should sail in
|
|
the opposite direction, and take the boy to Egypt to sell him for a
|
|
slave, I was confounded and said, 'Let some one else pilot the
|
|
ship;' withdrawing myself from any further agency in their wickedness.
|
|
They cursed me, and one of them, exclaiming, 'Don't flatter yourself
|
|
that we depend on you for our safety,' took my place as pilot, and
|
|
bore away from Naxos.
|
|
"Then the god, pretending that he had just become aware of their
|
|
treachery, looked out over the sea and said in a voice of weeping,
|
|
'Sailors, these are not the shores you promised to take me to;
|
|
yonder island is not my home. What have I done that you should treat
|
|
me so? It is small glory you will gain by cheating a poor boy.' I wept
|
|
to hear him, but the crew laughed at both of us, and sped the vessel
|
|
fast over the sea. All at once- strange as it may seem, it is true,-
|
|
the vessel stopped, in the mid sea, as fast as if it was fixed on
|
|
the ground. The men, astonished, pulled at their oars, and spread more
|
|
sail, trying to make progress by the aid of both, but all in vain. Ivy
|
|
twined round the oars and hindered their motion, and clung to the
|
|
sails, with heavy clusters of berries. A vine, laden with grapes,
|
|
ran up the mast, and along the sides of the vessel. The sound of
|
|
flutes was heard and the odour of fragrant wine spread all around. The
|
|
god himself had a chaplet of vine leaves, and bore in his hand a spear
|
|
wreathed with ivy. Tigers crouched at his feet, and forms of lynxes
|
|
and spotted panthers played around him. The men were seized with
|
|
terror or madness; some leaped overboard; others preparing to do the
|
|
same beheld their companions in the water undergoing a change, their
|
|
bodies becoming flattened and ending in a crooked tail. One exclaimed,
|
|
'What miracle is this!' and as he spoke his mouth widened, his
|
|
nostrils expanded, and scales covered all his body. Another,
|
|
endeavouring to pull the oar, felt his hands shrink up and presently
|
|
to be no longer hands but fins; another, trying to raise his arms to a
|
|
rope, found he had no arms, and curving his mutilated body jumped into
|
|
the sea. What had been his legs became the two ends of a
|
|
crescent-shaped tail. The whole crew became dolphins and swam about
|
|
the ship, now upon the surface, now under it, scattering the spray,
|
|
and spouting the water from their broad nostrils. Of twenty men I
|
|
alone was left. Trembling with fear, the god cheered me. 'Fear not,'
|
|
said he; 'steer towards Naxos.' I obeyed, and when we arrived there, I
|
|
kindled the altars and celebrated the sacred rites of Bacchus."
|
|
Pentheus here exclaimed, "We have wasted time enough on this silly
|
|
story. Take him away and have him executed without delay." Acetes
|
|
was led away by the attendants and shut up fast in prison; but while
|
|
they were getting ready the instruments of execution the prison
|
|
doors came open of their own accord and the chains fell from his
|
|
limbs, and when they looked for him he was nowhere to be found.
|
|
Pentheus would take no warning, but instead of sending others,
|
|
determined to go himself to the scene of the solemnities. The mountain
|
|
Citheron was all alive with worshippers, and the cries of the
|
|
Bacchanals resounded on every side. The noise roused the anger of
|
|
Pentheus as the sound of a trumpet does the fire of a war-horse. He
|
|
penetrated through the wood and reached an open space where the
|
|
chief scene of the orgies met his eyes. At the same moment the women
|
|
saw him; and first among them his own mother, Agave, blinded by the
|
|
god, cried out, "See there the wild boar, the hugest monster that
|
|
prowls in these woods! Come on, sisters! I will be the first to strike
|
|
the wild boar." The whole band rushed upon him, and while he now talks
|
|
less arrogantly, now excuses himself, and now confesses his crime
|
|
and implores pardon, they press upon him and wound him. In vain he
|
|
cries to his aunts to protect him from his mother. Autonoe seized
|
|
one arm, Ino the other, and between them he was torn to pieces,
|
|
while his mother shouted, "Victory! Victory! we have done it; the
|
|
glory is ours!"
|
|
So the worship of Bacchus was established in Greece.
|
|
|
|
There is an allusion to the story of Bacchus and the mariners in
|
|
Milton's "Comus," at line 46. The story of Circe will be found in
|
|
Chapter XXIX.
|
|
|
|
"Bacchus that first from out the purple grapes
|
|
Crushed the sweet poison of misused wine,
|
|
After the Tuscan mariners transformed,
|
|
Coasting the Tyrrhene shore as the winds listed
|
|
On Circe's island fell; (who knows not Circe,
|
|
The daughter of the Sun? whose charmed cup
|
|
Whoever tasted lost his upright shape,
|
|
And downward fen into a grovelling swine.)"
|
|
|
|
ARIADNE.
|
|
|
|
We have seen in the story of Theseus how Ariadne, the daughter of
|
|
King Minos, after helping Theseus to escape from the labyrinth, was
|
|
carried by him to the island of Naxos and was left there asleep, while
|
|
the ungrateful Theseus pursued his way home without her. Ariadne, on
|
|
waking and finding herself deserted, abandoned herself to grief. But
|
|
Venus took pity on her, and consoled her with the promise that she
|
|
should have an immortal lover, instead of the mortal one she had lost.
|
|
The island where Ariadne was left was the favourite island of
|
|
Bacchus, the same that he wished the Tyrrhenian mariners to carry
|
|
him to, when they so treacherously attempted to make prize of him.
|
|
As Ariadne sat lamenting her fate, Bacchus found her, consoled her,
|
|
and made her his wife. As a marriage present he gave her a golden
|
|
crown, enriched with gems, and when she died, he took her crown and
|
|
threw it up into the sky. As it mounted the gems grew brighter and
|
|
were turned into stars, and preserving its form Ariadne's crown
|
|
remains fixed in the heavens as a constellation, between the
|
|
kneeling Hercules and the man who holds the serpent.
|
|
|
|
Spenser alludes to Ariadne's crown, though he has made some mistakes
|
|
in his mythology. It was at the wedding of Pirithous, and not Theseus,
|
|
that the Centaurs and Lapithae quarrelled.
|
|
|
|
"Look how the crown which Ariadne wore
|
|
Upon her ivory forehead that same day
|
|
That Theseus her unto his bridal bore,
|
|
Then the bold Centaurs made that bloody fray
|
|
With the fierce Lapiths which did them dismay;
|
|
Being now placed in the firmament,
|
|
Through the bright heaven doth her beams display,
|
|
And is unto the stars an ornament,
|
|
Which round about her move in order excellent."
|
|
CHAPTER XXII.
|
|
THE RURAL DEITIES- ERISICHTHON- RHOECUS- THE
|
|
WATER DEITIES- THE CAMENAE- THE WINDS.
|
|
|
|
THE RURAL DEITIES.
|
|
|
|
PAN, the god of woods and fields, of flocks and shepherds, dwelt
|
|
in grottos, wandered on the mountains and in valleys, and amused
|
|
himself with the chase or in leading the dances of the nymphs. He
|
|
was fond of music, and was, as we have seen, the inventor of the
|
|
syrinx, or shepherd's pipe, which he himself played in a masterly
|
|
manner. Pan, like other gods who dwelt in forests, was dreaded by
|
|
those whose occupations caused them to pass through the woods by
|
|
night, for the gloom and loneliness of such scenes dispose the mind to
|
|
superstitious fears. Hence sudden fright without any visible cause was
|
|
ascribed to Pan, and called a Panic terror.
|
|
As the name of the god signifies all, Pan came to be considered a
|
|
symbol of the universe and personification of Nature; and later
|
|
still to be regarded as a representative of all the gods and of
|
|
heathenism itself.
|
|
Sylvanus and Faunus were Latin divinities, whose characteristics are
|
|
so nearly the same as those of Pan that we may safely consider them as
|
|
the same personage under different names.
|
|
The wood-nymphs, Pan's partners in the dance, were but one class
|
|
of nymphs. There were besides them the Naiads, who presided over
|
|
brooks and fountains, the Oreads, nymphs of mountains and grottos, and
|
|
the Nereids, sea-nymphs. The three last named were immortal, but the
|
|
wood-nymphs, called Dryads or Hamadryads, were believed to perish with
|
|
the trees which had been their abode and with which they had come into
|
|
existence. It was therefore an impious act wantonly to destroy a tree,
|
|
and in some aggravated cases was severely punished, as in the instance
|
|
of Erisichthon, which we are about to record.
|
|
|
|
Milton in his glowing description of the early creation, thus
|
|
alludes to Pan as the personification of Nature:
|
|
|
|
"...Universal Pan,
|
|
Knit with the Graces and the Hours in dance,
|
|
Led on the eternal spring."
|
|
|
|
And describing Eve's abode:
|
|
|
|
"...In shadier bower,
|
|
More sacred or sequestered, though but feigned,
|
|
Pan or Sylvanus never slept, nor nymph
|
|
Nor Faunus haunted."
|
|
Paradise Lost, B. IV.
|
|
|
|
It was a pleasing trait in the old Paganism that it loved to trace
|
|
in every operation of nature the agency of deity. The imagination
|
|
nation of the Greeks peopled all the regions of earth and sea with
|
|
divinities, to whose agency it attributed those phenomena which our
|
|
philosophy ascribes to the operation of the laws of nature.
|
|
Sometimes in our poetical moods we feel disposed to regret the change,
|
|
and to think that the heart has lost as much as the head has gained by
|
|
the substitution. The poet Wordsworth thus strongly expresses this
|
|
sentiment:
|
|
|
|
"...Great God, I'd rather be
|
|
A Pagan, suckled in a creed outworn,
|
|
So might I, standing on this pleasant lea,
|
|
Have glimpses that would make me less forlorn;
|
|
Have sight of Proteus rising from the sea
|
|
And hear old Triton blow his wreathed horn."
|
|
|
|
Schiller, in his poem "Die Gotter Griechenlands," expresses his
|
|
regret for the overthrow of the beautiful mythology of ancient times
|
|
in a way which has called forth an answer from a Christian poet,
|
|
Mrs. E. Barrett Browning, in her poem called "The Dead Pan." The two
|
|
following verses are a specimen:
|
|
|
|
"By your beauty which confesses
|
|
Some chief Beauty conquering you,
|
|
By our grand heroic guesses
|
|
Through your falsehood at the True,
|
|
We will weep not! earth shall roll
|
|
Heir to each god's aureole,
|
|
And Pan is dead.
|
|
|
|
"Earth outgrows the mythic fancies
|
|
Sung beside her in her youth;
|
|
And those debonaire romances
|
|
Sound but dull beside the truth.
|
|
Phoebus' chariot course is run!
|
|
Look up, poets, to the sun!
|
|
Pan, Pan is dead."
|
|
|
|
These lines are founded on an early Christian tradition that when
|
|
the heavenly host told the shepherds at Bethlehem of the birth of
|
|
Christ, a deep groan, heard through all the isles of Greece, told that
|
|
the great Pan was dead, and that all the royalty of Olympus was
|
|
dethroned and the several deities were sent wandering in cold and
|
|
darkness. So Milton in his "Hymn on the Nativity":
|
|
|
|
"The lonely mountains o'er
|
|
And the resounding shore,
|
|
A voice of weeping heard and loud lament;
|
|
From haunted spring and dale,
|
|
Edged with poplar pale,
|
|
The parting Genius is with sighing sent:
|
|
With flower-enwoven tresses torn,
|
|
The nymphs in twilight shade of tangled thickets mourn."
|
|
|
|
ERISICHTHON.
|
|
|
|
Erisichthon was a profane person and a despiser of the gods, On
|
|
one occasion he presumed to violate with the axe a grove sacred to
|
|
Ceres. There stood in this grove a venerable oak, so large that it
|
|
seemed a wood in itself, its ancient trunk towering aloft, whereon
|
|
votive garlands were often hung and inscriptions carved expressing the
|
|
gratitude of suppliants to the nymph of the tree. Often had the Dryads
|
|
danced round it hand in hand. Its trunk measured fifteen cubits round,
|
|
and it overtopped the other trees as they overtopped the shrubbery.
|
|
But for all that, Erisichthon saw no reason why he should spare it and
|
|
he ordered his servants to cut it down. When he saw them hesitate he
|
|
snatched an axe from one, and thus impiously exclaimed: "I care not
|
|
whether it be a tree beloved of the goddess or not; were it the
|
|
goddess herself it should come down if it stood in my way." So saying,
|
|
he lifted the axe and the oak seemed to shudder and utter a groan.
|
|
When the first blow fell upon the trunk blood flowed from the wound.
|
|
All the bystanders were horror-struck, and one of them ventured to
|
|
remonstrate and hold back the fatal axe. Erisichthon, with a
|
|
scornful look, said to him, "Receive the reward of your piety;" and
|
|
turned against him the weapon which he had held aside from the tree,
|
|
gashed his body with many wounds, and cut off his head. Then from
|
|
the midst of the oak came a voice, "I who dwell in this tree am a
|
|
nymph beloved of Ceres, and dying by your hands forewarn you that
|
|
punishment awaits you." He desisted not from his crime, and at last
|
|
the tree, sundered by repeated blows and drawn by ropes, fell with a
|
|
crash and prostrated a great part of the grove in its fall.
|
|
The Dryads, in dismay at the loss of their companion and at seeing
|
|
the pride of the forest laid low, went in a body to Ceres, all clad in
|
|
garments of mourning, and invoked punishment upon Erisichthon. She
|
|
nodded her assent, and as she bowed her head the grain ripe for
|
|
harvest in the laden fields bowed also. She planned a punishment so
|
|
dire that one would pity him, if such a culprit as he could be pitied-
|
|
to deliver him over to Famine. As Ceres herself could not approach
|
|
Famine, for the Fates have ordained that these two goddesses shall
|
|
never come together, she called an Oread from her mountain and spoke
|
|
to her in these words: "There is a place in the farthest part of
|
|
ice-clad Scythia, a sad and sterile region without trees and without
|
|
crops. Cold dwells there, and Fear and Shuddering, and Famine. Go
|
|
and tell the last to take possession of the bowels of Erisichthon. Let
|
|
not abundance subdue her, nor the power of my gifts drive her away. Be
|
|
not alarmed at the distance" (for Famine dwells very far from
|
|
Ceres), "but take my chariot. The dragons are fleet and obey the rein,
|
|
and will take you through the air in a short time." So she gave her
|
|
the reins, and she drove away and soon reached Scythia. On arriving at
|
|
Mount Caucasus she stopped the dragons and found Famine in a stony
|
|
field, pulling up with teeth and claws the scanty herbage. Her hair
|
|
was rough, her eyes sunk, her face pale, her lips blanched, her jaws
|
|
covered with dust, and her skin drawn tight, so as to show all her
|
|
bones. As the Oread saw her afar off (for she did not dare to come
|
|
near), she delivered the commands of Ceres; and, though she stopped as
|
|
short a time as possible, and kept her distance as well as she
|
|
could, yet she began to feel hungry, and turned the dragons' heads and
|
|
drove back to Thessaly.
|
|
Famine obeyed the commands of Ceres and sped through the air to
|
|
the dwelling of Erisichthon, entered the bedchamber of the guilty man,
|
|
and found him asleep. She enfolded him with her wings and breathed
|
|
herself into him, infusing her poison into his veins. Having
|
|
discharged her task, she hastened to leave the land of plenty and
|
|
returned to her accustomed haunts. Erisichthon still slept, and in his
|
|
dreams craved food, and moved his jaws as if eating. When he awoke,
|
|
his hunger was raging. Without a moment's delay he would have food set
|
|
before him, of whatever kind earth, sea, or air produces; and
|
|
complained of hunger even while he ate. What would have sufficed for a
|
|
city or a nation, was not enough for him. The more he ate the more
|
|
he craved. His hunger was like the sea, which receives all the rivers,
|
|
yet is never filled; or like fire, that burns all the fuel that is
|
|
heaped upon it, yet is still voracious for more.
|
|
His property rapidly diminished under the unceasing demands of his
|
|
appetite, but his hunger continued unabated. At length he had spent
|
|
all and had only his daughter left, a daughter worthy of a better
|
|
parent. Her too he sold. She scorned to be a slave of a purchaser
|
|
and as she stood by the seaside raised her hands in prayer to Neptune.
|
|
He heard her prayer, and though her new master was not far off and had
|
|
his eye upon her a moment before, Neptune changed her form and made
|
|
her assume that of a fisherman busy at his occupation. Her master,
|
|
looking for her and seeing her in her altered form, addressed her
|
|
and said, "Good fisherman, whither went the maiden whom I saw just
|
|
now, with hair dishevelled and in humble garb, standing about where
|
|
you stand? Tell me truly; so may your luck be good and not a fish
|
|
nibble at your hook and get away." She perceived that her prayer was
|
|
answered and rejoiced inwardly at hearing herself inquired of about
|
|
herself. She replied, "Pardon me, stranger, but I have been so
|
|
intent upon my line that I have seen nothing else; but I wish I may
|
|
never catch another fish if I believe any woman or other person except
|
|
myself to have been hereabouts for some time." He was deceived and
|
|
went his way, thinking his slave had escaped. Then she resumed her own
|
|
form. Her father was well pleased to find her still with him, and
|
|
the money too that he got by the sale of her; so he sold her again.
|
|
But she was changed by the favour of Neptune as often as she was sold,
|
|
now into a horse, now a bird, now an ox, and now a stag- got away from
|
|
her purchasers and came home. By this base method the starving
|
|
father procured food; but not enough for his wants, and at last hunger
|
|
compelled him to devour his limbs, and he strove to nourish his body
|
|
by eating his body, till death relieved him from the vengeance of
|
|
Ceres.
|
|
|
|
RHOECUS.
|
|
|
|
The Hamadryads could appreciate services as well as punish injuries.
|
|
The story of Rhoecus proves this. Rhoecus, happening to see an oak
|
|
just ready to fall, ordered his servants to prop it up. The nymph, who
|
|
had been on the point of perishing with the tree, came and expressed
|
|
her gratitude to him for having saved her life and bade him ask what
|
|
reward he would. Rhoecus boldly asked her love and the nymph yielded
|
|
to his desire. She at the same time charged him to be constant and
|
|
told him that a bee should be her messenger and let him know when
|
|
she would admit his society. One time the bee came to Rhoecus when
|
|
he was playing at draughts and he carelessly brushed it away. This
|
|
so incensed the nymph that she deprived him of sight.
|
|
|
|
Our countryman, J. R. Lowell, has taken this story for the subject
|
|
of one of his shorter poems. He introduces it thus:
|
|
|
|
"Hear now this fairy legend of old Greece,
|
|
As full of freedom, youth and beauty still,
|
|
As the immortal freshness of that grace
|
|
Carved for all ages on some Attic frieze."
|
|
|
|
THE WATER DEITIES.
|
|
|
|
Oceanus and Tethys were the Titans who ruled over the watery
|
|
elements. When Jove and his brothers overthrew the Titans and
|
|
assumed their power, Neptune and Amphitrite succeeded to the
|
|
dominion of the waters in place of Oceanus and Tethys.
|
|
|
|
NEPTUNE.
|
|
|
|
Neptune was the chief of the water deities. The symbol of his
|
|
power was the trident, or spear with three points, with which he
|
|
used to shatter rocks, to call forth or subdue storms, to shake the
|
|
shores and the like. He created the horse and was the patron of
|
|
horse races. His own horses had brazen hoofs and golden manes. They
|
|
drew his chariot over the sea, which became smooth before him, while
|
|
the monsters of the deep gambolled about his path.
|
|
|
|
AMPHITRITE.
|
|
|
|
Amphitrite was the wife of Neptune. She was the daughter of Nereus
|
|
and Doris, and the mother of Triton. Neptune, to pay his court to
|
|
Amphitrite, came riding on a dolphin. Having won her he rewarded the
|
|
dolphin by placing him among the stars.
|
|
|
|
NEREUS AND DORIS.
|
|
|
|
Nereus and Doris were the parents of the Nereids, the most
|
|
celebrated of whom were Amphitrite, Thetis, the mother of Achilles,
|
|
and Galatea, who was loved by the Cyclops Polyphemus: Nereus was
|
|
distinguished for his knowledge and his love of truth and justice,
|
|
whence he was termed an elder; the gift of prophecy was also
|
|
assigned to him.
|
|
|
|
TRITON AND PROTEUS.
|
|
|
|
Triton was the son of Neptune and Amphitrite, and the poets made him
|
|
his father's trumpeter. Proteus was also a son of Neptune. He, like
|
|
Nereus, is styled a sea-elder for his wisdom and knowledge of future
|
|
events. His peculiar power was that of changing his shape at will.
|
|
|
|
THETIS.
|
|
|
|
Thetis, the daughter of Nereus and Doris, was so beautiful that
|
|
Jupiter himself sought her in marriage; but having learned from
|
|
Prometheus the Titan that Thetis should bear a son who should be
|
|
greater than his father, Jupiter desisted from his suit and decreed
|
|
that Thetis should be the wife of a mortal. By the aid of Chiron the
|
|
Centaur, Peleus succeeded in winning the goddess for his bride and
|
|
their son was the renowned Achilles. In our chapter on the Trojan
|
|
war it will appear that Thetis was a faithful mother to him, aiding
|
|
him in all difficulties, and watching over his interests from the
|
|
first to the last.
|
|
|
|
LEUCOTHEA AND PALAEMON.
|
|
|
|
Ino, the daughter of Cadmus and wife of Athamas, flying from her
|
|
frantic husband with her little son Melicertes in her arms, sprang
|
|
from a cliff into the sea. The gods, out of compassion, make her a
|
|
goddess of the sea, under the name of Leucothea, and him a god,
|
|
under that of Palaemon. Both were held powerful to save from shipwreck
|
|
and were invoked by sailors. Palaemon was usually represented riding
|
|
on a dolphin. The Isthmian games were celebrated in his honour. He was
|
|
called Portunus by the Romans, and believed to have jurisdiction of
|
|
the ports and shores.
|
|
|
|
Milton alludes to all these deities in the song at the conclusion of
|
|
"Comus":
|
|
|
|
"Sabrina fair...
|
|
Listen and appear to us,
|
|
In name of great Oceanus;
|
|
By the earth-shaking Neptune's mace,
|
|
And Tethys' grave, majestic pace;
|
|
By hoary Nereus' wrinkled look,
|
|
And the Carpathian wizard's hook,*
|
|
|
|
By scaly Triton's winding shell,
|
|
And old soothsaying Glaucus' spell,
|
|
By Leucothea's lovely hands,
|
|
And her son who rules the strands;
|
|
By Thetis' tinsel-slippered feet,
|
|
And the songs of Sirens sweet;" etc.
|
|
|
|
* Proteus.
|
|
|
|
Armstrong, the poet of the "Art of Preserving Health," under the
|
|
inspiration of Hygeia, the goddess of health, thus celebrates the
|
|
Naiads. Paeon is a name both of Apollo and AEsculapius.
|
|
|
|
"Come ye Naiads! to the fountains lead!
|
|
Propitious maids! the task remains to sing
|
|
Your gifts (so Paeon, so the powers of Health
|
|
Command), to praise your crystal element.
|
|
O comfortable streams! with eager lips
|
|
And trembling hands the languid thirsty quaff
|
|
New life in you; fresh vigour fills their veins.
|
|
No warmer cups the rural ages knew,
|
|
None warmer sought the sires of humankind;
|
|
Happy in temperate peace their equal days
|
|
Felt not the alternate fits of feverish mirth
|
|
And sick dejection; still serene and pleased,
|
|
Blessed with divine immunity from ills,
|
|
Long centuries they lived; their only fate
|
|
Was ripe old age, and rather sleep than death."
|
|
|
|
THE CAMENAE.
|
|
|
|
By this name the Latins designated the Muses, but included under
|
|
it also some other deities, principally nymphs of fountains. Egeria
|
|
was one of them, whose fountain and grotto are still shown. It was
|
|
said that Numa, the second king of Rome, was favoured by this nymph
|
|
with secret interviews, in which she taught him those lessons of
|
|
wisdom and of law which he embodied in the institutions of his
|
|
rising nation. After the death of Numa the nymph pined away and was
|
|
changed into a fountain.
|
|
|
|
Byron, in "Childe Harold," Canto IV., thus alludes to Egeria and her
|
|
grotto:
|
|
|
|
"Here didst thou dwell, in this enchanted cover,
|
|
Egeria! all thy heavenly bosom beating
|
|
For the far footsteps of thy mortal lover;
|
|
The purple midnight veiled that mystic meeting
|
|
With her most starry canopy;" etc.
|
|
|
|
Tennyson, also, in his "Palace of Art," gives us a glimpse of the
|
|
royal lover expecting the interview:
|
|
|
|
"Holding one hand against his ear,
|
|
To list a footfall ere he saw
|
|
The wood-nymph, stayed the Tuscan king to hear
|
|
Of wisdom and of law."
|
|
|
|
THE WINDS.
|
|
|
|
When so many less active agencies were personified, it is not to
|
|
be supposed that the winds failed to be so. They were Boreas or
|
|
Aquilo, the north wind; Zephyrus or Favonius, the west; Notus or
|
|
Auster, the south; and Eurus, the east. The first two have been
|
|
chiefly celebrated by the poets, the former as the type of rudeness,
|
|
the latter of gentleness. Boreas loved the nymph Orithyia, and tried
|
|
to play the lover's part, but met with poor success. It was hard for
|
|
him to breathe gently, and sighing was out of the question. Weary at
|
|
last of fruitless endeavours, he acted out his true character,
|
|
seized the maiden and carried her off. Their children were Zetes and
|
|
Calais, winged warriors, who accompanied the Argonautic expedition,
|
|
and did good service in an encounter with those monstrous birds the
|
|
Harpies.
|
|
|
|
Zephyrus was the lover of Flora. Milton alludes to them in "Paradise
|
|
Lost," where he describes Adam waking and contemplating Eve still
|
|
asleep.
|
|
|
|
"...He on his side
|
|
Leaning half raised, with looks of cordial love,
|
|
Hung over her enamoured, and beheld
|
|
Beauty which; whether waking or asleep,
|
|
Shot forth peculiar graces; then with voice,
|
|
Mild as when Zephyrus on Flora breathes,
|
|
Her hand soft touching, whispered thus: 'Awake!
|
|
My fairest, my espoused, my latest found,
|
|
Heaven's last, best gift, my ever-new delight.'"
|
|
|
|
Dr. Young, the poet of the "Night Thoughts," addressing the idle and
|
|
luxurious, says:
|
|
|
|
"Ye delicate! who nothing can support
|
|
(Yourselves most insupportable) for whom
|
|
The winter rose must blow,...
|
|
....and silky soft
|
|
Favonius breathe still softer or be chid!"
|
|
CHAPTER XXIII.
|
|
ACHELOUS AND HERCULES- ADMETUS AND ALCESTIS-
|
|
ANTIGONE- PENELOPE.
|
|
|
|
ACHELOUS AND HERCULES.
|
|
|
|
THE river-god Achelous told the story of Erisichthon to Theseus
|
|
and his companions, whom he was entertaining at his hospitable
|
|
board, while they were delayed on their journey by the overflow of his
|
|
waters. Having finished his story, he added, "But why should I tell of
|
|
other persons' transformations when I myself am an instance of the
|
|
possession of this power? Sometimes I become a serpent, and
|
|
sometimes a bull, with horns on my head. Or I should say I once
|
|
could do so; but now I have but one horn, having lost one." And here
|
|
he groaned and was silent.
|
|
Theseus asked him the cause of his grief, and how he lost his
|
|
horn. To which question the river-god replied as follows: "Who likes
|
|
to tell of his defeats? Yet I will not hesitate to relate mine,
|
|
comforting myself with the thought of the greatness of my conqueror,
|
|
for it was Hercules. Perhaps you have heard of the fame of Dejanira,
|
|
the fairest of maidens, whom a host of suitors strove to win. Hercules
|
|
and myself were of the number, and the rest yielded to us two. He
|
|
urged in his behalf his descent from Jove and his labours by which
|
|
he had exceeded the exactions of Juno, his stepmother. I, on the other
|
|
hand, said to the father of the maiden, 'Behold me, the king of the
|
|
waters that flow through your land. I am no stranger from a foreign
|
|
shore, but belong to the country, a part of your realm. Let it not
|
|
stand in my way that royal Juno owes me no enmity nor punishes me with
|
|
heavy tasks. As for this man, who boasts himself the son of Jove, it
|
|
is either a false pretence, or disgraceful to him if true, for it
|
|
cannot be true except by his mother's shame.' As I said this
|
|
Hercules scowled upon me, and with difficulty restrained his rage. 'My
|
|
hand will answer better than my tongue,' said he. 'I yield to you
|
|
the victory in words, but trust my cause to the strife of deeds.' With
|
|
that he advanced towards me, and I was ashamed, after what I had said,
|
|
to yield. I threw off my green vesture and presented myself for the
|
|
struggle. He tried to throw me, now attacking my head, now my body. My
|
|
bulk was my protection, and he assailed me in vain. For a time we
|
|
stopped, then returned to the conflict. We each kept our position,
|
|
determined not to yield, foot to foot, I bending over him, clenching
|
|
his hand in mine, with my forehead almost touching his. Thrice
|
|
Hercules tried to throw me off, and the fourth time he succeeded,
|
|
brought me to the ground, and himself upon my back. I tell you the
|
|
truth, it was as if a mountain had fallen on me. I struggled to get my
|
|
arms at liberty, panting and reeking with perspiration. He gave me
|
|
no chance to recover, but seized my throat. My knees were on the earth
|
|
and my mouth in the dust.
|
|
"Finding that I was no match for him in the warrior's art, I
|
|
resorted to others and glided away in the form of a serpent. I
|
|
curled my body in a coil and hissed at him with my forked tongue. He
|
|
smiled scornfully at this, and said, 'It was the labour of my
|
|
infancy to conquer snakes.' So saying he clasped my neck with his
|
|
hands. I was almost choked, and struggled to get my neck out of his
|
|
grasp. Vanquished in this form, I tried what alone remained to me
|
|
and assumed the form of a bull. He grasped my neck with his arm, and
|
|
dragging my head down to the ground, overthrew me on the sand. Nor was
|
|
this enough. His ruthless hand rent my horn from my head. The Naiads
|
|
took it, consecrated it, and filled it with fragrant flowers. Plenty
|
|
adopted my horn and made it her own, and called it 'Cornucopia.'"
|
|
|
|
The ancients were fond of finding a hidden meaning in their
|
|
mythological tales. They explain this fight of Achelous with
|
|
Hercules by saying Achelous was a river that in seasons of rain
|
|
overflowed its banks. When the fable says that Achelous loved
|
|
Dejanira, and sought a union with her, the meaning is that the river
|
|
in its windings flowed through part of Dejanira's kingdom. It was said
|
|
to take the form of a snake because of its winding, and of a bull
|
|
because it made a brawling or roaring in its course. When the river
|
|
swelled, it made itself another channel. Thus its head was horned.
|
|
Hercules prevented the return of these periodical overflows by
|
|
embankments and canals; and therefore he was said to have vanquished
|
|
the river-god and cut off his horn. Finally, the lands formerly
|
|
subject to overflow, but now redeemed, became very fertile, and this
|
|
is meant by the horn of plenty.
|
|
There is another account of the origin of the Cornucopia. Jupiter at
|
|
his birth was committed by his mother Rhea to the care of the
|
|
daughters of Melisseus, a Cretan king. They fed the infant deity
|
|
with the milk of the goat Amalthea. Jupiter broke off one of the horns
|
|
of the goat and gave it to his nurses, and endowed it with the
|
|
wonderful power of becoming filled with whatever the possessor might
|
|
wish.
|
|
The name of Amalthea is also given by some writers to the mother
|
|
of Bacchus. It is thus used by Milton, "Paradise Lost," Book IV.:
|
|
|
|
"...That Nyseian isle,
|
|
Girt with the river Triton, where old Cham,
|
|
Whom Gentiles Ammon call, and Libyan Jove,
|
|
Hid Amalthea and her florid son,
|
|
Young Bacchus, from his stepdame Rhea's eye."
|
|
|
|
ADMETUS AND ALCESTIS.
|
|
|
|
AEsculapius, the son of Apollo, was endowed by his father with
|
|
such skill in the healing art that he even restored the dead to
|
|
life. At this Pluto took alarm, and prevailed on Jupiter to launch a
|
|
thunderbolt at AEsculapius. Apollo was indignant at the destruction of
|
|
his son, and wreaked his vengeance on the innocent workmen who had
|
|
made the thunderbolt. These were the Cyclopses, who have their
|
|
workshop under Mount AEtna, from which the smoke and flames of their
|
|
furnaces are constantly issuing. Apollo shot his arrows at the
|
|
Cyclopses, which so incensed Jupiter that he condemned him as a
|
|
punishment to become the servant of a mortal for the space of one
|
|
year. Accordingly Apollo went into the service of Admetus, king of
|
|
Thessaly, and pastured his flocks for him on the verdant banks of
|
|
the river Amphrysos.
|
|
Admetus was a suitor, with others, for the hand of Alcestis, the
|
|
daughter of Pelias, who promised her to him who should come for her in
|
|
a chariot drawn by lions and boars. This task Admetus performed by the
|
|
assistance of his divine herdsman, and was made happy in the
|
|
possession of Alcestis. But Admetus fell ill, and being near to death,
|
|
Apollo prevailed on the Fates to spare him on condition that some
|
|
one would consent to die in his stead. Admetus, in his joy at this
|
|
reprieve, thought little of the ransom, and perhaps remembering the
|
|
declarations of attachment which he had often heard from his courtiers
|
|
and dependents fancied that it would be easy to find a substitute. But
|
|
it was not so. Brave warriors, who would willingly have perilled their
|
|
lives for their prince, shrunk from the thought of dying for him on
|
|
the bed of sickness; and old servants who had experienced his bounty
|
|
and that of his house from their childhood up, were not willing to lay
|
|
down the scanty remnant of their days to show their gratitude. Men
|
|
asked, "Why does not one of his parents do it? They cannot in the
|
|
course of nature live much longer, and who can feel like them the call
|
|
to rescue the life they gave from an untimely end?" But the parents,
|
|
distressed though they were at the thought of losing him, shrunk
|
|
from the call. Then Alcestis, with a generous self-devotion, proffered
|
|
herself as the substitute. Admetus, fond as he was of life, would
|
|
not have submitted to receive it at such a cost; Lut there was no
|
|
remedy. The condition imposed by the Fates had been met, and the
|
|
decree was irrevocable. Alcestis sickened as Admetus revived, and
|
|
she was rapidly sinking to the grave.
|
|
Just at this time Hercules arrived at the Palace of Admetus, and
|
|
found all the inmates in great distress for the impending loss of
|
|
the devoted wife and beloved mistress. Hercules, to whom no labour was
|
|
too arduous, resolved to attempt her rescue. He went and lay in wait
|
|
at the door of the chamber of the dying queen, and when Death came for
|
|
his prey, he seized him and forced him to resign his victim.
|
|
Alcestis recovered, and was restored to her husband.
|
|
|
|
Milton alludes to the story of Alcestis in his Sonnet "on his
|
|
deceased wife":
|
|
|
|
"Methought I saw my late espoused saint
|
|
Brought to me like Alcestis from the grave,
|
|
Whom Jove's great son to her glad husband gave,
|
|
Rescued from death by force, though pale and faint."
|
|
|
|
J. R. Lowell has chosen the "Shepherd of King Admetus" for the
|
|
subject of a short poem. He makes that event the first introduction of
|
|
poetry to men.
|
|
|
|
"Men called him but a shiftless youth,
|
|
In whom no good they saw,
|
|
And yet unwittingly, in truth,
|
|
They made his careless words their law.
|
|
|
|
"And day by day more holy grew
|
|
Each spot where he had trod,
|
|
Till after-poets only knew
|
|
Their first-born brother was a god."
|
|
|
|
ANTIGONE.
|
|
|
|
A large proportion both of the interesting persons and of the
|
|
exalted acts of legendary Greece belongs to the female sex. Antigone
|
|
was as bright an example of filial and sisterly fidelity as was
|
|
Alcestis of connubial devotion. She was the daughter of OEdipus and
|
|
Jocasta, who with all their descendants were the victims of an
|
|
unrelenting fate, dooming them to destruction. OEdipus in his
|
|
madness had torn out his eyes, and was driven forth from his kingdom
|
|
Thebes, dreaded and abandoned by all men, as an object of divine
|
|
vengeance. Antigone, his daughter, alone shared his wanderings and
|
|
remained with him till he died, and then returned to Thebes.
|
|
Her brothers, Eteocles and Polynices, had agreed to share the
|
|
kingdom between them, and reign alternately year by year. The first
|
|
year fell to the lot of Eteocles, who, when his time expired,
|
|
refused to surrender the kingdom to his brother. Polynices fled to
|
|
Adrastus, king of Argos, who gave him his daughter in marriage, and
|
|
aided him with an army to enforce his claim to the kingdom. This led
|
|
to the celebrated expedition of the "Seven against Thebes," which
|
|
furnished ample materials for the epic and tragic poets of Greece.
|
|
Amphiaraus, the brother-in-law of Adrastus, opposed the
|
|
enterprise, for he was a soothsayer, and knew by his art that no one
|
|
of the leaders except Adrastus would live to return. But Amphiaraus,
|
|
on his marriage to Eriphyle, the king's sister, had agreed that
|
|
whenever he and Adrastus should differ in opinion, the decision should
|
|
be left to Eriphyle. Polynices, knowing this, gave Eriphyle the collar
|
|
of Harmonia, and thereby gained her to his interest. This collar or
|
|
necklace was a present which Vulcan had given to Harmonia on her
|
|
marriage with Cadmus, and Polynices had taken it with him on his
|
|
flight from Thebes. Eriphyle could not resist so tempting a bribe, and
|
|
by her decision the war was resolved on, and Amphiaraus went to his
|
|
certain fate. He bore his part bravely in the contest, but could not
|
|
avert his destiny. Pursued by the enemy, he fled along the river, when
|
|
a thunderbolt launched by Jupiter opened the ground, and he, his
|
|
chariot, and his charioteer were swallowed up.
|
|
It would not be in place here to detail all the acts of heroism or
|
|
atrocity which marked the contest; but we must not omit to record
|
|
the fidelity of Evadne as an offset to the weakness of Eriphyle.
|
|
Capaneus, the husband of Evadne, in the ardour of the fight declared
|
|
that he would force his way into the city in spite of Jove himself.
|
|
Placing a ladder against the wall he mounted, but Jupiter, offended at
|
|
his impious language, struck him with a thunderbolt. When his
|
|
obsequies were celebrated, Evadne cast herself on his funeral pile and
|
|
perished.
|
|
Early in the contest Eteocles consulted the soothsayer Tiresias as
|
|
to the issue. Tiresias in his youth had by chance seen Minerva
|
|
bathing. The goddess in her wrath deprived him of his sight, but
|
|
afterwards relenting gave him in compensation the knowledge of
|
|
future events. When consulted by Eteocles, he declared that victory
|
|
should fall to Thebes if Menoeceus, the son of Creon, gave himself a
|
|
voluntary victim. The heroic youth, learning the response, threw
|
|
away his life in the first encounter.
|
|
The siege continued long, with various success. At length both hosts
|
|
agreed that the brothers should decide their quarrel by single combat.
|
|
They fought and fell by each other's hands. The armies then renewed
|
|
the fight, and at last the invaders were forced to yield, and fled,
|
|
leaving their dead unburied. Creon, the uncle of the fallen princes,
|
|
now become king, caused Eteocles to be buried with distinguished
|
|
honour, but suffered the body of Polynices to lie where it fell,
|
|
forbidding every one on pain of death to give it burial.
|
|
Antigone, the sister of Polynices, heard with indignation the
|
|
revolting edict which consigned her brother's body to the dogs and
|
|
vultures, depriving it of those rites which were considered
|
|
essential to the repose of the dead. Unmoved by the dissuading counsel
|
|
of an affectionate but timid sister, and unable to procure assistance,
|
|
she determined to brave the hazard, and to bury the body with her
|
|
own hands. She was detected in the act, and Creon gave orders that she
|
|
should be buried alive, as having deliberately set at naught the
|
|
solemn edict of the city. Her lover, Haemon, the son of Creon,
|
|
unable to avert her fate, would not survive her, and fall by his own
|
|
hand.
|
|
|
|
Antigone forms the subject of two fine tragedies of the Grecian poet
|
|
Sophocles. Mrs. Jameson, in her "Characteristics of Women," has
|
|
compared her character with that of Cordelia, in Shakspeare's "King
|
|
Lear."
|
|
The following is the lamentation of Antigone over OEdipus, when
|
|
death has at last relieved him from his sufferings:
|
|
|
|
"Alas! I only wished I might have died
|
|
With my poor father; wherefore should I ask
|
|
For longer life?
|
|
O, I was fond of misery with him;
|
|
E'en what was most unlovely grew beloved
|
|
When he was with me. O my dearest father,
|
|
Beneath the earth now in deep darkness hid,
|
|
Worn as thou wert with age, to me thou still
|
|
Wast dear, and shalt be ever."
|
|
Francklin's Sophocles
|
|
|
|
PENELOPE.
|
|
|
|
Penelope is another of those mythic heroines whose beauties were
|
|
rather those of character and conduct than of person. She was the
|
|
daughter of Icarius, a Spartan prince. Ulysses, king of Ithaca, sought
|
|
her in marriage, and won her, over all competitors. When the moment
|
|
came for the bride to leave her father's house, Icarius, unable to
|
|
bear the thoughts of parting with his daughter, tried to persuade
|
|
her to remain with him, and not accompany her husband to Ithaca.
|
|
Ulysses gave Penelope her choice, to stay or go with him. Penelope
|
|
made no reply, but dropped her veil over her face. Icarius urged her
|
|
no further, but when she was gone erected a statue to Modesty on the
|
|
spot where they parted.
|
|
Ulysses and Penelope had not enjoyed their union more than a year
|
|
when it was interrupted by the events which called Ulysses to the
|
|
Trojan war. During his long absence, and when it was doubtful
|
|
whether he still lived, and highly improbable that he would ever
|
|
return, Penelope was importuned by numerous suitors, from whom there
|
|
seemed no refuge but in choosing one of them for her husband.
|
|
Penelope, however, employed every art to gain time, still hoping for
|
|
Ulysses' return. One of her arts of delay was engaging in the
|
|
preparation of a robe for the funeral canopy of Laertes, her husband's
|
|
father. She pledged herself to make her choice among the suitors
|
|
when the robe was finished. During the day she worked at the robe, but
|
|
in the night she undid the work of the day. This is the famous
|
|
Penelope's web, which is used as a proverbial expression for
|
|
anything which is perpetually doing but never done. The rest of
|
|
Penelope's history will be told when we give an account of her
|
|
husband's adventures.
|
|
CHAPTER XXIV.
|
|
ORPHEUS AND EURYDICE- ARISTAEUS- AMPHION- LINUS-
|
|
THAMYRIS- MARSYAS- MELAMPUS- MUSAEUS.
|
|
|
|
ORPHEUS AND EURYDICE.
|
|
|
|
ORPHEUS was the son of Apollo and the Muse Calliope. He was
|
|
presented by his father with a lyre and taught to play upon it,
|
|
which he did to such perfection that nothing could withstand the charm
|
|
of his music. Not only his fellow-mortals, but wild beasts were
|
|
softened by his strains, and gathering round him laid by their
|
|
fierceness, and stood entranced with his lay. Nay, the very trees
|
|
and rocks were sensible to the charm. The former crowded round him and
|
|
the latter relaxed somewhat of their hardness, softened by his notes.
|
|
Hymen had been called to bless with his presence the nuptials of
|
|
Orpheus with Eurydice; but though he attended, he brought no happy
|
|
omens with him. His very torch smoked and brought tears into their
|
|
eyes. In coincidence with such prognostics, Eurydice, shortly after
|
|
her marriage, while wandering with the nymphs, her companions, was
|
|
seen by the shepherd Aristaeus, who was struck by her beauty and
|
|
made advances to her. She fled, and in flying trod upon a snake in the
|
|
grass, was bitten in the foot, and died. Orpheus sang his grief to all
|
|
who breathed the upper air, both gods and men, and finding it all
|
|
unavailing resolved to seek his wife in the regions of the dead. He
|
|
descended by a cave situated on the side of the promontory of Taenarus
|
|
and arrived at the Stygian realm. He passed through crowds of ghosts
|
|
and presented himself before the throne of Pluto and Proserpine.
|
|
Accompanying the words with the lyre, he sung, "O deities of the
|
|
under-world, to whom all we who live must come, hear my words, for
|
|
they are true. I come not to spy out the secrets of Tartarus, nor to
|
|
try my strength against the three-headed dog with snaky hair who
|
|
guards the entrance. I come to seek my wife, whose opening years the
|
|
poisonous viper's fang has brought to an untimely end. Love has led me
|
|
here, Love, a god all powerful with us who dwell on the earth, and, if
|
|
old traditions say true, not less so here. I implore you by these
|
|
abodes full of terror, these realms of silence and uncreated things,
|
|
unite again the thread of Eurydice's life. We all are destined to you,
|
|
and sooner or later must pass to your domain. She too, when she
|
|
shall have filled her term of life, will rightly be yours. But till
|
|
then grant her to me, I beseech you. If you deny me, I cannot return
|
|
alone; you shall triumph in the death of us both."
|
|
As he sang these tender strains, the very ghosts shed tears.
|
|
Tantalus, in spite of his thirst, stopped for a moment his efforts for
|
|
water, Ixion's wheel stood still, the vulture ceased to tear the
|
|
giant's liver, the daughters of Danaus rested from their task of
|
|
drawing water in a sieve, and Sisyphus sat on his rock to listen. Then
|
|
for the first time, it is said, the cheeks of the Furies were wet with
|
|
tears. Proserpine could not resist, and Pluto himself gave way.
|
|
Eurydice was called. She came from among the new-arrived ghosts,
|
|
limping with her wounded foot. Orpheus was permitted to take her
|
|
away with him on one condition, that he should not turn around to look
|
|
at her till they should have reached the upper air. Under this
|
|
condition they proceeded on their way, he leading, she following,
|
|
through passages dark and steep, in total silence, till they had
|
|
nearly reached the outlet into the cheerful upper world, when Orpheus,
|
|
in a moment of forgetfulness, to assure himself that she was still
|
|
following, cast a glance behind him, when instantly she was borne
|
|
away. Stretching out their arms to embrace each other, they grasped
|
|
only the air! Dying now a second time, she yet cannot reproach her
|
|
husband, for how can she blame his impatience to behold her?
|
|
"Farewell," she said, "a last farewell,"- and was hurried away, so
|
|
fast that the sound hardly reached his ears.
|
|
Orpheus endeavoured to follow her, and besought permission to return
|
|
and try once more for her release; but the stern ferryman repulsed him
|
|
and refused passage. Seven days he lingered about the brink, without
|
|
food or sleep; then bitterly accusing of cruelty the powers of Erebus,
|
|
he sang his complaints to the rocks and mountains, melting the
|
|
hearts of tigers and moving the oaks from their stations. He held
|
|
himself aloof from womankind, dwelling constantly on the
|
|
recollection of his sad mischance. The Thracian maidens tried their
|
|
best to captivate him, but he repulsed their advances. They bore
|
|
with him as long as they could; but finding him insensible one day,
|
|
excited by the rites of Bacchus, one of them exclaimed, "See yonder
|
|
our despiser!" and threw at him her javelin. The weapon, as soon as it
|
|
came within the sound of his lyre, fell harmless at his feet. So did
|
|
also the stones that they threw at him. But the women raised a
|
|
scream and drowned the voice of the music, and then the missiles
|
|
reached him and soon were stained with his blood. The maniacs tore him
|
|
limb from limb, and threw his head and his lyre into the river Hebrus,
|
|
down which they floated, murmuring sad music, to which the shores
|
|
responded a plaintive symphony. The Muses gathered up the fragments of
|
|
his body and buried them at Libethra, where the nightingale is said to
|
|
sing over his grave more sweetly than in any other part of Greece. His
|
|
lyre was placed by Jupiter among the stars. His shade passed a
|
|
second time to Tartarus. where he sought out his Eurydice and embraced
|
|
her with eager arms. They roam the happy fields together now,
|
|
sometimes he leading, sometimes she; and Orpheus gazes as much as he
|
|
will upon her, no longer incurring a penalty for a thoughtless glance.
|
|
|
|
The story of Orpheus has furnished Pope with an illustration of
|
|
the power of music, for his "Ode for St. Cecilia's Day." The following
|
|
stanza relates the conclusion of the story:
|
|
|
|
"But soon, too soon the lover turns his eyes;
|
|
Again she falls, again she dies, she dies!
|
|
How wilt thou now the fatal sisters move?
|
|
No crime was thine, if 'tis no crime to love.
|
|
Now under hanging mountains,
|
|
Beside the falls of fountains,
|
|
Or where Hebrus wanders,
|
|
Rolling in meanders,
|
|
All alone,
|
|
He makes his moan,
|
|
And calls her ghost,
|
|
For ever, ever, ever lost!
|
|
Now with furies surrounded,
|
|
Despairing, confounded,
|
|
He trembles, he glows,
|
|
Amidst Rhodope's snows.
|
|
See, wild as the winds o'er the desert he flies;
|
|
Hark! Haemus resounds with the Bacchanals' cries.
|
|
Ah, see, he dies!
|
|
Yet even in death Eurydice he sung,
|
|
Eurydice still trembled on his tongue:
|
|
Eurydice the woods
|
|
Eurydice the floods
|
|
Eurydice the rocks and hollow mountains rung."
|
|
|
|
The superior melody of the nightingale's song over the grave of
|
|
Orpheus is alluded to by Southey in his "Thalaba":
|
|
|
|
"Then on his ear what sounds
|
|
Of harmony arose!
|
|
Far music and the distance-mellowed song
|
|
From bowers of merriment;
|
|
The waterfall remote;
|
|
The murmuring of the leafy groves;
|
|
The single nightingale
|
|
Perched in the rosier by, so richly toned,
|
|
That never from that most melodious bird
|
|
Singing a love song to his brooding mate,
|
|
Did Thracian shepherd by the grave
|
|
Of Orpheus hear a sweeter melody,
|
|
Though there the spirit of the sepulchre
|
|
All his own power infuse, to swell
|
|
The incense that he loves."
|
|
|
|
ARISTAEUS, THE BEE-KEEPER.
|
|
|
|
Man avails himself of the instincts of the inferior animals for
|
|
his own advantage. Hence sprang the art of keeping bees. Honey must
|
|
first have been known as a wild product, the bees building their
|
|
structures in hollow trees or holes in the rocks, or any similar
|
|
cavity that chance offered. Thus occasionally the carcass of a dead
|
|
animal would be occupied by the bees for that purpose. It was no doubt
|
|
from some such incident that the superstition arose that the bees were
|
|
engendered by the decaying flesh of the animal; and Virgil, in the
|
|
following story, shows how this supposed fact may be turned to account
|
|
for renewing the swarm when it has been lost by disease or accident.
|
|
Aristaeus, who first taught the management of bees, was the son of
|
|
the water-nymph Cyrene. His bees had perished, and he resorted for aid
|
|
to his mother. He stood at the river side and thus addressed her: "O
|
|
mother, the pride of my life is taken from me! I have lost my precious
|
|
bees. My care and skill have availed me nothing, and you, my mother,
|
|
have not warded off from me the blow of misfortune." His mother
|
|
heard these complaints as she sat in her palace at the bottom of the
|
|
river, with her attendant nymphs around her. They were engaged in
|
|
female occupations, spinning and weaving, while one told stories to
|
|
amuse the rest. The sad voice of Aristaeus interrupting their
|
|
occupation, one of them put her head above the water and seeing him,
|
|
returned and gave information to his mother, who ordered that he
|
|
should be brought into her presence. The river at her command opened
|
|
itself and let him pass in, while it stood curled like a mountain on
|
|
either side. He descended to the region where the fountains of the
|
|
great rivers lie; he saw the enormous receptacles of waters and was
|
|
almost deafened with the roar, while he surveyed them hurrying off
|
|
in various directions to water the face of the earth. Arriving at
|
|
his mother's apartment, he was hospitably received by Cyrene and her
|
|
nymphs, who spread their table with the richest dainties. They first
|
|
poured out libations to Neptune, then regaled themselves with the
|
|
feast, and after that Cyrene thus addressed him: "There is an old
|
|
prophet named Proteus, who dwells in the sea and is a favourite of
|
|
Neptune, whose herd of sea-calves he pastures. We nymphs hold him in
|
|
great respect, for he is a learned sage and knows all things, past,
|
|
present, and to come. He can tell you, my son, the cause of the
|
|
mortality among your bees and how you may remedy it. But he will not
|
|
do it voluntarily, however you may entreat him. You must compel him by
|
|
force. If you seize him and chain him, he will answer your questions
|
|
in order to get released, for he cannot by all his arts get away if
|
|
you hold fast the chains. I will carry you to his cave, where he comes
|
|
at noon to take his midday repose. Then you may easily secure him. But
|
|
when he finds himself captured, his resort is to a power he
|
|
possesses of changing himself into various forms. He will become a
|
|
wild boar or a fierce tiger, a scaly dragon or lion with yellow
|
|
mane. Or be will make a noise like the crackling of flames or the rush
|
|
of water, so as to tempt you to let go the chain, when he will make
|
|
his escape. But you have only to keep him fast bound, and at last when
|
|
he finds all his arts unavailing, he will return to his own figure and
|
|
obey your commands." So saying she sprinkled her son with fragrant
|
|
nectar, the beverage of the gods, and immediately an unusual vigour
|
|
filled his frame, and courage his heart, while perfume breathed all
|
|
around him.
|
|
The nymph led her son to the prophet's cave and concealed him
|
|
among the recesses of the rocks, while she herself took her place
|
|
behind the clouds. When noon came and the hour when men and herds
|
|
retreat from the glaring sun to indulge in quiet slumber, Proteus
|
|
issued from the water, followed by his herd of sea-calves which spread
|
|
themselves along the shore. He sat on the rock and counted his herd;
|
|
then stretched himself on the floor of the cave and went to sleep.
|
|
Aristaeus hardly allowed him to get fairly asleep before he fixed
|
|
the fetters on him and shouted aloud. Proteus, waking and finding
|
|
himself captured, immediately resorted to his arts, becoming first a
|
|
fire, then a flood, then a horrible wild beast, in rapid succession.
|
|
But finding all would not do, he at last resumed his own form and
|
|
addressed the youth in angry accents: "Who are you, bold youth, who
|
|
thus invade my abode, and what do you want with me?" Aristaeus
|
|
replied, "Proteus, you know already, for it is needless for any one to
|
|
attempt to deceive you. And do you also cease your efforts to elude
|
|
me. I am led hither by divine assistance, to know from you the cause
|
|
of my misfortune and how to remedy it." At these words the prophet,
|
|
fixing on him his grey eyes with a piercing look, thus spoke: "You
|
|
receive the merited reward of your deeds, by which Eurydice met her
|
|
death, for in flying from you she trod upon a serpent, of whose bite
|
|
she died. To avenge her death, the nymphs, her companions, have sent
|
|
this destruction to your bees. You have to appease their anger, and
|
|
thus it must be done: Select four bulls, of perfect form and size, and
|
|
four cows of equal beauty, build four altars to the nymphs, and
|
|
sacrifice the animals, leaving their carcasses in the leafy grove.
|
|
To Orpheus and Eurydice you shall pay such funeral honours as may
|
|
allay their resentment. Returning after nine days, you will examine
|
|
the bodies of the cattle slain and see what will befall." Aristaeus
|
|
faithfully obeyed these directions. He sacrificed the cattle, he
|
|
left their bodies in the grove, he offered funeral honours to the
|
|
shades of Orpheus and Eurydice; then returning on the ninth day he
|
|
examined the bodies of the animals, and, wonderful to relate! a
|
|
swarm of bees had taken possession of one of the carcasses and were
|
|
pursuing their labours there as in a hive.
|
|
|
|
In "The Task," Cowper alludes to the story of Aristaeus, when
|
|
speaking of the ice-palace built by the Empress Anne of Russia. He has
|
|
been describing the fantastic forms which ice assumes in connection
|
|
with waterfalls. etc.:
|
|
|
|
"Less worthy of applause though more admired
|
|
Because a novelty, the work of man,
|
|
Imperial mistress of the fur-clad Russ,
|
|
Thy most magnificent and mighty freak,
|
|
The wonder of the north. No forest fell
|
|
When thou wouldst build, no quarry sent its stores
|
|
T' enrich thy walls; but thou didst hew the floods
|
|
And make thy marble of the glassy wave.
|
|
In such a palace Aristaeus found
|
|
Cyrene, when he bore the plaintive tale
|
|
Of his lost bees to her maternal ear."
|
|
|
|
Milton also appears to have had Cyrene and her domestic scene in his
|
|
mind when he describes to us Sabrina, the nymph of the river Severn,
|
|
in the Guardian-spirit's song in "Comus":
|
|
|
|
"Sabrina fair!
|
|
Listen where thou art sitting
|
|
Under the glassy, cool, translucent wave
|
|
In twisted braids of lilies knitting
|
|
The loose train of thy amber-drooping hair;
|
|
Listen for dear honour's sake,
|
|
Goddess of the silver lake!
|
|
Listen and save."
|
|
|
|
The following are other celebrated mythical poets and musicians,
|
|
some of whom were hardly inferior to Orpheus himself:
|
|
|
|
AMPHION.
|
|
|
|
Amphion was the son of Jupiter and Antiope, queen of Thebes. With
|
|
his twin brother Zethus, he was exposed at birth on Mount Cithaeron,
|
|
where they grew up among the shepherds, not knowing their parentage.
|
|
Mercury gave Amphion a lyre and taught him to play upon it, and his
|
|
brother occupied himself in hunting and tending the flocks.
|
|
Meanwhile Antiope, their mother, who had been treated with great
|
|
cruelty by Lycus, the usurping king of Thebes, and by Dirce, his wife,
|
|
found means to inform her children of their rights and to summon
|
|
them to her assistance. With a band of their fellow-herdsmen they
|
|
attacked and slew Lycus, and tying Dirce by the hair of her head to
|
|
a bull, let him drag her till she was dead.* Amphion, having become
|
|
king of Thebes, fortified the city with a wall. It is said that when
|
|
he played on his lyre the stones moved of their own accord and took
|
|
their places in the wall.
|
|
See Tennyson's poem of "Amphion" for an amusing use made of this
|
|
story.
|
|
|
|
* The punishment of Dirce is the subject of a celebrated group of
|
|
statuary now in the Museum at Naples.
|
|
|
|
LINUS.
|
|
|
|
Linus was the instructor of Hercules in music, but having one day
|
|
reproved his pupil rather harshly, he roused the anger of Hercules,
|
|
who struck him with his lyre and killed him.
|
|
|
|
THAMYRIS.
|
|
|
|
An ancient Thracian bard, who in his presumption challenged the
|
|
Muses to a trial of skill, and being overcome in the contest, was
|
|
deprived by them of his sight. Milton alludes to him with other
|
|
blind bards, when speaking of his own blindness, "Paradise Lost," Book
|
|
III. 35.
|
|
|
|
MARSYAS.
|
|
|
|
Minerva invented the flute, and played upon it to the delight of all
|
|
the celestial auditors; but the mischievous urchin Cupid having
|
|
dared to laugh at the queer face which the goddess made while playing,
|
|
Minerva threw the instrument indignantly away, and it fell down to
|
|
earth and was found by Marsyas. He blew upon it, and drew from it such
|
|
ravishing sounds that he was tempted to challenge Apollo himself to
|
|
a musical contest. The god of course triumphed, and punished Marsyas
|
|
by flaying him alive.
|
|
|
|
MELAMPUS.
|
|
|
|
Melampus was the first mortal endowed with prophetic powers.
|
|
Before his house there stood an oak tree containing a serpent's
|
|
nest. The old serpents were killed by the servants, but Melampus
|
|
took care of the young ones and fed them carefully. One day when he
|
|
was asleep under the oak the serpents licked his ears with their
|
|
tongues. On awaking he was astonished to find that he now understood
|
|
the language of birds and creeping things. This knowledge enabled
|
|
him to foretell future events, and he became a renowned soothsayer. At
|
|
one time his enemies took him captive and kept him strictly
|
|
imprisoned. Melampus in the silence of the night heard the woodworms
|
|
in the timbers talking together, and found out by what they said
|
|
that the timbers were nearly eaten through and the roof would soon
|
|
fall in. He told his captors and demanded to be let out, warning
|
|
them also. They took his warning, and thus escaped destruction, and
|
|
regarded Melampus and held him in high honour.
|
|
|
|
MUSAEUS.
|
|
|
|
A semi-mythological personage who was represented by one tradition
|
|
to be the son of Orpheus. He is said to have written sacred poems
|
|
and oracles. Milton couples his name with that of Orpheus in his "Il
|
|
Penseroso":
|
|
|
|
"But O, sad virgin, that thy power
|
|
Might raise Musaeus from his bower,
|
|
Or bid the soul of Orpheus sing
|
|
Such notes as warbled to the string,
|
|
Drew iron tears down Pluto's cheek,
|
|
And made Hell grant what love did seek."
|
|
CHAPTER XXV.
|
|
ARION- IBYCUS- SIMONIDES- SAPPHO.
|
|
|
|
THE poets whose adventures compose this chapter were real persons
|
|
some of whose works yet remain, and their influence on poets who
|
|
succeeded them is yet more important than their poetical remains.
|
|
The adventures recorded of them in the following stories rest on the
|
|
same authority as other narratives of the "Age of Fable," that is,
|
|
of the poets who have told them. In their present form, the first
|
|
two are translated from the German, Arion from Schlegel, and Ibycus
|
|
from Schiller.
|
|
|
|
ARION.
|
|
|
|
Arion was a famous musician, and dwelt at the court of Periander,
|
|
king of Corinth, with whom he was a great favourite. There was to be a
|
|
musical contest in Sicily, and Arion longed to compete for the
|
|
prize, He told his wish to Periander, who besought him like a
|
|
brother to give up the thought. "Pray stay with me," he said, "and
|
|
be contented. He who strives to win may lose." Arion answered, "A
|
|
wandering life best suits the free heart of a poet. The talent which a
|
|
god bestowed on me, I would fain make a source of pleasure to
|
|
others. And if I win the prize, how will the enjoyment of it be
|
|
increased by the consciousness of my widespread fame!" He went, won
|
|
the prize, and embarked with his wealth in a Corinthian ship for home.
|
|
On the second morning after setting sail, the wind breathed mild and
|
|
fair. "O Periander," he exclaimed, "dismiss your fears! Soon shall you
|
|
forget them in my embrace. With what lavish offerings will we
|
|
display our gratitude to the gods, and how merry will we be at the
|
|
festal board!" The wind and sea continued propitious. Not a cloud
|
|
dimmed the firmament. He had not trusted too much to the ocean- but he
|
|
had to man. He overheard the seamen exchanging hints with one another,
|
|
and found they were plotting to possess themselves of his treasure.
|
|
Presently they surrounded him loud and mutinous, and said, "Arion, you
|
|
must die! If you would have a grave on shore, yield yourself to die on
|
|
this spot; but if otherwise, cast yourself into the sea." "Will
|
|
nothing satisfy you but my life?" said he. "Take my gold, and welcome,
|
|
I willingly buy my life at that price." "No, no; we cannot spare
|
|
you. Your life would be too dangerous to us. Where could we go to
|
|
escape from Periander, if he should know that you had been robbed by
|
|
us? Your gold would be of little use to us, if, on returning home,
|
|
we could never more be free from fear." "Grant me, then," said he,
|
|
"a last request, since nought will avail to save my life, that I may
|
|
die, as I have lived, as becomes a bard. When I shall have sung my
|
|
death song, and my harp-strings shall have ceased to vibrate, then I
|
|
will bid farewell to life, and yield uncomplaining to my fate." This
|
|
prayer, like the others, would have been unheeded,- they thought
|
|
only of their booty,- but to hear so famous a musician, that moved
|
|
their rude hearts. "Suffer me," he added, "to arrange my dress. Apollo
|
|
will not favour me unless I be clad in my minstrel garb."
|
|
He clothed his well-proportioned limbs in gold and purple fair to
|
|
see, his tunic fell around him in graceful folds, jewels adorned his
|
|
arms, his brow was crowned with a golden wreath, and over his neck and
|
|
shoulders flowed his hair perfumed with odours. His left hand held the
|
|
lyre, his right the ivory wand with which he struck its chords. Like
|
|
one inspired, he seemed to drink the morning air and glitter in the
|
|
morning ray. The seamen gazed with admiration. He strode forward to
|
|
the vessel's side and looked down into the deep blue sea. Addressing
|
|
his lyre, he sang, "Companion of my voice, come with me to the realm
|
|
of shades. Though Cerberus may growl, we know the power of song can
|
|
tame his rage. Ye heroes of Elysium, who have passed the darkling
|
|
flood,- ye happy souls, soon shall I join your band. Yet can ye
|
|
relieve my grief? Alas, I leave my friend behind me. Thou, who didst
|
|
find thy Eurydice, and lose her again as soon as found; when she had
|
|
vanished like a dream, how didst thou hate the cheerful light! I
|
|
must away, but I will not fear. The gods look down upon us. Ye who
|
|
slay me unoffending, when I am no more, your time of trembling shall
|
|
come. Ye Nereids, receive your guest, who throws himself upon your
|
|
mercy!" So saying, he sprang into the deep sea. The waves covered him,
|
|
and the seamen held on their way, fancying themselves safe from all
|
|
danger of detection.
|
|
But the strains of his music had drawn round him the inhabitants
|
|
of the deep to listen, and Dolphins followed the ship as if chained by
|
|
a spell. While he struggled in the waves, a Dolphin offered him his
|
|
back, and carried him mounted thereon safe to shore. At the spot where
|
|
he landed, a monument of brass was afterwards erected upon the rocky
|
|
shore, to preserve the memory of the event.
|
|
When Arion and the dolphin parted, each to his own element, Arion
|
|
thus poured forth his thanks: "Farewell, thou faithful, friendly fish!
|
|
Would that I could reward thee; but thou canst not wend with me, nor I
|
|
with thee. Companionship we may not have. May Galatea, queen of the
|
|
deep, accord thee her favour, and thou, proud of the burden, draw
|
|
her chariot over the smooth mirror of the deep."
|
|
Arion hastened from the shore, and soon saw before him the towers of
|
|
Corinth. He journeyed on, harp in hand, singing as he went, full of
|
|
love and happiness, forgetting his losses, and mindful only of what
|
|
remained, his friend and his lyre. He entered the hospitable halls,
|
|
and was soon clasped in the embrace of Periander. "I come back to
|
|
thee, my friend," he said. "The talent which a god bestowed has been
|
|
the delight of thousands, but false knaves have stripped me of my
|
|
well-earned treasure; yet I retain the consciousness of widespread
|
|
fame." Then he told Periander all the wonderful events that had
|
|
befallen him, who heard him with amazement. "Shall such wickedness
|
|
triumph?" said he. "Then in vain is power lodged in my hands. That
|
|
we may discover the criminals, you must remain here in concealment,
|
|
and so they will approach without suspicion." When the ship. arrived
|
|
in the harbour, he summoned the mariners before him. "Have you heard
|
|
anything of Arion?" he inquired. "I anxiously look for his return."
|
|
They replied, "We left him well and prosperous in Tarentum." As they
|
|
said these words, Arion stepped forth and faced them. His
|
|
well-proportioned limbs were arrayed in gold and purple fair to see,
|
|
his tunic fell around him in graceful folds, jewels adorned his
|
|
arms, his brow was crowned with a golden wreath, and over his neck and
|
|
shoulders flowed his hair perfumed with odours; his left hand held the
|
|
lyre, his right the ivory wand with which he struck its chords. They
|
|
fell prostrate at his feet, as if a lightning bolt had struck them.
|
|
"We meant to murder him, and he has become a god. O Earth, open and
|
|
receive us!" Then Periander spoke. "He lives, the master of the lay!
|
|
Kind Heaven protects the poet's life. As for you, I invoke not the
|
|
spirit of vengeance; Arion wishes not your blood. Ye slaves of
|
|
avarice, begone! Seek some barbarous land, and never may aught
|
|
beautiful delight your souls!"
|
|
|
|
Spenser represents Arion, mounted on his dolphin, accompanying the
|
|
train of Neptune and Amphitrite:
|
|
|
|
"Then was there heard a most celestial sound
|
|
Of dainty music which did next ensue,
|
|
And, on the floating waters as enthroned,
|
|
Arion with his harp unto him drew
|
|
The ears and hearts of all that goodly crew;
|
|
Even when as yet the dolphin which him bore
|
|
Through the AEgean Seas from pirates' view,
|
|
Stood still, by him astonished at his lore,
|
|
And all the raging seas for joy forgot to roar."
|
|
|
|
Byron, in his "Childe Harold," Canto II., alludes to the story of
|
|
Arion, when, describing his voyage, he represents one of the seamen
|
|
making music to entertain the rest:
|
|
|
|
"The moon is up; by Heaven a lovely eve!
|
|
Long streams of light o'er dancing waves expand;
|
|
Now lads on shore may sigh and maids believe;
|
|
Such be our fate when we return to land!
|
|
Meantime some rude Arion's restless hand
|
|
Wakes the brisk harmony that sailors love;
|
|
A circle there of merry listeners stand,
|
|
Or to some well-known measure featly move
|
|
Thoughtless as if on shore they still were free to rove."
|
|
|
|
IBYCUS.
|
|
|
|
In order to understand the story of Ibycus which follows it is
|
|
necessary to remember, first, that the theatres of the ancients were
|
|
immense fabrics capable of containing from ten to thirty thousand
|
|
spectators, and as they were used only on festal occasions, and
|
|
admission was free to all, they were usually filled. They were without
|
|
roofs and open to the sky, and the performances were in the daytime.
|
|
Secondly, the appalling representation of the Furies is not
|
|
exaggerated in the story. It is recorded that AEschylus, the tragic
|
|
poet, having on one occasion represented the Furies in a chorus of
|
|
fifty performers, the terror of the spectators was such that many
|
|
fainted and were thrown into convulsions, and the magistrates
|
|
forbade a like representation for the future.
|
|
Ibycus, the pious poet, was on his way to the chariot races and
|
|
musical competitions held at the Isthmus of Corinth, which attracted
|
|
all of Grecian lineage. Apollo had bestowed on him the gift of song,
|
|
the honeyed lips of the poet, and he pursued his way with lightsome
|
|
step, full of the god. Already the towers of Corinth crowning the
|
|
height appeared in view, and he had entered with pious awe the
|
|
sacred grove of Neptune. No living object was in sight, only a flock
|
|
of cranes flew overhead taking the same course as himself in their
|
|
migration to a southern clime. "Good luck to you, ye friendly
|
|
squadrons," he exclaimed, "my companions from across the sea. I take
|
|
your company for a good omen. We come from far and fly in search of
|
|
hospitality. May both of us meet that kind reception which shields the
|
|
stranger guest from harm!"
|
|
He paced briskly on, and soon was in the middle of the wood. There
|
|
suddenly, at a narrow pass, two robbers stepped forth and barred his
|
|
way. He must yield or fight. But his hand, accustomed to the lyre, and
|
|
not to the strife of arms, sank powerless. He called for help on men
|
|
and gods, but his cry reached no defender's ear. "Then here must I
|
|
die," said he, "in a strange land, unlamented, cut off by the hand
|
|
of outlaws, and see none to avenge my, cause." Sore wounded, he sank
|
|
to the earth, when hoarse screamed the cranes overhead. "Take up my
|
|
cause, ye cranes," he said, "since no voice but yours answers to my
|
|
cry." So saying he closed his eyes in death.
|
|
The body, despoiled and mangled, was found, and though disfigured
|
|
with wounds, was recognized by the friend in Corinth who had
|
|
expected him as a guest. "Is it thus I find you restored to me?" he
|
|
exclaimed. "I who hoped to entwine your temples with the wreath of
|
|
triumph in the strife of song!"
|
|
The guests assembled at the festival heard the tidings with
|
|
dismay. All Greece felt the wound, every heart owned its loss. They
|
|
crowded round the tribunal of the magistrates, and demanded
|
|
vengeance on the murderers and expiation with their blood.
|
|
But what trace or mark shall point out the perpetrator from amidst
|
|
the vast multitude attracted by the splendour of the feast? Did he
|
|
fall by the hands of robbers or did some private enemy slay him? The
|
|
all-discerning sun alone can tell, for no other eye beheld it. Yet not
|
|
improbably the murderer even now walks in the midst of the throng, and
|
|
enjoys the fruits of his crime, while vengeance seeks for him in vain.
|
|
Perhaps in their own temple's enclosure he defies the gods, mingling
|
|
freely in this throng of men that now presses into the amphitheatre.
|
|
For now crowded together, row on row, the multitude fills the
|
|
seats till it seems as if the very fabric would give way. The murmur
|
|
of voices sounds like the roar of the sea, while the circles
|
|
widening in their ascent rise tier on tier, as if they would reach the
|
|
sky.
|
|
And now the vast assemblage listens to the awful voice of the chorus
|
|
personating the Furies, which in solemn guise advances with measured
|
|
step, and moves around the circuit of the theatre. Can they be
|
|
mortal women who compose that awful group, and can that vast concourse
|
|
of silent forms be living beings?
|
|
The choristers, clad in black, bore in their fleshless hands torches
|
|
blazing with a pitchy flame. Their cheeks were bloodless, and in place
|
|
of hair writhing and swelling serpents curled around their brows.
|
|
Forming a circle, these awful beings sang their hymns, rending the
|
|
hearts of the guilty, and enchaining all their faculties. It rose
|
|
and swelled, overpowering the sound of the instruments, stealing the
|
|
judgment, palsying the heart, curdling the blood.
|
|
"Happy the man who keeps his heart pure from guilt and crime! Him we
|
|
avengers touch not; he treads the path of life secure from us. But
|
|
woe! woe! to him who has done the deed of secret murder. We, the
|
|
fearful family of Night, fasten ourselves upon his whole being. Thinks
|
|
he by flight to escape us? We fly still faster in pursuit, twine our
|
|
snakes around his feet, and bring him to the ground. Unwearied we
|
|
pursue; no pity checks our course; still on and on, to the end of
|
|
life, we give him no peace nor rest." Thus the Eumenides sang, and
|
|
moved in solemn cadence, while stillness like the stillness of death
|
|
sat over the whole assembly as if in the presence of superhuman
|
|
beings; and then in solemn march completing the circuit of the
|
|
theatre, they passed out at the back of the stage.
|
|
Every heart fluttered between illusion and reality, and every breast
|
|
panted with undefined terror, quailing before the awful power that
|
|
watches secret crimes and winds unseen the skein of destiny. At that
|
|
moment a cry burst forth from one of the uppermost benches- "Look!
|
|
look! comrade, yonder are the cranes of Ibycus!" And suddenly there
|
|
appeared sailing across the sky a dark object which a moment's
|
|
inspection showed to be a flock of cranes flying directly over the
|
|
theatre. "Of Ibycus! did he say?" The beloved name revived the
|
|
sorrow in every breast. As wave follows wave over the face of the sea,
|
|
so ran from mouth to mouth the words, "Of Ibycus! him whom we all
|
|
lament, whom some murderer's hand laid low! What have the cranes to do
|
|
with him?" And louder grew the swell of voices, while like a
|
|
lightning's flash the thought sped through every heart, "Observe the
|
|
power of the Eumenides! The pious poet shall be avenged! the
|
|
murderer has informed against himself. Seize the man who uttered
|
|
that cry and the other to whom he spoke!"
|
|
The culprit would gladly have recalled his words, but it was too
|
|
late. The faces of the murderers, pale with terror, betrayed their
|
|
guilt. The people took them before the judge, they confessed their
|
|
crime, and suffered the punishment they deserved.
|
|
|
|
SIMONIDES.
|
|
|
|
Simonides was one of the most prolific of the early poets of Greece,
|
|
but only a few fragments of his compositions have descended to us.
|
|
He wrote hymns, triumphal odes, and elegies. In the last species of
|
|
composition he particularly excelled. His genius was inclined to the
|
|
pathetic, and none could touch with truer effect the chords of human
|
|
sympathy. The "Lamentation of Danae," the most important of the
|
|
fragments which remain of his poetry, is based upon the tradition that
|
|
Danae and her infant son were confined by order of her father,
|
|
Acrisius, in a chest and set adrift on the sea. The chest floated
|
|
towards the island of Seriphus, where both were rescued by Dictys, a
|
|
fisherman, and carried to Polydectes, king of the country, who
|
|
received and protected them. The child, Perseus, when grown up
|
|
became a famous hero, whose adventures have been recorded in a
|
|
previous chapter.
|
|
Simonides passed much of his life at the courts of princes, and
|
|
often employed his talents in panegyric and festal odes, receiving his
|
|
reward from the munificence of those whose exploits he celebrated.
|
|
This employment was not derogatory, but closely resembles that of
|
|
the earliest bards, such as Demodocus, described by Homer, or of Homer
|
|
himself, as recorded by tradition.
|
|
On one occasion, when residing at the court of Scopas, king of
|
|
Thessaly, the prince desired him to prepare a poem in celebration of
|
|
his exploits, to be recited at a banquet. In order to diversify his
|
|
theme, Simonides, who was celebrated for his piety, introduced into
|
|
his poem the exploits of Castor and Pollux. Such digressions were
|
|
not unusual with the poets on similar occasions, and one might suppose
|
|
an ordinary mortal might have been content to share the praises of the
|
|
sons of Leda. But vanity is exacting; and as Scopas sat at his
|
|
festal board among his courtiers and sycophants, he grudged every
|
|
verse that did not rehearse his own praises. When Simonides approached
|
|
to receive the promised reward Scopas bestowed but half the expected
|
|
sum, saying, "Here is payment for my portion of thy performance;
|
|
Castor and Pollux will doubtless compensate thee for so much as
|
|
relates to them." The disconcerted poet returned to his seat amidst
|
|
the laughter which followed the great man's jest. In a little time
|
|
he received a message that two young men on horseback were waiting
|
|
without and anxious to see him. Simonides hastened to the door, but
|
|
looked in vain for the visitors. Scarcely, however, had he left the
|
|
banqueting hall when the roof fell in with a loud crash, burying
|
|
Scopas and all his guests beneath the ruins. On inquiring as to the
|
|
appearance of the young men who had sent for him, Simonides was
|
|
satisfied that they were no other than Castor and Pollux themselves.
|
|
|
|
SAPPHO.
|
|
|
|
Sappho was a poetess who flourished in a very early age of Greek
|
|
literature. Of her works few fragments remain, but they are enough
|
|
to establish her claim to eminent poetical genius. The story of Sappho
|
|
commonly alluded to is that she was passionately in love with a
|
|
beautiful youth named Phaon, and failing to obtain a return of
|
|
affection she threw herself from the promontory of Leucadia into the
|
|
sea, under a superstition that those who should take that
|
|
"Lover's-leap" would, if not destroyed, be cured of their love.
|
|
|
|
Byron alludes to the story of Sappho in "Childe Harold," Canto II.:
|
|
|
|
"Childe Harold sailed and passed the barren spot
|
|
Where sad Penelope o'erlooked the wave,
|
|
And onward viewed the mount, not yet forgot,
|
|
The lover's refuge and the Lesbian's grave.
|
|
Dark Sappho! could not verse immortal save
|
|
That breast imbued with such immortal fire?
|
|
|
|
"'Twas on a Grecian autumn's gentle eve
|
|
Childe Harold hailed Leucadia's cape afar; etc.
|
|
|
|
Those who wish to know more of Sappho and her "leap" are referred to
|
|
the "Spectator," Nos. 223 and 229. See also Moore's "Evenings in
|
|
Greece."
|
|
CHAPTER XXVI.
|
|
ENDYMION- ORION- AURORA AND TITHONUS- ACIS AND GALATEA.
|
|
|
|
ENDYMION was a beautiful youth who fed his flock on Mount Latmos.
|
|
One calm, clear night Diana, the moon, looked down and saw him
|
|
sleeping. The cold heart of the virgin goddess was warmed by his
|
|
surpassing beauty, and she came down to him, kissed him, and watched
|
|
over him while he slept.
|
|
Another story was that Jupiter bestowed on him the gift of perpetual
|
|
youth united with perpetual sleep. Of one so gifted we can have but
|
|
few adventures to record. Diana, it was said, took care that his
|
|
fortunes should not suffer by his inactive life, for she made his
|
|
flock increase, and guarded his sheep and lambs from the wild beasts.
|
|
The story of Endymion has a peculiar charm from the human meaning
|
|
which it so thinly veils. We see in Endymion the young poet, his fancy
|
|
and his heart seeking in vain for that which can satisfy them, finding
|
|
his favourite hour in the quiet moonlight, and nursing there beneath
|
|
the beams of the bright and silent witness the melancholy and the
|
|
ardour which consume him. The story suggests aspiring and poetic love,
|
|
a life spent more in dreams than in reality, and an early and
|
|
welcome death.- S. G. B.
|
|
|
|
The "Endymion" of Keats is a wild and fanciful poem, containing some
|
|
exquisite poetry, as this, to the moon:
|
|
|
|
"...The sleeping kine
|
|
Couched in thy brightness dream of fields divine.
|
|
Innumerable mountains rise, and rise,
|
|
Ambitious for the hallowing of thine eyes,
|
|
And yet thy benediction passeth not
|
|
One obscure hiding-place, one little spot
|
|
Where pleasure may be sent; the nested wren
|
|
Has thy fair face within its tranquil ken;" etc., etc.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Young, in the "Night Thoughts," alludes to Endymion thus:
|
|
|
|
"...These thoughts, O Night, are thine;
|
|
From thee they came like lovers' secret sighs,
|
|
While others slept. So Cynthia, poets feign,
|
|
In shadows veiled, soft, sliding from her sphere,
|
|
Her shepherd cheered, of her enamoured less
|
|
Than I of thee."
|
|
|
|
Fletcher, in the "Faithful Shepherdess," tells:
|
|
|
|
"How the pale Phoebe, hunting in a grove,
|
|
First saw the boy Endymion, from whose eyes
|
|
She took eternal fire that never dies;
|
|
How she conveyed him softly in a sleep,
|
|
His temples bound with poppy, to the steep
|
|
Head of old Latmos, where she stoops each night,
|
|
Gilding the mountain with her brother's light,
|
|
To kiss her sweetest."
|
|
|
|
ORION.
|
|
|
|
Orion was the son of Neptune. He was a handsome giant and a mighty
|
|
hunter. His father gave him the power of wading through the depths
|
|
of the sea, or, as others say, of walking on its surface.
|
|
Orion loved Merope, the daughter of OEnopion, king of Chios, and
|
|
sought her in marriage. He cleared the island of wild beasts, and
|
|
brought the spoils of the chase as presents to his beloved; but as
|
|
OEnopion constantly deferred his consent, Orion attempted to gain
|
|
possession of the maiden by violence. Her father, incensed at this
|
|
conduct, having made Orion drunk, deprived him of his sight and cast
|
|
him out on the seashore. The blinded hero followed the sound, of a
|
|
Cyclops' hammer till he reached Lemnos, and came to the forge of
|
|
Vulcan, who, taking pity on him, gave him Kedalion, one of his men, to
|
|
be his guide to the abode of the sun. Placing Kedalion on his
|
|
shoulders, Orion proceeded to the east, and there meeting the sun-god,
|
|
was restored to sight by his beam.
|
|
After this he dwelt as a hunter with Diana, with whom he was a
|
|
favourite, and it is even said she was about to marry him. Her brother
|
|
was highly displeased and often chid her, but to no purpose. One
|
|
day, observing Orion wading through the sea with his head just above
|
|
the water, Apollo pointed it out to his sister and maintained that she
|
|
could not hit that black thing on the sea. The archer-goddess
|
|
discharged a shaft with fatal aim. The waves rolled the dead body of
|
|
Orion to the land, and bewailing her fatal error with many tears,
|
|
Diana placed him among the stars, where he appears as a giant, with
|
|
a girdle, sword, lion's skin, and club. Sirius, his dog, follows
|
|
him, and the Pleiads fly before him.
|
|
The Pleiads were daughters of Atlas, and nymphs of Diana's train.
|
|
One day Orion saw them and became enamoured and pursued them. In their
|
|
distress they prayed to the gods to change their form, and Jupiter
|
|
in pity turned them into pigeons, and then made them a constellation
|
|
in the sky. Though their number was seven, only six stars are visible,
|
|
for Electra, one of them, it is said left her place that she might not
|
|
behold the ruin of Troy, for that city was founded by her son
|
|
Dardanus. The sight had such an effect on her sisters that they have
|
|
looked pale ever since.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Longfellow has a poem on the "Occultation of Orion." The
|
|
following lines are those in which he alludes to the mythic story.
|
|
We must premise that on the celestial globe Orion is represented as
|
|
robed in a lion's skin and wielding a club. At the moment the stars of
|
|
the constellation, one by one, were quenched in the light of the moon,
|
|
the poet tells us
|
|
|
|
"Down fell the red skin of the lion
|
|
Into the river at his feet.
|
|
His mighty club no longer beat
|
|
The forehead of the bull; but he
|
|
Reeled as of yore beside the sea,
|
|
When blinded by OEnopion
|
|
He sought the blacksmith at his forge,
|
|
And climbing up the narrow gorge,
|
|
Fixed his blank eyes upon the sun."
|
|
|
|
Tennyson has a different theory of the Pleiads:
|
|
|
|
"Many a night I saw the Pleiads, rising through the mellow shade,
|
|
Glitter like a swarm of fire-flies tangled in a silver braid."
|
|
Locksley Hall.
|
|
|
|
Byron alludes to the lost Pleiad:
|
|
|
|
"Like the lost Pleiad seen no more below."
|
|
|
|
See also Mrs. Hemans's verses on the same subject.
|
|
|
|
AURORA AND TITHONUS.
|
|
|
|
The goddess of the Dawn, like her sister the Moon, was at times
|
|
inspired with the love of mortals. Her greatest favourite was Tithonus
|
|
son of Laomedon, king of Troy. She stole him away, and prevailed on
|
|
Jupiter to grant him immortality; but, forgetting to have youth joined
|
|
in the gift, after some time she began to discern, to her great
|
|
mortification, that he was growing old. When his hair was quite
|
|
white she left his society; but he still had the range of her
|
|
palace, lived on ambrosial food, and was clad in celestial raiment. At
|
|
length he lost the power of using his limbs, and then she shut him
|
|
up in his chamber, whence his feeble voice might at times be heard.
|
|
Finally she turned him into a grasshopper.
|
|
Memnon was the son of Aurora and Tithonus. He was king of the
|
|
AEthiopians, and dwelt in the extreme east, on the shore of Ocean.
|
|
He came with his warriors to assist the kindred of his father in the
|
|
war of Troy. King Priam received him with great honours, and
|
|
listened with admiration to his narrative of the wonders of the
|
|
ocean shore.
|
|
The very day after his arrival, Memnon, impatient of repose, led his
|
|
troops to the field. Antilochus, the brave son of Nestor, fell by
|
|
his hand, and the Greeks were put to flight, when Achilles appeared
|
|
and restored the battle. A long and doubtful contest ensued between
|
|
him and the son of Aurora; at length victory declared for Achilles,
|
|
Memnon fell, and the Trojans fled in dismay.
|
|
Aurora, who from her station in the sky had viewed with apprehension
|
|
the danger of her son, when she saw him fall, directed his brothers,
|
|
the Winds, to convey his body to the banks of the river Esepus in
|
|
Paphlagonia. In the evening Aurora came, accompanied by the Hours
|
|
and the Pleiads, and wept and lamented over her son. Night, in
|
|
sympathy with her grief, spread the heaven with clouds; all nature
|
|
mourned for the offspring of the Dawn. The AEthiopians raised his tomb
|
|
on the banks of the stream in the grove of the Nymphs, and Jupiter
|
|
caused the sparks and cinders of his funeral pile to be turned into
|
|
birds, which, dividing into two flocks, fought over the pile till they
|
|
fell into the flames. Every year at the anniversary of his death
|
|
they return and celebrate his obsequies in like manner. Aurora remains
|
|
inconsolable for the loss of her son. Her tears still flow, and may be
|
|
seen at early morning in the form of dew-drops on the grass.
|
|
|
|
Unlike most of the marvels of ancient mythology, there still exist
|
|
some memorials of this. On the banks of the river Nile, in Egypt,
|
|
are two colossal statues, one of which is said to be the statue of
|
|
Memnon. Ancient writers record that when the first rays of the
|
|
rising sun fall upon this statue a sound is heard to issue from it,
|
|
which they compare to the snapping of a harp-string. There is some
|
|
doubt about the identification of the existing statue with the one
|
|
described by the ancients, and the mysterious sounds are still more
|
|
doubtful. Yet there are not wanting some modern testimonies to their
|
|
being still audible. It has been suggested that sounds produced by
|
|
confined air making its escape from crevices or caverns in the rocks
|
|
may have given some ground for the story. Sir Gardner Wilkinson, a
|
|
late traveller, of the highest authority, examined the statue
|
|
itself, and discovered that it was hollow, and that "in the lap of the
|
|
statue is a stone, which on being struck emits a metallic sound,
|
|
that might still be made use of to deceive a visitor who was
|
|
predisposed to believe its powers."
|
|
The vocal statue of Memnon is a favourite subject of allusion with
|
|
the poets. Darwin, in his "Botanic Garden," says:
|
|
|
|
"So to the sacred Sun in Memnon's fane
|
|
Spontaneous concords choired the matin strain;
|
|
Touched by his orient beam responsive rings
|
|
The living lyre and vibrates all its strings;
|
|
Accordant aisles the tender tones prolong,
|
|
And holy echoes swell the adoring song."
|
|
Book I., 1. 182.
|
|
|
|
ACIS AND GALATEA.
|
|
|
|
Scylla was a fair virgin of Sicily, a favourite of the Sea-Nymphs.
|
|
She had many suitors, but repelled them all, and would go to the
|
|
grotto of Galatea, and tell her how she was persecuted. One day the
|
|
goddess, while Scylla dressed her hair, listened to the story, and
|
|
then replied, "Yet, maiden, your persecutors are of the not ungentle
|
|
race of men, whom, if you will, you can repel; but I, the daughter
|
|
of Nereus, and protected by such a band of sisters, found no escape
|
|
from the passion of the Cyclops but in the depths of the sea;" and
|
|
tears stopped her utterance, which when the pitying maiden had wiped
|
|
away with her delicate finger, and soothed the goddess, "Tell me,
|
|
dearest," said she, "the cause of your grief." Galatea then said,
|
|
"Acis was the son of Faunus, and a Naiad. His father and mother
|
|
loved him dearly, but their love was not equal to mine. For the
|
|
beautiful youth attached himself to me alone, and he was just
|
|
sixteen years old, the down just beginning to darken his cheeks. As
|
|
much as I sought his society, so much did the Cyclops seek mine; and
|
|
if you ask me whether my love for Acis or my hatred of Polyphemus
|
|
was the stronger, I cannot tell you; they were in equal measure. O
|
|
Venus, how great is thy power! this fierce giant, the terror of the
|
|
woods, whom no hapless stranger escaped unharmed, who defied even Jove
|
|
himself, learned to feel what love was, and, touched with a passion
|
|
for me, forgot his flocks and his well-stored caverns. Then for the
|
|
first time he began to take some care of his appearance, and to try to
|
|
make himself agreeable; he harrowed those coarse locks of his with a
|
|
comb, and mowed his beard with a sickle, looked at his harsh
|
|
features in the water, and composed his countenance. His love of
|
|
slaughter, his fierceness and thirst of blood prevailed no more, and
|
|
ships that touched at his island went away in safety. He paced up
|
|
and down the sea-shore, imprinting huge tracks with his heavy tread,
|
|
and, when weary, lay tranquilly in his cave.
|
|
"There is a cliff which projects into the sea, which washes it on
|
|
either side. Thither one day the huge Cyclops ascended, and sat down
|
|
while his flocks spread themselves around. Laying down his staff,
|
|
which would have served for a mast to hold a vessel's sail, and taking
|
|
his instrument compacted of numerous pipes, he made the hills and
|
|
the waters echo the music of his song. I lay hid under a rock by the
|
|
side of my beloved Acis, and listened to the distant strain. It was
|
|
full of extravagant praises of my beauty, mingled with passionate
|
|
reproaches of my coldness and cruelty.
|
|
"When he had finished he rose up, and, like a raging bull that
|
|
cannot stand still, wandered off into the woods. Acis and I thought no
|
|
more of him, till on a sudden he came to a spot which gave him a
|
|
view of us as we sat. 'I see you,' he exclaimed, 'and I will make this
|
|
the last of your love-meetings.' His voice was a roar such as an angry
|
|
Cyclops alone could utter. AEtna trembled at the sound. I, overcome
|
|
with terror, plunged into the water. Acis turned and fled, crying,
|
|
'Save me, Galatea, save me, my parents!' The Cyclops pursued him,
|
|
and tearing a rock from the side of the mountain hurled it at him.
|
|
Though only a corner of it touched him, it overwhelmed him.
|
|
"All that fate left in my power I did for Acis. I endowed him with
|
|
the honours of his grandfather, the river-god. The purple blood flowed
|
|
out from under the rock, but by degrees grew paler and looked like the
|
|
stream of a river rendered turbid by rains, and in time it became
|
|
clear. The rock cleaved open, and the water, as it gushed from the
|
|
chasm, uttered a pleasing murmur."
|
|
Thus Acis was changed into a river, and the river retains the name
|
|
of Acis.
|
|
|
|
Dryden, in his "Cymon and Iphigenia," has told the story of a
|
|
clown converted into a gentleman by the power of love, in a way that
|
|
shows traces of kindred to the old story of Galatea and the Cyclops.
|
|
|
|
"What not his father's care nor tutor's art
|
|
Could plant with pains in his unpolished heart,
|
|
The best instructor, Love, at once inspired,
|
|
As barren grounds to fruitfulness are fired.
|
|
Love taught him shame, and shame with love at strife
|
|
Soon taught the sweet civilities of life."
|
|
CHAPTER XXVII.
|
|
THE TROJAN WAR.
|
|
|
|
MINERVA was the goddess of wisdom, but on one occasion she did a
|
|
very foolish thing; she entered into competition with Juno and Venus
|
|
for the prize of beauty. It happened thus: At the nuptials of Peleus
|
|
and Thetis all the gods were invited with the exception of Eris, or
|
|
Discord. Enraged at her exclusion, the goddess threw a golden apple
|
|
among the guests, with the inscription, "For the fairest." Thereupon
|
|
Juno, Venus, and Minerva each claimed the apple. Jupiter, not
|
|
willing to decide in so delicate a matter, sent the goddesses to Mount
|
|
Ida, where the beautiful shepherd Paris was tending his flocks, and to
|
|
him was committed the decision. The goddesses accordingly appeared
|
|
before him. Juno promised him power and riches, Minerva glory and
|
|
renown in war, and Venus the fairest of women for his wife, each
|
|
attempting to bias his decision in her own favour. Paris decided in
|
|
favour of Venus and gave her the golden apple, thus making the two
|
|
other goddesses his enemies. Under the protection of Venus, Paris
|
|
sailed to Greece, and was hospitably received by Menelaus, king of
|
|
Sparta. Now Helen, the wife of Menelaus, was the very woman whom Venus
|
|
had destined for Paris, the fairest of her sex. She had been sought as
|
|
a bride by numerous suitors, and before her decision was made known,
|
|
they all, at the suggestion of Ulysses, one of their number, took an
|
|
oath that they would defend her from all injury and avenge her cause
|
|
if necessary. She chose Menelaus, and was living with him happily when
|
|
Paris became their guest. Paris, aided by Venus, persuaded her to
|
|
elope with him, and carried her to Troy, whence arose the famous
|
|
Trojan war, the theme of the greatest poems of antiquity, those of
|
|
Homer and Virgil.
|
|
Menelaus called upon his brother chieftains of Greece to fulfil
|
|
their pledge, and join him in his efforts to recover his wife. They
|
|
generally came forward, but Ulysses, who had married Penelope, and was
|
|
very happy in his wife and child, had no disposition to embark in such
|
|
a troublesome affair. He therefore hung back and Palamedes was sent to
|
|
urge him. When Palamedes arrived at Ithaca Ulysses pretended to be
|
|
mad. He yoked an ass and an ox together to the plough and began to sow
|
|
salt. Palamedes, to try him, placed the infant Telemachus before the
|
|
plough, whereupon the father turned the plough aside, showing
|
|
plainly that he was no madman, and after that could no longer refuse
|
|
to fulfil his promise. Being now himself gained for the undertaking,
|
|
he lent his aid to bring in other reluctant chiefs, especially
|
|
Achilles. This hero was the son of that Thetis at whose marriage the
|
|
apple of Discord had been thrown among the goddesses. Thetis was
|
|
herself one of the immortals, a sea-nymph, and knowing that her son
|
|
was fated to perish before Troy if he went on the expedition, she
|
|
endeavoured to prevent his going. She sent him away to the court of
|
|
King Lycomedes, and induced him to conceal himself in the disguise
|
|
of a maiden among the daughters of the king. Ulysses, hearing he was
|
|
there, went disguised as a merchant to the palace and offered for sale
|
|
female ornaments, among which he had placed some arms. While the
|
|
king's daughters were engrossed with the other contents of the
|
|
merchant's pack, Achilles handled the weapons and thereby betrayed
|
|
himself to the keen eye of Ulysses, who found no great difficulty in
|
|
persuading him to disregard his mother's prudent counsels and join his
|
|
countrymen in the war.
|
|
Priam was king of Troy, and Paris, the shepherd and seducer of
|
|
Helen, was his son. Paris had been brought up in obscurity, because
|
|
there were certain ominous forebodings connected with him from his
|
|
infancy that he would be the ruin of the state. These forebodings
|
|
seemed at length likely to be realized, for the Grecian armament now
|
|
in preparation was the greatest that had ever been fitted out.
|
|
Agamemnon, king of Mycenae, and brother of the injured Menelaus, was
|
|
chosen commander-in-chief. Achilles was their most illustrious
|
|
warrior. After him ranked Ajax, gigantic in size and of great courage,
|
|
but dull of intellect; Diomede, second only to Achilles in all the
|
|
qualities of a hero; Ulysses, famous for his sagacity; and Nestor, the
|
|
oldest of the Grecian chiefs, and one to whom they all looked up for
|
|
counsel. But Troy was no feeble enemy. Priam, the king, was now old,
|
|
but he had been a wise prince and had strengthened his state by good
|
|
government at home and numerous alliances with his neighbours. But the
|
|
principal stay and support of his throne was his own Hector, one of
|
|
the noblest characters painted by heathen antiquity. He felt, from the
|
|
first, a presentiment of the fall of his country, but still persevered
|
|
in his heroic resistance, yet by no means justified the wrong which
|
|
brought this danger upon her. He was united in marriage with
|
|
Andromache, and as a husband and father his character was not less
|
|
admirable than as a warrior. The principal leaders on the side of
|
|
the Trojans, besides Hector, were AEneas and Deiphobus, Glaucus and
|
|
Sarpedon.
|
|
After two years of preparation the Greek fleet and army assembled in
|
|
the port of Aulis in Boeotia. Here Agamemnon in hunting killed a
|
|
stag which was sacred to Diana, and the goddess in return visited
|
|
the army with pestilence, and produced a calm which prevented the
|
|
ships from leaving the port. Calchas, the soothsayer, thereupon
|
|
announced that the wrath of the virgin goddess could only be
|
|
appeased by the sacrifice of a virgin on her altar, and that none
|
|
other but the daughter of the offender would be acceptable. Agamemnon,
|
|
however reluctant, yielded his consent, and the maiden Iphigenia was
|
|
sent for under the pretence that she was to be married to Achilles.
|
|
When she was about to be sacrificed the goddess relented and
|
|
snatched her away, leaving a hind in her place, and Iphigenia,
|
|
enveloped in a cloud, was carried to Tauris, where Diana made her
|
|
priestess of her temple.
|
|
|
|
Tennyson, in his "Dream of Fair Women," makes Iphigenia thus
|
|
describe her feelings at the moment of sacrifice:
|
|
|
|
"I was cut off from hope in that sad place,
|
|
Which yet to name my spirit loathes and fears;
|
|
My father held his hand upon his face;
|
|
I, blinded by my tears,
|
|
|
|
"Still strove to speak; my voice was thick with sighs,
|
|
As in a dream. Dimly I could descry
|
|
The stern black-bearded kings, with wolfish eyes,
|
|
Waiting to see me die.
|
|
|
|
"The tall masts quivered as they lay afloat,
|
|
The temples and the people and the shore;
|
|
One drew a shark knife through my tender throat
|
|
Slowly,- and- nothing more."
|
|
|
|
The wind now proving fair the fleet made sail and brought the forces
|
|
to the coast of Troy. The Trojans came to oppose their landing, and at
|
|
the first onset Protesilaus fell by the hand of Hector. Protesilaus
|
|
had left at home his wife, Laodamia, who was most tenderly attached to
|
|
him. When the news of his death reached her she implored the gods to
|
|
be allowed to converse with him only three hours. The request was
|
|
granted. Mercury led Protesilaus back to the upper world, and when
|
|
he died a second time Laodamia died with him. There was a story that
|
|
the nymphs planted elm trees round his grave which grew very well till
|
|
they were high enough to command a view of Troy, and then withered
|
|
away, while fresh branches sprang from the roots.
|
|
|
|
Wordsworth has taken the story of Protesilaus and Laodamia for the
|
|
subject of a poem. It seems the oracle had declared that victory
|
|
should be the lot of that party from which should fall the first
|
|
victim to the war. The poet represents Protesilaus, on his brief
|
|
return to earth, as relating to Laodamia the story of his fate:
|
|
|
|
"'The wished-for wind was given; I then revolved
|
|
The oracle, upon the silent sea;
|
|
And if no worthier led the way, resolved
|
|
That of a thousand vessels mine should be
|
|
The foremost prow impressing to the strand,-
|
|
Mine the first blood that tinged the Trojan sand.
|
|
|
|
"'Yet bitter, ofttimes bitter was the pang
|
|
When of thy loss I thought, beloved wife!
|
|
On thee too fondly did my memory hang,
|
|
And on the joys we shared in mortal life,
|
|
The paths which we had trod,- these fountains, flowers;
|
|
My new planned cities and unfinished towers.
|
|
|
|
"'But should suspense permit the foe to cry,
|
|
"Behold they tremble! haughty their array,
|
|
Yet of their number no one dares to die?"
|
|
In soul I swept the indignity away:
|
|
Old frailties then recurred: but lofty thought
|
|
In act embodied my deliverance wrought.'
|
|
|
|
. . . . . . .
|
|
|
|
"...upon the side
|
|
Of Hellespont (such faith was entertained)
|
|
A knot of spiry trees for ages grew
|
|
From out the tomb of him for whom she died;
|
|
And ever when such stature they had gained
|
|
That Ilium's walls were subject to their view,
|
|
The trees' tall summits withered at the sight,
|
|
A constant interchange of growth and blight!"
|
|
|
|
"THE ILIAD".
|
|
|
|
The war continued without decisive results for nine years. Then an
|
|
event occurred which seemed likely to be fatal to the cause of the
|
|
Greeks, and that was a quarrel between Achilles and Agamemnon. It is
|
|
at this point that the great poem of Homer, "The Iliad," begins. The
|
|
Greeks, though unsuccessful against Troy, had taken the neighbouring
|
|
and allied cities, and in the division of the spoil a female
|
|
captive, by name Chryseis, daughter of Chryses, priest of Apollo,
|
|
had fallen to the share of Agamemnon. Chryses came bearing the
|
|
sacred emblems of his office, and begged the release of his
|
|
daughter. Agamemnon refused. Thereupon Chryses implored Apollo to
|
|
afflict the Greeks till they should be forced to yield their prey.
|
|
Apollo granted the prayer of his priest, and sent pestilence into
|
|
the Grecian camp. Then a council was called to deliberate how to allay
|
|
the wrath of the gods and avert the plague. Achilles boldly charged
|
|
their misfortunes upon Agamemnon as caused by his withholding
|
|
Chryseis. Agamemnon, enraged, consented to relinquish his captive, but
|
|
demanded that Achilles should yield to him in her stead Briseis, a
|
|
maiden who had fallen to Achilles' share in the division of the spoil.
|
|
Achilles submitted, but forthwith declared that he would take no
|
|
further part in the war. He withdrew his forces from the general
|
|
camp and openly avowed his intention of returning home to Greece.
|
|
The gods and goddesses interested themselves as much in this
|
|
famous war as the parties themselves. It was well known to them that
|
|
fate had decreed that Troy should fall, at last, if her enemies should
|
|
persevere and not voluntarily abandon the enterprise. Yet there was
|
|
room enough left for chance to excite by turns the hopes and fears
|
|
of the powers above who took part with either side. Juno and
|
|
Minerva, in consequence of the slight put upon their charms by
|
|
Paris, were hostile to the Trojans; Venus for the opposite cause
|
|
favoured them. Venus enlisted her admirer Mars on the same side, but
|
|
Neptune favoured the Greeks. Apollo was neutral, sometimes taking
|
|
one side, sometimes the other, and Jove himself, though he loved the
|
|
good King Priam, yet exercised a degree of impartiality; not, however,
|
|
without exceptions.
|
|
Thetis, the mother of Achilles, warmly resented the injury done to
|
|
her son. She repaired immediately to Jove's palace and besought him to
|
|
make the Greeks repent of their injustice to Achilles by granting
|
|
success to the Trojan arms. Jupiter consented, and in the battle which
|
|
ensued the Trojans were completely successful. The Greeks were
|
|
driven from the field and took refuge in their ships.
|
|
Then Agamemnon called a council of his wisest and bravest chiefs.
|
|
Nestor advised that an embassy should be sent to Achilles to
|
|
persuade him to return to the field; that Agamemnon should yield the
|
|
maiden, the cause of the dispute, with ample gifts to atone for the
|
|
wrong he had done. Agamemnon consented, and Ulysses, Ajax and
|
|
Phoenix were sent to carry to Achilles the penitent message. They
|
|
performed that duty, but Achilles was deaf to their entreaties. He
|
|
positively refused to return to the field, and persisted in his
|
|
resolution to embark for Greece without delay.
|
|
The Greeks had constructed a rampart around their ships, and now
|
|
instead of besieging Troy they were in a manner besieged themselves,
|
|
within their rampart. The next day after the unsuccessful embassy to
|
|
Achilles, a battle was fought, and the Trojans, favoured by Jove, were
|
|
successful, and succeeded in forcing a passage through the Grecian
|
|
rampart, and were about to set fire to the ships. Neptune, seeing
|
|
the Greeks so pressed, came to their rescue. He appeared in the form
|
|
of Calchas the prophet, encouraged the warriors with his shouts, and
|
|
appealed to each individually till he raised their ardour to such a
|
|
pitch that they forced the Trojans to give way. Ajax performed
|
|
prodigies of valour, and at length encountered Hector. Ajax shouted
|
|
defiance, to which Hector replied, and hurled his lance at the huge
|
|
warrior. It was well aimed and struck Ajax, where the belts that
|
|
bore his sword and shield crossed each other on the breast. The double
|
|
guard prevented its penetrating and it fell harmless. Then Ajax,
|
|
seizing a huge stone, one of those that served to prop the ships,
|
|
hurled it at Hector. It struck him in the neck and stretched him on
|
|
the plain. His followers instantly seized him and bore him off,
|
|
stunned an wounded.
|
|
While Neptune was thus aiding the Greeks and driving back the
|
|
Trojans, Jupiter saw nothing of what was going on, for his attention
|
|
had been drawn from the field by the wiles of Juno. That goddess had
|
|
arrayed herself in all her charms, and to crown all had borrowed of
|
|
Venus her girdle, called "Cestus," which had the effect to heighten
|
|
the wearer's charms to such a degree that they were quite
|
|
irresistible. So prepared, Juno went to Join her husband, who sat on
|
|
Olympus watching the battle. When he beheld her she looked so charming
|
|
that the fondness of his early love revived, and, forgetting the
|
|
contending armies and all other affairs of state, he thought only of
|
|
her and let the battle go as it would.
|
|
But this absorption did not continue long, and when, upon turning
|
|
his eyes downward, he beheld Hector stretched on the plain almost
|
|
lifeless from pain and bruises, he dismissed Juno in a rage,
|
|
commanding her to send Iris and Apollo to him. When Iris came he
|
|
sent her with a stern message to Neptune, ordering him instantly to
|
|
quit the field. Apollo was despatched to heal Hector's bruises and
|
|
to inspirit his heart. These orders were obeyed with such speed
|
|
that, while the battle still raged, Hector returned to the field and
|
|
Neptune betook himself to his own dominions.
|
|
An arrow from Paris's bow wounded Machaon, son of AEsculapius, who
|
|
inherited his father's art of healing, and was therefore of great
|
|
value to the Greeks as their surgeon, besides being one of their
|
|
bravest warriors. Nestor took Machaon in his chariot and conveyed
|
|
him from the field. As they passed the ships of Achilles, that hero,
|
|
looking out over the field, saw the chariot of Nestor and recognized
|
|
the old chief, but could not discern who the wounded chief was. So
|
|
calling Patroclus, his companion and dearest friend, he sent him to
|
|
Nestor's tent to inquire.
|
|
Patroclus, arriving at Nestor's tent, saw Machaon wounded, and
|
|
having told the cause of his coming would have hastened away, but
|
|
Nestor detained him, to tell him the extent of the Grecian calamities.
|
|
He reminded him also how, at the time of departing for Troy,
|
|
Achilles and himself had been charged by their respective fathers with
|
|
different advice: Achilles to aspire to the highest pitch of glory,
|
|
Patroclus, as the elder, to keep watch over his friend, and to guide
|
|
his inexperience. "Now," said Nestor, "is the time for such influence.
|
|
If the gods so please, thou mayest win him back to the common cause;
|
|
but if not let him at least send his soldiers to the field, and come
|
|
thou, Patroclus, clad in his armour, and perhaps the very sight of
|
|
it may drive back the Trojans."
|
|
Patroclus was strongly moved with this address, and hastened back to
|
|
Achilles, revolving in his mind all he had seen and heard. He told the
|
|
prince the sad condition of affairs at the camp of their late
|
|
associates: Diomede, Ulysses, Agamemnon, Machaon, all wounded, the
|
|
rampart broken down, the enemy among the ships preparing to burn them,
|
|
and thus to cut off all means of return to Greece. While they spoke
|
|
the flames burst forth from one of the ships. Achilles, at the
|
|
sight, relented so far as to grant Patroclus his request to lead the
|
|
Myrmidons (for so were Achilles' soldiers called) to the field, and to
|
|
lend him his armour, that he might thereby strike more terror into the
|
|
minds of the Trojans. Without delay the soldiers were marshalled,
|
|
Patroclus put on the radiant armour and mounted the chariot of
|
|
Achilles, and led forth the men ardent for battle. But before he went,
|
|
Achilles strictly charged him that he should be content with repelling
|
|
the foe. "Seek not," said he, "to press the Trojans without me, lest
|
|
thou add still more to the disgrace already mine." Then exhorting
|
|
the troops to do their best he dismissed them full of ardour to the
|
|
fight.
|
|
Patroclus and his Myrmidons at once plunged into the contest where
|
|
it raged hottest; at the sight of which the joyful Grecians shouted
|
|
and the ships re-echoed the acclaim. The Trojans, at the sight of
|
|
the well-known armour, struck with terror, looked everywhere for
|
|
refuge. First those who had got possession of the ship and set it on
|
|
fire left and allowed the Grecians to retake it and extinguish the
|
|
flames. Then the rest of the Trojans fled in dismay. Ajax, Menelaus,
|
|
and the two sons of Nestor performed prodigies of valour. Hector was
|
|
forced to turn his horses' heads and retire from the enclosure,
|
|
leaving his men entangled in the fosse to escape as they could.
|
|
Patroclus drove them before him, slaying many, none daring to make a
|
|
stand against him.
|
|
At last Sarpedon, son of Jove, ventured to oppose himself in fight
|
|
to Patroclus. Jupiter looked down upon him and would have snatched him
|
|
from the fate which awaited him, but Juno hinted that if he did so
|
|
it would induce all others of the inhabitants of heaven to interpose
|
|
in like manner whenever any of their offspring were endangered; to
|
|
which reason Jove yielded. Sarpedon threw his spear, but missed
|
|
Patroclus, but Patroclus threw his with better success. It pierced
|
|
Sarpedon's breast and he fell, and, calling to his friends to save his
|
|
body from the foe, expired. Then a furious contest arose for the
|
|
possession of the corpse. The Greeks succeeded and stripped Sarpedon
|
|
of his armour; but Jove would not allow the remains of his son to be
|
|
dishonoured, and by his command Apollo snatched from the midst of
|
|
the combatants the body of Sarpedon and committed it to the care of
|
|
the twin brothers Death and Sleep, by whom it was transported to
|
|
Lycia, the native land of Sarpedon, where it received due funeral
|
|
rites.
|
|
Thus far Patroclus had succeeded to his utmost wish in repelling the
|
|
Trojans and relieving his countrymen, but now came a change of
|
|
fortune. Hector, borne in his chariot, confronted him. Patroclus threw
|
|
a vast stone at Hector, which missed its aim, but smote Cebriones, the
|
|
charioteer, and knocked him from the car. Hector leaped from the
|
|
chariot to rescue his friend, and Patroclus also descended to complete
|
|
his victory. Thus the two heroes met face to face. At this decisive
|
|
moment the poet, as if reluctant to give Hector the glory, records
|
|
that Phoebus took part against Patroclus. He struck the helmet from
|
|
his head and the lance from his hand. At the same moment an obscure
|
|
Trojan wounded him in the back, and Hector, pressing forward,
|
|
pierced him with his spear. He fell mortally wounded.
|
|
Then arose a tremendous conflict for the body of Patroclus, but
|
|
his armour was at once taken possession of by Hector, who retiring a
|
|
short distance divested himself of his own armour and put on that of
|
|
Achilles, then returned to the fight. Ajax and Menelaus defended the
|
|
body, and Hector and his bravest warriors struggled to capture it. The
|
|
battle raged with equal fortunes, when Jove enveloped the whole face
|
|
of heaven with a dark cloud. The lightning flashed, the thunder
|
|
roared, and Ajax, looking round for some one whom he might despatch to
|
|
Achilles to tell him of the death of his friend, and of the imminent
|
|
danger that his remains would fall into the hands of the enemy,
|
|
could see no suitable messenger. It was then that he exclaimed in
|
|
those famous lines so often quoted,
|
|
|
|
"Father of heaven and earth! deliver thou
|
|
Achaia's host from darkness; clear the skies;
|
|
Give day; and, since thy sovereign will is such,
|
|
Destruction with it; but, O, give us day."
|
|
Cowper.
|
|
|
|
Or, as rendered by Pope,
|
|
|
|
"...Lord of earth and air!
|
|
O king! O father! hear my humble prayer!
|
|
Dispel this cloud, the light of heaven restore;
|
|
Give me to see and Ajax asks no more;
|
|
If Greece must perish we thy will obey,
|
|
But let us perish in the face of day."
|
|
|
|
Jupiter heard the prayer and dispersed the clouds. Then Ajax sent
|
|
Antilochus to Achilles with the intelligence of Patroclus's death, and
|
|
of the conflict raging for his remains. The Greeks at last succeeded
|
|
in bearing off the body to the ships, closely pursued by Hector and
|
|
AEneas and the rest of the Trojans.
|
|
Achilles heard the fate of his friend with such distress that
|
|
Antilochus feared for a while that he would destroy himself. His
|
|
groans reached the ears of his mother, Thetis, far down in the deeps
|
|
of ocean where she abode, and she hastened to him to inquire the
|
|
cause. She found him overwhelmed with self-reproach that he had
|
|
indulged his resentment so far, and suffered his friend to fall a
|
|
victim to it. But his only consolation was the hope of revenge. He
|
|
would fly instantly in search of Hector. But his mother reminded him
|
|
that he was now without armour, and promised him, if he would but wait
|
|
till the morrow, she would procure for him a suit of armour from
|
|
Vulcan more than equal to that he had lost. He consented, and Thetis
|
|
immediately repaired to Vulcan's palace. She found him busy at his
|
|
forge making tripods for his own use, so artfully constructed that
|
|
they moved forward of their own accord when wanted, and retired
|
|
again when dismissed. On hearing the request of Thetis, Vulcan
|
|
immediately laid aside his work and hastened to comply with her
|
|
wishes. He fabricated a splendid suit of armour for Achilles, first
|
|
a shield adorned with elaborate devices, then a helmet crested with
|
|
gold, then a corselet and greaves of impenetrable temper, all
|
|
perfectly adapted to his form, and of consummate workmanship. It was
|
|
all done in one night, and Thetis, receiving it, descended with it
|
|
to earth and laid it down at Achilles' feet at the dawn of day.
|
|
The first glow of pleasure that Achilles had felt since the death of
|
|
Patroclus was at the sight of this splendid armour. And now, arrayed
|
|
in it, he went forth into the camp, calling all the chiefs to council.
|
|
When they were all assembled he addressed them. Renouncing his
|
|
displeasure against Agamemnon and bitterly lamenting the miseries that
|
|
had resulted from it, he called on them to proceed at once to the
|
|
field. Agamemnon made a suitable reply, laying all the blame on Ate,
|
|
the goddess of discord; and thereupon complete reconcilement took
|
|
place between the heroes.
|
|
Then Achilles went forth to battle inspired with a rage and thirst
|
|
for vengeance that made him irresistible. The bravest warriors fled
|
|
before him or fell by his lance. Hector, cautioned by Apollo, kept
|
|
aloof; but the god, assuming the form of one of Priam's sons,
|
|
Lycaon, urged AEneas to encounter the terrible warrior. AEneas, though
|
|
he felt himself unequal, did not decline the combat. He hurled his
|
|
spear with all his force against the shield, the work of Vulcan. It
|
|
was formed of five metal plates; two were of brass, two of tin, and
|
|
one of gold. The spear pierced two thicknesses, but was stopped in the
|
|
third. Achilles threw his with better success. It pierced through
|
|
the shield of AEneas, but glanced near his shoulder and made no wound.
|
|
Then AEneas seized a stone, such as two men of modern times could
|
|
hardly lift, and was about to throw it, and Achilles, with sword
|
|
drawn, was about to rush upon him, when Neptune, who looked out upon
|
|
the contest, moved with pity for AEneas, who he saw would surely
|
|
fall a victim if not speedily rescued, spread a cloud between the
|
|
combatants, and lifting AEneas from the ground, bore him over the
|
|
heads of warriors and steeds to the rear of the battle. Achilles, when
|
|
the mist cleared away, looked round in vain for his adversary, and
|
|
acknowledging the prodigy, turned his arms against other champions.
|
|
But none dared stand before him, and Priam looking down from the
|
|
city walls beheld his whole army in full flight towards the city. He
|
|
gave command to open wide the gates to receive the fugitives, and to
|
|
shut them as soon as the Trojans should have passed, lest the enemy
|
|
should enter likewise. But Achilles was so close in pursuit that
|
|
that would have been impossible if Apollo had not, in the form of
|
|
Agenor, Priam's son, encountered Achilles for a while, then turned
|
|
to fly, and taken the way apart from the city. Achilles pursued and
|
|
had chased his supposed victim far from the walls, when Apollo
|
|
disclosed himself, and Achilles, perceiving how he had been deluded,
|
|
gave up the chase.
|
|
But when the rest had escaped into the town Hector stood without
|
|
determined to await the combat. His old father called to him from
|
|
the walls and begged him to retire nor tempt the encounter. His
|
|
mother, Hecuba, also besought him to the same effect, but all in vain.
|
|
"How can I," said he to himself, "by whose command the people went
|
|
to this day's contest, where so many have fallen, seek safety for
|
|
myself against a single foe? But what if I offer him to yield up Helen
|
|
and all her treasures and ample of our own beside? Ah, no! it is too
|
|
late. He would not even hear me through, but slay me while I spoke."
|
|
While he thus ruminated, Achilles approached, terrible as Mars, his
|
|
armour flashing lightning as he moved. At that sight Hector's heart
|
|
failed him and he fled. Achilles swiftly pursued. They ran, still
|
|
keeping near the walls, till they had thrice encircled the city. As
|
|
often as Hector approached the walls Achilles intercepted him and
|
|
forced him to keep out in a wider circle. But Apollo sustained
|
|
Hector's strength and would not let him sink in weariness. Then
|
|
Pallas, assuming the form of Deiphobus, Hector's bravest brother,
|
|
appeared suddenly at his side. Hector saw him with delight, and thus
|
|
strengthened stopped his flight and turned to meet Achilles. Hector
|
|
threw his spear, which struck the shield of Achilles and bounded back.
|
|
He. turned to receive another from the hand of Deiphobus, but
|
|
Deiphobus was gone. Then Hector understood his doom and said, "Alas!
|
|
it is plain this is my hour to die! I thought Deiphobus at hand, but
|
|
Pallas deceived me, and he is still in Troy. But I will not fall
|
|
inglorious." So saying he drew his falchion from his side and rushed
|
|
at once to combat. Achilles, secure behind his shield, waited the
|
|
approach of Hector. When he came within reach of his spear, Achilles
|
|
choosing with his eye a vulnerable part where the armour leaves the
|
|
neck uncovered, aimed his spear at that part and Hector fell,
|
|
death-wounded, and feebly said, "Spare my body! Let my parents
|
|
ransom it, and let me receive funeral rites from the sons and
|
|
daughters of Troy." To which Achilles replied, "Dog, name not ransom
|
|
nor pity to me, on whom you have brought such dire distress. No! trust
|
|
me, nought shall save thy carcass from the dogs. Though twenty ransoms
|
|
and thy weight in gold were offered, I would refuse it all."
|
|
So saying he stripped the body of its armour, and fastening cords to
|
|
the feet tied them behind his chariot, leaving the body to trail along
|
|
the ground. Then mounting the chariot he lashed the steeds and so
|
|
dragged the body to and fro before the city. What words can tell the
|
|
grief of King Priam and Queen Hecuba at this sight! His people could
|
|
scarce restrain the old king from rushing forth. He threw himself in
|
|
the dust and besought them each by name to give him way. Hecuba's
|
|
distress was not less violent. The citizens stood round them
|
|
weeping. The sound of the mourning reached the ears of Andromache, the
|
|
wife of Hector, as she sat among her maidens at work, and anticipating
|
|
evil she went forth to the wall. When she saw the sight there
|
|
presented, she would have thrown herself headlong from the wall, but
|
|
fainted and fell into the arms of her maidens. Recovering, she
|
|
bewailed her fate, picturing to herself her country ruined, herself
|
|
a captive, and her son dependent for his bread on the charity of
|
|
strangers.
|
|
When Achilles and the Greeks had taken their revenge on the killer
|
|
of Patroclus they busied themselves in paying due funeral rites to
|
|
their friend. A pile was erected, and the body burned with due
|
|
solemnity; and then ensued games of strength and skill, chariot races,
|
|
wrestling, boxing and archery. Then the chiefs sat down to the funeral
|
|
banquet and after that retired to rest. But Achilles neither partook
|
|
of the feast nor of sleep. The recollection of his lost friend kept
|
|
him awake, remembering their companionship in toil and dangers, in
|
|
battle or on the perilous deep. Before the earliest dawn he left his
|
|
tent, and joining to his chariot his swift steeds, he fastened
|
|
Hector's body to be dragged behind. Twice he dragged him round the
|
|
tomb of Patroclus, leaving him at length stretched in the dust. But
|
|
Apollo would not permit the body to be torn or disfigured with all
|
|
this abuse, but preserved it free from all taint or defilement.
|
|
While Achilles indulged his wrath in thus disgracing brave Hector,
|
|
Jupiter in pity summoned Thetis to his presence. He told her to go
|
|
to her son and prevail on him to restore the body of Hector to his
|
|
friends. Then Jupiter sent Iris to King Priam to encourage him to go
|
|
to Achilles and beg the body of his son. Iris delivered her message,
|
|
and Priam immediately prepared to obey. He opened his treasuries and
|
|
took out rich garments and cloths, with ten talents in gold and two
|
|
splendid tripods and a golden cup of matchless workmanship. Then he
|
|
called to his sons and bade them draw forth his litter and place in it
|
|
the various articles designed for a ransom to Achilles. When all was
|
|
ready, the old king with a single companion as aged as himself, the
|
|
herald Idaeus, drove forth from the gates, parting there with
|
|
Hecuba, his queen, and all his friends, who lamented him as going to
|
|
certain death.
|
|
But Jupiter, beholding with compassion the venerable king, sent
|
|
Mercury to be his guide and protector. Mercury, assuming the form of a
|
|
young warrior, presented himself to the aged couple, and while at
|
|
the sight of him they hesitated whether to fly or yield, the god
|
|
approached, and grasping Priam's hand offered to be their guide to
|
|
Achilles' tent. Priam gladly accepted his offered service, and he,
|
|
mounting the carriage, assumed the reins and soon conveyed them to the
|
|
tent of Achilles. Mercury's wand put to sleep all the guards, and
|
|
without hindrance he introduced Priam into the tent where Achilles
|
|
sat, attended by two of his warriors. The old king threw himself at
|
|
the feet of Achilles, and kissed those terrible hands which had
|
|
destroyed so many of his sons. "Think, O Achilles," he said, "of thy
|
|
own father, full of days like me, and trembling on the gloomy verge of
|
|
life. Perhaps even now some neighbour chief oppresses him and there is
|
|
none at hand to succour him in his distress. Yet doubtless knowing
|
|
that Achilles lives he still rejoices, hoping that one day he shall
|
|
see thy face again. But no comfort cheers me, whose bravest sons, so
|
|
late the flower of Ilium, all have fallen. Yet one I had, one more
|
|
than all the rest the strength of my age, whom, fighting for his
|
|
country, thou hast slain. I come to redeem his body, bringing
|
|
inestimable ransom with me. Achilles! reverence the gods! recollect
|
|
thy father! for his sake show compassion to me!" These words moved
|
|
Achilles, and he wept remembering by turns his absent father and his
|
|
lost friend. Moved with pity of Priam's silver locks and beard, he
|
|
raised him from the earth, and thus spake: "Priam, I know that thou
|
|
hast reached this place conducted by some god, for without aid
|
|
divine no mortal even in his prime of youth had dared the attempt. I
|
|
grant thy request, moved thereto by the evident will of Jove." So
|
|
saying he arose, and went forth with his two friends, and unloaded
|
|
of its charge the litter, leaving two mantles and a robe for the
|
|
covering of the body, which they placed on the litter, and spread
|
|
the garments over it, that not unveiled it should be borne back to
|
|
Troy. Then Achilles dismissed the old king with his attendants, having
|
|
first pledged himself to allow a truce of twelve days for the
|
|
funeral solemnities.
|
|
As the litter approached the city and was descried from the walls,
|
|
the people poured forth to gaze once more on the face of their hero.
|
|
Foremost of all, the mother and the wife of Hector came, and at the
|
|
sight of the lifeless body renewed their lamentations. The people
|
|
all wept with them, and to the going down of the sun there was no
|
|
pause or abatement of their grief.
|
|
The next day preparations were made for the funeral solemnities. For
|
|
nine days the people brought wood and built the pile, and on the tenth
|
|
they placed the body on the summit and applied the torch; while all
|
|
Troy thronging forth encompassed the pile. When it had completely
|
|
burned, they quenched the cinders with wine, collected the bones and
|
|
placed them in a golden urn, which they buried in the earth, and
|
|
reared a pile of stones over the spot.
|
|
|
|
"Such honours Ilium to her hero paid,
|
|
And peaceful slept the mighty Hector's shade."
|
|
Pope.
|
|
CHAPTER XXVIII.
|
|
THE FALL OF TROY- RETURN OF THE GREEKS-
|
|
AGAMEMNON, ORESTES AND ELECTRA.
|
|
|
|
THE FALL OF TROY.
|
|
|
|
THE story of the Iliad ends with the death of Hector, and it is from
|
|
the Odyssey and later poems that we learn the fate of the other
|
|
heroes. After the death of Hector, Troy did not immediately fall,
|
|
but receiving aid from new allies still continued its resistance.
|
|
One of these allies was Memnon, the AEthiopian prince, whose story
|
|
we have already told. Another was Penthesilea, queen of the Amazons,
|
|
who came with a band of female warriors. All the authorities attest
|
|
their valour and the fearful effect of their war cry. Penthesilea slew
|
|
many of the bravest warriors, but was at last slain by Achilles. But
|
|
when the hero bent over his fallen foe, and contemplated her beauty,
|
|
youth and valour, he bitterly regretted his victory. Thersites, an
|
|
insolent brawler and demagogue, ridiculed his grief, and was in
|
|
consequence slain by the hero.
|
|
Achilles by chance had seen Polyxena, daughter of King Priam,
|
|
perhaps on occasion of the truce which was allowed the Trojans for the
|
|
burial of Hector. He was captivated with her charms, and to win her in
|
|
marriage agreed to use his influence with the Greeks to grant peace to
|
|
Troy. While in the temple of Apollo, negotiating the marriage, Paris
|
|
discharged at him a poisoned arrow, which, guided by Apollo, wounded
|
|
Achilles in the heel, the only vulnerable part about him. For Thetis
|
|
his mother had dipped him when an infant in the river Styx, which made
|
|
every part of him invulnerable except the heel by which she held him.*
|
|
|
|
* The story of the invulnerability of Achilles is not found in
|
|
Homer, and is inconsistent with his account. For how could Achilles
|
|
require the aid of celestial armour if he were invulnerable?
|
|
|
|
The body of Achilles so treacherously slain was rescued by Ajax
|
|
and Ulysses. Thetis directed the Greeks to bestow her son's armour
|
|
on the hero who of all the survivors should be judged most deserving
|
|
of it. Ajax and Ulysses were the only claimants; a select number of
|
|
the other chiefs were appointed to award the prize. It was awarded
|
|
to Ulysses, thus placing wisdom before valour, whereupon Ajax slew
|
|
himself. On the spot where his blood sank into the earth a flower
|
|
sprang up, called the hyacinth, bearing on its leaves the first two
|
|
letters of the name of Ajax, Ai, the Greek for "woe." Thus Ajax is a
|
|
claimant with the boy Hyacinthus for the honour of giving birth to
|
|
this flower. There is a species of Larkspur which represents the
|
|
hyacinth of the poets in preserving the memory of this event, the
|
|
Delphinium Ajacis- Ajax's Larkspur.
|
|
It was now discovered that Troy could not be taken but by the aid of
|
|
the arrows of Hercules. They were in possession of Philoctetes, the
|
|
friend who had been with Hercules at the last and lighted his
|
|
funeral pyre. Philoctetes had joined the Grecian expedition against
|
|
Troy, but had accidentally wounded his foot with one of the poisoned
|
|
arrows, and the smell from his wound proved so offensive that his
|
|
companions carried him to the isle of Lemnos and left him there.
|
|
Diomed was now sent to induce him to rejoin the army. He succeeded.
|
|
Philoctetes was cured of his wound by Machaon, and Paris was the first
|
|
victim of the fatal arrows. In his distress Paris bethought him of one
|
|
whom in his prosperity he had forgotten. This was the nymph OEnone,
|
|
whom he had married when a youth, and had abandoned for the fatal
|
|
beauty Helen. OEnone remembering the wrongs she had suffered,
|
|
refused to heal the wound, and Paris went back to Troy and died.
|
|
OEnone quickly repented, and hastened after him with remedies, but
|
|
came too late, and in her grief hung herself.*
|
|
|
|
* Tennyson has chosen OEnone as the subject of a short poem; but
|
|
he has omitted the most poetical part of the story, the return of
|
|
Paris wounded, her cruelty and subsequent repentance.
|
|
|
|
There was in Troy a celebrated statue of Minerva called the
|
|
Palladium. It was said to have fallen from heaven, and the belief
|
|
was that the city could not be taken so long as this statue remained
|
|
within it. Ulysses and Diomed entered the city in disguise and
|
|
succeeded in obtaining the Palladium, which they carried off to the
|
|
Grecian camp.
|
|
But Troy still held out, and the Greeks began to despair of ever
|
|
subduing it by force, and by advice of Ulysses resolved to resort to
|
|
stratagem. They pretended to be making preparations to abandon the
|
|
siege, and a portion of the ships were withdrawn and lay hid behind
|
|
a neighbouring island. The Greeks then constructed an immense wooden
|
|
horse, which they gave out was intended as a propitiatory offering
|
|
to Minerva, but in fact was filled with armed men. The remaining
|
|
Greeks then betook themselves to their ships and sailed away, as if
|
|
for a final departure. The Trojans, seeing the encampment broken up
|
|
and the fleet gone, concluded the enemy to have abandoned the siege.
|
|
The gates were thrown open, and the whole population issued forth
|
|
rejoicing at the long-prohibited liberty of passing freely over the
|
|
scene of the late encampment. The great horse was the chief object
|
|
of curiosity. All wondered what it could be for. Some recommended to
|
|
take it into the city as a trophy; others felt afraid of it.
|
|
While they hesitate, Laocoon, the priest of Neptune, exclaims, "What
|
|
madness, citizens, is this? Have you not learned enough of Grecian
|
|
fraud to be on your guard against it? For my part, I fear the Greeks
|
|
even when they offer gifts."* So saying he threw his lance at the
|
|
horse's side. It struck, and a hollow sound reverberated like a groan.
|
|
Then perhaps the people might have taken his advice and destroyed
|
|
the fatal horse and all its contents; but just at that moment a
|
|
group of people appeared, dragging forward one who seemed a prisoner
|
|
and a Greek. Stupefied with terror, he was brought before the
|
|
chiefs, who reassured him, promising that his life should be spared on
|
|
condition of his returning true answers to the questions asked him. He
|
|
informed them that he was a Greek, Sinon by name, and that in
|
|
consequence of the malice of Ulysses he had been left behind by his
|
|
countrymen at their departure. With regard to the wooden horse, he
|
|
told them that it was a propitiatory offering to Minerva, and made
|
|
so huge for the express purpose of preventing its being carried within
|
|
the city; for Calchas the prophet had told them that if the Trojans
|
|
took possession of it they would assuredly triumph over the Greeks.
|
|
This language turned the tide of the people's feelings and they
|
|
began to think how they might best secure the monstrous horse and
|
|
the favourable auguries connected with it, when suddenly a prodigy
|
|
occurred which left no room to doubt. There appeared, advancing over
|
|
the sea, two immense serpents. They came upon the land, and the
|
|
crowd fled in all directions. The serpents advanced directly to the
|
|
spot where Laocoon stood with his two sons. They first attacked the
|
|
children, winding round their bodies and breathing their
|
|
pestilential breath in their faces. The father, attempting to rescue
|
|
them, is next seized and involved in the serpents' coils. He struggles
|
|
to tear them away, but they overpower all his efforts and strangle him
|
|
and the children in their poisonous folds. This event was regarded
|
|
as a clear indication of the displeasure of the gods at Laocoon's
|
|
irreverent treatment of the wooden horse, which they no longer
|
|
hesitated to regard as a sacred object, and prepared to introduce with
|
|
due solemnity into the city. This was done with songs and triumphal
|
|
acclamations, and the day closed with festivity. In the night the
|
|
armed men who were enclosed in the body of the horse, being let out by
|
|
the traitor Sinon, opened the gates of the city to their friends,
|
|
who had returned under cover of the night. The city was set on fire;
|
|
the people, overcome with feasting and sleep, put to the sword, and
|
|
Troy completely subdued.
|
|
|
|
* See Proverbial Expressions, no. 6.
|
|
|
|
One of the most celebrated groups of statuary in existence is that
|
|
of Laocoon and his children in the embrace of the serpents. The
|
|
original is in the Vatican at Rome. The following lines are from the
|
|
"Childe Harold" of Byron:
|
|
|
|
"Now turning to the Vatican go see
|
|
Laocoon's torture dignifying pain;
|
|
A father's love and mortal's agony
|
|
With an immortal's patience blending;- vain
|
|
The struggle! vain against the coiling strain
|
|
And gripe and deepening of the dragon's grasp
|
|
The old man's clinch; the long envenomed chain
|
|
Rivets the living links; the enormous asp
|
|
Enforces pang on pang and stifles gasp on gasp."
|
|
|
|
The comic poets will also occasionally borrow a classical
|
|
allusion. The following is from Swift's "Description of a City
|
|
Shower":
|
|
|
|
"Boxed in a chair the beau impatient sits,
|
|
While spouts run clattering o'er the roof by fits,
|
|
And ever and anon with frightful din
|
|
The leather sounds; he trembles from within.
|
|
So when Troy chairmen bore the wooden steed
|
|
Pregnant with Greeks impatient to be freed,
|
|
(Those bully Greeks, who, as the moderns do,
|
|
Instead of paying chairmen, run them through);
|
|
Laocoon struck the outside with a spear,
|
|
And each imprisoned champion quaked with fear."
|
|
|
|
King Priam lived to see the downfall of his kingdom and was slain at
|
|
last on the fatal night when the Greeks took the city. He had armed
|
|
himself and was about to mingle with the combatants, but was prevailed
|
|
on by Hecuba, his aged queen, to take refuge with herself and his
|
|
daughters as a suppliant at the altar of Jupiter. While there, his
|
|
youngest son Polites, pursued by Pyrrhus, the son of Achilles,
|
|
rushed in wounded, and expired at the feet of his father; whereupon
|
|
Priam, overcome with indignation, hurled his spear with feeble hand
|
|
against Pyrrhus,* and was forthwith slain by him.
|
|
|
|
* Pyrrhus's exclamation, "Not such aid nor such defenders does the
|
|
time require," has become proverbial. See Proverbial Expressions,
|
|
no. 7.
|
|
|
|
Queen Hecuba and her daughter Cassandra were carried captives to
|
|
Greece. Cassandra had been loved by Apollo, and he gave her the gift
|
|
of prophecy; but afterwards offended with her, he rendered the gift
|
|
unavailing by ordaining that her predictions should never be believed.
|
|
Polyxena, another daughter, who had been loved by Achilles, was
|
|
demanded by the ghost of that warrior, and was sacrificed by the
|
|
Greeks upon his tomb.
|
|
|
|
MENELAUS AND HELEN.
|
|
|
|
Our readers will be anxious to know the fate of Helen, the fair
|
|
but guilty occasion of so much slaughter. On the fall of Troy Menelaus
|
|
recovered possession of his wife, who had not ceased to love him,
|
|
though she had yielded to the might of Venus and deserted him for
|
|
another. After the death of Paris she aided the Greeks secretly on
|
|
several occasions, and in particular when Ulysses and Diomed entered
|
|
the city in disguise to carry off the Palladium. She saw and
|
|
recognized Ulysses, but kept the secret and even assisted them in
|
|
obtaining the image. Thus she became reconciled to her husband, and
|
|
they were among the first to leave the shores of Troy for their native
|
|
land. But having incurred the displeasure of the gods they were driven
|
|
by storms from shore to shore of the Mediterranean, visiting Cyprus,
|
|
Phoenicia and Egypt. In Egypt they were kindly treated and presented
|
|
with rich gifts, of which Helen's share was a golden spindle and a
|
|
basket on wheels. The basket was to hold the wool and spools for the
|
|
queen's work.
|
|
|
|
Dyer, in his poem of the "Fleece," thus alludes to this incident:
|
|
|
|
"...many yet adhere
|
|
To the ancient distaff, at the bosom fixed,
|
|
Casting the whirling spindle as they walk.
|
|
|
|
. . . . . . . .
|
|
|
|
This was of old, in no inglorious days,
|
|
The mode of spinning, when the Egyptian prince
|
|
A golden distaff gave that beauteous nymph,
|
|
Too beauteous Helen; no uncourtly gift."
|
|
|
|
Milton also alludes to a famous recipe for an invigorating
|
|
draught, called Nepenthe, which the Egyptian queen gave to Helen:
|
|
|
|
"Not that Nepenthes which the wife of Thone
|
|
In Egypt gave to Jove-born Helena,
|
|
Is of such power to stir up joy as this,
|
|
To life so friendly or so cool to thirst."
|
|
Comus.
|
|
|
|
Menelaus and Helen at length arrived in safety at Sparta, resumed
|
|
their royal dignity, and lived and reigned in splendour; and when
|
|
Telemachus, the son of Ulysses, in search of his father, arrived at
|
|
Sparta, he found Menelaus and Helen celebrating the marriage of
|
|
their daughter Hermione to Neoptolemus, son of Achilles.
|
|
|
|
AGAMEMNON, ORESTES AND ELECTRA.
|
|
|
|
Agamemnon, the general-in-chief of the Greeks, the brother of
|
|
Menelaus, and who had been drawn into the quarrel to avenge his
|
|
brother's wrongs, not his own, was not so fortunate in the issue.
|
|
During his absence his wife Clytemnestra had been false to him, and
|
|
when his return was expected, she with her paramour, AEgisthus, laid a
|
|
plan for his destruction, and at the banquet given to celebrate his
|
|
return, murdered him.
|
|
It was intended by the conspirators to slay his son Orestes also,
|
|
a lad not yet old enough to be an object of apprehension, but from
|
|
whom, if he should be suffered to grow up, there might be danger.
|
|
Electra, the sister of Orestes, saved her brother's life by sending
|
|
him secretly away to his uncle Strophius, King of Phocis. In the
|
|
palace of Strophius Orestes grew up with the king's son Pylades, and
|
|
formed with him that ardent friendship which bas become proverbial.
|
|
Electra frequently reminded her brother by messengers of the duty of
|
|
avenging his father's death, and when grown up he consulted the oracle
|
|
of Delphi, which confirmed him in his design. He therefore repaired in
|
|
disguise to Argos, pretending to be a messenger from Strophius, who
|
|
had come to announce the death of Orestes, and brought the ashes of
|
|
the deceased in a funeral urn. After visiting his father's tomb and.
|
|
sacrificing upon it, according to the rites of the ancients he made
|
|
himself known to his sister Electra, and soon after slew both
|
|
AEgisthus and Clytemnestra.
|
|
This revolting act, the slaughter of a mother by her son, though
|
|
alleviated by the guilt of the victim and the express command of the
|
|
gods, did not fail to awaken in the breasts of the ancients the same
|
|
abhorrence that it does in ours. The Eumenides, avenging deities,
|
|
seized upon Orestes, and drove him frantic from land to land.
|
|
Pylades accompanied him in his wanderings and watched over him. At
|
|
length, in answer to a second appeal to the oracle, he was directed to
|
|
go to Tauris in Scythia, and to bring thence a statue of Diana which
|
|
was believed to have fallen from heaven. Accordingly Orestes and
|
|
Pylades went to Tauris, where the barbarous people were accustomed
|
|
to sacrifice to the goddess all strangers who fell into their hands.
|
|
The two friends were seized and carried bound to the temple to be made
|
|
victims. But the priestess of Diana was no other than Iphigenia, the
|
|
sister of Orestes, who, our readers will remember, was snatched away
|
|
by Diana at the moment when she was about to be sacrificed.
|
|
Ascertaining from the prisoners who they were, Iphigenia disclosed
|
|
herself to them, and the three made their escape with the statue of
|
|
the goddess, and returned to Mycenae.
|
|
But Orestes was not yet relieved from the vengeance of the
|
|
Erinyes. At length he took refuge with Minerva at Athens. The
|
|
goddess afforded him protection, and appointed the court of
|
|
Areopagus to decide his fate. The Erinyes brought forward their
|
|
accusation, and Orestes made the command of the Delphic oracle his
|
|
excuse. When the court voted and the voices were equally divided,
|
|
Orestes was acquitted by the command of Minerva.
|
|
|
|
Byron, in "Childe Harold," Canto IV., alludes to the story of
|
|
Orestes:
|
|
|
|
"O thou who never yet of human wrong
|
|
Left the unbalanced scale, great Nemesis!
|
|
Thou who didst call the Furies from the abyss,
|
|
And round Orestes bade them howl and hiss,
|
|
For that unnatural retribution,-just
|
|
Had it but been from hands less near,- in this,
|
|
Thy former realm, I call thee from the dust!"
|
|
|
|
One of the most pathetic scenes in the ancient drama is that in
|
|
which Sophocles represents the meeting of Orestes and Electra, on
|
|
his return from Phocis. Orestes, mistaking Electra for one of the
|
|
domestics, and desirous of keeping his arrival a secret till the
|
|
hour of vengeance should arrive, produces the urn in which his ashes
|
|
are supposed to rest. Electra, believing him to be really dead,
|
|
takes the urn and, embracing it, pours forth her grief in language
|
|
full of tenderness and despair.
|
|
|
|
Milton in one of his sonnets, says:
|
|
|
|
"...The repeated air
|
|
Of sad Electra's poet had the power
|
|
To save the Athenian walls from ruin bare."
|
|
|
|
This alludes to the story that when, on one occasion, the city of
|
|
Athens was at the mercy of her Spartan foes, and it was proposed to
|
|
destroy it, the thought was rejected upon the accidental quotation, by
|
|
some one, of a chorus of Euripides.
|
|
|
|
TROY.
|
|
|
|
After hearing so much about the city of Troy and its heroes, the
|
|
reader will perhaps be surprised to learn that the exact site of
|
|
that famous city is still a matter of dispute. There are some vestiges
|
|
of tombs on the plain which most nearly answers to the description
|
|
given by Homer and the ancient geographers, but no other evidence of
|
|
the former existence of a great city. Byron thus describes the present
|
|
appearance of the scene:
|
|
|
|
"The winds are high, and Helle's tide
|
|
Rolls darkly heaving to the main;
|
|
And night's descending shadows hide
|
|
That field with blood bedewed in vain,
|
|
The desert of old Priam's pride,
|
|
The tombs, sole relics of his reign.
|
|
All- save immortal dreams that could beguile
|
|
The blind old man of Scio's rocky isle."
|
|
Bride of Abydos.
|
|
CHAPTER XXIX.
|
|
ADVENTURES OF ULYSSES- THE LOTUS-EATERS- CYCLOPSE- CIRCE
|
|
-SIRENS- SCYLLA AND CHARYBDIS- CALYPSO.
|
|
|
|
RETURN OF ULYSSES.
|
|
|
|
THE romantic poem of the Odyssey is now to engage our attention.
|
|
It narrates the wanderings of Ulysses (Odysseus in the Greek language)
|
|
in his return from Troy to his own kingdom Ithaca.
|
|
From Troy the vessels first made land at Ismarus, city of the
|
|
Ciconians, where, in a skirmish with the inhabitants, Ulysses lost six
|
|
men from each ship. Sailing thence, they were overtaken by a storm
|
|
which drove them for nine days along the sea till they reached the
|
|
country of the Lotus-eaters. Here, after watering, Ulysses sent
|
|
three of his men to discover who the inhabitants were. These men on
|
|
coming among the Lotus-eaters were kindly entertained by them, and
|
|
were given some of their own food, the lotus-plant, to eat. The effect
|
|
of this food was such that those who partook of it lost all thoughts
|
|
of home and wished to remain in that country. It was by main force
|
|
that Ulysses dragged these men away, and he was even obliged to tie
|
|
them under the benches of his ships.*
|
|
|
|
* Tennyson in the "Lotos-eaters," has charmingly expressed the
|
|
dreamy languid feeling which the lotus food is said to have produced.
|
|
|
|
"How sweet it were, hearing the downward stream
|
|
With half-shut eyes ever to seem
|
|
Falling asleep in a half-dream!
|
|
To dream and dream, like yonder amber light
|
|
Which will not leave the myrrh-bush on the height;
|
|
To hear each other's whispered speech;
|
|
Eating the Lotos, day by day,
|
|
To watch the crisping ripples on the beach,
|
|
And tender curving lines of creamy spray:
|
|
To lend our hearts and spirits wholly
|
|
To the influence of mild-minded melancholy;
|
|
To muse and brood and live again in memory,
|
|
With those old faces of our infancy
|
|
Heaped over with a mound of grass,
|
|
Two handfuls of white dust, shut in an urn of brass."
|
|
|
|
They next arrived at the country of the Cyclopses. The Cyclopses
|
|
were giants, who inhabited an island of which they were the only
|
|
possessors. The name means "round eye," and these giants were so
|
|
called because they had but one eye, and that placed in the middle
|
|
of the forehead. They dwelt in caves and fed on the wild productions
|
|
of the island and on what their flocks yielded, for they were
|
|
shepherds. Ulysses left the main body of his ships at anchor, and with
|
|
one vessel went to the Cyclopses' island to explore for supplies. He
|
|
landed with his companions, carrying with them a jar of wine for a
|
|
present, and coming to a large cave they entered it, and finding no
|
|
one within examined its contents. They found it stored with the
|
|
richest of the flock, quantities of cheese, pails and bowls of milk,
|
|
lambs and kids in their pens, all in nice order. Presently arrived the
|
|
master of the cave, Polyphemus, bearing an immense bundle of firewood,
|
|
which he threw down before the cavern's mouth. He then drove into
|
|
the cave the sheep and goats to be milked, and, entering, rolled to
|
|
the cave's mouth an enormous rock, that twenty oxen could not draw.
|
|
Next he sat down and milked his ewes, preparing a part for cheese, and
|
|
setting the rest aside for his customary drink. Then, turning round
|
|
his great eye, he discerned the strangers, and growled out to them,
|
|
demanding who they were, and where from. Ulysses replied most
|
|
humbly, stating that they were Greeks, from the great expedition
|
|
that had lately won so much glory in the conquest of Troy; that they
|
|
were now on their way home, and finished by imploring his
|
|
hospitality in the name of the gods. Polyphemus deigned no answer, but
|
|
reaching out his hand seized two of the Greeks, whom he hurled against
|
|
the side of the cave, and dashed out their brains. He proceeded to
|
|
devour them with great relish, and having made a hearty meal,
|
|
stretched himself out on the floor to sleep. Ulysses was tempted to
|
|
seize the opportunity and plunge his sword into him as be slept, but
|
|
recollected that it would only expose them all to certain destruction,
|
|
as the rock with which the giant had closed up the door was far beyond
|
|
their power to remove, and they would therefore be in hopeless
|
|
imprisonment. Next morning the giant seized two more of the Greeks,
|
|
and despatched them in the same manner as their companions, feasting
|
|
on their flesh till no fragment was left. He then moved away the
|
|
rock from the door, drove out his flocks, and went out, carefully
|
|
replacing the barrier after him. When he was gone Ulysses planned
|
|
how he might take vengeance for his murdered friends, and effect his
|
|
escape with his surviving companions. He made his men prepare a
|
|
massive bar of wood cut by the Cyclops for a staff, which they found
|
|
in the cave. They sharpened the end of it, and seasoned it in the
|
|
fire, and hid it under the straw on the cavern floor. Then four of the
|
|
boldest were selected, with whom Ulysses joined himself as a fifth.
|
|
The Cyclops came home at evening, rolled away the stone and drove in
|
|
his flock as usual. After milking them and making his arrangements
|
|
as before, he seized two more of Ulysses' companions and dashed
|
|
their brains out, and made his evening meal upon them as he had on the
|
|
others. After he had supped, Ulysses approaching him handed him a bowl
|
|
of wine, saying, "Cyclops, this is wine; taste and drink after thy
|
|
meal of men's flesh." He took and drank it, and was hugely delighted
|
|
with it, and called for more. Ulysses supplied him once again, which
|
|
pleased the giant so much that he promised him as a favour that he
|
|
should be the last of the party devoured. He asked his name, to
|
|
which Ulysses replied, "My name is Noman."
|
|
After his supper the giant lay down to repose, and was soon found
|
|
asleep. Then Ulysses with his four select friends thrust the end of
|
|
the stake into the fire till it was all one burning coal, then poising
|
|
it exactly above the giant's only eye, they buried it deeply into
|
|
the socket, twirling it round as a carpenter does his auger. The
|
|
howling monster with his outcry filled the cavern, and Ulysses with
|
|
his aids nimbly got out of his way and concealed themselves in the
|
|
cave. He, bellowing, called aloud on all the Cyclopses dwelling in the
|
|
caves around him, far and near. They on his cry flocked round the den,
|
|
and inquired what grievous hurt had caused him to sound such an
|
|
alarm and break their slumbers. He replied, "O friends, I die, and
|
|
Noman gives the blow." They answered, "If no man hurts thee it is
|
|
the stroke of Jove, and thou must bear it." So saying, they left him
|
|
groaning.
|
|
Next morning the Cyclops rolled away the stone to let his flock
|
|
out to pasture, but planted himself in the door of the cave to feel of
|
|
all as they went out, that Ulysses and his men should not escape
|
|
with them. But Ulysses had made his men harness the rams of the
|
|
flock three abreast, with osiers which they found on the floor of
|
|
the cave. To the middle ram of the three one of the Greeks suspended
|
|
himself, so protected by the exterior rams on either side. As they
|
|
passed, the giant felt of the animals' backs and sides, but never
|
|
thought of their bellies; so the men all passed safe, Ulysses
|
|
himself being on the last one that passed. When they had got a few
|
|
paces from the cavern, Ulysses and his friends released themselves
|
|
from their rams, and drove a good part of the flock down to the
|
|
shore to their boat. They put them aboard with all haste, then
|
|
pushed off from the shore, and when at a safe distance Ulysses shouted
|
|
out, "Cyclops, the gods have well requited thee for thy atrocious
|
|
deeds. Know it is Ulysses to whom thou owest thy shameful loss of
|
|
sight." The Cyclops, hearing this, seized a rock that projected from
|
|
the side of the mountain, and rending it from its bed he lifted it
|
|
high in the air, then exerting all his force, hurled it in the
|
|
direction of the voice. Down came the mass, just clearing the vessel's
|
|
stern. The ocean, at the plunge of the huge rock, heaved the ship
|
|
towards the land, so that it barely escaped being swamped by the
|
|
waves. When they had with the utmost difficulty pulled off shore,
|
|
Ulysses was about to hail the giant again, but his friends besought
|
|
him not to do so. He could not forbear, however, letting the giant
|
|
know that they had escaped his missile, but waited till they had
|
|
reached a safer distance than before. The giant answered them with
|
|
curses, but Ulysses and his friends plied their oars vigorously, and
|
|
soon regained their companions.
|
|
Ulysses next arrived at the island of AEolus. To this monarch
|
|
Jupiter had intrusted the government of the winds, to send them
|
|
forth or retain them at his will. He treated Ulysses hospitably, and
|
|
at his departure gave him, tied up in a leathern bag with a silver
|
|
string, such winds as might be hurtful and dangerous, commanding
|
|
fair winds to blow the barks towards their country. Nine days they
|
|
sped before the wind, and all that time Ulysses had stood at the helm,
|
|
without sleep. At last quite exhausted he lay down to sleep. While
|
|
he slept, the crew conferred together about the mysterious bag, and
|
|
concluded it must contain treasures given by the hospitable King
|
|
AEolus to their commander. Tempted to secure some portion for
|
|
themselves, they loosed the string, when immediately the winds
|
|
rushed forth. The ships were driven far from their course, and back
|
|
again to the island they had just left. AEolus was so indignant at
|
|
their folly that he refused to assist them further, and they were
|
|
obliged to labour over their course once more by means of their oars.
|
|
|
|
THE LAESTRYGONIANS.
|
|
|
|
Their next adventure was with the barbarous tribe of Laestrygonians.
|
|
The vessels all pushed into the harbour, tempted by the secure
|
|
appearance of the cove, completely land-locked; only Ulysses moored
|
|
his vessel without. As soon as the Laestrygonians found the ships
|
|
completely in their power they attacked them, heaving huge stones
|
|
which broke and overturned them, and with their spears despatched
|
|
the seamen as they struggled in the water. All the vessels with
|
|
their crews were destroyed, except Ulysses' own ship, which had
|
|
remained outside, and finding no safety but in flight, he exhorted his
|
|
men to ply their oars vigorously, and they escaped.
|
|
With grief for their slain companions mixed with joy at their own
|
|
escape, they pursued their way till they arrived at the AEaean isle,
|
|
where Circe dwelt, the daughter of the sun. Landing here, Ulysses
|
|
climbed a hill, and gazing round saw no signs of habitation except
|
|
in one spot at the centre of the island, where he perceived a palace
|
|
embowered with trees. He sent forward one-half of his crew, under
|
|
the command of Eurylochus, to see what prospect of hospitality they
|
|
might find. As they approached the palace, they found themselves
|
|
surrounded by lions, tigers, and wolves, not fierce, but tamed by
|
|
Circe's art, for she was a powerful magician. All these animals had
|
|
once been men, but had been changed by Circe's enchantments into the
|
|
forms of beasts. The sounds of soft music were heard from within,
|
|
and a sweet female voice singing. Eurylochus called aloud and the
|
|
goddess came forth and invited them in; they all gladly entered except
|
|
Eurylochus, who suspected danger. The goddess conducted her guests
|
|
to a seat, and had them served with wine and other delicacies. When
|
|
they had feasted heartily, she touched them one by one with her
|
|
wand, and they became immediately changed into swine, in "head,
|
|
body, voice, and bristles," yet with their intellects as before. She
|
|
shut them in her sties and supplied them with acorns and such other
|
|
things as swine love.
|
|
Eurylochus hurried back to the ship and told the tale. Ulysses
|
|
thereupon determined to go himself, and try if by any means he might
|
|
deliver his companions. As he strode onward alone, he met a youth
|
|
who addressed him familiarly, appearing to be acquainted with his
|
|
adventures. He announced himself as Mercury, and informed Ulysses of
|
|
the arts of Circe, and of the danger of approaching her. As Ulysses
|
|
was not to be dissuaded from his attempt, Mercury provided him with
|
|
a sprig of the plant Moly, of wonderful power to resist sorceries, and
|
|
instructed him how to act. Ulysses proceeded, and reaching the
|
|
palace was courteously received by Circe, who entertained him as she
|
|
had done his companions, and after he had eaten and drank, touched him
|
|
with her wand, saying, "Hence, seek the sty and wallow with thy
|
|
friends." But he, instead of obeying, drew his sword and rushed upon
|
|
her with fury in his countenance. She fell on her knees and begged for
|
|
mercy. He dictated a solemn oath that she would release his companions
|
|
and practise no further harm against him or them; and she repeated it,
|
|
at the same time promising to dismiss them all in safety after
|
|
hospitably entertaining them. She was as good as her word. The men
|
|
were restored to their shapes, the rest of the crew summoned from
|
|
the shore, and the whole magnificently entertained day after day, till
|
|
Ulysses seemed to have forgotten his native land, and to have
|
|
reconciled himself to an inglorious life of ease and pleasure.
|
|
At length his companions recalled him to nobler sentiments, and he
|
|
received their admonition gratefully. Circe aided their departure, and
|
|
instructed them how to pass safely by the coast of the Sirens. The
|
|
Sirens were sea-nymphs who had the power of charming by their song all
|
|
who heard them, so that the unhappy mariners were irresistibly
|
|
impelled to cast themselves into the sea to their destruction. Circe
|
|
directed Ulysses to fill the ears of his seamen with wax, so that they
|
|
should not hear the strain; and to cause himself to be bound to the
|
|
mast, and his people to be strictly enjoined, whatever he might say or
|
|
do, by no means to release him till they should have passed the
|
|
Sirens' island. Ulysses obeyed these directions. He filled the ears of
|
|
his people with wax, and suffered them to bind him with cords firmly
|
|
to the mast. As they approached the Sirens' island, the sea was
|
|
calm, and over the waters came the notes of music so ravishing and
|
|
attractive that Ulysses struggled to get loose, and by cries and signs
|
|
to his people begged to be released; but they, obedient to his
|
|
previous orders, sprang forward and bound him still faster. They
|
|
held on their course, and the music grew fainter till it ceased to
|
|
be heard, when with joy Ulysses gave his companions the signal to
|
|
unseal their ears, and they relieved him from his bonds.
|
|
|
|
The imagination of a modern poet, Keats, has discovered for us the
|
|
thoughts that passed through the brains of the victims of Circe, after
|
|
their transformation. In his "Endymion" he represents one of them, a
|
|
monarch in the guise of an elephant, addressing the sorceress in human
|
|
language, thus:
|
|
|
|
"I sue not for my happy crown again;
|
|
I sue not for my phalanx on the plain;
|
|
I sue not for my lone, my widowed wife;
|
|
I sue not for my ruddy drops of life,
|
|
My children fair, my lovely girls and boys;
|
|
I will forget them; I will pass these joys,
|
|
Ask nought so heavenward; so too- too high;
|
|
Only I pray, as fairest boon, to die;
|
|
To be delivered from this cumbrous flesh,
|
|
From this gross, detestable, filthy mesh,
|
|
And merely given to the cold, bleak air.
|
|
Have mercy, goddess! Circe, feel my prayer!"
|
|
|
|
SCYLLA AND CHARYBDIS.
|
|
|
|
Ulysses had been warned by Circe of the two monsters Scylla and
|
|
Charybdis. We have already met with Scylla in the story of Glaucus,
|
|
and remember that she was once a beautiful maiden and was changed into
|
|
a snaky monster by Circe. She dwelt in a cave high up on the cliff,
|
|
from whence she was accustomed to thrust forth her long necks (for she
|
|
had six heads), and in each of her mouths seize one of the crew of
|
|
every vessel passing within reach. The other terror, Charybdis, was
|
|
a gulf, nearly on a level with the water. Thrice each day the water
|
|
rushed into a frightful chasm, and thrice was disgorged. Any vessel
|
|
coming near the whirlpool when the tide was rushing in must inevitably
|
|
be ingulfed; not Neptune himself could save it.
|
|
On approaching the haunt of the dread monsters, Ulysses kept
|
|
strict watch to discover them. The roar of the waters as Charybdis
|
|
ingulfed them, gave warning at a distance, but Scylla could nowhere be
|
|
discerned. While Ulysses and his men watched with anxious eyes the
|
|
dreadful whirlpool, they were not equally on their guard from the
|
|
attack of Scylla, and the monster, darting forth her snaky heads,
|
|
caught six of his men, and bore them away, shrieking, to her den. It
|
|
was the saddest sight Ulysses had yet seen; to behold his friends thus
|
|
sacrificed and hear their cries, unable to afford them any assistance.
|
|
Circe had warned him of another danger. After passing Scylla and
|
|
Charybdis the next land he would make was Thrinakia, an island whereon
|
|
were pastured the cattle of Hyperion, the Sun, tended by his daughters
|
|
Lampetia and Phaethusa. These flocks must not be violated, whatever
|
|
the wants of the voyagers might be. If this injunction were
|
|
transgressed destruction was sure to fall on the offenders.
|
|
Ulysses would willingly have passed the island of the Sun without
|
|
stopping, but his companions so urgently pleaded for the rest and
|
|
refreshment that would be derived from anchoring and passing the night
|
|
on shore, that Ulysses yielded. He bound them, however, with an oath
|
|
that they would not touch one of the animals of the sacred flocks
|
|
and herds, but content themselves with what provision they yet had
|
|
left of the supply which Circe had put on board. So long as this
|
|
supply lasted the people kept their oath, but contrary winds
|
|
detained them at the island for a month, and after consuming all their
|
|
stock of provisions, they were forced to rely upon the birds and
|
|
fishes they could catch. Famine pressed them, and at length one day,
|
|
in the absence of Ulysses, they slew some of the cattle, vainly
|
|
attempting to make amends for the deed by offering from them a portion
|
|
to the offended powers. Ulysses, on his return to the shore, was
|
|
horror-struck at perceiving what they had done, and the more so on
|
|
account of the portentous signs which followed. The skins crept on the
|
|
ground, and the joints of meat lowed on the spits while roasting.
|
|
The wind becoming fair they sailed from the island. They had not
|
|
gone far when the weather changed, and a storm of thunder and
|
|
lightning ensued. A stroke of lightning shattered their mast, which in
|
|
its fall killed the pilot. At last the vessel itself came to pieces.
|
|
The keel and mast floating side by side, Ulysses formed of them a
|
|
raft, to which he clung, and, the wind changing, the waves bore him to
|
|
Calypso's island. All the rest of the crew perished.
|
|
|
|
The following allusion to the topics we have just been considering
|
|
is from Milton's "Comus," line 252:
|
|
|
|
"...I have often heard
|
|
My mother Circe and the Sirens three,
|
|
Amidst the flowery-kirtled Naiades,
|
|
Culling their potent herbs and baneful drugs,
|
|
Who as they sung would take the prisoned soul
|
|
And lap it in Elysium. Scylla wept,
|
|
And chid her barking waves into attention,
|
|
And fell Charybdis murmured soft applause."
|
|
|
|
Scylla and Charybdis have become proverbial, to denote opposite
|
|
dangers which beset one's course. See Proverbial Expressions, no. 8.
|
|
|
|
CALYPSO.
|
|
|
|
Calypso was a sea-nymph, which name denotes a numerous class of
|
|
female divinities of lower rank, yet sharing many of the attributes of
|
|
the gods. Calypso received Ulysses hospitably, entertained him
|
|
magnificently, became enamoured of him, and wished to retain him for
|
|
ever, conferring on him immortality. But be persisted in his
|
|
resolution to return to his country and his wife and son. Calypso at
|
|
last received the command of Jove to dismiss him. Mercury brought
|
|
the message to her, and found her in her grotto, which is thus
|
|
described by Homer:
|
|
|
|
"A garden vine, luxuriant on all sides,
|
|
Mantled the spacious cavern, cluster-hung
|
|
Profuse; four fountains of serenest lymph,
|
|
Their sinuous course pursuing side by side,
|
|
Strayed all around, and everywhere appeared
|
|
Meadows of softest verdure, purpled o'er
|
|
With violets; it was a scene to fill
|
|
A god from heaven with wonder and delight."
|
|
|
|
Calypso with much reluctance proceeded to obey the commands of
|
|
Jupiter. She supplied Ulysses with the means of constructing a raft,
|
|
provisioned it well for him, and gave him a favouring gale. He sped on
|
|
his course prosperously for many days, till at length, when in sight
|
|
of land, a storm arose that broke his mast, and threatened to rend the
|
|
raft asunder. In this crisis he was seen by a compassionate sea-nymph,
|
|
who in the form of a cormorant alighted on the raft, and presented him
|
|
a girdle, directing him to bind it beneath his breast, and if he
|
|
should be compelled to trust himself to the waves, it would buoy him
|
|
up and enable him by swimming to reach the land.
|
|
|
|
Fenelon, in his romance of "Telemachus," has given us the adventures
|
|
of the son of Ulysses in search of his father. Among other places at
|
|
which he arrived, following on his father's footsteps, was Calypso's
|
|
isle, and, as in the former case, the goddess tried every art to
|
|
keep him with her, and offered to share her immortality with him.
|
|
But Minerva, who in the shape of Mentor accompanied him and governed
|
|
all his movements, made him repel her allurements, and when no other
|
|
means of escape could be found, the two friends leaped from a cliff
|
|
into the sea, and swam to a vessel which lay becalmed off shore. Byron
|
|
alludes to this leap of Telemachus and Mentor in the following stanza:
|
|
|
|
"But not in silence pass Calypso's isles,
|
|
The sister tenants of the middle deep;
|
|
There for the weary still a haven smiles,
|
|
Though the fair goddess long has ceased to weep,
|
|
And o'er her cliffs a fruitless watch to keep
|
|
For him who dared prefer a mortal bride.
|
|
Here too his boy essayed the dreadful leap,
|
|
Stern Mentor urged from high to yonder tide;
|
|
While thus of both bereft the nymph-queen doubly sighed."
|
|
CHAPTER XXX.
|
|
THE PHAEACIANS- FATE OF THE SUITORS.
|
|
|
|
THE PHAEACIANS.
|
|
|
|
ULYSSES clung to the raft while any of its timbers kept together,
|
|
and when it no longer yielded him support, binding the girdle around
|
|
him, he swam. Minerva smoothed the billows before him and sent him a
|
|
wind that rolled the waves towards the shore. The surf beat high on
|
|
the rocks and seemed to forbid approach; but at length finding calm
|
|
water at the mouth of a gentle stream, he landed, spent with toil,
|
|
breathless and speechless and almost dead. After some time,
|
|
reviving, he kissed the soil, rejoicing, yet at a loss what course
|
|
to take. At a short distance he perceived a wood to which he turned
|
|
his steps. There, finding a covert sheltered by intermingling branches
|
|
alike from the sun and the rain, he collected a pile of leaves and
|
|
formed a bed, on which he stretched himself, and heaping the leaves
|
|
over him, fell asleep.
|
|
The land where he was thrown was Scheria, the country of the
|
|
Phaeacians. These people dwelt originally near the Cyclopses; but
|
|
being oppressed by that savage race, they migrated to the isle of
|
|
Scheria, under the conduct of Nausithous, their king. They were, the
|
|
poet tells us, a people akin to the gods, who appeared manifestly
|
|
and feasted among them when they offered sacrifices and did not
|
|
conceal themselves from solitary wayfarers when they met them. They
|
|
had abundance of wealth and lived in the enjoyment of it undisturbed
|
|
by the alarms of war, for as they dwelt remote from gain-seeking
|
|
men, no enemy ever approached their shores, and they did not even
|
|
require to make use of bows and quivers. Their chief employment was
|
|
navigation. Their ships, which went with the velocity of birds, were
|
|
endued with intelligence; they knew every port and needed no pilot.
|
|
Alcinous, the son of Nausithous, was now their king, a wise and just
|
|
sovereign, beloved by his people.
|
|
Now it happened that the very night on which Ulysses was cast ashore
|
|
on the Phaeacian island, and while he lay sleeping on his bed of
|
|
leaves, Nausicaa, the daughter of the king, had a dream sent by
|
|
Minerva, reminding her that her wedding-day was not far distant, and
|
|
that it would be but a prudent preparation for that event to have a
|
|
general washing of the clothes of the family. This was no slight
|
|
affair, for the fountains were at some distance, and the garments must
|
|
be carried thither. On awaking, the princess hastened to her parents
|
|
to tell them what was on her mind; not alluding to her wedding-day,
|
|
but finding other reasons equally good. Her father readily assented
|
|
and ordered the grooms to furnish forth a wagon for the purpose. The
|
|
clothes were put therein, and the queen mother placed in the wagon,
|
|
likewise, an abundant supply of food and wine. The princess took her
|
|
seat and plied the lash, her attendant virgins following her on
|
|
foot. Arrived at the river side, they turned out the mules to graze,
|
|
and unlading the carriage, bore the garments down to the water, and
|
|
working with cheerfulness and alacrity, soon despatched their
|
|
labour. Then having spread the garments on the shore to dry, and
|
|
having themselves bathed, they sat down to enjoy their meal; after
|
|
which they rose and amused themselves with a game of ball, the
|
|
princess singing to them while they played. But when they had refolded
|
|
the apparel and were about to resume their way to the town, Minerva
|
|
caused the ball thrown by the princess to fall into the water, whereat
|
|
they all screamed and Ulysses awaked at the sound.
|
|
Now we must picture to ourselves Ulysses, a shipwrecked mariner, but
|
|
a few hours escaped from the waves, and utterly destitute of clothing,
|
|
awaking and discovering that only a few bushes were interposed between
|
|
him and a group of young maidens whom, by their deportment and attire,
|
|
he discovered to be not mere peasant girls, but of a higher class.
|
|
Sadly needing help, how could he yet venture, naked as he was, to
|
|
discover himself and make his wants known? It certainly was a case
|
|
worthy of the interposition of his patron goddess Minerva, who never
|
|
failed him at a crisis. Breaking off a leafy branch from a tree, he
|
|
held it before him and stepped out from the thicket. The virgins at
|
|
sight of him fled in all directions, Nausicaa alone excepted, for
|
|
her Minerva aided and endowed with courage and discernment. Ulysses,
|
|
standing respectfully aloof, told his sad case, and besought the
|
|
fair object (whether queen or goddess he professed he knew not) for
|
|
food and clothing. The princess replied courteously, promising present
|
|
relief and her father's hospitality when he should become acquainted
|
|
with the facts. She called back her scattered maidens, chiding their
|
|
alarm, and reminding them that the Phaeacians had no enemies to
|
|
fear. This man, she told them, was an unhappy wanderer, whom it was
|
|
a duty to cherish, for the poor and stranger are from Jove. She bade
|
|
them bring food and clothing, for some of her brothers' garments
|
|
were among the contents of the wagon. When this was done, and Ulysses,
|
|
retiring to a sheltered place, had washed his body free from the
|
|
sea-foam, clothed and refreshed himself with food, Pallas dilated
|
|
his form and diffused grace over his ample chest and manly brows.
|
|
The princess, seeing him, was filled with admiration, and scrupled
|
|
not to say to her damsels that she wished the gods would send her such
|
|
a husband. To Ulysses she recommended that he should repair to the
|
|
city, following herself and train so far as the way lay through the
|
|
fields; but when they should approach the city she desired that he
|
|
would no longer be seen in her company, for she feared the remarks
|
|
which rude and vulgar people might make on seeing her return
|
|
accompanied by such a gallant stranger. To avoid which she directed
|
|
him to stop at a grove adjoining the city, in which were a farm and
|
|
garden belonging to the king. After allowing time for the princess and
|
|
her companions to reach the city, he was then to pursue his way
|
|
thither, and would be easily guided by any he might meet to the
|
|
royal abode.
|
|
Ulysses obeyed the directions and in due time proceeded to the city,
|
|
on approaching which he met a young woman bearing a pitcher forth
|
|
for water. It was Minerva, who had assumed that form. Ulysses accosted
|
|
her and desired to be directed to the palace of Alcinous the king. The
|
|
maiden replied respectfully, offering to be his guide; for the palace,
|
|
she informed him, stood near her father's dwelling. Under the guidance
|
|
of the goddess, and by her power enveloped in a cloud which shielded
|
|
him from observation, Ulysses passed among the busy crowd, and with
|
|
wonder observed their harbour, their ships, their forum (the resort of
|
|
heroes), and their battlements, till they came to the palace, where
|
|
the goddess, having first given him some information of the country,
|
|
king, and people he was about to meet, left him. Ulysses, before
|
|
entering the courtyard of the palace, stood and surveyed the scene.
|
|
Its splendour astonished him. Brazen walls stretched from the entrance
|
|
to the interior house, of which the doors were gold, the doorposts
|
|
silver, the lintels silver ornamented with gold. On either side were
|
|
figures of mastiffs wrought in gold and silver, standing in rows as if
|
|
to guard the approach. Along the walls were seats spread through all
|
|
their length with mantles of finest texture, the work of Phaeacian
|
|
maidens. On these seats the princes sat and feasted, while golden
|
|
statues of graceful youths held in their hands lighted torches which
|
|
shed radiance over the scene. Full fifty female menials served in
|
|
household offices, some employed to grind the corn, others to wind off
|
|
the purple wool or ply the loom. For the Phaeacian women as far
|
|
exceeded all other women in household arts as the mariners of that
|
|
country did the rest of mankind in the management of ships. Without
|
|
the court a spacious garden lay, four acres in extent. In it grew many
|
|
a lofty tree, pomegranate, pear, apple, fig, and olive. Neither
|
|
winter's cold nor summer's drought arrested their growth, but they
|
|
flourished in constant succession, some budding while others were
|
|
maturing. The vineyard was equally prolific. In one quarter you
|
|
might see the vines, some in blossom, some loaded with ripe grapes,
|
|
and in another observe the vintagers treading the wine press. On the
|
|
garden's borders flowers of all hues bloomed all the year round,
|
|
arranged with neatest art. In the midst two fountains poured forth
|
|
their waters, one flowing by artificial channels over all the
|
|
garden, the other conducted through the courtyard of the palace,
|
|
whence every citizen might draw his supplies.
|
|
Ulysses stood gazing in admiration, unobserved himself, for the
|
|
cloud which Minerva spread around him still shielded him. At length,
|
|
having sufficiently observed the scene, he advanced with rapid step
|
|
into the hall where the chiefs and senators were assembled, pouring
|
|
libation to Mercury, whose worship followed the evening meal. Just
|
|
then Minerva dissolved the cloud and disclosed him to the assembled
|
|
chiefs. Advancing to the place where the queen sat, he knelt at her
|
|
feet and implored her favour and assistance to enable him to return to
|
|
his native country. Then withdrawing, he seated himself in the
|
|
manner of suppliants, at the hearth side.
|
|
For a time none spoke. At last an aged statesman, addressing the
|
|
king, said, "It is not fit that a stranger who asks our hospitality
|
|
should be kept waiting in suppliant guise, none welcoming him. Let him
|
|
therefore be led to a seat among us and supplied with food and
|
|
wine." At these words the king rising gave his hand to Ulysses and led
|
|
him to a seat, displacing thence his own son to make room for the
|
|
stranger. Food and wine were set before him and he ate and refreshed
|
|
himself.
|
|
The king then dismissed his guests, notifying them that the next day
|
|
he would call them to council to consider what had best be done for
|
|
the stranger.
|
|
When the guests had departed and Ulysses was left alone with the
|
|
king and queen, the queen asked him who he was and whence he came, and
|
|
(recognizing the clothes which he wore as those which her maidens
|
|
and herself had made) from whom he received those garments. He told
|
|
them of his residence in Calypso's isle and his departure thence; of
|
|
the wreck of his raft, his escape by swimming, and of the relief
|
|
afforded by the princess. The parents heard approvingly, and the
|
|
king promised to furnish a ship in which his guest might return to his
|
|
own land.
|
|
The next day the assembled chiefs confirmed the promise of the king.
|
|
A bark was prepared and a crew of stout rowers selected, and all
|
|
betook themselves to the palace, where a bounteous repast was
|
|
provided. After the feast the king proposed that the young men
|
|
should show their guest their proficiency in manly sports, and all
|
|
went forth to the arena for games of running, wrestling, and other
|
|
exercises. After all had done their best, Ulysses being challenged
|
|
to show what he could do, at first declined, but being taunted by
|
|
one of the youths, seized a quoit of weight far heavier than any of
|
|
the Phaeacians had thrown, and sent it farther than the utmost throw
|
|
of theirs. All were astonished, and viewed their guest with greatly
|
|
increased respect.
|
|
After the games they returned to the hall, and the herald led in
|
|
Demodocus, the blind bard,
|
|
|
|
"...Dear to the Muse,
|
|
Who yet appointed him both good and ill,
|
|
Took from his sight, but gave him strains divine."
|
|
|
|
He took for his theme the "Wooden Horse," by means of which the
|
|
Greeks found entrance into Troy. Apollo inspired him, and he sang so
|
|
feelingly the terrors and the exploits of that eventful time that
|
|
all were delighted, but Ulysses was moved to tears. Observing which,
|
|
Alcinous, when the song was done, demanded of him why at the mention
|
|
of Troy his sorrows awaked. Had he lost there a father, or brother, or
|
|
any dear friend? Ulysses replied by announcing himself by his true
|
|
name, and at their request, recounted the adventures which had
|
|
befallen him since his departure from Troy. This narrative raised
|
|
the sympathy and admiration of the Phaeacians for their guest to the
|
|
highest pitch. The king proposed that all the chiefs should present
|
|
him with a gift, himself setting the example. They obeyed, and vied
|
|
with one another in loading the illustrious stranger with costly
|
|
gifts.
|
|
The next day Ulysses set sail in the Phaeacian vessel, and in a
|
|
short time arrived safe at Ithaca, his own island. When the vessel
|
|
touched the strand he was asleep. The mariners, without waking him,
|
|
carried him on shore, and landed with him the chest containing his
|
|
presents, and then sailed away.
|
|
Neptune was so displeased at the conduct of the Phaeacians in thus
|
|
rescuing Ulysses from his hands that on the return of the vessel to
|
|
port he transformed it into a rock, right opposite the mouth of the
|
|
harbour.
|
|
Homer's description of the ships of the Phaeacians has been
|
|
thought to look like an anticipation of the wonders of modern steam
|
|
navigation. Alcinous says to Ulysses,
|
|
|
|
"Say from what city, from what regions tossed,
|
|
And what inhabitants those regions boast?
|
|
So shalt thou quickly reach the realm assigned,
|
|
In wondrous ships, self-moved, instinct with mind;
|
|
No helm secures their course, no pilot guides;
|
|
Like man intelligently they plough the tides,
|
|
Conscious of every coast and every bay
|
|
That lies beneath the sun's all-seeing ray."
|
|
Odyssey, Book VIII.
|
|
|
|
Lord Carlisle, in his "Diary in the Turkish and Greek Waters,"
|
|
thus speaks of Corfu, which he considers to be the ancient Phaeacian
|
|
island:
|
|
"The sites explain the 'Odyssey.' The temple of the sea-god could
|
|
not have been more fitly placed, upon a grassy platform of the most
|
|
elastic turf, on the brow of a crag commanding the harbour, and
|
|
channel, and ocean. Just at the entrance of the inner harbour there is
|
|
a picturesque rock with a small convent perched upon it, which by
|
|
one legend is the transformed pinnace of Ulysses.
|
|
"Almost the only river in the island is just at the proper
|
|
distance from the probable site of the city and palace of the king, to
|
|
justify the princess Nausicaa having had resort to her chariot and
|
|
to luncheon when she went with the maidens of the court to wash
|
|
their garments."
|
|
|
|
FATE OF THE SUITORS.
|
|
|
|
Ulysses had now been away from Ithaca for twenty years, and when
|
|
he awoke he did not recognize his native land. Minerva appeared to him
|
|
in the form of a young shepherd, informed him where he was, and told
|
|
him the state of things at his palace. More than a hundred nobles of
|
|
Ithaca and of the neighbouring islands had been for years suing for
|
|
the hand of Penelope, his wife, imagining him dead, and lording it
|
|
over his palace and people, as if they were owners of both. That he
|
|
might be able to take vengeance upon them, it was important that he
|
|
should not be recognized. Minerva accordingly metamorphosed him into
|
|
an unsightly beggar, and as such he was kindly received by Eumaeus,
|
|
the swine-herd, a faithful servant of his house.
|
|
Telemachus, his son, was absent in quest of his father. He had
|
|
gone to the courts of the other kings, who had returned from the
|
|
Trojan expedition. While on the search, he received counsel from
|
|
Minerva to return home. He arrived and sought Eumaeus to learn
|
|
something of the state of affairs at the palace before presenting
|
|
himself among the suitors. Finding a stranger with Eumaeus, he treated
|
|
him courteously, though in the garb of a beggar, and promised him
|
|
assistance. Eumaeus was sent to the palace to inform Penelope
|
|
privately of her son's arrival, for caution was necessary with
|
|
regard to the suitors, who, as Telemachus had learned, were plotting
|
|
to intercept and kill him. When Eumaeus was gone, Minerva presented
|
|
herself to Ulysses, and directed him to make himself known to his son.
|
|
At the same time she touched him, removed at once from him the
|
|
appearance of age and penury, and gave him the aspect of vigorous
|
|
manhood that belonged to him. Telemachus viewed him with astonishment,
|
|
and at first thought he must be more than mortal. But Ulysses
|
|
announced himself as his father, and accounted for the change of
|
|
appearance by explaining that it was Minerva's doing.
|
|
|
|
"...Then threw Telemachus
|
|
His arms around his father's neck and wept.
|
|
Desire intense of lamentation seized.
|
|
On both; soft murmurs uttering, each indulged
|
|
His grief."
|
|
|
|
The father and son took counsel together how they should get the
|
|
better of the suitors and punish them for their outrages. It was
|
|
arranged that Telemachus should proceed to the palace and mingle
|
|
with the suitors as formerly; that Ulysses should also go as a beggar,
|
|
a character which in the rude old times had different privileges
|
|
from what we concede to it now. As traveller and storyteller, the
|
|
beggar was admitted in the halls of chieftains, and often treated like
|
|
a guest; though sometimes, also, no doubt, with contumely. Ulysses
|
|
charged his son not to betray, by any display of unusual interest in
|
|
him, that he knew him to be other than he seemed, and even if he saw
|
|
him insulted, or beaten, not to interpose otherwise than he might do
|
|
for any stranger. At the palace they found the usual scene of feasting
|
|
and riot going on. The suitors pretended to receive Telemachus with
|
|
joy at his return, though secretly mortified at the failure of their
|
|
plots to take his life. The old beggar was permitted to enter, and
|
|
provided with a portion from the table. A touching incident occurred
|
|
as Ulysses entered the courtyard of the palace. An old dog lay in
|
|
the yard almost dead with age, and seeing a stranger enter, raised his
|
|
head, with ears erect. It was Argus, Ulysses' own dog, that he had
|
|
in other days often led to the chase.
|
|
|
|
"...Soon as he perceived
|
|
Long-lost Ulysses nigh, down fell his ears
|
|
Clapped close, and with his tall glad sign he gave
|
|
Of gratulation, impotent to rise,
|
|
And to approach his master as of old.
|
|
Ulysses, noting him, wiped off a tear
|
|
Unmarked.
|
|
...Then his destiny released
|
|
Old Argus, soon as he had lived to see
|
|
Ulysses in the twentieth year restored."
|
|
|
|
As Ulysses sat eating his portion in the hall, the suitors began
|
|
to exhibit their insolence to him. When he mildly remonstrated, one of
|
|
them raised a stool and with it gave him a blow. Telemachus had hard
|
|
work to restrain his indignation at seeing his father so treated in
|
|
his own hall, but remembering his father's injunctions, said no more
|
|
than what became him as master of the house, though young, and
|
|
protector of his guests.
|
|
Penelope had protracted her decision in favour of either of her
|
|
suitors so long that there seemed to be no further pretence for delay.
|
|
The continued absence of her husband seemed to prove that his return
|
|
was no longer to be expected. Meanwhile her son had grown up, and
|
|
was able to manage his own affairs. She therefore consented to
|
|
submit the question of her choice to a trial of skill among the
|
|
suitors. The test selected was shooting with the bow. Twelve rings
|
|
were arranged in a line, and he whose arrow was sent through the whole
|
|
twelve was to have the queen for his prize. A bow that one of his
|
|
brother heroes had given to Ulysses in former times was brought from
|
|
the armoury, and with its quiver full of arrows was laid in the
|
|
hall. Telemachus had taken care that all other weapons should be
|
|
removed, under pretence that in the heat of competition there was
|
|
danger, in some rash moment, of putting them to an improper use.
|
|
All things being prepared for the trial, the first thing to be
|
|
done was to bend the bow in order to attach the string. Telemachus
|
|
endeavoured to do it, but found all his efforts fruitless; and
|
|
modestly confessing that he had attempted a task beyond his
|
|
strength, he yielded the bow to another. He tried it with no better
|
|
success, and, amidst the laughter and jeers of his companions, gave it
|
|
up. Another tried it and another; they rubbed the bow with tallow, but
|
|
all to no purpose; it would not bend. Then spoke Ulysses, humbly
|
|
suggesting that he should be permitted to try; for, said he, "beggar
|
|
as I am, I was once a soldier, and there is still some strength in
|
|
these old limbs of mine." The suitors hooted with derision, and
|
|
commanded to turn him out of the hall for his insolence. But
|
|
Telemachus spoke up for him, and, merely to gratify the old man,
|
|
bade him try. Ulysses took the bow, and handled it with the hand of
|
|
a master. With ease he adjusted the cord to its notch, then fitting an
|
|
arrow to the bow be drew the string and sped the arrow unerring
|
|
through the rings.
|
|
Without allowing them time to express their astonishment, he said,
|
|
"Now for another mark!" and aimed direct at the most insolent one of
|
|
the suitors. The arrow pierced through his throat and he fell dead.
|
|
Telemachus, Eumaeus, and another faithful follower, well armed, now
|
|
sprang to the side of Ulysses. The suitors, in amazement, looked round
|
|
for arms, but found none, neither was there any way of escape, for
|
|
Eumaeus had secured the door. Ulysses left them not long in
|
|
uncertainty; he announced himself as the long-lost chief, whose
|
|
house they had invaded, whose substance they had squandered, whose
|
|
wife and son they had persecuted for ten long years; and told them
|
|
he meant to have ample vengeance. All were slain, and Ulysses was left
|
|
master of his palace and possessor of his kingdom and his wife.
|
|
|
|
Tennyson's poem of "Ulysses" represents the old hero, after his
|
|
dangers past and nothing left but to stay at home and be happy,
|
|
growing tired of inaction and resolving to set forth again in quest of
|
|
new adventures:
|
|
|
|
"...Come, my friends,
|
|
'Tis not too late to seek a newer world.
|
|
Push off, and sitting well in order smite
|
|
The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds
|
|
To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths
|
|
Of all the western stars, until I die.
|
|
It may be that the gulfs will wash us down;
|
|
It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles,
|
|
And see the great Achilles whom we knew;" etc.
|
|
CHAPTER XXXI.
|
|
ADVENTURES OF AENEAS- THE HARPIES- DIDO- PALINURIUS.
|
|
|
|
ADVENTURES OF AENEAS.
|
|
|
|
WE have followed one of the Grecian heroes, Ulysses, in his
|
|
wanderings on his return home from Troy, and now we propose to share
|
|
the fortunes of the remnant of the conquered people, under their chief
|
|
AEneas, in their search for a new home, after the ruin of their native
|
|
city. On that fatal night when the wooden horse disgorged its contents
|
|
of armed men, and the capture and conflagration of the city were the
|
|
result, AEneas made his escape from the scene of destruction, with his
|
|
father, and his wife, and young son. The father, Anchises, was too old
|
|
to walk with the speed required, and AEneas took him upon his
|
|
shoulders.* Thus burdened, leading his son and followed by his wife,
|
|
he made the best of his way out of the burning city; but, in the
|
|
confusion, his wife was swept away and lost.
|
|
|
|
* See Proverbial Expressions, no. 9.
|
|
|
|
On arriving at the place of rendezvous, numerous fugitives, of
|
|
both sexes, were found, who put themselves under the guidance of
|
|
AEneas. Some months were spent in preparation, and at length they
|
|
embarked. They first landed on the neighboring shores of Thrace, and
|
|
were preparing to build a city, but AEneas was deterred by a
|
|
prodigy. Preparing to offer sacrifice, he tore some twigs from one
|
|
of the bushes. To his dismay the wounded part dropped blood. When he
|
|
repeated the act a voice from the ground cried out to him, "Spare
|
|
me, AEneas; I am your kinsman, Polydore, here murdered with many
|
|
arrows, from which a bush has grown, nourished with my blood." These
|
|
words recalled to the recollection of AEneas that Polydore was a young
|
|
prince of Troy, whom his father had sent with ample treasures to the
|
|
neighbouring land of Thrace, to be there brought up, at a distance
|
|
from the horrors of war. The king to whom he was sent had murdered him
|
|
and seized his treasures. AEneas and his companions, considering the
|
|
land accursed by the stain of such a crime, hastened away.
|
|
They next landed on the island of Delos, which was once a floating
|
|
island, till Jupiter fastened it by adamantine chains to the bottom of
|
|
the sea. Apollo and Diana were born there, and the island was sacred
|
|
to Apollo. Here AEneas consulted the oracle of Apollo, and received an
|
|
answer, ambiguous as usual,- "Seek your ancient mother; there the race
|
|
of AEneas shall dwell, and reduce all other nations to their sway."
|
|
The Trojans heard with joy and immediately began to ask one another,
|
|
"Where is the spot intended by the oracle?" Anchises remembered that
|
|
there was a tradition that their forefathers came from Crete and
|
|
thither they resolved to steer. They arrived at Crete and began to
|
|
build their city, but sickness broke out among them, and the fields
|
|
that they had planted failed to yield a crop. In this gloomy aspect of
|
|
affairs AEneas was warned in a dream to leave the country and seek a
|
|
western land, called Hesperia, whence Dardanus, the true founder of
|
|
the Trojan race, had originally migrated. To Hesperia, now called
|
|
Italy, therefore, they directed their future course, and not till
|
|
after many adventures and the lapse of time sufficient to carry a
|
|
modern navigator several times round the world, did they arrive there.
|
|
Their first landing was at the island of the Harpies. These were
|
|
disgusting birds with the heads of maidens, with long claws and
|
|
faces pale with hunger. They were sent by the gods to torment a
|
|
certain Phineus, whom Jupiter had deprived of his sight, in punishment
|
|
of his cruelty; and whenever a meal was placed before him the
|
|
Harpies darted down from the air and carried it off. They were
|
|
driven away from Phineus by the heroes of the Argonautic expedition,
|
|
and took refuge in the island where AEneas now found them.
|
|
When they entered the port the Trojans saw herds of cattle roaming
|
|
over the plain. They slew as many as they wished and prepared for a
|
|
feast. But no sooner had they seated themselves at the table than a
|
|
horrible clamour was heard in the air, and a flock of these odious
|
|
harpies came rushing down upon them, seizing in their talons the
|
|
meat from the dishes and flying away with it. AEneas and his
|
|
companions drew their swords and dealt vigorous blows among the
|
|
monsters, but to no purpose, for they were so nimble it was almost
|
|
impossible to hit them, and their feathers were like armour
|
|
impenetrable to steel. One of them, perched on a neighbouring cliff,
|
|
screamed out, "Is it thus, Trojans, you treat us innocent birds, first
|
|
slaughter our cattle and then make war on ourselves?" She then
|
|
predicted dire sufferings to them in their future course, and having
|
|
vented her wrath flew away. The Trojans made haste to leave the
|
|
country, and next found themselves coasting along the shore of Epirus.
|
|
Here they landed, and to their astonishment learned that certain
|
|
Trojan exiles, who had been carried there as prisoners, had become
|
|
rulers of the country. Andromache, the widow of Hector, became the
|
|
wife of one of the victorious Grecian chiefs, to whom she bore a
|
|
son. Her husband dying, she was left regent of the country, as
|
|
guardian of her son, and had married a fellow-captive, Helenus, of the
|
|
royal race of Troy. Helenus and Andromache treated the exiles with the
|
|
utmost hospitality, and dismissed them loaded with gifts.
|
|
From hence AEneas coasted along the shore of Sicily and passed the
|
|
country of the Cyclopses. Here they were hailed from the shore by a
|
|
miserable object, whom by his garments, tattered as they were, they
|
|
perceived to be a Greek. He told them he was one of Ulysses'
|
|
companions, left behind by that chief in his hurried departure. He
|
|
related the story of Ulysses' adventure with Polyphemus, and
|
|
besought them to take him off with them as he had no means of
|
|
sustaining his existence where he was but wild berries and roots,
|
|
and lived in constant fear of the Cyclopses, While he spoke Polyphemus
|
|
made his appearance; "a terrible monster, shapeless, vast, whose
|
|
only eye had been put out."* He walked with cautious steps, feeling
|
|
his way with a staff, down to the seaside, to wash his eye-socket in
|
|
the waves. When he reached the water, he waded out towards them, and
|
|
his immense height enabled him to advance far into the sea, so that
|
|
the Trojans, in terror, took to their oars to get out of his way.
|
|
Hearing the oars, Polyphemus shouted after them, so that the shores
|
|
resounded, and at the noise the other Cyclopses came forth from
|
|
their caves and woods and lined the shore, like a row of lofty pine
|
|
trees. The Trojans plied their oars and soon left them out of sight.
|
|
|
|
* See Proverbial Expressions, no. 10.
|
|
|
|
AEneas had been cautioned by Helenus to avoid the strait guarded
|
|
by the monsters Scylla and Charybdis. There Ulysses, the reader will
|
|
remember, had lost six of his men, seized by Scylla while the
|
|
navigators were wholly intent upon avoiding Charybdis. AEneas,
|
|
following the advice of Helenus, shunned the dangerous pass and
|
|
coasted along the island of Sicily.
|
|
Juno, seeing the Trojans speeding their way prosperously towards
|
|
their destined shore, felt her old grudge against them revive, for she
|
|
could not forget the slight that Paris had put upon her, in awarding
|
|
the prize of beauty to another. "In heavenly minds can such
|
|
resentments dwell!"* Accordingly she hastened to AEolus, the ruler
|
|
of the winds,- the same who supplied Ulysses with favouring gales,
|
|
giving him the contrary ones tied up in a bag AEolus obeyed the
|
|
goddess and sent forth his sons, Boreas, Typhon, and the other
|
|
winds, to toss the ocean. A terrible storm ensued and the Trojan ships
|
|
were driven out of their course towards the coast of Africa. They were
|
|
in imminent danger of being wrecked, and were separated, so that
|
|
AEneas thought that all were lost except his own.
|
|
|
|
* See Proverbial Expressions no. 11.
|
|
|
|
At this crisis, Neptune, hearing the storm raging, and knowing
|
|
that he had given no orders for one. raised his head above the
|
|
waves, and saw the fleet of AEneas driving before the gale. Knowing
|
|
the hostility of Juno, he was at no loss to account for it, but his
|
|
anger was not the less at this interference in his province. He called
|
|
the winds and dismissed them with a severe reprimand. He then
|
|
soothed the waves, and brushed away the clouds from before the face of
|
|
the sun. Some of the ships which had got on the rocks he prised off
|
|
with his own trident, while Triton and a sea-nymph, putting their
|
|
shoulders under others, set them afloat again. The Trojans, when the
|
|
sea became calm, sought the nearest shore, which was the coast of
|
|
Carthage, where AEneas was so happy as to find that one by one the
|
|
ships all arrived safe, though badly shaken.
|
|
|
|
Waller, in his "Panegyric to the Lord Protector" (Cromwell), alludes
|
|
to this stilling of the storm by Neptune:
|
|
|
|
"Above the waves, as Neptune showed his face,
|
|
To chide the winds and save the Trojan race,
|
|
So has your Highness, raised above the rest,
|
|
Storms of ambition tossing us repressed."
|
|
|
|
DIDO.
|
|
|
|
Carthage, where the exiles had now arrived, was a spot on the
|
|
coast of Africa opposite Sicily, where at that time a Tyrian colony
|
|
under Dido, their queen, were laying the foundations of a state
|
|
destined in later ages to be the rival of Rome itself. Dido was the
|
|
daughter of Belus, king of Tyre, and sister of Pygmalion, who
|
|
succeeded his father on the throne. Her husband was Sichaeus, a man of
|
|
immense wealth, but Pygmalion, who coveted his treasures, caused him
|
|
to be put to death. Dido, with a numerous body of friends and
|
|
followers, both men and women, succeeded in effecting their escape
|
|
from Tyre, in several vessels, carrying with them the treasures of
|
|
Sichaeus. On arriving at the spot which they selected as the seat of
|
|
their future home, they asked of the natives only so much land as they
|
|
could enclose with a bull's hide. When this was readily granted, she
|
|
caused the hide to be cut into strips, and with them enclosed a spot
|
|
on which she built a citadel, and called it Byrsa (a hide). Around
|
|
this fort the city of Carthage rose, and soon became a powerful and
|
|
flourishing place.
|
|
Such was the state of affairs when AEneas with his Trojans arrived
|
|
there. Dido received the illustrious exiles with friendliness and
|
|
hospitality. "Not unacquainted with distress," she said, "I have
|
|
learned to succour the unfortunate."* The queen's hospitality
|
|
displayed itself in festivities at which games of strength and skill
|
|
were exhibited. The strangers contended for the palm with her own
|
|
subjects, on equal terms, the queen declaring that whether the
|
|
victor were "Trojan or Tyrian should make no difference to her."*(2)
|
|
At the feast which followed the games, AEneas gave at her request a
|
|
recital of the closing events of the Trojan history and his own
|
|
adventures after the fall of the city. Dido was charmed with his
|
|
discourse and filled with admiration of his exploits. She conceived an
|
|
ardent passion for him, and he for his part seemed well content to
|
|
accept the fortunate chance which appeared to offer him at once a
|
|
happy termination of his wanderings, a home, a kingdom, and a bride.
|
|
Months rolled away in the enjoyment of pleasant intercourse, and it
|
|
seemed as if Italy and the empire destined to be founded on its shores
|
|
were alike forgotten. Seeing which, Jupiter despatched Mercury with
|
|
a message to AEneas recalling him to a sense of his high destiny,
|
|
and commanding him to resume his voyage.
|
|
|
|
* See Proverbial Expressions, no. 12.
|
|
*(2) See Proverbial Expressions, no. 13.
|
|
|
|
AEneas parted from Dido, though she tried every allurement and
|
|
persuasion to detain him. The blow to her affection and her pride
|
|
was too much for her to endure, and when she found that he was gone,
|
|
she mounted a funeral pile which she had caused to be erected, and
|
|
having stabbed herself was consumed with the pile. The flames rising
|
|
over the city were seen by the departing Trojans, and, though the
|
|
cause was unknown, gave to AEneas some intimation of the fatal event.
|
|
|
|
The following epigram we find in "Elegant Extracts":
|
|
|
|
FROM THE LATIN.
|
|
|
|
"Unhappy, Dido, was thy fate
|
|
In first and second married state!
|
|
One husband caused thy flight by dying,
|
|
Thy death the other caused by flying."
|
|
|
|
PALINURUS.
|
|
|
|
After touching at the island of Sicily, where Acestes, a prince of
|
|
Trojan lineage, bore sway, who gave them a hospitable reception, the
|
|
Trojans re-embarked, and held on their course for Italy. Venus now
|
|
interceded with Neptune to allow her son at last to attain the
|
|
wished-for goal and find an end of his perils on the deep. Neptune
|
|
consented, stipulating only for one life as a ransom for the rest. The
|
|
victim was Palinurus, the pilot. As he sat watching the stars, with
|
|
his hand on the helm, Somnus sent by Neptune approached in the guise
|
|
of Phorbas and said: "Palinurus, the breeze is fair, the water smooth,
|
|
and the ship sails steadily on her course. Lie down awhile and take
|
|
needful rest. I will stand at the helm in your place." Palinurus
|
|
replied, "Tell me not of smooth seas or favouring winds,- me who
|
|
have seen so much of their treachery. Shall I trust AEneas to the
|
|
chances of the weather and the winds?" And he continued to grasp the
|
|
helm and to keep his eyes fixed on the stars. But Somnus waved over
|
|
him a branch moistened with Lethaean dew, and his eyes closed in spite
|
|
of all his efforts. Then Somnus pushed him overboard and he fell:
|
|
but keeping his hold upon the helm, it came away with him. Neptune was
|
|
mindful of his promise and kept the ship on her track without helm
|
|
or pilot, till AEneas discovered his loss, and, sorrowing deeply for
|
|
his faithful steersman, took charge of the ship himself.
|
|
|
|
There is a beautiful allusion to the story of Palinurus in Scott's
|
|
"Marmion," Introduction to Canto I., where the poet, speaking of the
|
|
recent death of William Pitt, says:
|
|
|
|
"O, think how, to his latest day,
|
|
When death just hovering claimed his prey,
|
|
With Palinure's unaltered mood,
|
|
Firm at his dangerous post he stood;
|
|
Each call for needful rest repelled,
|
|
With dying hand the rudder held,
|
|
Till in his fall, with fateful sway,
|
|
The steerage of the realm gave way."
|
|
|
|
The ships at last reached the shores of Italy, and joyfully did
|
|
the adventurers leap to land. While his people were employed in making
|
|
their encampment AEneas sought the abode of the Sibyl. It was a cave
|
|
connected with a temple and grove, sacred to Apollo and Diana. While
|
|
AEneas contemplated the scene, the Sibyl accosted him. She seemed to
|
|
know his errand, and under the influence of the deity of the place,
|
|
burst forth in a prophetic strain, giving dark intimations of
|
|
labours and perils through which he was destined to make his way to
|
|
final success. She closed with the encouraging words which have become
|
|
proverbial: "Yield not to disasters, but press onward the more
|
|
bravely."* AEneas replied that he had prepared himself for whatever
|
|
might await him. He had but one request to make. Having been
|
|
directed in a dream to seek the abode of the dead in order to confer
|
|
with his father, Anchises, to receive from him a revelation of his
|
|
future fortunes and those of his race, he asked her assistance to
|
|
enable him to accomplish the task. The Sibyl replied, "The descent
|
|
to Avernus is easy: the gate of Pluto stands open night and day; but
|
|
to retrace one's steps and return to the upper air, that is the
|
|
toil, that the difficulty."*(2) She instructed him to seek in the
|
|
forest a tree on which grew a golden branch. This branch was to be
|
|
plucked off and borne as a gift to Proserpine, and if fate was
|
|
propitious it would yield to the hand and quit its parent trunk, but
|
|
otherwise no force could rend it away. If torn away, another would
|
|
succeed.*(3)
|
|
|
|
* See Proverbial Expressions, no. 14.
|
|
*(2) See Proverbial Expressions, no. 15.
|
|
*(3) See Proverbial Expressions, no. 16.
|
|
|
|
AEneas followed the directions of the Sibyl. His mother, Venus, sent
|
|
two of her doves to fly before him and show him the way, and by
|
|
their assistance he found the tree, plucked the branch, and hastened
|
|
back with it to the Sibyl.
|
|
CHAPTER XXXII.
|
|
THE INFERNAL REGIONS- THE SIBYL.
|
|
|
|
THE INFERNAL REGIONS.
|
|
|
|
AS at the commencement of our series we have given the pagan account
|
|
of the creation of the world, so as we approach its conclusion we
|
|
present a view of the regions of the dead, depicted by one of their
|
|
most enlightened poets, who drew his doctrines from their most
|
|
esteemed philosophers. The region where Virgil locates the entrance to
|
|
this abode is perhaps the most strikingly adapted to excite ideas of
|
|
the terrific and preternatural of any on the face of the earth. It
|
|
is the volcanic region near Vesuvius, where the whole country is cleft
|
|
with chasms, from which sulphurous flames arise, while the ground is
|
|
shaken with pent-up vapours, and mysterious sounds issue from the
|
|
bowels of the earth. The lake Avernus is supposed to fill the crater
|
|
of an extinct volcano. It is circular, half a mile wide, and very
|
|
deep, surrounded by high banks, which in Virgil's time were covered
|
|
with a gloomy forest. Mephitic vapours rise from its waters, so that
|
|
no life is found on its banks: and no birds fly over it. Here,
|
|
according to the poet, was the cave which afforded access to the
|
|
infernal regions, and here AEneas offered sacrifices to the infernal
|
|
deities, Proserpine, Hecate, and the Furies. Then a roaring was
|
|
heard in the earth, the woods on the hill-tops were shaken, and the
|
|
howling of dogs announced the approach of the deities. "Now," said the
|
|
Sibyl, "summon up your courage, for you will need it." She descended
|
|
into the cave, and AEneas followed. Before the threshold of hell
|
|
they passed through a group of beings who are enumerated as Griefs and
|
|
avenging Cares, pale Diseases and melancholy Age, Fear and Hunger that
|
|
tempt to crime, Toil, Poverty, and Death,- forms horrible to view. The
|
|
Furies spread the couches there, and Discord, whose hair was of vipers
|
|
tied up with a bloody fillet. Here also were the monsters, Briareus,
|
|
with his hundred arms, Hydras hissing, and Chimaeras breathing fire.
|
|
AEneas shuddered at the sight, drew his sword and would have struck,
|
|
but the Sibyl restrained him. They then came to the black river
|
|
Cocytus, where they found the ferryman, Charon, old and squalid, but
|
|
strong and vigorous, who was receiving passengers of all kinds into
|
|
his boat, magnanimous heroes, boys and unmarried girls, as numerous as
|
|
the leaves that fall at autumn, or the flocks that fly southward at
|
|
the approach of winter. They stood pressing for a passage and
|
|
longing to touch the opposite shore, But the stern ferryman took in
|
|
only such as he chose, driving the rest back. AEneas, wondering at the
|
|
sight, asked the Sibyl, "Why this discrimination?" She answered,
|
|
"Those who are taken on board the bark are the souls of those who have
|
|
received due burial rites; the host of others who have remained
|
|
unburied are not permitted to pass the flood but wander a hundred
|
|
years, and flit to and fro about the shore, till at last they are
|
|
taken over." AEneas grieved at recollecting some of his own companions
|
|
who had perished in the storm. At that moment he beheld Palinurus, his
|
|
pilot, who fell overboard and was drowned. He addressed him and
|
|
asked him the cause of his misfortune. Palinurus replied that the
|
|
rudder was carried away, and he, clinging to it, was swept away with
|
|
it. He besought AEneas most urgently to extend to him his hand and
|
|
take him in company to the opposite shore. But the Sibyl rebuked him
|
|
for the wish thus to transgress the laws of Pluto; but consoled him by
|
|
informing him that the people of the shore where his body had been
|
|
wafted by the waves should be stirred up by prodigies to give it due
|
|
burial, and that the promontory should bear the name of Cape
|
|
Palinurus, which it does to this day. Leaving Palinurus consoled by
|
|
these words, they approached the boat. Charon, fixing his eyes sternly
|
|
upon the advancing warrior, demanded by what right he, living and
|
|
armed, approached that shore. To which the Sibyl replied that they
|
|
would commit no violence, that AEneas's only object was to see his
|
|
father, and finally exhibited the golden branch, at sight of which
|
|
Charon's wrath relaxed, and he made haste to turn his bark to the
|
|
shore, and receive them on board. The boat, adapted only to the
|
|
light freight of bodiless spirits, groaned under the weight of the
|
|
hero. They were soon conveyed to the opposite shore. There they were
|
|
encountered by the three-headed dog, Cerberus, with his necks
|
|
bristling with snakes. He barked with all his three throats till the
|
|
Sibyl threw him a medicated cake which he eagerly devoured, and then
|
|
stretched himself out in his den and fell asleep. AEneas and the Sibyl
|
|
sprang to land. The first sound that struck their ears was the wailing
|
|
of young children, who had died on the threshold of life, and near
|
|
to these were they who had perished under false charges, Minos
|
|
presides over them as judge, and examines the deeds of each. The
|
|
next class was of those who had died by their own hand, hating life
|
|
and seeking refuge in death. O how willingly would they now endure
|
|
poverty, labour, and any other infliction, if they might but return to
|
|
life! Next were situated the regions of sadness, divided off into
|
|
retired paths, leading through groves of myrtle. Here roamed those who
|
|
had fallen victims to unrequited love, not freed from pain even by
|
|
death itself. Among these, AEneas thought he descried the form of
|
|
Dido, with a wound still recent. In the dim light he was for a
|
|
moment uncertain, but approaching, perceived it was indeed herself.
|
|
Tears fell from his eyes, and he addressed her in the accents of love.
|
|
"Unhappy Dido! was then the rumour true that you had perished? and was
|
|
I, alas! the cause? I call the gods to witness that my departure
|
|
from you was reluctant, and in obedience to the commands of Jove;
|
|
nor could I believe that my absence would cost you so dear. Stop, I
|
|
beseech you, and refuse me not a last farewell." She stood for a
|
|
moment with averted countenance, and eyes fixed on the ground, and
|
|
then silently passed on, as insensible to his pleadings as a rock.
|
|
AEneas followed for some distance; then, with a heavy heart,
|
|
rejoined his companion and resumed his route.
|
|
They next entered the fields where roam the heroes who have fallen
|
|
in battle. Here they saw many shades of Grecian and Trojan warriors.
|
|
The Trojans thronged around him, and could not be satisfied with the
|
|
sight. They asked the cause of his coming, and plied him with
|
|
innumerable questions. But the Greeks, at the sight of his armour
|
|
glittering through the murky atmosphere, recognized the hero, and
|
|
filled with terror turned their backs and fled, as they used to do
|
|
on the plains of Troy.
|
|
AEneas would have lingered long with his Trojan friends, but the
|
|
Sibyl hurried him away. They next came to a place where the road
|
|
divided, the one leading to Elysium, the other to the regions of the
|
|
condemned. AEneas beheld on one side the walls of a mighty city,
|
|
around which Phlegethon rolled its fiery waters, Before him was the
|
|
gate of adamant that neither gods nor men can break through. An iron
|
|
tower stood by the gate, on which Tisiphone, the avenging Fury, kept
|
|
guard. From the city were heard groans, and the sound of the
|
|
scourge, the creaking of iron, and the clanking of chains. AEneas,
|
|
horror-struck, inquired of his guide what crimes were those whose
|
|
punishments produced the sounds he heard? The Sibyl answered, "Here is
|
|
the judgment hall of Rhadamanthus, who brings to light crimes done
|
|
in life, which the perpetrator vainly thought impenetrably hid.
|
|
Tisiphone applies her whip of scorpions, and delivers the offender
|
|
over to her sister Furies." At this moment with horrid clang the
|
|
brazen gates unfolded, and AEneas saw within a Hydra with fifty
|
|
heads guarding the entrance. The Sibyl told him that the gulf of
|
|
Tartarus descended deep, so that its recesses were as far beneath
|
|
their feet as heaven was high above their heads. In the bottom of this
|
|
pit, the Titan race, who warred against the gods, lie prostrate;
|
|
Salmoneus, also, who presumed to vie with Jupiter, and built a
|
|
bridge of brass over which he drove his chariot that the sound might
|
|
resemble thunder, launching flaming brands at his people in
|
|
imitation of lightning, till Jupiter struck him with a real
|
|
thunderbolt, and taught him the difference between mortal weapons
|
|
and divine. Here, also, is Tityus, the giant, whose form is so immense
|
|
that as he lies he stretches over nine acres, while a vulture preys
|
|
upon his liver, which as fast as it is devoured grows again, so that
|
|
his punishment will have no end.
|
|
AEneas saw groups seated at tables loaded with dainties, while
|
|
near by stood a Fury who snatched away the viands from their lips as
|
|
fast as they prepared to taste them. Others beheld suspended over
|
|
their heads huge rocks, threatening to fall, keeping them in a state
|
|
of constant alarm. These were they who had hated their brothers, or
|
|
struck their parents, or defrauded the friends who trusted them, or
|
|
who, having grown rich, kept their money to themselves, and gave no
|
|
share to others; the last being the most numerous class. Here also
|
|
were those who had violated the marriage vow, or fought in a bad
|
|
cause, or failed in fidelity to their employers. Here was one who
|
|
had sold his country for gold, another who perverted the laws,
|
|
making them say one thing to-day and another to-morrow.
|
|
Ixion was there, fastened to the circumference of a wheel
|
|
ceaselessly revolving; and Sisyphus, whose task was to roll a huge
|
|
stone up to a hill-top, but when the steep was well-nigh gained, the
|
|
rock, repulsed by some sudden force, rushed again-headlong down to the
|
|
plain. Again he toiled at it, while the sweat bathed all his weary
|
|
limbs, but all to no effect. There was Tantalus, who stood in a
|
|
pool, his chin level with the water, yet he was parched with thirst,
|
|
and found nothing to assuage it; for when he bowed his hoary head,
|
|
eager to quaff, the water fled away, leaving the ground at his feet
|
|
all dry. Tall trees laden with fruit stooped their heads to him,
|
|
pears, pomegranates, apples, and luscious figs; but when with a sudden
|
|
grasp he tried to seize them winds whirled them high above his reach.
|
|
The Sibyl now warned AEneas it was time to turn from these
|
|
melancholy regions and seek the city of the blessed. They passed
|
|
through a middle tract of darkness, and came upon the Elysian
|
|
fields, the groves where the happy reside. They breathed a freer
|
|
air, and saw all objects clothed in a purple light. The region has a
|
|
sun and stars of its own. The inhabitants were enjoying themselves
|
|
in various ways, some in sports on the grassy turf, in games of
|
|
strength or skill, others dancing or singing. Orpheus struck the
|
|
chords of his lyre, and called forth ravishing sounds. Here AEneas saw
|
|
the founders of the Trojan state, magnanimous heroes who lived in
|
|
happier times. He gazed with admiration on the war chariots and
|
|
glittering arms now reposing in disuse. Spears stood fixed in the
|
|
ground, and the horses, unharnessed, roamed over the plain. The same
|
|
pride in splendid armour and generous steeds which the old heroes felt
|
|
in life, accompanied them here. He saw another group feasting and
|
|
listening to the strains of music. They were in a laurel grove, whence
|
|
the great river Po has its origin, and flows out among men. Here dwelt
|
|
those who fell by wounds received in their country's cause, holy
|
|
priests also, and poets who have uttered thoughts worthy of Apollo,
|
|
and others who have contributed to cheer and adorn life by their
|
|
discoveries in the useful arts, and have made their memory blessed
|
|
by rendering service to mankind. They wore snow-white fillets about
|
|
their brows. The Sibyl addressed a group of these, and inquired
|
|
where Anchises was to be found. They were directed where to seek
|
|
him, and soon found him in a verdant valley, where he was
|
|
contemplating the ranks of his posterity, their destinies and worthy
|
|
deeds to be achieved in coming times. When he recognized AEneas
|
|
approaching, he stretched out both hands to him, while tears flowed
|
|
freely. "Have you come at last," said he, "long expected, and do I
|
|
behold you after such perils past? O my son, how have I trembled for
|
|
you as I have watched your career!" To which AEneas replied, "O
|
|
father! your image was always before me to guide and guard me." Then
|
|
he endeavoured to enfold his father in his embrace, but his arms
|
|
enclosed only an unsubstantial image.
|
|
AEneas perceived before him a spacious valley, with trees gently
|
|
waving to the wind, a tranquil landscape, through which the river
|
|
Lethe flowed. Along the banks of the stream wandered a countless
|
|
multitude, numerous as insects in the summer air. AEneas, with
|
|
surprise, inquired who were these. Anchises answered, "They are
|
|
souls to which bodies are to be given in due time. Meanwhile they
|
|
dwell on Lethe's bank, and drink oblivion of their former lives." "O
|
|
father!" said AEneas, "is it possible that any can be so in love
|
|
with life as to wish to leave these tranquil seats for the upper
|
|
world?" Anchises replied by explaining the plan of creation. The
|
|
Creator, he told him, originally made the material of which souls
|
|
are composed of the four elements, fire, air, earth, and water, all
|
|
which when united took the form of the most excellent part, fire,
|
|
and became flame. This material was scattered like seed among the
|
|
heavenly bodies, the sun, moon, and stars. Of this seed the inferior
|
|
gods created man and all other animals, mingling it with various
|
|
proportions of earth, by which its purity was alloyed and reduced.
|
|
Thus, the more earth predominates in the composition the less pure
|
|
is the individual; and we see men and women with their full-grown
|
|
bodies have not the purity of childhood. So in proportion to the
|
|
time which the union of body and soul has lasted is the impurity
|
|
contracted by the spiritual part. This impurity must be purged away
|
|
after death, which is done by ventilating the souls in the current
|
|
of winds, or merging them in water, or burning out their impurities by
|
|
fire. Some few, of whom Anchises intimates that he is one, are
|
|
admitted at once to Elysium, there to remain. But the rest, after
|
|
the impurities of earth are purged away, are sent back to life endowed
|
|
with new bodies, having had the remembrance of their former lives
|
|
effectually washed away by the waters of Lethe. Some, however, there
|
|
still are, so thoroughly corrupted, that they are not fit to be
|
|
intrusted with human bodies, and these are made into brute animals,
|
|
lions, tigers, cats, dogs, monkeys, etc. This is what the ancients
|
|
called Metempsychosis, or the transmigration of souls; a doctrine
|
|
which is still held by the natives of India, who scruple to destroy
|
|
the life even of the most insignificant animal, not knowing but it may
|
|
be one of their relations in an altered form.
|
|
Anchises, having explained so much, proceeded to point out to AEneas
|
|
individuals of his race, who were hereafter to be born, and to
|
|
relate to him the exploits they should perform in the world. After
|
|
this he reverted to the present, and told his son of the events that
|
|
remained to him to be accomplished before the complete establishment
|
|
of himself and his followers in Italy. Wars were to be waged,
|
|
battles fought, a bride to be won, and in the result a Trojan state
|
|
founded, from which should arise the Roman power, to be in time the
|
|
sovereign of the world.
|
|
AEneas and the Sibyl then took leave of Anchises, and returned by
|
|
some short cut, which the poet does not explain, to the upper world.
|
|
|
|
ELYSIUM.
|
|
|
|
Virgil, we have seen, places his Elysium under the earth, and
|
|
assigns it for a residence to the spirits of the blessed. But in Homer
|
|
Elysium forms no part of the realms of the dead. He places it on the
|
|
west of the earth, near Ocean, and describes it as a happy land, where
|
|
there is neither snow, nor cold, nor rain, and always fanned by the
|
|
delightful breezes of Zephyrus. Hither favoured heroes pass without
|
|
dying and live happy under the rule of Rhadamanthus. The Elysium of
|
|
Hesiod and Pindar is in the Isles of the Blessed, or Fortunate
|
|
Islands, in the Western Ocean. From these sprang the legend of the
|
|
happy island Atlantis. This blissful region may have been wholly
|
|
imaginary, but possibly may have sprung from the reports of some
|
|
storm-driven mariners who had caught a glimpse of the coast of
|
|
America.
|
|
|
|
J. R. Lowell, in one of his shorter poems, claims for the present
|
|
age some of the privileges of that happy realm. Addressing the Past,
|
|
he says:
|
|
|
|
"Whatever of true life there was in thee,
|
|
Leaps in our age's veins.
|
|
|
|
. . . . . . . .
|
|
|
|
Here, 'mid the bleak waves of our strife and care,
|
|
Float the green 'Fortunate Isles,'
|
|
Where all thy hero-spirits dwell and share
|
|
Our martyrdoms and toils.
|
|
The present moves attended
|
|
With all of brave and excellent and fair
|
|
That made the old time splendid."
|
|
|
|
Milton also alludes to the same fable in "Paradise Lost," Book
|
|
III. 1. 568:
|
|
|
|
"Like those Hesperian gardens famed of old,
|
|
Fortunate fields and groves and flowery vales,
|
|
Thrice happy isles."
|
|
|
|
And in Book II. he characterizes the rivers of Erebus according to
|
|
the meaning of their names in the Greek language:
|
|
|
|
"Abhorred Styx, the flood of deadly hate,
|
|
Sad Acheron of sorrow black and deep;
|
|
Cocytus named of lamentation loud
|
|
Heard on the rueful stream; fierce Phlegethon
|
|
Whose waves of torrent fire inflame with rage.
|
|
Far off from these a slow and silent stream,
|
|
Lethe, the river of oblivion, rolls
|
|
Her watery labyrinth, whereof who drinks
|
|
Forthwith his former state and being forgets,
|
|
Forgets both joy and grief, pleasure and pain."
|
|
|
|
THE SIBYL.
|
|
|
|
As AEneas and the Sibyl pursued their way back to earth, he said
|
|
to her, "Whether thou be a goddess or a mortal beloved of the gods, by
|
|
me thou shalt always be held in reverence. When I reach the upper
|
|
air I will cause a temple to be built to thy honour, and will myself
|
|
bring offerings." "I am no goddess," said the Sibyl; "I have no
|
|
claim to sacrifice or offering. I am mortal; yet if I could have
|
|
accepted the love of Apollo I might have been immortal. He promised me
|
|
the fulfilment of my wish, if I would consent to be his. I took a
|
|
handful of sand, and holding it forth, said, 'Grant me to see as
|
|
many birthdays as there are sand grains in my hand.' Unluckily I
|
|
forgot to ask for enduring youth. This also he would have granted,
|
|
could I have accepted his love, but offended at my refusal, he allowed
|
|
me to grow old. My youth and youthful strength fled long ago. I have
|
|
lived seven hundred years, and to equal the number of the
|
|
sand-grains I have still to see three hundred springs and three
|
|
hundred harvests. My body shrinks up as years increase, and in time, I
|
|
shall be lost to sight, but my voice will remain, and future ages will
|
|
respect my sayings."
|
|
These concluding words of the Sibyl alluded to her prophetic
|
|
power. In her cave she was accustomed to inscribe on leaves gathered
|
|
from the trees the names and fates of individuals. The leaves thus
|
|
inscribed were arranged in order within the cave, and might be
|
|
consulted by her votaries. But if perchance at the opening of the door
|
|
the wind rushed in and dispersed the leaves the Sibyl gave no aid in
|
|
restoring them again, and the oracle was irreparably lost.
|
|
The following legend of the Sibyl is fixed at a later date. In the
|
|
reign of one of the Tarquins there appeared before the king a woman
|
|
who offered him nine books for sale, The king refused to purchase
|
|
them, whereupon the woman went away and burned three of the books, and
|
|
returning offered the remaining books for the same price she had asked
|
|
for the nine. The king again rejected them; but when the woman,
|
|
after burning three books more, returned and asked for the three
|
|
remaining the same price which she had before asked for the nine,
|
|
his curiosity was excited, and he purchased the books. They were found
|
|
to contain the destinies of the Roman state. They were kept in the
|
|
temple of Jupiter Capitolinus, preserved in a stone chest, and allowed
|
|
to be inspected only by special officers appointed for that duty, who,
|
|
on great occasions, consulted them and interpreted their oracles to
|
|
the people.
|
|
There were various Sibyls; but the Cumaean Sibyl, of whom Ovid and
|
|
Virgil write, is the most celebrated of them. Ovid's story of her life
|
|
protracted to one thousand years may be intended to represent the
|
|
various Sibyls as being only reappearances of one and the same
|
|
individual.
|
|
|
|
Young, in the "Night Thoughts," alludes to the Sibyl. Speaking of
|
|
Worldly Wisdom, he says:
|
|
|
|
"If future fate she plans 'tis all in leaves,
|
|
Like Sibyl, unsubstantial, fleeting bliss;
|
|
At the first blast it vanishes in air.
|
|
As worldly schemes resemble Sibyl's leaves,
|
|
The good man's days to Sibyl's books compare,
|
|
The price still rising as in number less."
|
|
CHAPTER XXXIII.
|
|
AENEAS IN ITALY.
|
|
|
|
CAMILLA- EVANDER- NISUS AND EURYALUS-
|
|
MEZENTIUS- TURNUS.
|
|
|
|
AENEAS, having parted from the Sibyl and rejoined his fleet, coasted
|
|
along the shores of Italy and cast anchor in the mouth of the Tiber.
|
|
The poet, having brought his hero to this spot, the destined
|
|
termination of his wanderings, invokes his Muse to tell him the
|
|
situation of things at that eventful moment. Latinus, third in descent
|
|
from Saturn, ruled the country. He was now old and had no male
|
|
descendant, but had one charming daughter, Lavinia, who was sought
|
|
in marriage by many neighbouring chiefs, one of whom, Turnus, king
|
|
of the Rutulians, was favoured by the wishes of her parents. But
|
|
Latinus had been warned in a dream by his father Faunus, that the
|
|
destined husband of Lavinia should come from a foreign land. From that
|
|
union should spring a race destined to subdue the world.
|
|
Our readers will remember that in the conflict with the Harpies
|
|
one of those half-human birds had threatened the Trojans with dire
|
|
sufferings. In particular she predicted that before their wanderings
|
|
ceased they should be pressed by hunger to devour their tables. This
|
|
portent now came true; for as they took their scanty meal, seated on
|
|
the grass, the men placed their hard biscuit on their laps, and put
|
|
thereon whatever their gleanings in the woods supplied. Having
|
|
despatched the latter they finished by eating the crusts. Seeing
|
|
which, the boy Iulus said playfully, "See, we are eating our
|
|
tables." AEneas caught the words and accepted the omen. "All hail,
|
|
promised land!" he exclaimed, "this is our home, this our country." He
|
|
then took measures to find out who were the present inhabitants of the
|
|
land, and who their rulers. A hundred chosen men were sent to the
|
|
village of Latinus, bearing presents and a request for friendship
|
|
and alliance. They went and were favourably received. Latinus
|
|
immediately concluded that the Trojan hero was no other than the
|
|
promised son-in-law announced by the oracle. He cheerfully granted his
|
|
alliance and sent back the messengers mounted on steeds from his
|
|
stables, and loaded with gifts and friendly messages.
|
|
Juno, seeing things go thus prosperously for the Trojans, felt her
|
|
old animosity revive, summoned Alecto from Erebus, and sent her to
|
|
stir up discord. The Fury first took possession of the queen, Amata,
|
|
and roused her to oppose in every way the new alliance. Alecto then
|
|
speeded to the city of Turnus, and assuming the form of an old
|
|
priestess, informed him of the arrival of the foreigners and of the
|
|
attempts of their prince to rob him of his bride. Next she turned
|
|
her attention to the camp of the Trojans. There she saw the boy
|
|
Iulus and his companions amusing themselves with hunting. She
|
|
sharpened the scent of the dogs, and led them to rouse up from the
|
|
thicket a tame stag, the favourite of Silvia, the daughter of
|
|
Tyrrheus, the king's herdsman. A javelin from the hand of Iulus
|
|
wounded the animal, and he had only strength left to run homewards,
|
|
and died at his mistress's feet. Her cries and tears roused her
|
|
brothers and the herdsmen, and they, seizing whatever weapons came
|
|
to hand, furiously assaulted the hunting party. These were protected
|
|
by their friends, and the herdsmen were finally driven back with the
|
|
loss of two of their number.
|
|
These things were enough to rouse the storm of war, and the queen,
|
|
Turnus, and the peasants all urged the old king to drive the strangers
|
|
from the country. He resisted as long as he could, but, finding his
|
|
opposition unavailing, finally gave way and retreated to his
|
|
retirement.
|
|
|
|
OPENING THE GATES OF JANUS.
|
|
|
|
It was the custom of the country, when war was to be undertaken, for
|
|
the chief magistrate, clad in his robes of office, with solemn pomp to
|
|
open the gates of the temple of Janus, which were kept shut as long as
|
|
peace endured. His people now urged the old king to perform that
|
|
solemn office, but he refused to do so. While they contested, Juno
|
|
herself, descending from the skies, smote the doors with
|
|
irresistible force, and burst them open. Immediately the whole country
|
|
was in a flame. The people rushed from every side breathing nothing
|
|
but war.
|
|
Turnus was recognized by all as leader; others joined as allies,
|
|
chief of whom was Mezentius, a brave and able soldier, but of
|
|
detestable cruelty. He had been the chief of one of the neighbouring
|
|
cities, but his people drove him out. With him was joined his son
|
|
Lausus, a generous youth, worthy of a better sire.
|
|
|
|
CAMILLA.
|
|
|
|
Camilla, the favourite of Diana, a huntress and warrior, after the
|
|
fashion of the Amazons, came with her band of mounted followers,
|
|
including a select number of her own sex, and ranged herself on the
|
|
side of Turnus. This maiden had never accustomed her fingers to the
|
|
distaff or the loom, but had learned to endure the toils of war, and
|
|
in speed to outstrip the wind. It seemed as if she might run over
|
|
the standing corn without crushing it, or over the surface of the
|
|
water without dipping her feet. Camilla's history had been singular
|
|
from the beginning. Her father, Metabus, driven from his city by civil
|
|
discord, carried with him in his flight his infant daughter. As he
|
|
fled through the woods, his enemies in hot pursuit, he reached the
|
|
bank of the river Amazenus, which, swelled by rain, seemed to debar
|
|
a passage. He paused for a moment, then decided what to do. He tied
|
|
the infant to his lance with wrappers of bark, and poising the
|
|
weapon in his upraised hand, thus addressed Diana: "Goddess of the
|
|
woods! I consecrate this maid to you"; then hurled the weapon with its
|
|
burden to the opposite bank. The spear flew across the roaring
|
|
water. His pursuers were already upon him, but he plunged into the
|
|
river and swam across, and found the spear, with the infant safe on
|
|
the other side. Thenceforth he lived among the shepherds, and
|
|
brought up his daughter in woodland arts. While a child she was taught
|
|
to use the bow and throw the javelin. With her sling she could bring
|
|
down the crane or the wild swan. Her dress was a tiger's skin. Many
|
|
mothers sought her for a daughter-in-law, but she continued faithful
|
|
to Diana and repelled the thought of marriage.
|
|
|
|
EVANDER.
|
|
|
|
Such were the formidable allies that ranged themselves against
|
|
AEneas. It was night and he lay stretched in sleep on the bank of
|
|
the river under the open heavens. The god of the stream, Father Tiber.
|
|
seemed to raise his head above the willows and to say, "O
|
|
goddess-born, destined possessor of the Latin realms, this is the
|
|
promised land, here is to be your home, here shall terminate the
|
|
hostility of the heavenly powers, if only you faithfully persevere.
|
|
There are friends not far distant. Prepare your boats and row up my
|
|
stream; I will lead you to Evander, the Arcadian chief. He has long
|
|
been at strife with Turnus and the Rutulians, and is prepared to
|
|
become an ally of yours. Rise! offer your vows to Juno, and
|
|
deprecate her anger. When you have achieved your victory then think of
|
|
me." AEneas woke and paid immediate obedience to the friendly
|
|
vision. He sacrificed to Juno, and invoked the god of the river and
|
|
all his tributary fountains to lend their aid. Then for the first time
|
|
a vessel filled with armed warriors floated on the stream of the
|
|
Tiber. The river smoothed its waves, and bade its current flow gently,
|
|
while, impelled by the vigorous strokes of the rowers, the vessels
|
|
shot rapidly up the stream.
|
|
About the middle of the day they came in sight of the scattered
|
|
buildings of the infant town, where in after times the proud city of
|
|
Rome grew, whose glory reached the skies. By chance the old king,
|
|
Evander, was that day celebrating annual solemnities in honour of
|
|
Hercules and all the gods. Pallas, his son, and all the chiefs of
|
|
the little commonwealth stood by. When they saw the tall ship
|
|
gliding onward near the wood, they were alarmed at the sight, and rose
|
|
from the tables. But Pallas forbade the solemnities to be interrupted,
|
|
and seizing a weapon, stepped forward to the river's bank. He called
|
|
aloud, demanding who they were, and what their object. AEneas, holding
|
|
forth an olive-branch, replied, "We are Trojans, friends to you, and
|
|
enemies to the Rutulians. We seek Evander, and offer to join our
|
|
arms with yours." Pallas, in amaze at the sound of so great a name,
|
|
invited them to land, and when AEneas touched the shore he seized
|
|
his hand, and held it long in friendly grasp. Proceeding through the
|
|
wood, they joined the king and his party and were most favourably
|
|
received. Seats were provided for them at the tables, and the repast
|
|
proceeded.
|
|
|
|
INFANT ROME.
|
|
|
|
When the solemnities were ended all moved towards the city. The
|
|
king, bending with age, walked between his son and AEneas, taking
|
|
the arm of one or the other of them, and with much variety of pleasing
|
|
talk shortening the way. AEneas with delight looked and listened,
|
|
observing all the beauties of the scene, and learning much of heroes
|
|
renowned in ancient times. Evander said, "These extensive groves
|
|
were once inhabited by fauns and nymphs, and a rude race of men who
|
|
sprang from the trees themselves, and had neither laws not social
|
|
culture. They knew not how to yoke the cattle nor raise a harvest, nor
|
|
provide from present abundance for future want; but browsed like
|
|
beasts upon the leafy boughs, or fed voraciously or their hunted prey.
|
|
Such were they when Saturn, expelled from Olympus by his sons, came
|
|
among them and drew together the fierce savages, formed them into
|
|
society and gave them laws. Such peace and plenty ensued that men ever
|
|
since have called his reign the golden age; but by degrees far other
|
|
times succeeded, and the thirst of gold and the thirst of blood
|
|
prevailed. The land was a prey to successive tyrants, till fortune and
|
|
resistless destiny brought me hither, an exile from my native land,
|
|
Arcadia."
|
|
Having thus said, he showed him the Tarpeian rock, and the rude spot
|
|
then overgrown with bushes where in after times the Capitol rose in
|
|
all its magnificence. He next pointed to some dismantled walls, and
|
|
said, "Here stood Janiculum, built by Janus, and there Saturnia, the
|
|
town of Saturn." Such discourse brought them to the cottage of poor
|
|
Evander, whence they saw the lowing herds roaming over the plain where
|
|
now the proud and stately Forum stands. They entered, and a couch
|
|
was spread for AEneas, well stuffed with leaves, and covered with
|
|
the skin of a Libyan bear.
|
|
Next morning, awakened by the dawn and the shrill song of birds
|
|
beneath the eaves of his low mansion, old Evander rose. Clad in a
|
|
tunic, and a panther's skin thrown over his shoulders, with sandals on
|
|
his feet and his good sword girded to his side, he went forth to
|
|
seek his guest. Two mastiffs followed him, his whole retinue and
|
|
body guard. He found the hero attended by his faithful Achates, and,
|
|
Pallas, soon joining them, the old king spoke thus:
|
|
"Illustrious Trojan, it is but little we can do in so great a cause.
|
|
Our state is feeble, hemmed in on one side by the river, on the
|
|
other by the Rutulians. But I propose to ally you with a people
|
|
numerous and rich, to whom fate has brought you at the propitious
|
|
moment. The Etruscans hold the country beyond the river. Mezentius was
|
|
their king, a monster of cruelty, who invented unheard-of torments
|
|
to gratify his vengeance. He would fasten the dead to the living, hand
|
|
to hand and face to face, and leave the wretched victims to die in
|
|
that dreadful embrace. At length the people cast him out, him and
|
|
his house. They burned his palace and slew his friends. He escaped and
|
|
took refuge with Turnus, who protects him with arms. The Etruscans
|
|
demand that he shall be given up to deserved punishment, and would ere
|
|
now have attempted to enforce their demand; but the priests restrain
|
|
them, telling them that it is the will of heaven that no native of the
|
|
land shall guide them to victory, and that their destined leader
|
|
must come from across the sea. They have offered the crown to me,
|
|
but I am too old to undertake such great affairs, and my son is
|
|
native-born, which precludes him from the choice. You, equally by
|
|
birth and time of life, and fame in arms, pointed out by the gods,
|
|
have but to appear to be hailed at once as their leader. With you I
|
|
will join Pallas, my son, my only hope and comfort. Under you he shall
|
|
learn the art of war, and strive to emulate your great exploits."
|
|
Then the king ordered horses to be furnished for the Trojan
|
|
chiefs, and AEneas, with a chosen band of followers and Pallas
|
|
accompanying, mounted and took the way to the Etruscan city,* having
|
|
sent back the rest of his party in the ships. AEneas and his band
|
|
safely arrived at the Etruscan camp and were received with open arms
|
|
by Tarchon and his countrymen.
|
|
|
|
* The poet here inserts a famous line which is thought to imitate in
|
|
its sound the galloping of horses. It may be thus translated: "Then
|
|
struck the hoofs of the steeds on the ground with a four-footed
|
|
trampling."- See Proverbial Expressions, no. 17.
|
|
|
|
NISUS AND EURYALUS.
|
|
|
|
In the meanwhile Turnus had collected his bands and made all
|
|
necessary preparations for the war. Juno sent Iris to him with a
|
|
message inciting him to take advantage of the absence of AEneas and
|
|
surprise the Trojan camp. Accordingly the attempt was made, but the
|
|
Trojans were found on their guard, and having received strict orders
|
|
from AEneas not to fight in his absence, they lay still in their
|
|
intrenchments, and resisted all the efforts of the Rutulians to draw
|
|
them into the field. Night coming on, the army of Turnus, in high
|
|
spirits at their fancied superiority, feasted and enjoyed
|
|
themselves, and finally stretched themselves on the field and slept
|
|
secure.
|
|
In the camp of the Trojans things were far otherwise. There all
|
|
was watchfulness and anxiety and impatience for AEneas's return. Nisus
|
|
stood guard at the entrance of the camp, and Euryalus, a youth
|
|
distinguished above all in the army for graces of person and fine
|
|
qualities, was with him. These two were friends and brothers in
|
|
arms. Nisus said to his friend, "Do you perceive what confidence and
|
|
carelessness the enemy display? Their lights are few and dim, and
|
|
the men seem all oppressed with wine or sleep. You know how
|
|
anxiously our chiefs wish to send to AEneas, and to get intelligence
|
|
from him. Now, I am strongly moved to make my way through the
|
|
enemy's camp and to go in search of our chief. If I succeed, the glory
|
|
of the deed will be reward enough for me, and if they judge the
|
|
service deserves anything more, let them pay it to you."
|
|
Euryalus, all on fire with the love of adventure, replied, "Would
|
|
you, then, Nisus, refuse to share your enterprise with me? And shall I
|
|
let you go into such danger alone? Not so my brave father brought me
|
|
up, nor so have I planned for myself when I joined the standard of
|
|
AEneas, and resolved to hold my life cheap in comparison with honour."
|
|
Nisus replied, "I doubt it not, my friend; but you know the
|
|
uncertain event of such an undertaking, and whatever may happen to me,
|
|
I wish you to be safe. You are younger than I and have more of life in
|
|
prospect. Nor can I be the cause of such grief to your mother, who has
|
|
chosen to be here in the camp with you rather than stay and live in
|
|
peace with the other matrons in Acestes' city." Euryalus replied, "Say
|
|
no more. In vain you seek arguments to dissuade me. I am fixed in
|
|
the resolution to go with you. Let us lose no time." They called the
|
|
guard, and committing the watch to them, sought the general's tent.
|
|
They found the chief officers in consultation, deliberating how they
|
|
should send notice to AEneas of their situation. The offer of the
|
|
two friends was gladly accepted, themselves loaded with praises and
|
|
promised the most liberal rewards in case of success. Iulus especially
|
|
addressed Euryalus, assuring him of his lasting friendship. Euryalus
|
|
replied, "I have but one boon to ask. My aged mother is with me in the
|
|
camp. For me she left the Trojan soil, and would not stay behind
|
|
with the other matrons at the city of Acestes. I go now without taking
|
|
leave of her. I could not bear her tears nor set at nought her
|
|
entreaties. But do thou, I beseech you, comfort her in her distress.
|
|
Promise me that and I shall go more boldly into whatever dangers may
|
|
present themselves." Iulus and the other chiefs were moved to tears,
|
|
and promised to do all his request. "Your mother shall be mine,"
|
|
said Iulus, "and all that I have promised to you shall be made good to
|
|
her, if you do not return to receive it."
|
|
The two friends left the camp and plunged at once into the midst
|
|
of the enemy. They found no watch, no sentinels posted, but, all
|
|
about, the sleeping soldiers strewn on the grass and among the wagons.
|
|
The laws of war at that early day did not forbid a brave man to slay a
|
|
sleeping foe, and the two Trojans slew, as they passed, such of the
|
|
enemy as they could without exciting alarm. In one tent Euryalus
|
|
made prize of a helmet brilliant with gold and plumes. They had passed
|
|
through the enemy's ranks without being discovered, but now suddenly
|
|
appeared a troop directly in front of them, which, under Volscens,
|
|
their leader, were approaching the camp. The glittering helmet of
|
|
Euryalus caught their attention, and Volscens hailed the two, and
|
|
demanded who and whence they were. They made no answer, but plunged
|
|
into the wood. The horsemen scattered in all directions to intercept
|
|
their flight. Nisus had eluded pursuit and was out of danger, but
|
|
Euryalus being missing he turned back to seek him. He again entered
|
|
the wood and soon came within sound of voices. Looking through the
|
|
thicket he saw the whole band surrounding Euryalus with noisy
|
|
questions. What should he do? how extricate the youth, or would it
|
|
be better to die with him?
|
|
Raising his eyes to the moon, which now shone clear, he said,
|
|
"Goddess! favour my effort!" and aiming his javelin at one of the
|
|
leaders of the troop, struck him in the back and stretched him on
|
|
the plain with a death-blow. In the midst of their amazement another
|
|
weapon flew and another of the party fell dead. Volscens, the
|
|
leader, ignorant whence the darts came, rushed sword in hand upon
|
|
Euryalus. "You shall pay the penalty of both," he said, and would have
|
|
plunged the sword into his bosom, when Nisus, who from his concealment
|
|
saw the peril of his friend, rushed forward exclaiming, "'Twas I,
|
|
'twas I; turn your swords against me, Rutulians, I did it; he only
|
|
followed me as a friend." While he spoke the sword fell, and pierced
|
|
the comely bosom of Euryalus. His head fell on his shoulder, like a
|
|
flower cut down by the plough. Nisus rushed upon Volscens and
|
|
plunged his sword into his body, and was himself slain on the
|
|
instant by numberless blows.
|
|
|
|
MEZENTIUS.
|
|
|
|
AEneas, with his Etrurian allies, arrived on the scene of action
|
|
in time to rescue his beleaguered camp; and now the two armies being
|
|
nearly equal in strength, the war began in good earnest. We cannot
|
|
find space for all the details, but must simply record the fate of the
|
|
principal characters whom we have introduced to our readers. The
|
|
tyrant Mezentius, finding himself engaged against his revolting
|
|
subjects, raged like a wild beast. He slew all who dared to
|
|
withstand him, and put the multitude to flight wherever he appeared.
|
|
At last he encountered AEneas, and the armies stood still to see the
|
|
issue. Mezentius threw his spear, which striking AEneas's shield
|
|
glanced off and hit Anthor. He was a Grecian by birth, who had left
|
|
Argos, his native city, and followed Evander into Italy. The poet says
|
|
of him with simple pathos which has made the words proverbial, "He
|
|
fell, unhappy, by a wound intended for another, looked up to the
|
|
skies, and dying remembered sweet Argos."* AEneas now in turn hurled
|
|
his lance. It pierced the shield of Mezentius, and wounded him in
|
|
the thigh. Lausus, his son, could not bear the sight, but rushed
|
|
forward and interposed himself, while the followers pressed round
|
|
Mezentius and bore him away. AEneas held his sword suspended over
|
|
Lausus and delayed to strike, but the furious youth pressed on and
|
|
he was compelled to deal the fatal blow. Lausus fell, and AEneas
|
|
bent over him in pity. "Hapless youth," he said, "what can I do for
|
|
you worthy of your praise? Keep those arms in which you glory, and
|
|
fear not but that your body shall be restored to your friends, and
|
|
have due funeral honours." So saying, he called the timid followers
|
|
and delivered the body into their hands.
|
|
|
|
* See Proverbial Expressions, no. 18.
|
|
|
|
Mezentius meanwhile had been borne to the river-side, and washed his
|
|
wound. Soon the news reached him of Lausus's death, and rage and
|
|
despair supplied the place of strength. He mounted his horse and
|
|
dashed into the place of the fight, seeking AEneas. Having found
|
|
him, he rode round him in a circle, throwing one javelin after
|
|
another, while AEneas stood fenced with his shield, turning every
|
|
way to meet them. At last, after Mezentius had three times made the
|
|
circuit, AEneas threw his lance directly at the horse's head. It
|
|
pierced his temples and he fell, while a shout from both armies rent
|
|
the skies. Mezentius asked no mercy, but only that his body might be
|
|
spared the insults of his revolted subjects, and be buried in the same
|
|
grave with his son. He received the fatal stroke not unprepared, and
|
|
poured out his life and his blood together.
|
|
|
|
PALLAS, CAMILLA, TURNUS.
|
|
|
|
While these things were doing in one part of the field, in another
|
|
Turnus encountered the youthful Pallas. The contest between
|
|
champions so unequally matched could not be doubtful. Pallas bore
|
|
himself bravely, but fell by the lance of Turnus. The victor almost
|
|
relented when he saw the brave youth lying dead at his feet, and
|
|
spared to use the privilege of a Conqueror in despoiling him of his
|
|
arms. The belt only, adorned with studs and carvings of gold, he
|
|
took and clasped round his own body. The rest he remitted to the
|
|
friends of the slain.
|
|
After the battle there was a cessation of arms for some days to
|
|
allow both armies to bury their dead. In this interval AEneas
|
|
challenged Turnus to decide the contest by single combat, but Turnus
|
|
evaded the challenge. Another battle ensued, in which Camilla, the
|
|
virgin warrior, was chiefly conspicuous. Her deeds of valor
|
|
surpassed those of the bravest warriors, and many Trojans and
|
|
Etruscans fell pierced with her darts or struck down by her
|
|
battle-axe. At last an Etruscan named Aruns, who had watched her long,
|
|
seeking for some advantage, observed her pursuing a flying enemy whose
|
|
splendid armour offered a tempting prize. Intent on the chase she
|
|
observed not her danger, and the javelin of Aruns struck her and
|
|
inflicted a fatal wound. She fell and breathed her last in the arms of
|
|
her attendant maidens. But Diana, who beheld her fate, suffered not
|
|
her slaughter to be unavenged. Aruns, as he stole away, glad but
|
|
frightened, was struck by a secret arrow, launched by one of the
|
|
nymphs of Diana's train, and died ignobly and unknown.
|
|
At length the final conflict took place between AEneas and Turnus.
|
|
Turnus had avoided the contest as long as he could, but at last,
|
|
impelled by the ill success of his arms and by the murmurs of his
|
|
followers, he braced himself to the conflict. It could not be
|
|
doubtful. On the side of AEneas were the expressed decree of
|
|
destiny, the aid of his goddess-mother at every emergency, and
|
|
impenetrable armour fabricated by Vulcan, at her request, for her son.
|
|
Turnus, on the other hand, was deserted by his celestial allies,
|
|
Juno having been expressly forbidden by Jupiter to assist him any
|
|
longer. Turnus threw his lance, but it recoiled harmless from the
|
|
shield of AEneas. The Trojan hero then threw his, which penetrated the
|
|
shield of Turnus, and pierced his thigh. Then Turnus's fortitude
|
|
forsook him and he begged for mercy; and AEneas would have given him
|
|
life, but at the instant his eye fell on the belt of Pallas, which
|
|
Turnus had taken from the slaughtered youth. Instantly his rage
|
|
revived, and exclaiming, "Pallas immolates thee with this blow," he
|
|
thrust him through with his sword.
|
|
Here the poem of the "AEneid" closes, and we are left to infer
|
|
that AEneas, having triumphed over his foes, obtained Lavinia for
|
|
his bride. Tradition adds that he founded his city, and called it
|
|
after her name, Lavinium. His son Iulus founded Alba Longa, which
|
|
was the birthplace of Romulus and Remus and the cradle of Rome itself.
|
|
|
|
There is an allusion to Camilla in those well-known lines of Pope,
|
|
in which, illustrating the rule that "the sound should be an echo to
|
|
the sense," he says:
|
|
|
|
"When Ajax strives some rock's vast weight to throw,
|
|
The line too labours and the words move slow.
|
|
Not so when swift Camilla scours the plain,
|
|
Flies o'er the unbending corn or skims along the main."
|
|
Essay on Criticism.
|
|
CHAPTER XXXIV.
|
|
PYTHAGORAS- EGYPTIAN DEITIES- ORACLES.
|
|
|
|
PYTHAGORAS.
|
|
|
|
THE teachings of Anchises to AEneas, respecting the nature of the
|
|
human soul, were in conformity with the doctrines of the Pythagoreans.
|
|
Pythagoras (born five hundred and forty years B.C.) was a native of
|
|
the island of Samos, but passed the chief portion of his life at
|
|
Crotona in Italy. He is therefore sometimes called "the Samian," and
|
|
sometimes "the philosopher of Crotona." When young he travelled
|
|
extensively, and it is said visited Egypt, where he was instructed
|
|
by the priests in all their learning, and afterwards journeyed to
|
|
the East, and visited the Persian and Chaldean Magi, and the
|
|
Brahmins of India.
|
|
At Crotona, where he finally established himself, his
|
|
extraordinary qualities collected round him a great number of
|
|
disciples. The inhabitants were notorious for luxury and
|
|
licentiousness, but the good effects of his influence were soon
|
|
visible. Sobriety and temperance succeeded. Six hundred of the
|
|
inhabitants became his disciples and enrolled themselves in a
|
|
society to aid each other in the pursuit of wisdom, uniting their
|
|
property in one common stock for the benefit of the whole. They were
|
|
required to practise the greatest purity and simplicity of manners.
|
|
The first lesson they learned was silence; for a time they were
|
|
required to be only hearers. "He [Pythagoras] said so" (Ipse dixit),
|
|
was to be held by them as sufficient, without any proof. It was only
|
|
the advanced pupils, after years of patient submission, who were
|
|
allowed to ask questions and to state objections.
|
|
Pythagoras considered numbers as the essence and principle of all
|
|
things, and attributed to them a real and distinct existence; so that,
|
|
in his view, they were the elements out of which the universe was
|
|
constructed. How he conceived this process has never been
|
|
satisfactorily explained. He traced the various forms and phenomena of
|
|
the world to numbers as their basis and essence. The "Monad" or unit
|
|
he regarded as the source of all numbers. The number Two was
|
|
imperfect, and the cause of increase and division. Three was called
|
|
the number of the whole because it had a beginning, middle, and end.
|
|
Four, representing the square, is in the highest degree perfect; and
|
|
Ten, as it contains the sum of the four prime numbers, comprehends all
|
|
musical and arithmetical proportions, and denotes the system of the
|
|
world.
|
|
As the numbers proceed from the monad, so he regarded the pure and
|
|
simple essence of the Deity as the source of all the forms of
|
|
nature. Gods, demons, and heroes are emanations of the Supreme, and
|
|
there is a fourth emanation, the human soul. This is immortal, and
|
|
when freed from the fetters of the body passes to the habitation of
|
|
the dead, where it remains till it returns to the world, to dwell in
|
|
some other human or animal body, and at last, when sufficiently
|
|
purified, it returns to the source from which it proceeded. This
|
|
doctrine of the transmigration of souls (metempsychosis), which was
|
|
originally Egyptian and connected with the doctrine of reward and
|
|
punishment of human actions, was the chief cause why the
|
|
Pythagoreans killed no animals. Ovid represents Pythagoras
|
|
addressing his disciples in these words: "Souls never die, but
|
|
always on quitting one abode pass to another. I myself can remember
|
|
that in the time of the Trojan war I was Euphorbus, the son of
|
|
Panthus, and fell by the spear of Menelaus. Lately being in the temple
|
|
of Juno, at Argos, I recognized my shield hung up there among the
|
|
trophies. All things change, nothing perishes. The soul passes
|
|
hither and thither, occupying now this body, now that, passing from
|
|
the body of a beast into that of a man, and thence to a beast's again.
|
|
As wax is stamped with certain figures, then melted, then stamped anew
|
|
with others, yet is always the same wax, so the soul, being always the
|
|
same, yet wears, at different times, different forms. Therefore, if
|
|
the love of kindred is not extinct in your bosoms, forbear, I
|
|
entreat you, to violate the life of those who may haply be your own
|
|
relatives."
|
|
|
|
Shakespeare, in the "Merchant of Venice," makes Gratiano allude to
|
|
the metempsychosis, where he says to Shylock:
|
|
|
|
"Thou almost mak'st me waver in my faith,
|
|
To hold opinion with Pythagoras,
|
|
That souls of animals infuse themselves
|
|
Into the trunks of men; thy currish spirit
|
|
Governed a wolf, who, hanged for human slaughter,
|
|
Infused his soul in thee; for thy desires
|
|
Are wolfish, bloody, starved and ravenous."
|
|
|
|
The relation of the notes of the musical scale to numbers, whereby
|
|
harmony results from vibrations in equal times, and discord from the
|
|
reverse, led Pythagoras to apply the word "harmony" to the visible
|
|
creation, meaning by it the just adaptation of parts to each other.
|
|
This is the idea which Dryden expresses in the beginning of his
|
|
"Song for St. Cecilia's Day":
|
|
|
|
"From harmony, from heavenly harmony
|
|
This everlasting frame began;
|
|
From harmony to harmony
|
|
Through all the compass of the notes it ran,
|
|
The Diapason closing full in Man."
|
|
|
|
In the centre of the universe (he taught) there was a central
|
|
fire, the principle of life. The central fire was surrounded by the
|
|
earth, the moon, the sun, and the five planets. The distances of the
|
|
various heavenly bodies from one another were conceived to
|
|
correspond to the proportions of the musical scale. The heavenly
|
|
bodies, with the gods who inhabited them, were supposed to perform a
|
|
choral dance round the central fire, "not without song." It is this
|
|
doctrine which Shakespeare alludes to when he makes Lorenzo teach
|
|
astronomy to Jessica in this fashion:
|
|
|
|
"Look, Jessica, see how the floor of heaven
|
|
Is thick inlaid with patines of bright gold!
|
|
There's not the smallest orb that thou behold'st
|
|
But in his motion like an angel sings,
|
|
Still quiring to the young-eyed cherubim;
|
|
Such harmony is in immortal souls!
|
|
But whilst this muddy vesture of decay
|
|
Doth grossly close it in we cannot hear it."
|
|
Merchant of Venice.
|
|
|
|
The spheres were conceived to be crystalline or glassy fabrics
|
|
arranged over one another like a nest of bowls reversed. In the
|
|
substance of each sphere one or more of the heavenly bodies was
|
|
supposed to be fixed, so as to move with it. As the spheres are
|
|
transparent we look through them and see the heavenly bodies which
|
|
they contain and carry round with them. But as these spheres cannot
|
|
move on one another without friction, a sound is thereby produced
|
|
which is of exquisite harmony, too fine for mortal ears to
|
|
recognize. Milton, in his "Hymn on the Nativity," thus alludes to
|
|
the music of the spheres:
|
|
|
|
"Ring out, ye crystal spheres!
|
|
Once bless our human ears
|
|
(If ye have power to charm our senses so);
|
|
And let your silver chime
|
|
Move in melodious time;
|
|
And let the bass of Heaven's deep organ blow;
|
|
And with your ninefold harmony
|
|
Make up full concert to the angelic symphony."
|
|
|
|
Pythagoras is said to have invented the lyre. Our own poet
|
|
Longfellow, in "Verses to a Child," thus relates the story:
|
|
|
|
"As great Pythagoras of yore,
|
|
Standing beside the blacksmith's door,
|
|
And hearing the hammers as they smote
|
|
The anvils with a different note,
|
|
Stole from the varying tones that hung
|
|
Vibrant on every iron tongue,
|
|
The secret of the sounding wire,
|
|
And formed the seven-chorded lyre."
|
|
|
|
See also the same poet's "Occultation of Orion"-
|
|
|
|
"The Samian's great AEolian lyre."
|
|
|
|
SYBARIS AND CROTONA.
|
|
|
|
Sybaris, a neighbouring city to Crotona, was as celebrated for
|
|
luxury and effeminacy as Crotona for the reverse. The name has
|
|
become proverbial. J. R. Lowell uses it in this sense in his
|
|
charming little poem "To the Dandelion":
|
|
|
|
"Not in mid June the golden-cuirassed bee
|
|
Feels a more summer-like, warm ravishment
|
|
In the white lily's breezy tent
|
|
(His conquered Sybaris) than I when first
|
|
From the dark green thy yellow circles burst."
|
|
|
|
A war arose between the two cities, and Sybaris was conquered and
|
|
destroyed. Milo, the celebrated athlete, led the army of Crotona. Many
|
|
stories are told of Milo's vast strength, such as his carrying a
|
|
heifer of four years old upon his shoulders and afterwards eating
|
|
the whole of it in a single day. The mode of his death is thus
|
|
related: As he was passing through a forest he saw the trunk of a tree
|
|
which had been partially split open by wood-cutters, and attempted
|
|
to rend it further; but the wood closed upon his hands and held him
|
|
fast, in which state he was attacked and devoured by wolves.
|
|
|
|
Byron, in his "Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte," alludes to the story of
|
|
Milo:
|
|
|
|
"He who of old would rend the oak
|
|
Deemed not of the rebound;
|
|
Chained by the trunk he vainly broke,
|
|
Alone, how looked he round!"
|
|
|
|
EGYPTIAN DEITIES.
|
|
|
|
The Egyptians acknowledged as the highest deity Amun, afterwards
|
|
called Zeus, or Jupiter Ammon. Amun manifested himself in his word
|
|
or will, which created Kneph and Athor, of different sexes. From Kneph
|
|
and Athor proceeded Osiris and Isis. Osiris was worshipped as the
|
|
god of the sun, the source of warmth, life, and fruitfulness, in
|
|
addition to which he was also regarded as the god of the Nile, who
|
|
annually visited his wife, Isis (the Earth), by means of an
|
|
inundation. Serapis or Hermes is sometimes represented as identical
|
|
with Osiris, and sometimes as a distinct divinity, the ruler of
|
|
Tartarus and god of medicine. Anubis is the guardian god,
|
|
represented with a dog's head, emblematic of his character of fidelity
|
|
and watchfulness. Horus or Harpocrates was the son of Osiris. He is
|
|
represented seated on a Lotus flower, with his finger on his lips,
|
|
as the god of Silence.
|
|
In one of Moore's "Irish Melodies" is an allusion to Harpocrates:
|
|
|
|
"Thyself shall, under some rosy bower,
|
|
Sit mute, with thy finger on thy lip;
|
|
Like him, the boy, who born among
|
|
The flowers that on the Nile-stream blush,
|
|
Sits ever thus,- his only song
|
|
To Earth and Heaven, 'Hush all, hush!"
|
|
|
|
MYTH OF OSIRIS AND ISIS.
|
|
|
|
Osiris and Isis were at one time induced to descend to the earth
|
|
to bestow gifts and blessings on its inhabitants. Isis showed them
|
|
first the use of wheat and barley, and Osiris made the instruments
|
|
of agriculture and taught men the use of them, as well as how to
|
|
harness the ox to the plough. He then gave men laws, the institution
|
|
of marriage, a civil organization, and taught them how to worship
|
|
the gods. After he had thus made the valley of the Nile a happy
|
|
country, he assembled a host with which he went to bestow his
|
|
blessings upon the rest of the world. He conquered the nations
|
|
everywhere, but not with weapons, only with music and eloquence. His
|
|
brother, Typhon saw this, and filled with envy and malice sought
|
|
during his absence to usurp his throne. But Isis, who held the reins
|
|
of government, frustrated his plans. Still more embittered, he now
|
|
resolved to kill his brother. This he did in the following manner:
|
|
Having organized a conspiracy of seventy-two members, he went with
|
|
them to the feast which was celebrated in honour of the king's return.
|
|
He then caused a box or chest to be brought in, which had been made to
|
|
fit exactly the size of Osiris, and declared that he would give that
|
|
chest of precious wood to whomsoever could get into it. The rest tried
|
|
in vain, but no sooner was Osiris in it than Typhon and his companions
|
|
closed the lid and flung the chest into the Nile. When Isis heard of
|
|
the cruel murder she wept and mourned, and then with her hair shorn,
|
|
clothed in black and beating her breast, she sought diligently for the
|
|
body of her husband. In this search she was materially assisted by
|
|
Anubis, the son of Osiris and Nephthys. They sought in vain for some
|
|
time; for when the chest, carried by the waves to the shores of
|
|
Byblos, had become entangled in the reeds that grew at the edge of the
|
|
water, the divine power that dwelt in the body of Osiris imparted such
|
|
strength to the shrub that it grew into a mighty tree, enclosing in
|
|
its trunk the coffin of the god. This tree with its sacred deposit was
|
|
shortly after felled, and erected as a column in the palace of the
|
|
king of Phoenicia. But at length by the aid of Anubis and the sacred
|
|
birds, Isis ascertained these facts, and then went to the royal
|
|
city. There she offered herself at the palace as a servant, and
|
|
being admitted, threw off her disguise and appeared as the goddess,
|
|
surrounded with thunder and lightning. Striking the column with her
|
|
wand she caused it to split open and give up the sacred coffin. This
|
|
she seized and returned with it, and concealed it in the depth of a
|
|
forest, but Typhon discovered it, and cutting the body into fourteen
|
|
pieces scattered them hither and thither. After a tedious search, Isis
|
|
found thirteen pieces, the fishes of the Nile having eaten the
|
|
other. This she replaced by an imitation of sycamore wood, and
|
|
buried the body at Philoe, which became ever after the great burying
|
|
place of the nation, and the spot to which pilgrimages were made
|
|
from all parts of the country. A temple of surpassing magnificence was
|
|
also erected there in honour of the god, and at every place where
|
|
one of his limbs had been found minor temples and tombs were built
|
|
to commemorate the event. Osiris became after that the tutelar deity
|
|
of the Egyptians. His soul was supposed always to inhabit the body
|
|
of the bull Apis, and at his death to transfer itself to his
|
|
successor.
|
|
Apis, the Bull of Memphis, was worshipped with the greatest
|
|
reverence by the Egyptians. The individual animal who was held to be
|
|
Apis was recognized by certain signs. It was requisite that he
|
|
should be quite black, have a white square mark on the forehead,
|
|
another, in the form of an eagle, on his back, and under his tongue
|
|
a lump somewhat in the shape of a scarabaeus or beetle. As soon as a
|
|
bull thus marked was found by those sent in search of him, he was
|
|
placed in a building facing the east, and was fed with milk for four
|
|
months. At the expiration of this term the priests repaired at new
|
|
moon, with great pomp, to his habitation and saluted him Apis. He
|
|
was placed in a vessel magnificently decorated and conveyed down the
|
|
Nile to Memphis, where a temple, with two chapels and a court for
|
|
exercise, was assigned to him. Sacrifices were made to him, and once
|
|
every year, about the time when the Nile began to rise, a golden cup
|
|
was thrown into the river, and a grand festival was held to
|
|
celebrate his birthday. The people believed that during this
|
|
festival the crocodiles forgot their natural ferocity and became
|
|
harmless. There was, however, one drawback to his happy lot: he was
|
|
not permitted to live beyond a certain period, and if, when he had
|
|
attained the age of twenty-five years, he still survived, the
|
|
priests drowned him in the sacred cistern and then buried him in the
|
|
temple of Serapis. On the death of this bull, whether it occurred in
|
|
the course of nature or by violence, the whole land was filled with
|
|
sorrow and lamentations, which lasted until his successor was found.
|
|
We find the following item in one of the newspapers of the day:
|
|
"The Tomb of Apis.- The excavations going on at Memphis bid fair
|
|
to make that buried city as interesting as Pompeii. The monster tomb
|
|
of Apis is now open, after having lain unknown for centuries."
|
|
|
|
Milton, in his "Hymn on the Nativity," alludes to the Egyptian
|
|
deities, not as imaginary beings, but as real demons, put to flight by
|
|
the coming of Christ.
|
|
|
|
"The brutish gods of Nile as fast,
|
|
Isis and Horus and the dog Anubis haste.
|
|
Nor is Osiris seen
|
|
In Memphian grove or green
|
|
Trampling the unshowered* grass with lowings loud;
|
|
Nor can he be at rest
|
|
Within his sacred chest;
|
|
Nought but profoundest hell can be his shroud.
|
|
In vain with timbrel'd anthems dark
|
|
The sable-stoled sorcerers bear his worshipped ark."
|
|
|
|
* There being no rain in Egypt, the grass is "unshowered," and the
|
|
country depends for its fertility upon the overflowings of the Nile.
|
|
The ark alluded to in the last line is shown by pictures still
|
|
remaining on the walk of the Egyptian temple to have been borne by the
|
|
priests in their religious processions. It probable represented the
|
|
chest in which Osiris was placed.
|
|
|
|
Isis was represented in statuary with the head veiled, a symbol of
|
|
mystery. It is this which Tennyson alludes to in "Maud," IV. 8:
|
|
|
|
"For the drift of the Maker is dark, an Isis hid by the veil," etc.
|
|
|
|
ORACLES.
|
|
|
|
Oracle was the name used to denote the place where answers were
|
|
supposed to be given by any of the divinities to those who consulted
|
|
them respecting the future. The word was also used to signify the
|
|
response which was given.
|
|
The most ancient Grecian oracle was that of Jupiter at Dodona.
|
|
According to one account, it was established in the following
|
|
manner: Two black doves took their flight from Thebes in Egypt. One
|
|
flew to Dodona in Epirus, and alighting in a grove of oaks, it
|
|
proclaimed in human language to the inhabitants of the district that
|
|
they must establish there an oracle of Jupiter. The other dove flew to
|
|
the temple of Jupiter Ammon in the Libyan Oasis, and delivered a
|
|
similar command there. Another account is, that they were not doves,
|
|
but priestesses, who were carried off from Thebes in Egypt by the
|
|
Phoenicians, and set up oracles at the Oasis and Dodona. The responses
|
|
of the oracle were given from the trees, by the branches rustling in
|
|
the wind, the sounds being interpreted by the priests.
|
|
But the most celebrated of the Grecian oracles was that of Apollo at
|
|
Delphi, a city built on the slopes of Parnassus in Phocis.
|
|
It had been observed at a very early period that the goats feeding
|
|
on Parnassus were thrown into convulsions when they approached a
|
|
certain long deep cleft in the side of the mountain. This was owing to
|
|
a peculiar vapour arising out of the cavern, and one of the
|
|
goatherds was induced to try its effects upon himself. Inhaling the
|
|
intoxicating air, he was affected in the same manner as the cattle had
|
|
been, and the inhabitants of the surrounding country, unable to
|
|
explain the circumstance, imputed the convulsive ravings to which he
|
|
gave utterance while under the power of the exhalations to a divine
|
|
inspiration. The fact was speedily circulated widely, and a temple was
|
|
erected on the spot. The prophetic influence was at first variously
|
|
attributed to the goddess Earth, to Neptune, Themis, and others, but
|
|
it was at length assigned to Apollo, and to him alone. A priestess was
|
|
appointed whose office it was to inhale the hallowed air, and who
|
|
was named the Pythia. She was prepared for this duty by previous
|
|
ablution at the fountain of Castalia, and being crowned with laurel
|
|
was seated upon a tripod similarly adorned, which was placed over
|
|
the chasm whence the divine afflatus proceeded. Her inspired words
|
|
while thus situated were interpreted by the priests.
|
|
|
|
ORACLE OF TROPHONIUS.
|
|
|
|
Besides the oracles of Jupiter and Apollo, at Dodona and Delphi,
|
|
that of Trophonius in Boeotia was held in high estimation.
|
|
Trophonius and Agamedes were brothers. They were distinguished
|
|
architects, and built the temple of Apollo at Delphi, and a treasury
|
|
for King Hyrieus. In the wall of the treasury they placed a stone,
|
|
in such a manner that it could be taken out; and by this means, from
|
|
time to time, purloined the treasure. This amazed Hyrieus, for his
|
|
locks and seals were untouched, and yet his wealth continually
|
|
diminished. At length he set a trap for the thief and Agamedes was
|
|
caught.
|
|
Trophonius, unable to extricate him, and fearing that when found
|
|
he would be compelled by torture to discover his accomplice, cut off
|
|
his head. Trophonius himself is said to have been shortly afterwards
|
|
swallowed up by the earth.
|
|
The oracle of Trophonius was at Lebadea in Boeotia. During a great
|
|
drought the Boeotians, it is said, were directed by the god at
|
|
Delphi to seek aid of Trophonius at Lebadea. They came thither, but
|
|
could find no oracle. One of them, however, happening to see a swarm
|
|
of bees, followed them to a chasm in the earth, which proved to be the
|
|
place sought.
|
|
Peculiar ceremonies were to be performed by the person who came to
|
|
consult the oracle. After these preliminaries, he descended into the
|
|
cave by a narrow passage. This place could be entered only in the
|
|
night. The person returned from the cave by the same narrow passage,
|
|
but walking backwards. He appeared melancholy and dejected; and
|
|
hence the proverb which was applied to a person low-spirited and
|
|
gloomy, "He has been consulting the oracle of Trophonius."
|
|
|
|
ORACLE OF AESCULAPIUS.
|
|
|
|
There were numerous oracles of AEsculapius, but the most
|
|
celebrated one was at Epidaurus. Here the sick sought responses and
|
|
the recovery of their health by sleeping in the temple. It has been
|
|
inferred from the accounts that have come down to us that the
|
|
treatment of the sick resembled what is now called Animal Magnetism or
|
|
Mesmerism.
|
|
Serpents were sacred to AEsculapius, probably because of a
|
|
superstition that those animals have a faculty of renewing their youth
|
|
by a change of skin.
|
|
The worship of AEsculapius was introduced into Rome in a time of
|
|
great sickness, and an embassy sent to the temple of Epidaurus to
|
|
entreat the aid of the god. AEsculapius was propitious and on the
|
|
return of the ship accompanied it in the form of a serpent. Arriving
|
|
in the river Tiber, the serpent glided from the vessel and took
|
|
possession of an island in the river, and a temple was there erected
|
|
to his honour.
|
|
|
|
ORACLE OF APIS.
|
|
|
|
At Memphis the sacred bull Apis gave answer to those who consulted
|
|
him by the manner in which he received or rejected what was
|
|
presented to him. If the bull refused food from the hand of the
|
|
inquirer it was considered an unfavourable sign, and the contrary when
|
|
he received it.
|
|
It has been a question whether oracular responses ought to be
|
|
ascribed to mere human contrivance or to the agency of evil spirits.
|
|
The latter opinion has been most general in past ages. A third
|
|
theory has been advanced since the phenomena of Mesmerism have
|
|
attracted attention, that something like the mesmeric trance was
|
|
induced in the Pythoness, and the faculty of clairvoyance really
|
|
called into action.
|
|
Another question is as to the time when the Pagan oracles ceased
|
|
to give responses. Ancient Christian writers assert that they became
|
|
silent at the birth of Christ, and were heard no more after that date.
|
|
Milton adopts this view in his "Hymn on the Nativity," and in lines of
|
|
solemn and elevated beauty pictures the consternation of the heathen
|
|
idols at the advent of the Saviour:
|
|
|
|
"The oracles are dumb;
|
|
No voice or hideous hum
|
|
Rings through the arched roof in words deceiving.
|
|
Apollo from his shrine
|
|
Can no more divine,
|
|
With hollow shriek the steep of Delphos leaving.
|
|
No nightly trance or breathed spell
|
|
Inspires the pale-eyed priest from the prophetic cell."
|
|
|
|
In Cowper's poem of "Yardley Oak" there are some beautiful
|
|
mythological allusions. The former of the two following is to the
|
|
fable of Castor and Pollux; the latter is more appropriate to our
|
|
present subject. Addressing the acorn he says,
|
|
|
|
"Thou fell'st mature; and in the loamy clod,
|
|
Swelling with vegetative force instinct,
|
|
Didst burst thine egg, as theirs the fabled Twins
|
|
Now stars; two lobes protruding, paired exact;
|
|
A leaf succeeded and another leaf,
|
|
And, all the elements thy puny growth
|
|
Fostering propitious, thou becam'st a twig.
|
|
Who lived when thou wast such? O, couldst thou speak,
|
|
As in Dodona once thy kindred trees
|
|
Oracular, I would not curious ask
|
|
The future, best unknown, but at thy mouth
|
|
Inquisitive, the less ambiguous past."
|
|
|
|
Tennyson, in his "Talking Oak," alludes to the oaks of Dodona in
|
|
these lines:
|
|
|
|
"And I will work in prose and rhyme,
|
|
And praise thee more in both
|
|
Than bard has honored beech or lime,
|
|
Or that Thessalian growth
|
|
In which the swarthy ring-dove sat
|
|
And mystic sentence spoke;" etc.
|
|
|
|
Byron alludes to the oracle of Delphi where, speaking of Rousseau,
|
|
whose writings he conceives did much to bring on the French
|
|
revolution, he says,
|
|
|
|
"For then he was inspired, and from him came,
|
|
As from the Pythian's mystic cave of yore,
|
|
Those oracles which set the world in flame,
|
|
Nor ceased to burn till kingdoms were no more."
|
|
CHAPTER XXXV.
|
|
ORIGIN OF MYTHOLOGY- STATUES OF GODS AND GODDESSES- POETS
|
|
OF MYTHOLOGY.
|
|
|
|
ORIGIN OF MYTHOLOGY.
|
|
|
|
HAVING reached the close of our series of stories of Pagan
|
|
mythology, an inquiry suggests itself. "Whence came these stories?
|
|
Have they a foundation in truth, or are they simply dreams of the
|
|
imagination?" Philosophers have suggested various theories of the
|
|
subject; and 1. The Scriptural theory; according to which all
|
|
mythological legends are derived from the narratives of Scriptures,
|
|
though the real facts have been disguised and altered. Thus
|
|
Deucalion is only another name for Noah, Hercules for Samson, Arion
|
|
for Jonah, etc. Sir Walter Raleigh, in his "History of the World,"
|
|
says, "Jubal, Tubal, and Tubal-Cain were Mercury, Vulcan, and
|
|
Apollo, inventors of Pasturage, Smithing, and Music. The Dragon
|
|
which kept the golden apples was the serpent that beguiled Eve.
|
|
Nimrod's tower was the attempt of the Giants against Heaven." There
|
|
are doubtless many curious coincidences like these, but the theory
|
|
cannot without extravagance be pushed so far as to account for any
|
|
great proportion of the stories.
|
|
2. The Historical theory; according to which all the persons
|
|
mentioned in mythology were once real human beings, and the legends
|
|
and fabulous traditions relating to them are merely the additions
|
|
and embellishments of later times. Thus the story of AEolus, the
|
|
king and god of the winds, is supposed to have risen from the fact
|
|
that AEolus was the ruler of some islands in the Tyrrhenian Sea, where
|
|
be reigned as a just and pious king, and taught the natives the use of
|
|
sails for or ships, and how to tell from the signs of the atmosphere
|
|
the changes of the weather and the winds. Cadmus, who, the legend
|
|
says, sowed the earth with dragon's teeth, from which sprang a crop of
|
|
armed men, was in fact an emigrant from Phoenicia, and brought with
|
|
him into Greece the knowledge of the letters of the alphabet, which be
|
|
taught to the natives. From these rudiments of learning sprung
|
|
civilization, which the poets have always been prone to describe as
|
|
a deterioration of man's first estate, the Golden Age of innocence and
|
|
simplicity.
|
|
3. The Allegorical theory supposes that all the myths of the
|
|
ancients were allegorical and symbolical, and contained some moral,
|
|
religious, or philosophical truth or historical fact, under the form
|
|
of an allegory, but came in process of time to be understood
|
|
literally. Thus Saturn, who devours his own children, is the same
|
|
power whom the Greeks called Cronos (Time), which may truly be said to
|
|
destroy whatever it has brought into existence. The story of Io is
|
|
interpreted in a similar manner. Io is the moon, and Argus the
|
|
starry sky, which, as it were, keeps sleepless watch over her. The
|
|
fabulous wanderings of lo represent the continual revolutions of the
|
|
moon, which also suggested to Milton the same idea.
|
|
|
|
"To behold the wandering moon
|
|
Riding near her highest noon,
|
|
Like one that had been led astray
|
|
In the heaven's wide, pathless way."
|
|
Il Penseroso.
|
|
|
|
4. The Physical theory; according to which the elements of air,
|
|
fire, and water were originally the objects of religious adoration,
|
|
and the principal deities were personifications of the powers of
|
|
nature. The transition was easy from a personification of the elements
|
|
to the notion of supernatural beings presiding over and governing
|
|
the different objects of nature. The Greeks, whose imagination was
|
|
lively, peopled all nature with invisible beings, and supposed that
|
|
every object, from the sun and sea to the smallest fountain and
|
|
rivulet, was under the care of some particular divinity. Wordsworth,
|
|
in his "Excursion," has beautifully developed this view of Grecian
|
|
mythology:
|
|
|
|
"In that fair clime the lonely herdsman, stretched
|
|
On the soft grass through half a summer's day,
|
|
With music lulled his indolent repose;
|
|
And, in some fit of weariness, if he,
|
|
When his own breath was silent, chanced to hear
|
|
A distant strain far sweeter than the sounds
|
|
Which his poor skill could make, his fancy fetched
|
|
Even from the blazing chariot of the Sun
|
|
A beardless youth who touched a golden lute,
|
|
And filled the illumined groves with ravishment.
|
|
The mighty hunter, lifting up his eyes
|
|
Toward the crescent Moon, with grateful heart
|
|
Called on the lovely Wanderer who bestowed
|
|
That timely light to share his joyous sport;
|
|
And hence a beaming goddess with her nymphs
|
|
Across the lawn and through the darksome grove
|
|
(Not unaccompanied with tuneful notes
|
|
By echo multiplied from rock or cave)
|
|
Swept in the storm of chase, as moon and stars
|
|
Glance rapidly along the clouded heaven
|
|
When winds are blowing strong. The Traveller slaked
|
|
His thirst from rill or gushing fount, and thanked
|
|
The Naiad. Sunbeams upon distant hills
|
|
Gliding apace with shadows in their train,
|
|
Might, with small help from fancy, be transformed
|
|
Into fleet Oreads sporting visibly.
|
|
The Zephyrs, fanning, as they passed, their wings,
|
|
Lacked not for love fair objects whom they wooed
|
|
With gentle whisper. Withered boughs grotesque,
|
|
Stripped of their leaves and twigs by hoary age,
|
|
From depth of shaggy covert peeping forth
|
|
In the low vale, or on steep mountain side;
|
|
And sometimes intermixed with stirring horns
|
|
Of the live deer, or goat's depending beard;
|
|
These were the lurking Satyrs, a wild brood
|
|
Of gamesome deities; or Pan himself,
|
|
That simple shepherd's awe-inspiring god."
|
|
|
|
All the theories which have been mentioned are true to a certain
|
|
extent. It would therefore be more correct to say that the mythology
|
|
of a nation has sprung from all these sources combined than from any
|
|
one in particular. We may add also that there are many myths which
|
|
have arisen from the desire of man to account for those natural
|
|
phenomena which he cannot understand; and not a few have had their
|
|
rise from a similar desire of giving a reason for the names of
|
|
places and persons.
|
|
|
|
STATUES OF THE GODS.
|
|
|
|
To adequately represent to the eye the ideas intended to be conveyed
|
|
to the mind under the several names of deities was a task which called
|
|
into exercise the highest powers of genius and art. Of to many
|
|
attempts four have been most celebrated the first two known to us only
|
|
by the descriptions of the ancients, the others still extant and the
|
|
acknowledged masterpieces of the sculptor's art.
|
|
|
|
THE OLYMPIAN JUPITER.
|
|
|
|
The statue of the Olympian Jupiter by Phidias was considered the
|
|
highest achievement of this department of Grecian art. It was of
|
|
colossal dimensions, and was what the ancients called
|
|
"chryselephantine"; that is, composed of ivory and gold; the parts
|
|
representing flesh being of ivory laid on a core of wood or stone,
|
|
while the drapery and other ornaments were of gold. The height of
|
|
the figure was forty feet, on a pedestal twelve feet high. The god was
|
|
represented seated on his throne. His brows were crowned with a wreath
|
|
of olive, and he held in his right hand a sceptre, and in his left a
|
|
statue of Victory. The throne was of cedar, adorned with gold and
|
|
precious stones.
|
|
The idea which the artist essayed to embody was that of the
|
|
supreme deity of the Hellenic (Grecian) nation, enthroned as a
|
|
conqueror, in perfect majesty and repose, and ruling with a nod the
|
|
subject world. Phidias avowed that he took his idea from the
|
|
representation which Homer gives in the first book of the "Iliad,"
|
|
in the passage thus translated by Pope:
|
|
|
|
"He spoke and awful bends his sable brows,
|
|
Shakes his ambrosial curls and gives the nod,
|
|
The stamp of fate and sanction of the god.
|
|
High heaven with reverence the dread signal took,
|
|
And all Olympus to the centre shook."*
|
|
|
|
* Cowper's version is less elegant, but truer to the original:
|
|
|
|
"He ceased, and under his dark brows the nod
|
|
Vouchsafed of confirmation. All around
|
|
The sovereign's everlasting head his curls
|
|
Ambrosial shook, and the huge mountain reeled."
|
|
|
|
It may interest our readers to see how this passage appears in
|
|
another famous version, that which was issued under the name of
|
|
Tickell, contemporaneously with Pope's, and which, being by many
|
|
attributed to Addison, led to the quarrel which ensued between Addison
|
|
and Pope:
|
|
|
|
"This said, his kingly brow the sire inclined;
|
|
The large black curls fell awful from behind,
|
|
Thick shadowing the stern forehead of the god;
|
|
Olympus trembled at the almighty nod."
|
|
|
|
THE MINERVA OF THE PARTHENON.
|
|
|
|
This was also the work of Phidias. It stood in the Parthenon, or
|
|
temple of Minerva at Athens. The goddess was represented standing.
|
|
In one hand she held a spear, in the other a statue of Victory. Her
|
|
helmet, highly decorated, was surmounted by a Sphinx. The statue was
|
|
forty feet in height, and, like the Jupiter, composed of ivory and
|
|
gold. The eyes were of marble, and probably painted to represent the
|
|
iris and pupil. The Parthenon, in which this statue stood, was also
|
|
constructed under the direction and superintendence of Phidias. Its
|
|
exterior was enriched with sculptures, many of them from the hand of
|
|
Phidias. The Elgin marbles, now in the British Museum, are a part of
|
|
them.
|
|
Both the Jupiter and Minerva of Phidias are lost, but there is
|
|
good ground to believe that we have, in several extant statues and
|
|
busts, the artist's conceptions of the countenances of both. They
|
|
are characterized by grave and dignified beauty, and freedom from
|
|
any transient expression, which in the language of art is called
|
|
repose.
|
|
|
|
THE VENUS DE' MEDICI.
|
|
|
|
The Venus of the Medici is so called from its having been in the
|
|
possession of the princes of that name in Rome when it first attracted
|
|
attention, about two hundred years ago. An inscription on the base
|
|
records it to be the work of Cleomenes, an Athenian sculptor of 200
|
|
B.C., but the authenticity of the inscription is doubtful. There is
|
|
a story that the artist was employed by public authority to make a
|
|
statue exhibiting the perfection of female beauty, and to aid him in
|
|
his task the most perfect forms the city could supply were furnished
|
|
him for models. It is this which Thomson alludes to in his "Summer":
|
|
|
|
"So stands the statue that enchants the world;
|
|
So bending tries to veil the matchless boast,
|
|
The mingled beauties of exulting Greece."
|
|
|
|
Byron also alludes to this statue. Speaking of the Florence
|
|
Museum, he says:
|
|
|
|
"There, too, the goddess loves in stone, and fills
|
|
The air around with beauty;" etc.
|
|
|
|
And in the next stanza,
|
|
|
|
"Blood, pulse, and breast confirm the Dardan shepherd's prize."
|
|
|
|
See this last allusion explained in Chapter XXVII.
|
|
|
|
THE APOLLO BELVEDERE.
|
|
|
|
The most highly esteemed of all the remains of ancient sculpture
|
|
is the statue of Apollo, called the Belvedere, from the name of the
|
|
apartment of the Pope's palace at Rome in which it was placed. The
|
|
artist is unknown. It is supposed to be a work of Roman art, of
|
|
about the first century of our era. It is a standing figure, in
|
|
marble, more than seven feet high, naked except for the cloak which is
|
|
fastened around the neck and hangs over the extended left arm. It is
|
|
supposed to represent the god in the moment when he has shot the arrow
|
|
to destroy the monster Python. (See Chapter III.) The victorious
|
|
divinity is in the act of stepping forward. The left arm, which
|
|
seems to have held the bow, is outstretched, and the head is turned in
|
|
the same direction. In attitude and proportion the graceful majesty of
|
|
the figure is unsurpassed. The effect is completed by the countenance,
|
|
where on the perfection of youthful godlike beauty there dwells the
|
|
consciousness of triumphant power.
|
|
|
|
THE DIANA A LA BICHE.
|
|
|
|
The Diana of the Hind, in the palace of the Louvre, may be
|
|
considered the counterpart to the Apollo Belvedere. The attitude
|
|
much resembles that of the Apollo, the sizes correspond and also the
|
|
style of execution. It is a work of the highest order, though by no
|
|
means equal to the Apollo. The attitude is that of hurried and eager
|
|
motion, the face that of a huntress in the excitement of the chase.
|
|
The left hand is extended over the forehead of the Hind, which runs by
|
|
her side, the right arm reaches backward over the shoulder to draw
|
|
an arrow from the quiver.
|
|
|
|
THE POETS OF MYTHOLOGY.
|
|
|
|
Homer, from whose poems of the "Iliad" and "Odyssey" we have taken
|
|
the chief part of our chapters of the Trojan war and the return of the
|
|
Grecians, is almost as mythical a personage as the heroes he
|
|
celebrates. The traditionary story is that he was a wandering
|
|
minstrel, blind and old, who travelled from place to place singing his
|
|
lays to the music of his harp, in the courts of princes or the
|
|
cottages of peasants, and dependent upon the voluntary offerings of
|
|
his hearers for support. Byron calls him "The blind old man of
|
|
Scio's rocky isle," and a well-known epigram, alluding to the
|
|
uncertainty of the fact of his birthplace, says:
|
|
|
|
"Seven wealthy towns contend for Homer dead,
|
|
Through which the living Homer begged his bread."
|
|
|
|
These seven were Smyrna, Scio, Rhodes, Colophon, Salamis, Argos, and
|
|
Athens.
|
|
Modern scholars have doubted whether the Homeric poems are the
|
|
work of any single mind. This arises from the difficulty of
|
|
believing that poems of such length could have been committed to
|
|
writing at so early an age as that usually assigned to these, an age
|
|
earlier than the date of any remaining inscriptions or coins, and when
|
|
no materials capable of containing such long productions were yet
|
|
introduced into use. On the other hand it is asked how poems of such
|
|
length could have been handed down from age to age by means of the
|
|
memory alone. This is answered by the statement that there was a
|
|
professional body of men, called Rhapsodists, who recited the poems of
|
|
others, and whose business it was to commit to memory and rehearse for
|
|
pay the national and patriotic legends.
|
|
The prevailing opinion of the learned, at this time, seems to be
|
|
that the framework and much of the structure of the poems belongs to
|
|
Homer, but that there are numerous interpolations and additions by
|
|
other hands.
|
|
The date assigned to Homer, on the authority of Herodotus, is 850
|
|
B.C.
|
|
|
|
VIRGIL.
|
|
|
|
Virgil, called also by his surname, Maro, from whose poem of the
|
|
"AEneid" we have taken the story of AEneas, was one of the great poets
|
|
who made the reign of the Roman emperor Augustus so celebrated,
|
|
under the name of the Augustan age. Virgil was born in Mantua in the
|
|
year 70 B.C. His great poem is ranked next to those of Homer, in the
|
|
highest class of poetical composition, the Epic. Virgil is far
|
|
inferior to Homer in originality and invention, but superior to him in
|
|
correctness and elegance. To critics of English lineage Milton alone
|
|
of modern poets seems worthy to be classed with these illustrious
|
|
ancients. His poem of "Paradise Lost," from which we have borrowed
|
|
so many illustrations, is in many respects equal, in some superior, to
|
|
either of the great works of antiquity. The following epigram of
|
|
Dryden characterizes the three poets with as much truth as it is usual
|
|
to find in such pointed criticism.
|
|
|
|
"ON MILTON.
|
|
|
|
"Three poets in three different ages born,
|
|
Greece, Italy, and England did adorn.
|
|
The first in loftiness of soul surpassed,
|
|
The next in majesty, in both the last.
|
|
The force of nature could no further go;
|
|
To make a third she joined the other two."
|
|
|
|
From Cowper's "Table Talk":
|
|
|
|
"Ages elapsed ere Homer's lamp appeared,
|
|
And ages ere the Mantuan swan was heard.
|
|
To carry nature lengths unknown before,
|
|
To give a Milton birth, asked ages more.
|
|
Thus genius rose and set at ordered times,
|
|
And shot a dayspring into distant climes,
|
|
Ennobling every region that he chose;
|
|
He sunk in Greece, in Italy he rose,
|
|
And, tedious years of Gothic darkness past,
|
|
Emerged all splendour in our isle at last.
|
|
Thus lovely Halcyons dive into the main,
|
|
Then show far off their shining plumes again."
|
|
|
|
OVID,
|
|
|
|
often alluded to in poetry by his other name of Naso, was born in
|
|
the year 43 B.C. He was educated for public life and held some offices
|
|
of considerable dignity, but poetry was his delight, and he early
|
|
resolved to devote himself to it. He accordingly sought the society of
|
|
the contemporary poets, and was acquainted with Horace and saw Virgil,
|
|
though the latter died when Ovid was yet too young and undistinguished
|
|
to have formed his acquaintance. Ovid spent an easy life at Rome in
|
|
the enjoyment of a competent income. He was intimate with the family
|
|
of Augustus, the emperor, and it is supposed that some serious offence
|
|
given to some member of that family was the cause of an event which
|
|
reversed the poet's happy circumstances and clouded all the latter
|
|
portion of his life. At the age of fifty he was banished from Rome,
|
|
and ordered to betake himself to Tomi, on the borders of the Black
|
|
Sea. Here, among the barbarous people and in a severe climate, the
|
|
poet, who had been accustomed to all the pleasures of a luxurious
|
|
capital and the society of his most distinguished contemporaries,
|
|
spent the last ten years of his life, worn out with grief and anxiety.
|
|
His only consolation in exile was to address his wife and absent
|
|
friends, and his letters were all poetical. Though these poems (the
|
|
"Tristia" and "Letters from Pontus") have no other topic than the
|
|
poet's sorrow's, his exquisite taste and fruitful invention have
|
|
redeemed them from the charge of being tedious, and they are read with
|
|
pleasure and even with sympathy.
|
|
The two great works of Ovid are his "Metamorphoses" and his "Fasti."
|
|
They are both mythological poems, and from the former we have taken
|
|
most of our stories of Grecian and Roman mythology. A late writer thus
|
|
characterizes these poems:
|
|
"The rich mythology of Greece furnished Ovid, as it may still
|
|
furnish the poet, the painter, and the sculptor, with materials for
|
|
his art. With exquisite taste, simplicity, and pathos he has
|
|
narrated the fabulous traditions of early ages, and given to them that
|
|
appearance of reality which only a master-hand could impart. His
|
|
pictures of nature are striking and true; he selects with care that
|
|
which is appropriate; he rejects the superfluous; and when he has
|
|
completed his work, it is neither defective nor redundant. The
|
|
'Metamorphoses' are read with pleasure by youth, and are re-read in
|
|
more advanced age with still greater delight. The poet ventured to
|
|
predict that his poem would survive him, and be read wherever the
|
|
Roman name was known."
|
|
The prediction above alluded to is contained in the closing lines of
|
|
the "Metamorphoses," of which we give a literal translation below:
|
|
|
|
"And now I close my work, which not the ire
|
|
Of Jove, nor tooth of time, nor sword, nor fire
|
|
Shall bring to nought. Come when it will that day
|
|
Which o'er the body, not the mind, has sway,
|
|
And snatch the remnant of my life away,
|
|
My better part above the stars shall soar,
|
|
And my renown endure for evermore.
|
|
Where'er the Roman arms and arts shall spread,
|
|
There by the people shall my book be read;
|
|
And, if aught true in poet's visions be,
|
|
My name and fame have immortality."
|
|
CHAPTER XXXVI.
|
|
MODERN MONSTERS- THE PHOENIX- BASILISK- UNICORN-
|
|
-SALAMANDER.
|
|
|
|
MODERN MONSTERS.
|
|
|
|
THERE is a set of imaginary beings which seem to have been the
|
|
successors of the "Gorgons, Hydras, and Chimeras dire" of the old
|
|
superstitions, and, having no connection with the false gods of
|
|
Paganism, to have continued to enjoy an existence in the popular
|
|
belief after Paganism was superseded by Christianity. They are
|
|
mentioned perhaps by the classical writers, but their chief popularity
|
|
and currency seem to have been in more modern times. We seek our
|
|
accounts of them not so much in the poetry of the ancients as in the
|
|
old natural history books and narrations of travellers. The accounts
|
|
which we are about to give are taken chiefly from the Penny
|
|
Cyclopedia.
|
|
|
|
THE PHOENIX.
|
|
|
|
Ovid tells the story of the Phoenix as follows: "Most beings
|
|
spring from other individuals; but there is a certain kind which
|
|
reproduces itself. The Assyrians call it the Phoenix. It does not live
|
|
on fruit or flowers, but on frankincense and odoriferous gums. When it
|
|
has lived five hundred years, it builds itself a nest in the
|
|
branches of an oak, or on the top of a palm tree. In this it
|
|
collects cinnamon, and spikenard, and myrrh, and of these 'materials
|
|
builds a pile on which it deposits itself, and dying, breathes out its
|
|
last breath amidst odours. From the body of the parent bird, a young
|
|
Phoenix issues forth, destined to live as long a life as its
|
|
predecessor. When this has grown up and gained sufficient strength, it
|
|
lifts its nest from the tree (its own cradle and its parent's
|
|
sepulchre), and carries it to the city of Heliopolis in Egypt, and
|
|
deposits it in the temple of the Sun."
|
|
Such is the account given by a poet. Now let us see that of a
|
|
philosophic historian. Tacitus says, "in the consulship of Paulus
|
|
Fabius (A.D. 34) the miraculous bird known to the world by the name of
|
|
the Phoenix, after disappearing for a series of ages, revisited Egypt.
|
|
It was attended in its flight by a group of various birds, all
|
|
attracted by the novelty, and gazing with wonder at so beautiful an
|
|
appearance." He then gives an account of the bird, not varying
|
|
materially from the preceding, but adding some details. "The first
|
|
care of the young bird as soon as fledged, and able to trust to his
|
|
wings, is to perform the obsequies of his father. But this duty is not
|
|
undertaken rashly. He collects a quantity of myrrh, and to try his
|
|
strength makes frequent excursions with a load on his back. When he
|
|
has gained sufficient confidence in his own vigour, he takes up the
|
|
body of his father and flies with it to the altar of the Sun, where he
|
|
leaves it to be consumed in flames of fragrance." Other writers add
|
|
a few particulars. The myrrh is compacted in the form of an egg, in
|
|
which the dead Phoenix is enclosed. From the mouldering flesh of the
|
|
dead bird a worm springs, and this worm, when grown large, is
|
|
transformed into a bird. Herodotus describes the bird, though he says,
|
|
"I have not seen it myself, except in a picture. Part of his plumage
|
|
is gold-coloured, and part crimson; and he is for the most part very
|
|
much like an eagle in outline and bulk."
|
|
The first writer who disclaimed a belief in the existence of the
|
|
Phoenix was Sir Thomas Browne, in his "Vulgar Errors," published in
|
|
1646. He was replied to a few years later by Alexander Ross, who says,
|
|
in answer to the objection of the Phoenix so seldom making his
|
|
appearance, "His instinct teaches him to keep out of the way of the
|
|
tyrant of the creation, man, for if he were to be got at, some wealthy
|
|
glutton would surely devour him, though there were no more in the
|
|
world."
|
|
|
|
Dryden in one of his early poems has this allusion to the Phoenix:
|
|
|
|
"So when the new-born Phoenix first is seen
|
|
Her feathered subjects all adore their queen,
|
|
And while she makes her progress through the East,
|
|
From every grove her numerous train 's increased;
|
|
Each poet of the air her glory sings,
|
|
And round him the pleased audience clap their wings."
|
|
|
|
Milton, in "Paradise Lost," Book V., compares the angel Raphael
|
|
descending to earth to a Phoenix:
|
|
|
|
"...Down thither, prone in flight
|
|
He speeds, and through the vast ethereal sky
|
|
Sails between worlds and worlds, with steady wing,
|
|
Now on the polar winds, then with quick fan
|
|
Winnows the buxom air; till within soar
|
|
Of towering eagles, to all the fowls he seems
|
|
A Phoenix, gazed by all; as that sole bird
|
|
When, to enshrine his relics in the sun's
|
|
Bright temple, to Egyptian Thebes he flies."
|
|
|
|
THE COCKATRICE, OR BASILISK.
|
|
|
|
This animal was called the king of the serpents. In confirmation
|
|
of his royalty, he was said to be endowed with a crest, or comb upon
|
|
the head, constituting a crown. He was supposed to be produced from
|
|
the egg of a cock hatched under toads or serpents. There were
|
|
several species of this animal. One species burned up whatever they
|
|
approached; a second were a kind of wandering Medusa's heads, and
|
|
their look caused an instant horror which was immediately followed
|
|
by death. In Shakespeare's play of "Richard the Third," Lady Anne,
|
|
in answer to Richard's compliment on her eyes, says "Would they were
|
|
basilisk's, to strike thee dead!"
|
|
The basilisks were called kings of serpents because all other
|
|
serpents and snakes, behaving like good subjects, and wisely not
|
|
wishing to be burned up or struck dead, fled the moment they heard the
|
|
distant hiss of their king, although they might be in full feed upon
|
|
the most delicious prey, leaving the sole enjoyment of the banquet
|
|
to the royal monster.
|
|
The Roman naturalist Pliny thus describes him. "He does not impel
|
|
his body, like other serpents, by a multiplied flexion, but advances
|
|
lofty and upright. He kills the shrubs, not only by contact, but by
|
|
breathing on them, and splits the rocks, such power of evil is there
|
|
in him." It was formerly believed that if killed by a spear from on
|
|
horseback the power of the poison conducted through the weapon
|
|
killed not only the rider, but the horse also. To this Lucan alludes
|
|
in these lines:
|
|
|
|
"What though the Moor the basilisk hath slain,
|
|
And pinned him lifeless to the sandy plain,
|
|
Up through the spear the subtle venom flies,
|
|
The hand imbibes it, and the victor dies."
|
|
|
|
Such a prodigy was not likely to be passed over in the legends of
|
|
the saints. Accordingly we find it recorded that a certain holy man,
|
|
going to a fountain in the desert, suddenly beheld a basilisk. He
|
|
immediately raised his eyes to heaven, and with a pious appeal to
|
|
the Deity laid the monster dead at his feet.
|
|
These wonderful powers of the basilisk are attested by a host of
|
|
learned persons, such as Galen, Avicenna, Scaliger, and others.
|
|
Occasionally one would demur to some part of the tale while he
|
|
admitted the rest. Jonston, a learned physician, sagely remarks, "I
|
|
would scarcely believe that it kills with its look, for who could have
|
|
seen it and lived to tell the story?" The worthy sage was not aware
|
|
that those who went to hunt the basilisk of this sort took with them a
|
|
mirror, which reflected back the deadly glare upon its author, and
|
|
by a kind of poetical justice slew the basilisk with his own weapon.
|
|
But what was to attack this terrible and unapproachable monster?
|
|
There is an old saying that "everything has its enemy"- and the
|
|
cockatrice quailed before the weasel. The basilisk might look daggers,
|
|
the weasel cared not, but advanced boldly to the conflict. When
|
|
bitten, the weasel retired for a moment to eat some rue, which was the
|
|
only plant the basilisks could not wither, returned with renewed
|
|
strength and soundness to the charge, and never left the enemy till he
|
|
was stretched dead on the plain. The monster, too, as if conscious
|
|
of the irregular way in which he came into the world, was supposed
|
|
to have a great antipathy to a cock; and well he might, for as soon as
|
|
he heard the cock crow he expired.
|
|
The basilisk was of some use after death. Thus we read that its
|
|
carcass was suspended in the temple of Apollo, and in private
|
|
houses, as a sovereign remedy against spiders, and that it was also
|
|
hung up in the temple of Diana, for which reason no swallow ever dared
|
|
enter the sacred place.
|
|
The reader will, we apprehend, by this time have had enough of
|
|
absurdities, but still we can imagine his anxiety to know what a
|
|
cockatrice was like. The following is from Aldrovandus, a celebrated
|
|
naturalist of the sixteenth century, whose work on natural history, in
|
|
thirteen folio volumes, contains with much that is valuable a large
|
|
proportion of fables and inutilities. In particular he is so ample
|
|
on the subject of the cock and the bull that from his practice, all
|
|
rambling, gossiping tales of doubtful credibility are called cock
|
|
and bull stories.
|
|
Shelley, in his "Ode to Naples," full of the enthusiasm excited by
|
|
the intelligence of the proclamation of a Constitutional Government at
|
|
Naples, in 1820, thus uses an allusion to the basilisk:
|
|
|
|
"What though Cimmerian anarchs dare blaspheme
|
|
Freedom and thee? a new Actaeon's error
|
|
Shall theirs have been,- devoured by their own hounds!
|
|
Be thou like the imperial basilisk,
|
|
Killing thy foe with unapparent wounds!
|
|
Gaze on oppression, till at that dread risk,
|
|
Aghast she pass from the earth's disk.
|
|
Fear not, but gaze,- for freemen mightier grow,
|
|
And slaves more feeble, gazing on their foe."
|
|
|
|
THE UNICORN.
|
|
|
|
Pliny, the Roman naturalist, out of whose account of the unicorn
|
|
most of the modern unicorns have been described and figured, records
|
|
it as "a very ferocious beast, similar in the rest of its body to a
|
|
horse, with the head of a deer, the feet of an elephant, the tail of a
|
|
boar, a deep, bellowing voice, and a single black horn, two cubits
|
|
in length, standing out in the middle of its forehead." He adds that
|
|
"it cannot be taken alive"; and some such excuse may have been
|
|
necessary in those days for not producing the living animal upon the
|
|
arena of the amphitheatre.
|
|
The unicorn seems to have been a sad puzzle to the hunters, who
|
|
hardly knew how to come at so valuable a piece of game. Some described
|
|
the horn as movable at the will of the animal, a kind of small
|
|
sword, in short, with which no hunter who was not exceedingly
|
|
cunning in fence could have a chance. Others maintained that all the
|
|
animal's strength lay in its horn, and that when hard pressed in
|
|
pursuit, it would throw itself from the pinnacle of the highest
|
|
rocks horn foremost, so as to pitch upon it, and then quietly march
|
|
off not a whit the worse for its fall.
|
|
But it seems they found out how to circumvent the poor unicorn at
|
|
last. They discovered that it was a great lover of purity and
|
|
innocence, so they took the field with a young virgin, who was
|
|
placed in the unsuspecting admirer's way. When the unicorn spied
|
|
her, he approached with all reverence, crouched beside her, and laying
|
|
his head in her lap, fell asleep. The treacherous virgin then gave a
|
|
signal, and the hunters made in and captured the simple beast.
|
|
Modern zoologists, disgusted as they well may be with such fables as
|
|
these, disbelieved generally the existence of the unicorn. Yet there
|
|
are animals bearing on their heads a bony protuberance more or less
|
|
like a horn, which may have given rise to the story. The rhinoceros
|
|
horn, as it is called, is such a protuberance, though it does not
|
|
exceed a few inches in height, and is far from agreeing with the
|
|
descriptions of the horn of the unicorn. The nearest approach to a
|
|
horn in the middle of the forehead is exhibited in the bony
|
|
protuberance on the forehead of the giraffe; but this also is short
|
|
and blunt, and is not the only horn of the animal, but a third horn,
|
|
standing in front of the two others. In fine, though it would be
|
|
presumptuous to deny the existence of a one-horned quadruped other
|
|
than the rhinoceros, it may be safely stated that the insertion of a
|
|
long and solid horn in the living forehead of a horse-like or
|
|
deer-like animal is as near an impossibility as anything can be.
|
|
|
|
THE SALAMANDER.
|
|
|
|
The following is from the "Life of Benvenuto Cellini," an Italian
|
|
artist of the sixteenth century, written by himself: "When I was about
|
|
five years of age, my father, happening to be in a little room in
|
|
which they had been washing, and where there was a good fire of oak
|
|
burning, looked into the flames and saw a little animal resembling a
|
|
lizard, which could live in the hottest part of that element.
|
|
Instantly perceiving what it was, he called for my sister and me,
|
|
and after he had shown us the creature, he gave me a box on the ear. I
|
|
fell a-crying, while he, soothing me with caresses, spoke these words:
|
|
'My dear child, I do not give you that blow for any fault you have
|
|
committed, but that you may recollect that the little creature you see
|
|
in the fire is a salamander; such a one as never was beheld before
|
|
to my knowledge.' So saying he embraced me, and gave me some money."
|
|
It seems unreasonable to doubt a story of which Signor Cellini was
|
|
both an eye and ear witness. Add to which the authority of numerous
|
|
sage philosophers, at the head of whom are Aristotle and Pliny,
|
|
affirms this power of the salamander. According to them, the animal
|
|
not only resists fire, but extinguishes it, and when he sees the flame
|
|
charges it as an enemy which he well knows how to vanquish.
|
|
That the skin of an animal which could resist the action of fire
|
|
should be considered proof against that element is not to be
|
|
wondered at. We accordingly find that a cloth made of the skin of
|
|
salamanders (for there really is such an animal, a kind of lizard) was
|
|
incombustible, and very valuable, for wrapping up such articles as
|
|
were too precious to be intrusted to any other envelopes. These
|
|
fire-proof cloths were actually produced, said to be made of
|
|
salamander's wool, though the knowing ones detected that the substance
|
|
of which they were composed was asbestos, a mineral, which is in
|
|
fine filaments capable of being woven into a flexible cloth.
|
|
The foundation of the above fables is supposed to be the fact that
|
|
the salamander really does secrete from the pores of his body a
|
|
milky juice, which when he is irritated is produced in considerable
|
|
quantity, and would doubtless, for a few moments, defend the body from
|
|
fire. Then it is a hibernating animal, and in winter retires to some
|
|
hollow tree or other cavity, where it coils itself up and remains in a
|
|
torpid state till the spring again calls it forth. It may therefore
|
|
sometimes be carried with the fuel to the fire, and wake up only
|
|
time enough to put forth all its faculties for its defence. Its
|
|
viscous juice would do good service, and all who profess to have
|
|
seen it, acknowledge that it got out of the fire as fast as its legs
|
|
could carry it; indeed, too fast for them ever to make prize of one,
|
|
except in one instance, and in that one the animal's feet and some
|
|
parts of its body were badly burned.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Young, in the "Night Thoughts," with more quaintness than good
|
|
taste, compares the sceptic who can remain unmoved in the
|
|
contemplation of the starry heavens to a salamander unwarmed in the
|
|
fire:
|
|
|
|
"An undevout astronomer is mad!
|
|
|
|
. . . . . . .
|
|
|
|
"O, what a genius must inform the skies!
|
|
And is Lorenzo's salamander-heart
|
|
Cold and untouched amid these sacred fires?"
|
|
CHAPTER XXXVII.
|
|
EASTERN MYTHOLOGY- ZOROASTER- HINDU MYTHOLOGY- CASTES-
|
|
BUDDHA- GRAND LAMA.
|
|
|
|
ZOROASTER.
|
|
|
|
OUR knowledge of the religion of the ancient Persians is principally
|
|
derived from the Zendavesta, or sacred books of that people. Zoroaster
|
|
was the founder of their religion, or rather the reformer of the
|
|
religion which preceded him. The time when he lived is doubtful, but
|
|
it is certain that his system became the dominant religion of
|
|
Western Asia from the time of Cyrus (550 B.C.) to the conquest of
|
|
Persia by Alexander the Great. Under the Macedonian monarchy the
|
|
doctrines of Zoroaster appear to have been considerably corrupted by
|
|
the introduction of foreign opinions; but they afterwards recovered
|
|
their ascendency.
|
|
Zoroaster taught the existence of a supreme being, who created two
|
|
other mighty beings and imparted to them as much of his own nature
|
|
as seemed good to him. Of these, Ormuzd (called by the Greeks
|
|
Oromasdes) remained faithful to his creator, and was regarded as the
|
|
source of all good, while Ahriman (Arimanes) rebelled, and became
|
|
the author of all evil upon the earth. Ormuzd created man and supplied
|
|
him with all the materials of happiness; but Ahriman marred this
|
|
happiness by introducing evil into the world, and creating savage
|
|
beasts and poisonous reptiles and plants. In consequence of this, evil
|
|
and good are now mingled together in every part of the world, and
|
|
the followers of good and evil- the adherents of Ormuzd and Ahriman-
|
|
carry on incessant war. But this state of things will not last for
|
|
ever. The time will come when the adherents of Ormuzd shall everywhere
|
|
be victorious, and Ahriman and his followers be consigned to
|
|
darkness for ever.
|
|
The religious rites of the ancient Persians were exceedingly simple.
|
|
They used neither temples, altars, nor statues, and performed their
|
|
sacrifices on the tops of mountains. They adored fire, light, and
|
|
the sun as emblems of Ormuzd, the source of all light and purity,
|
|
but did not regard them as independent deities. The religious rites
|
|
and ceremonies were regulated by the priests, who were called Magi.
|
|
The learning of the Magi was connected with astrology and enchantment,
|
|
in which they were so celebrated that their name was applied to all
|
|
orders of magicians and enchanters.
|
|
Wordsworth thus alludes to the worship of the Persians:
|
|
|
|
"...the Persians,- zealous to reject
|
|
Altar and Image, and the inclusive walls
|
|
And roofs of temples built by human hands,-
|
|
The loftiest heights ascending, from their tops,
|
|
With myrtle-wreathed Tiara on his brows,
|
|
Presented sacrifice to Moon and Stars,
|
|
And to the Winds and mother Elements,
|
|
And the whole circle of the Heavens, for him
|
|
A sensitive existence and a God."
|
|
Excursion, Book IV.
|
|
|
|
In "Childe Harold" Byron speaks thus of the Persian worship:
|
|
|
|
"Not vainly did the early Persian make
|
|
His altar the high places and the peak
|
|
Of earth-o'er-gazing mountains, and thus take
|
|
A fit and unwalled temple, there to seek
|
|
The Spirit, in whose honour shrines are weak,
|
|
Upreared of human hands. Come and compare
|
|
Columns and idol-dwellings, Goth or Greek,
|
|
With Nature's realms of worship, earth and air,
|
|
Nor fix on fond abodes to circumscribe thy prayer."
|
|
III. 91.
|
|
|
|
The religion of Zoroaster continued to flourish even after the
|
|
introduction of Christianity, and in the third century was the
|
|
dominant faith of the East, till the rise of the Mahometan power and
|
|
the conquest of Persia by the Arabs in the seventh century, who
|
|
compelled the greater number of the Persians to renounce their ancient
|
|
faith. Those who refused to abandon the religion of their ancestors
|
|
fled to the deserts of Kerman and to Hindustan, where they still exist
|
|
under the name of Parsees, a name derived from Paris, the ancient name
|
|
of Persia. The Arabs call them Guebers, from an Arabic word signifying
|
|
unbelievers. At Bombay the Parsees are at this day a very active,
|
|
intelligent, and wealthy class. For purity of life, honesty, and
|
|
conciliatory manners, they are favourably distinguished. They have
|
|
numerous temples to Fire, which they adore as the symbol of the
|
|
divinity.
|
|
The Persian religion makes the subject of the finest tale in Moore's
|
|
"Lalla Rookh," the "Fire Worshippers." The Gueber chief says:
|
|
|
|
"Yes! I am of that impious race,
|
|
Those slaves of Fire, that morn and even
|
|
Hail their creator's dwelling-place
|
|
Among the living lights of heaven;
|
|
Yes I am of that outcast crew
|
|
To Iran and to vengeance true,
|
|
Who curse the hour your Arabs came
|
|
To desecrate our shrines of flame,
|
|
And swear before God's burning eye
|
|
To break our country's chains or die."
|
|
|
|
HINDU MYTHOLOGY.
|
|
|
|
The religion of the Hindus is professedly founded on the Vedas. To
|
|
these books of their scripture they attach the greatest sanctity,
|
|
and state that Brahma himself composed them at the creation. But the
|
|
present arrangement of the Vedas is attributed to the sage Vyasa,
|
|
about five thousand years ago.
|
|
The Vedas undoubtedly teach the belief of one supreme God. The
|
|
name of this deity is Brahma. His attributes are represented by the
|
|
three personified powers of creation, preservation, and destruction,
|
|
which under the respective names of Brahma, Vishnu, and Siva form
|
|
the Trimurti or triad of principal Hindu gods. Of the inferior gods
|
|
the most important are: 1. Indra, the god of heaven, of thunder,
|
|
lightning, storm, and rain; 2. Agni, the god of fire; 3. Yama, the god
|
|
of the infernal regions; 4. Surya, the god of the sun.
|
|
Brahma is the creator of the universe, and the source from which all
|
|
the individual deities have sprung, and into which all will ultimately
|
|
be absorbed. "As milk changes to curd, and water to ice, so is
|
|
Brahma variously transformed and diversified, without aid of
|
|
exterior means of any sort." The human soul, according to the Vedas,
|
|
is a portion of the supreme ruler, as a spark is of the fire.
|
|
|
|
VISHNU.
|
|
|
|
Vishnu occupies the second place in the triad of the Hindus, and
|
|
is the personification of the preserving principle. To protect the
|
|
world in various epochs of danger, Vishnu descended to the earth in
|
|
different incarnations, or bodily forms, which descents are called
|
|
Avatars. They are very numerous, but ten are more particularly
|
|
specified. The first Avatar was as Matsya, the Fish, under which
|
|
form Vishnu preserved Manu, the ancestor of the human race, during a
|
|
universal deluge. The second Avatar was in the form of a Tortoise,
|
|
which form he assumed to support the earth when the gods were churning
|
|
the sea for the beverage of immortality, Amrita.
|
|
We may omit the other Avatars, which were of the same general
|
|
character, that is, interpositions to protect the right or to punish
|
|
wrong-doers, and come to the ninth, which is the most celebrated of
|
|
the Avatars of Vishnu, in which he appeared in the human form of
|
|
Krishna, an invincible warrior, who by his exploits relieved the earth
|
|
from the tyrants who oppressed it.
|
|
Buddha is by the followers of the Brahminical religion regarded as a
|
|
delusive incarnation of Vishnu, assumed by him in order to induce
|
|
the Asuras, opponents of the gods, to abandon the sacred ordinances of
|
|
the Vedas, by which means they lost their strength and supremacy.
|
|
Kalki is the name of the tenth Avatar, in which Vishnu will appear
|
|
at the end of the present age of the world to destroy all vice and
|
|
wickedness, and to restore mankind to virtue and purity.
|
|
|
|
SIVA.
|
|
|
|
Siva is the third person of the Hindu triad. He is the
|
|
personification of the destroying principle. Though the third name, he
|
|
is, in respect to the number of his worshippers and the extension of
|
|
his worship, before either of the others. In the Puranas (the
|
|
scriptures of the modern Hindu religion) no allusion is made to the
|
|
original power of this god as a destroyer; that power not being to
|
|
be called into exercise till after the expiration of twelve millions
|
|
of years, or when the universe will come to an end; and Mahadeva
|
|
(another name for Siva) is rather the representative of regeneration
|
|
than of destruction.
|
|
|
|
The worshippers of Vishnu and Siva form two sects, each of which
|
|
proclaims the superiority of its favourite deity, denying the claims
|
|
of the other, and Brahma, the creator, having finished his work, seems
|
|
to be regarded as no longer active, and has now only one temple in
|
|
India, while Mahadeva and Vishnu have many. The worshippers of
|
|
Vishnu are generally distinguished by a greater tenderness for life,
|
|
and consequent abstinence from animal food, and a worship less cruel
|
|
than that of the followers of Siva.
|
|
|
|
JUGGERNAUT.
|
|
|
|
Whether the worshippers of juggernaut are to be reckoned among the
|
|
followers of Vishnu or Siva, our authorities differ. The temple stands
|
|
near the shore, about three hundred miles southwest of Calcutta. The
|
|
idol is a carved block of wood, with a hideous face, painted black,
|
|
and a distended blood-red mouth. On festival days the throne of the
|
|
image is placed on a tower sixty feet high, moving on wheels. Six long
|
|
ropes are attached to the tower, by which the people draw it along.
|
|
The priests and their attendants stand round the throne on the
|
|
tower, and occasionally turn to the worshippers with songs and
|
|
gestures. While the tower moves along numbers of the devout
|
|
worshippers throw themselves on the ground, in order to be crushed
|
|
by the wheels, and the multitude shout in approbation of the act, as a
|
|
pleasing sacrifice to the idol. Every year, particularly at two
|
|
great festivals in March and July, pilgrims flock in crowds to the
|
|
temple. Not less than seventy or eighty thousand people are said to
|
|
visit the place on these occasions, when all castes eat together.
|
|
|
|
CASTES.
|
|
|
|
The division of the Hindus into classes or castes, with fixed
|
|
occupations, existed from the earliest times. It is supposed by some
|
|
to have been founded upon conquest, the first three castes being
|
|
composed of a foreign race, who subdued the natives of the country and
|
|
reduced them to an inferior caste. Others trace it to the fondness
|
|
of perpetuating, by descent from father to son, certain offices or
|
|
occupations.
|
|
The Hindu tradition gives the following account of the origin of the
|
|
various castes: At the creation Brahma resolved to give the earth
|
|
inhabitants who should be direct emanations from his own body.
|
|
Accordingly from his mouth came forth the eldest born, Brahma (the
|
|
priest), to whom he confided the four Vedas; from his right arm issued
|
|
Shatriya (the warrior), and from his left, the warrior's wife. His
|
|
thighs produced Vaissyas, male and female (agriculturists and
|
|
traders), and lastly from his feet sprang Sudras (mechanics and
|
|
labourers).
|
|
The four sons of Brahma, so significantly brought into the world,
|
|
became the fathers of the human race, and heads of their respective
|
|
castes. They were commanded to regard the four Vedas as containing all
|
|
the rules of their faith, and all that was necessary to guide them
|
|
in their religious ceremonies. They were also commanded to take rank
|
|
in the order of their birth, the Brahmans uppermost, as having
|
|
sprung from the head of Brahma.
|
|
A strong line of demarcation is drawn between the first three castes
|
|
and the Sudras. The former are allowed to receive instruction from the
|
|
Vedas, which is not permitted to the Sudras. The Brahmans possess
|
|
the privilege of teaching the Vedas, and were in former times in
|
|
exclusive possession of all knowledge. Though the sovereign of the
|
|
country was chosen from the Shatriya class, also called Rajputs, the
|
|
Brahmans possessed the real power, and were the royal counsellors, the
|
|
judges and magistrates of the country; their persons and property were
|
|
inviolable; and though they committed the greatest crimes, they
|
|
could only be banished from the kingdom. They were to be treated by
|
|
sovereigns with the greatest respect, for "a Brahman, whether
|
|
learned or ignorant, is a powerful divinity."
|
|
When the Brahman arrives at years of maturity it becomes his duty to
|
|
marry. He ought to be supported by the contributions of the rich,
|
|
and not to be obliged to gain his subsistence by any laborious or
|
|
productive occupation. But as all the Brahmans could not be maintained
|
|
by the working classes of the community, it was found necessary to
|
|
allow them to engage in productive employments.
|
|
We need say little of the two intermediate classes, whose rank and
|
|
privileges may be readily inferred from their occupations. The
|
|
Sudras or fourth class are bound to servile attendance on the higher
|
|
classes, especially the Brahmans, but they may follow mechanical
|
|
occupations and practical arts, as painting and writing, or become
|
|
traders or husbandmen. Consequently they sometimes grow rich, and it
|
|
will also sometimes happen that Brahmans become poor. That fact
|
|
works its usual consequence, and rich Sudras sometimes employ poor
|
|
Brahmans in menial occupations.
|
|
There is another class lower even than the Sudras, for it is not one
|
|
of the original pure classes, but springs from an unauthorized union
|
|
of individuals of different castes. These are the Pariahs, who are
|
|
employed in the lowest services and treated with the utmost
|
|
severity. They are compelled to do what no one else can do without
|
|
pollution. They are not only considered unclean themselves, but they
|
|
render unclean everything they touch. They are deprived of all civil
|
|
rights, and stigmatized by particular laws regulating their mode of
|
|
life, their houses, and their furniture. They are not allowed to visit
|
|
the pagodas or temples of the other castes, but have their own pagodas
|
|
and religious exercises. They are not suffered to enter the houses
|
|
of the other castes; if it is done incautiously or from necessity, the
|
|
place must be purified by religious ceremonies. They must not appear
|
|
at public markets, and are confined to the use of particular wells,
|
|
which they are obliged to surround with bones of animals, to warn
|
|
others against using them. They dwell in miserable hovels, distant
|
|
from cities and villages, and are under no restrictions in regard to
|
|
food, which last is not a privilege, but a mark of ignominy, as if
|
|
they were so degraded that nothing could pollute them. The three
|
|
higher castes are prohibited entirely the use of flesh. The fourth
|
|
is allowed to use all kinds except beef, but only the lowest caste
|
|
is allowed every kind of food without restriction.
|
|
|
|
BUDDHA.
|
|
|
|
Buddha, whom the Vedas represent as a delusive incarnation of
|
|
Vishnu, is said by his followers to have been a mortal sage, whose
|
|
name was Gautama, called also by the complimentary epithets of
|
|
Sakyasinha, the Lion, and Buddha, the Sage.
|
|
By a comparison of the various epochs assigned to his birth, it is
|
|
inferred that he lived about one thousand years before Christ.
|
|
He was the son of a king; and when in conformity to the usage of the
|
|
country he was, a few days after his birth, presented before the altar
|
|
of a deity, the image is said to have inclined its head as a presage
|
|
of the future greatness of the new-born prophet. The child soon
|
|
developed faculties of the first order, and became equally
|
|
distinguished by the uncommon beauty of his person. No sooner had he
|
|
grown to years of maturity than he began to reflect deeply on the
|
|
depravity and misery of mankind, and he conceived the idea of retiring
|
|
from society and devoting himself to meditation. His father in vain
|
|
opposed this design. Buddha escaped the vigilance of his guards, and
|
|
having found a secure retreat, lived for six years undisturbed in
|
|
his devout contemplations. At the expiration of that period he came
|
|
forward at Benares as a religious teacher. At first some who heard him
|
|
doubted of the soundness of his mind; but his doctrines soon gained
|
|
credit, and were propagated so rapidly that Buddha himself lived to
|
|
see them spread all over India. He died at the age of eighty years.
|
|
The Buddhists reject entirely the authority of the Vedas, and the
|
|
religious observances prescribed in them and kept by the Hindus.
|
|
They also reject the distinction of castes, and prohibit all bloody
|
|
sacrifices, and allow animal food. Their priests are chosen from all
|
|
classes; they are expected to procure their maintenance by
|
|
perambulation and begging, and among other things it is their duty
|
|
to endeavour to turn to some use things thrown aside as useless by
|
|
others, and to discover the medicinal power of plants. But in Ceylon
|
|
three orders of priests are recognized; those of the highest order are
|
|
usually men of high birth and learning, and are supported at the
|
|
principal temples, most of which have been richly endowed by the
|
|
former monarchs of the country.
|
|
For several centuries after the appearance of buddha, his sect seems
|
|
to have been tolerated by the Brahmans, and Buddhism appears to have
|
|
penetrated the peninsula of Hindustan in every direction, and to
|
|
have been carried to Ceylon, and to the eastern peninsula. But
|
|
afterwards it had to endure in India a long-continued persecution,
|
|
which ultimately had the effect of entirely abolishing it in the
|
|
country where it had originated, but to scatter it widely over
|
|
adjacent countries. Buddhism appears to have been introduced into
|
|
China about the year 65 of our era. From China it was subsequently
|
|
extended to Corea, Japan, and Java.
|
|
|
|
THE GRAND LAMA.
|
|
|
|
It is a doctrine alike of the Brahminical Hindus and of the Buddhist
|
|
sect that the confinement of the human soul, an emanation of the
|
|
divine spirit, in a human body, is a state of misery, and the
|
|
consequence of frailties and sins committed during former
|
|
existences. But they hold that some few individuals have appeared on
|
|
this earth from time to time, not under the necessity of terrestrial
|
|
existence, but who voluntarily descended to the earth to promote the
|
|
welfare of mankind. These individuals have gradually assumed the
|
|
character of reappearances of Buddha himself, in which capacity the
|
|
line is continued till the present day, in the several Lamas of
|
|
Thibet, China, and other countries where Buddhism prevails. In
|
|
consequence of the victories of Gengis Khan and his successors, the
|
|
Lama residing in Thibet was raised to the dignity of chief pontiff
|
|
of the sect. A separate province was assigned to him as his own
|
|
territory, and besides his spiritual dignity he became to a limited
|
|
extent a temporal monarch. He is styled the Dalai Lama.
|
|
The first Christian missionaries who proceeded to Thibet were
|
|
surprised to find there in the heart of Asia a pontifical court and
|
|
several other ecclesiastical institutions resembling those of the
|
|
Roman Catholic church. They found convents for priests and nuns,
|
|
also processions and forms of religious worship, attended with much
|
|
pomp and splendour; and many were induced by these similarities to
|
|
consider Lamaism as a sort of degenerated Christianity. It is not
|
|
improbable that the Lamas derived some of these practices from the
|
|
Nestorian Christians, who were settled in Tartary when Buddhism was
|
|
introduced into Thibet.
|
|
|
|
PRESTER JOHN.
|
|
|
|
An early account, communicated probably by travelling merchants,
|
|
of a Lama or spiritual chief among the Tartars, seems to have
|
|
occasioned in Europe the report of a Presbyter or Prester John, a
|
|
Christian pontiff resident in Upper Asia. The Pope sent a mission in
|
|
search of him, as did also Louis IX of France, some years later, but
|
|
both missions were unsuccessful, though the small communities of
|
|
Nestorian Christians, which they did find, served to keep up the
|
|
belief in Europe that such a personage did exist somewhere in the
|
|
East. At last in the fifteenth century, a Portuguese traveller,
|
|
Pedro Covilham, happening to hear that there was a Christian prince in
|
|
the country of the Abessines (Abyssinia), not far from the Red Sea,
|
|
concluded that this must be the true Prester John. He accordingly went
|
|
thither, and penetrated to the court of the king, whom he calls Negus.
|
|
Milton alludes to him in "Paradise Lost," Book XI., where,
|
|
describing Adam's vision of his descendants in their various nations
|
|
and cities, scattered over the face of the earth, he says,-
|
|
|
|
"...Nor did his eyes not ken
|
|
Th' empire of Negus, to his utmost port,
|
|
Ercoco, and the less maritime kings,
|
|
Mombaza and Quiloa and Melind."
|
|
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
|
|
NORTHERN MYTHOLOGY- VALHALLA- THE VALKYRIOR.
|
|
|
|
NORTHERN MYTHOLOGY.
|
|
|
|
THE stories which have engaged our attention thus far relate to
|
|
the mythology of southern regions. But there is another branch of
|
|
ancient superstitions which ought not to be entirely overlooked,
|
|
especially as it belongs to the nations from which we, through our
|
|
English ancestors, derive our origin. It is that of the northern
|
|
nations, called Scandinavians, who inhabited the countries now known
|
|
as Sweden, Denmark, Norway, and Iceland. These mythological records
|
|
are contained in two collections called the Eddas, of which the oldest
|
|
is in poetry and dates back to the year 1O56, the more modern or prose
|
|
Edda being of the date of 1640.
|
|
According to the Eddas there was once no heaven above nor earth
|
|
beneath, but only a bottomless deep, and a world of mist in which
|
|
flowed a fountain. Twelve rivers issued from this fountain, and when
|
|
they had flowed far from their source, they froze into ice, and one
|
|
layer accumulating over another, the great deep was filled up.
|
|
Southward from the world of mist was the world of light. From this
|
|
flowed a warm wind upon the ice and melted it. The vapours rose in the
|
|
air and formed clouds, from which sprang Ymir, the Frost giant and his
|
|
progeny, and the cow Audhumbla, whose milk afforded nourishment and
|
|
food to the giant. The cow got nourishment by licking the hoar frost
|
|
and salt from the ice. While she was one day licking the salt stones
|
|
there appeared at first the hair of a man, on the second day the whole
|
|
head, and on the third the entire form endowed with beauty, agility,
|
|
and power. This new being was a god, from whom and his wife, a
|
|
daughter of the giant race, sprang the three brothers Odin, Vili,
|
|
and Ve. They slew the giant Ymir, and out of his body formed the
|
|
earth, of his blood the seas, of his bones the mountains, of his
|
|
hair the trees, of his skull the heavens, and of his brain clouds,
|
|
charged with hail and snow. Of Ymir's eyebrows the gods formed Midgard
|
|
(mid earth), destined to become the abode of man.
|
|
Odin then regulated the periods of day and night and the seasons
|
|
by placing in the heavens the sun and moon, and appointing to them
|
|
their respective courses. As soon as the sun began to shed its rays
|
|
upon the earth, it caused the vegetable world to bud and sprout.
|
|
Shortly after the gods had created the world they walked by the side
|
|
of the sea, pleased with their new work, but found that it was still
|
|
incomplete, for it was without human beings. They therefore took an
|
|
ash tree and made a man out of it, and they made a woman out of an
|
|
alder, and called the man Aske and the woman Embla. Odin then gave
|
|
them life and soul, Vili reason and motion, and Ve bestowed upon
|
|
them the senses, expressive features, and speech. Midgard was then
|
|
given them as their residence, and they became the progenitors of
|
|
the human race.
|
|
The mighty ash tree Ygdrasill was supposed to support the whole
|
|
universe. It sprang from the body of Ymir, and had three immense
|
|
roots; extending one into Asgard (the dwelling of the gods), the other
|
|
into Jotunheim (the abode of the giants), and the third to
|
|
Niffleheim (the regions of darkness and cold). By the side of each
|
|
of these roots is a spring, from which it is watered. The root that
|
|
extends into Asgard is carefully tended by the three Norns, goddesses,
|
|
who are regarded as the dispensers of fate. They are Urdur (the past),
|
|
Verdandi (the present), Skuld (the future). The spring at the
|
|
Jotunheim side is Ymir's well, in which wisdom and wit lie hidden, but
|
|
that of Niffleheim feeds the adder Nidhogge (darkness), which
|
|
perpetually gnaws at the root. Four harts run across the branches of
|
|
the tree and bite the buds; they represent the four winds. Under the
|
|
tree lies Ymir, and when he tries to shake off its weight the earth
|
|
quakes.
|
|
Asgard is the name of the abode of the gods, access to which is only
|
|
gained by crossing the bridge Bifrost (the rainbow). Asgard consists
|
|
of golden and silver palaces, the dwellings of the gods, but the
|
|
most beautiful of these is Valhalla, the residence of Odin. When
|
|
seated on his throne he overlooks all heaven and earth. Upon his
|
|
shoulders are the ravens Hugin and Munin, who fly every day over the
|
|
whole world, and on their return report to him all they have seen
|
|
and heard. At his feet lie his two wolves, Geri and Freki, to whom
|
|
Odin gives all the meat that is set before him, for he himself
|
|
stands in no need of food. Mead is for him both food and drink. He
|
|
invented the Runic characters, and it is the business of the Norns
|
|
to engrave the runes of fate upon a metal shield. From Odin's name,
|
|
spelt Woden, as it sometimes is, came Wednesday, the name of the
|
|
fourth day of the week.
|
|
Odin is frequently called Alfdaur (All-father), but this name is
|
|
sometimes used in a way that shows that the Scandinavians had an
|
|
idea of a deity superior to Odin, uncreated and eternal.
|
|
|
|
OF THE JOYS OF VALHALLA.
|
|
|
|
Valhalla is the great hall of Odin, wherein he feasts with his
|
|
chosen heroes, all those who have fallen bravely in battle, for all
|
|
who die a peaceful death are excluded. The flesh of the boar Schrimnir
|
|
is served up to them, and is abundant for all. For although this
|
|
boar is cooked every morning, be becomes whole again every night.
|
|
For drink the heroes are supplied abundantly with mead from the
|
|
she-goat Heidrum. When the heroes are not feasting they amuse
|
|
themselves with fighting. Every day they ride out into the court or
|
|
field and fight until they cut each other in pieces. This is their
|
|
pastime; but when meal time comes they recover from their wounds and
|
|
return to feast in Valhalla.
|
|
|
|
THE VALKYRIOR.
|
|
|
|
The Valkyrior are warlike virgins, mounted upon horses and armed
|
|
with helmets and spears. Odin, who is desirous to collect a great many
|
|
heroes in Valhalla, to be able to meet the giants in a day when the
|
|
final contest must come, sends down to every battlefield to make
|
|
choice of those who shall be slain. The Valkyrior are his
|
|
messengers, and their name means "Choosers of the slain." When they
|
|
ride forth on their errand, their armour sheds a strange flickering
|
|
light, which flashes up over the northern skies, making what men
|
|
call the "Aurora Borealis," or "Northern Lights."*
|
|
|
|
* Gray's ode, "The Fatal Sisters," is founded on this superstition.
|
|
|
|
OF THOR AND THE OTHER GODS.
|
|
|
|
Thor, the thunderer, Odin's eldest son, is the strongest of gods and
|
|
men, and possesses three very precious things. The first is a
|
|
hammer, which both the Frost and the Mountain giants know to their
|
|
cost, when they see it hurled against them in the air, for it has
|
|
split many a skull of their fathers and kindred. When thrown, it
|
|
returns to his hand of its own accord. The second rare thing he
|
|
possesses is called the belt of strength. When he girds it about him
|
|
his divine might is doubled. The third, also very precious, is his
|
|
iron gloves, which he puts on whenever he would use his mallet
|
|
efficiently. From Thor's name is derived our word Thursday.
|
|
Frey is one of the most celebrated of the gods. He presides over
|
|
rain and sunshine and all the fruits of the earth. His sister Freya is
|
|
the most propitious of the goddesses. She loves music, spring, and
|
|
flowers, and is particularly fond of the Elves (fairies). She is
|
|
very fond of love ditties, and all lovers would do well to invoke her.
|
|
Bragi is the god of poetry, and his song records the deeds of
|
|
warriors. His wife, Iduna, keeps in a box the apples which the gods,
|
|
when they feel old age approaching, have only to taste of to become
|
|
young again.
|
|
Heimdall is the watchman of the gods, and is therefore placed on the
|
|
borders of heaven to prevent the giants from forcing their way over
|
|
the bridge Bifrost (the rainbow). He requires less sleep than a
|
|
bird, and sees by night as well as by day a hundred miles around
|
|
him. So acute is his ear that no sound escapes him, for he can even
|
|
hear the grass grow and the wool on a sheep's back.
|
|
|
|
OF LOKI AND HIS PROGENY.
|
|
|
|
There is another deity who is described as the calumniator of the
|
|
gods and the contriver of all fraud and mischief. His name is Loki. He
|
|
is handsome and well made, but of a very fickle mood and most evil
|
|
disposition. He is of the giant race, but forced himself into the
|
|
company of the gods, and seems to take pleasure in bringing them
|
|
into difficulties, and in extricating them out of the danger by his
|
|
cunning, wit and skill. Loki has three children. The first is the wolf
|
|
Fenris, the second the Midgard serpent, the third Hela (Death). The
|
|
gods were not ignorant that these monsters were growing up, and that
|
|
they would one day bring much evil upon gods and men. So Odin deemed
|
|
it advisable to send one to bring them to him. When they came he threw
|
|
the serpent into that deep ocean by which the earth is surrounded. But
|
|
the monster had grown to such an enormous size that holding his tail
|
|
in his mouth he encircles the whole earth. Hela he cast into
|
|
Niffleheim, and gave her power over nine worlds or regions, into which
|
|
she distributes those who are sent to her; that is, all who die of
|
|
sickness or old age. Her hall is called Elvidner. Hunger is her table,
|
|
Starvation her knife, Delay her man, Slowness her maid, Precipice
|
|
her threshold, Care her bed, and Burning Anguish forms the hangings of
|
|
the apartments. She may easily be recognized, for her body is half
|
|
flesh colour and half blue, and she has a dreadfully stern and
|
|
forbidding countenance.
|
|
The wolf Fenris gave the gods a great deal of trouble before they
|
|
succeeded in chaining him. He broke the strongest fetters as if they
|
|
were made of cobwebs. Finally the gods sent a messenger to the
|
|
mountain spirits, who made for them the chain called Gleipnir. It is
|
|
fashioned of six things, viz., the noise made by the footfall of a
|
|
cat, the beards of women, the roots of stones, the breath of fishes,
|
|
the nerves (sensibilities) of bears, and the spittle of birds. When
|
|
finished it was as smooth and soft as a silken string. But when the
|
|
gods asked the wolf to suffer himself to be bound with this apparently
|
|
slight ribbon, he suspected their design, fearing that it was made
|
|
by enchantment. He therefore only consented to be bound with it upon
|
|
condition that one of the gods put his hand in his (Fenris's) mouth as
|
|
a pledge that the band was to be removed again. Tyr (the god of
|
|
battles) alone had courage enough to do this. But when the wolf
|
|
found that he could not break his fetters, and that the gods would not
|
|
release him, he bit off Tyr's hand, and he has ever since remained
|
|
one-handed.
|
|
|
|
HOW THOR PAID THE MOUNTAIN GIANT HIS WAGES.
|
|
|
|
Once on a time, when the gods were constructing their abodes and had
|
|
already finished Midgard and Valhalla, a certain artificer came and
|
|
offered to build them a residence so well fortified that they should
|
|
be perfectly safe from the incursions of the Frost giants and the
|
|
giants of the mountains. But he demanded for his reward the goddess
|
|
Freya, together with the sun and moon. The gods yielded to his
|
|
terms, provided he would finish the whole work himself without any
|
|
one's assistance, and all within the space of one winter. But if
|
|
anything remained unfinished on the first day of summer he should
|
|
forfeit the recompense agreed on. On being told these terms the
|
|
artificer stipulated that he should be allowed the use of his horse
|
|
Svadilfari, and this by the advice of Loki was granted to him. He
|
|
accordingly set to work on the first day of winter, and during the
|
|
night let his horse draw stone for the building. The enormous size
|
|
of the stones struck the gods with astonishment, and they saw
|
|
clearly that the horse did one-half more of the toilsome work than his
|
|
master. Their bargain, however, had been concluded, and confirmed by
|
|
solemn oaths, for without these precautions a giant would not have
|
|
thought himself safe among the gods, especially when Thor should
|
|
return from an expedition he had then undertaken against the evil
|
|
demons.
|
|
As the winter drew to a close, the building was far advanced, and
|
|
the bulwarks were sufficiently high and massive to render the place
|
|
impregnable. In short, when it wanted but three days to summer, the
|
|
only part that remained to be finished was the gateway. Then sat the
|
|
gods on their seats of justice and entered into consultation,
|
|
inquiring of one another who among them could have advised to give
|
|
Freya away, or to plunge the heavens in darkness by permitting the
|
|
giant to carry away the sun and the moon.
|
|
They all agreed that no one but Loki, the author of so many evil
|
|
deeds, could have given such bad counsel, and that he should be put to
|
|
a cruel death if he did not contrive some way to prevent the artificer
|
|
from completing his task and obtaining the stipulated recompense. They
|
|
proceeded to lay hands on Loki, who in his fright promised upon oath
|
|
that, let it cost him what it would, he would so manage matters that
|
|
the man should lose his reward. That very night when the man went with
|
|
Svadilfari for building stone, a mare suddenly ran out of a forest and
|
|
began to neigh. The horse thereat broke loose and ran after the mare
|
|
into the forest, which obliged the man also to run after his horse,
|
|
and thus between one and another the whole night was lost, so that
|
|
at dawn the work had not made the usual progress. The man, seeing that
|
|
he must fail of completing his task, resumed his own gigantic stature,
|
|
and the gods now clearly perceived that it was in reality a mountain
|
|
giant who had come amongst them. Feeling no longer bound by their
|
|
oaths, they called on Thor, who immediately ran to their assistance,
|
|
and lifting up his mallet, paid the workman his wages, not with the
|
|
sun and moon, and not even by sending him back to Jotunheim, for
|
|
with the first blow he shattered the giant's skull to pieces and
|
|
hurled him headlong into Niffleheim.
|
|
|
|
THE RECOVERY OF THE HAMMER.
|
|
|
|
Once upon a time it happened that Thor's hammer fell into the
|
|
possession of the giant Thrym, who buried it eight fathoms deep
|
|
under the rocks of Jotunheim. Thor sent Loki to negotiate with
|
|
Thrym, but he could only prevail so far as to get the giant's
|
|
promise to restore the weapon if Freya would consent to be his
|
|
bride. Loki returned and reported the result of his mission, but the
|
|
goddess of love was quite horrified at the idea of bestowing her
|
|
charms on the king of the Frost giants. In this emergency Loki
|
|
persuaded Thor to dress himself in Freya's clothes and accompany him
|
|
to Jotunheim. Thrym received his veiled bride with due courtesy, but
|
|
was greatly surprised at seeing her eat for her supper eight salmons
|
|
and a full grown ox, besides other delicacies, washing the whole
|
|
down with three tuns of mead. Loki, however, assured him that she
|
|
had not tasted anything for eight long nights, so great was her desire
|
|
to see her lover, the renowned ruler of Jotunheim. Thrym had at length
|
|
the curiosity to peep under his bride's veil, but started back in
|
|
affright and demanded why Freya's eyeballs glistened with fire. Loki
|
|
repeated the same excuse and the giant was satisfied. He ordered the
|
|
hammer to be brought in and laid on the maiden's lap. Thereupon Thor
|
|
threw off his disguise, grasped his redoubted weapon, and
|
|
slaughtered Thrym and all his followers.
|
|
Frey also possessed a wonderful weapon, a sword which would of
|
|
itself spread a field with carnage whenever the owner desired it. Frey
|
|
parted with this sword, but was less fortunate than Thor and never
|
|
recovered it. It happened in this way: Frey once mounted Odin's
|
|
throne, from whence one can see over the whole universe, and looking
|
|
round saw far off in the giant's kingdom a beautiful maid, at the
|
|
sight of whom he was struck with sudden sadness, insomuch that from
|
|
that moment he could neither sleep, nor drink, nor speak. At last
|
|
Skirnir, his messenger, drew his secret from him, and undertook to get
|
|
him the maiden for his bride, if he would give him his sword as a
|
|
reward. Frey consented and gave him the sword, and Skirnir set off
|
|
on his journey and obtained the maiden's promise that within nine
|
|
nights she would come to a certain place and there wed Frey. Skirnir
|
|
having reported the success of his errand, Frey exclaimed:
|
|
|
|
"Long is one night,
|
|
Long are two nights,
|
|
But how shall I hold out three?
|
|
Shorter hath seemed
|
|
A month to me oft
|
|
Than of this longing time the half."
|
|
|
|
So Frey obtained Gerda, the most beautiful of all women, for his
|
|
wife, but he lost his sword.
|
|
|
|
This story, entitled "Skirnir For," and the one immediately
|
|
preceding it, "Thrym's Quida," will be found poetically told in
|
|
Longfellow's "Poets and Poetry of Europe."
|
|
CHAPTER XXXIX.
|
|
THOR'S VISIT TO JOTUNHEIM.
|
|
|
|
THOR'S VISIT TO JOTUNHEIM, THE GIANT'S COUNTRY.
|
|
|
|
ONE day the god Thor, with his servant Thialfi, and accompanied by
|
|
Loki, set out on a journey to the giant's country. Thialfi was of
|
|
all men the swiftest of foot. He bore Thor's wallet, containing
|
|
their provisions. When night came on they found themselves in an
|
|
immense forest, and searched on all sides for a place where they might
|
|
pass the night, and at last came to a very large hall, with an
|
|
entrance that took the whole breadth of one end of the building.
|
|
Here they lay down to sleep, but towards midnight were alarmed by an
|
|
earthquake which shook the whole edifice. Thor, rising up, called on
|
|
his companions to seek with him a place of safety. On the right they
|
|
found an adjoining chamber, into which the others entered, but Thor
|
|
remained at the doorway with his mallet in his hand, prepared to
|
|
defend himself, whatever might happen. A terrible groaning was heard
|
|
during the night, and at dawn of day Thor went out and found lying
|
|
near him a huge giant, who slept and snored in the way that had
|
|
alarmed them so. It is said that for once Thor was afraid to use his
|
|
mallet, and as the giant soon waked up, Thor contented himself with
|
|
simply asking his name.
|
|
"My name is Skrymir," said the giant, "but I need not ask thy
|
|
name, for I know that thou art the god Thor. But what has become of my
|
|
glove?" Thor then perceived that what they had taken overnight for a
|
|
hall was the giant's glove, and the chamber where his two companions
|
|
had sought refuge was the thumb. Skrymir then proposed that they
|
|
should travel in company, and Thor consenting, they sat down to eat
|
|
their breakfast, and when they had done, Skrymir packed all the
|
|
provisions into one wallet, threw it over his shoulder, and strode
|
|
on before them, taking such tremendous strides that they were hard put
|
|
to it to keep up with him. So they travelled the whole day, and at
|
|
dusk Skrymir chose a place for them to pass the night in under a large
|
|
oak tree. Skrymir then told them he would lie down to sleep. "But take
|
|
ye the wallet," he added, "and prepare your supper."
|
|
Skrymir soon fell asleep and began to snore strongly; but when
|
|
Thor tried to open the wallet, he found the giant had tied it up so
|
|
tight he could not untie a single knot. At last Thor became wroth, and
|
|
grasping his mallet with both hands he struck a furious blow on the
|
|
giant's head. Skrymir, awakening, merely asked whether a leaf had
|
|
not fallen on his head, and whether they had supped and were ready
|
|
to go to sleep. Thor answered that they were just going to sleep,
|
|
and so saying went and laid himself down under another tree. But sleep
|
|
came not that night to Thor, and when Skrymir snored again so loud
|
|
that the forest re-echoed with the noise, he arose, and grasping his
|
|
mallet launched it with such force at the giant's skull that it made a
|
|
deep dint in it. Skrymir, awakening, cried out, "What's the matter?
|
|
Are there any birds perched on this tree? I felt some moss from the
|
|
branches fall on my head. How fares it with thee, Thor?" But Thor went
|
|
away hastily, saying that he had just then awoke, and that as it was
|
|
only midnight, there was still time for sleep. He, however, resolved
|
|
that if he had an opportunity of striking a third blow, it should
|
|
settle all matters between them. A little before daybreak he perceived
|
|
that Skrymir was again fast asleep, and again grasping his mallet,
|
|
he dashed it with such violence that it forced its way into the
|
|
giant's skull up to the handle. But Skrymir sat up, and stroking his
|
|
cheek said, "An acorn fell on my head. What! Art thou awake, Thor?
|
|
Methinks it is time for us to get up and dress ourselves; but you have
|
|
not now a long way before you to the city called Utgard. I have
|
|
heard you whispering to one another that I am not a man of small
|
|
dimensions; but if you come to Utgard you will see there many men much
|
|
taller than I. Wherefore I advise you, when you come there, not to
|
|
make too much of yourselves, for the followers of Utgard-Loki will not
|
|
brook the boasting of such little fellows as you are. You must take
|
|
the road that leads eastward, mine lies northward, so we must part
|
|
here."
|
|
Hereupon he threw his wallet over his shoulders and turned away from
|
|
them into the forest, and Thor had no wish to stop him or to ask for
|
|
any more of his company.
|
|
Thor and his companions proceeded on their way, and towards noon
|
|
descried a city standing in the middle of a plain. It was so lofty
|
|
that they were obliged to bend their necks quite back on their
|
|
shoulders in order to see to the top of it. On arriving they entered
|
|
the city, and seeing a large palace before them with the door wide
|
|
open, they went in, and found a number of men of prodigious stature,
|
|
sitting on benches in the hall. Going further, they came before the
|
|
king, Utgard-Loki, whom they saluted with great respect. The king,
|
|
regarding them with a scornful smile, said, "If I do not mistake me,
|
|
that stripling yonder must be the god Thor." Then addressing himself
|
|
to Thor, he said, "Perhaps thou mayst be more than thou appearest to
|
|
be. What are the feats that thou and thy fellows deem yourselves
|
|
skilled in, for no one is permitted to remain here who does not, in
|
|
some feat or other, excel all other men?"
|
|
"The feat that I know," said Loki, "is to eat quicker than any one
|
|
else, and in this I am ready to give a proof against any one here
|
|
who may choose to compete with me."
|
|
"That will indeed be a feat," said Utgard-Loki, "if thou
|
|
performest what thou promisest, and it shall be tried forthwith."
|
|
He then ordered one of his men who was sitting at the farther end of
|
|
the bench, and whose name was Logi, to come forward and try his
|
|
skill with Loki. A trough filled with meat having been set on the hall
|
|
floor, Loki placed himself at one end, and Logi at the other, and each
|
|
of them began to eat as fast as he could, until they met in the middle
|
|
of the trough. But it was found that Loki had only eaten the flesh,
|
|
while his adversary had devoured both flesh and bone, and the trough
|
|
to boot. All the company therefore adjudged that Loki was vanquished.
|
|
Utgard-Loki then asked what feat the young man who accompanied
|
|
Thor could perform. Thialfi answered that he would run a race with any
|
|
one who might be matched against him. The king observed that skill
|
|
in running was something to boast of, but if the youth would win the
|
|
match he must display great agility. He then arose and went with all
|
|
who were present to a plain where there was good ground for running
|
|
on, and calling a young man named Hugi, bade him run a match with
|
|
Thialfi. In the first course Hugi so much outstripped his competitor
|
|
that he turned back and met him not far from the starting place.
|
|
Then they ran a second and a third time, but Thialfi met with no
|
|
better success.
|
|
Utgard-Loki then asked Thor in what feats he would choose to give
|
|
proofs of that prowess for which he was so famous. Thor answered
|
|
that he would try a drinking match with any one. Utgard-Loki bade
|
|
his cupbearer bring the large horn which his followers were obliged to
|
|
empty when they had trespassed in any way against the law of the
|
|
feast. The cupbearer having presented it to Thor, Utgard-Loki said,
|
|
"Whoever is a good drinker will empty that horn at a single draught,
|
|
though most men make two of it, but the most puny drinker can do it in
|
|
three."
|
|
Thor looked at the horn, which seemed of no extraordinary size
|
|
though somewhat long; however, as he was very thirsty, he set it to
|
|
his lips, and without drawing breath, pulled as long and as deeply
|
|
as he could, that he might not be obliged to make a second draught
|
|
of it; but when he set the horn down and looked in, he could
|
|
scarcely perceive that the liquor was diminished.
|
|
After taking breath, Thor went to it again with all his might, but
|
|
when he took the horn from his mouth, it seemed to him that he had
|
|
drunk rather less than before, although the horn could now be
|
|
carried without spilling.
|
|
"How now, Thor?" said Utgard-Loki; "thou must not spare thyself;
|
|
if thou meanest to drain the horn at the third draught thou must
|
|
pull deeply; and I must needs say that thou wilt not be called so
|
|
mighty a man here as thou art at home if thou showest no greater
|
|
prowess in other feats than methinks will be shown in this."
|
|
Thor, full of wrath, again set the horn to his lips, and did his
|
|
best to empty it; but on looking in found the liquor was only a little
|
|
lower, so he resolved to make no further attempt, but gave back the
|
|
horn to the cupbearer.
|
|
"I now see plainly," said Utgard-Loki, "that thou art not quite so
|
|
stout as we thought thee: but wilt thou try any other feat, though
|
|
methinks thou art not likely to bear any prize away with thee hence."
|
|
"What new trial hast thou to propose?" said Thor.
|
|
"We have a very trifling game here," answered Utgard-Loki, "in which
|
|
we exercise none but children. It consists in merely lifting my cat
|
|
from the ground; nor should I have dared to mention such a feat to the
|
|
great Thor if I had not already observed that thou art by no means
|
|
what we took thee for."
|
|
As he finished speaking, a large grey cat sprang on the hall
|
|
floor. Thor put his hand under the cat's belly and did his utmost to
|
|
raise him from the floor, but the cat, bending his back, had,
|
|
notwithstanding all Thor's efforts, only one of his feet lifted up,
|
|
seeing which Thor made no further attempt.
|
|
"This trial has turned out," said Utgard-Loki, "just as I imagined
|
|
it would. The cat is large, but Thor is little in comparison to our
|
|
men."
|
|
"Little as ye call me," answered Thor, "let me see who among you
|
|
will come hither now I am in wrath and wrestle with me."
|
|
"I see no one here," said Utgard-Loki, looking at the men sitting on
|
|
the benches, "who would not think it beneath him to wrestle with thee;
|
|
let somebody, however, call hither that old crone, my nurse Elli,
|
|
and let Thor wrestle with her if he will. She has thrown to the ground
|
|
many a man not less strong than this Thor is."
|
|
A toothless old woman then entered the hall, and was told by
|
|
Utgard-Loki to take hold of Thor. The tale is shortly told. The more
|
|
Thor tightened his hold on the crone the firmer she stood. At length
|
|
after a very violent struggle Thor began to lose his footing, and
|
|
was finally brought down upon one knee. Utgard-Loki then told them
|
|
to desist, adding that Thor had now no occasion to ask any one else in
|
|
the hall to wrestle with him, and it was also getting late; so he
|
|
showed Thor and his companions to their seats, and they passed the
|
|
night there in good cheer.
|
|
The next morning, at break of day, Thor and his companions dressed
|
|
themselves and prepared for their departure. Utgard-Loki ordered a
|
|
table to be set for them, on which there was no lack of victuals or
|
|
drink. After the repast Utgard-Loki led them to the gate of the
|
|
city, and on parting asked Thor how he thought his journey had
|
|
turned out, and whether he had met with any men stronger than himself.
|
|
Thor told him that he could not deny but that he had brought great
|
|
shame on himself. "And what grieves me most," he added, "is that ye
|
|
will call me a person of little worth."
|
|
"Nay," said Utgard-Loki, "it behooves me to tell thee the truth, now
|
|
thou art out of the city, which so long as I live and have my way thou
|
|
shalt never enter again. And, by my troth, had I known beforehand that
|
|
thou hadst so much strength in thee, and wouldst have brought me so
|
|
near to a great mishap, I would not have suffered thee to enter this
|
|
time. Know then that I have all along deceived thee by my illusions;
|
|
first in the forest, where I tied up the wallet with iron wire so that
|
|
thou couldst not untie it. After this thou gavest me three blows
|
|
with thy mallet; the first, though the least, would have ended my days
|
|
had it fallen on me, but I slipped aside and thy blows fell on the
|
|
mountain, where thou wilt find three glens, one of them remarkably
|
|
deep. These are the dints made by thy mallet. I have made use of
|
|
similar illusions in the contests you have had with my followers. In
|
|
the first, Loki, like hunger itself, devoured all that was set
|
|
before him, but Logi was in reality nothing else than Fire, and
|
|
therefore consumed not only the meat, but the trough which held it.
|
|
Hugi, with whom Thialfi contended in running, was Thought, and it
|
|
was impossible for Thialfi to keep pace with that. When thou in thy
|
|
turn didst attempt to empty the horn, thou didst perform, by my troth,
|
|
a deed so marvellous that had I not seen it myself I should never have
|
|
believed it. For one end of that horn reached the sea, which thou wast
|
|
not aware of, but when thou comest to the shore thou wilt perceive how
|
|
much the sea has sunk by thy draughts. Thou didst perform a feat no
|
|
less wonderful by lifting up the cat, and to tell thee the truth, when
|
|
we saw that one of his paws was off the floor, we were all of us
|
|
terror-stricken, for what thou tookest for a cat was in reality the
|
|
Midgard serpent that encompasseth the earth, and he was so stretched
|
|
by thee that he was barely long enough to enclose it between his
|
|
head and tail. Thy wrestling with Elli was also a most astonishing
|
|
feat, for there was never yet a man, nor ever will be, whom Old Age,
|
|
for such in fact was Elli, will not sooner or later lay low. But
|
|
now, as we are going to part, let me tell thee that it will be
|
|
better for both of us if thou never come near me again, for shouldst
|
|
thou do so, I shall again defend myself by other illusions, so that
|
|
thou wilt only lose thy labour and get no fame from the contest with
|
|
me."
|
|
On hearing these words Thor in a rage laid hold of his mallet and
|
|
would have launched it at him, but Utgard-Loki had disappeared, and
|
|
when Thor would have returned to the city to destroy it, he found
|
|
nothing around him but a verdant plain.
|
|
CHAPTER XL.
|
|
THE DEATH OF BALDUR- THE ELVES- RUNIC LETTERS-
|
|
SKALDS- ICELAND.
|
|
|
|
THE DEATH OF BALDUR.
|
|
|
|
BALDUR the Good, having been tormented with terrible dreams
|
|
indicating that his life was in peril, told them to the assembled
|
|
gods, who resolved to conjure all things to avert from him the
|
|
threatened danger. Then Frigga, the wife of Odin, exacted an oath from
|
|
fire and water, from iron and all other metals, from stones, trees,
|
|
diseases, beasts, birds, poisons, and creeping things, that none of
|
|
them would do any harm to Baldur. Odin, not satisfied with all this,
|
|
and feeling alarmed for the fate of his son, determined to consult the
|
|
prophetess Angerbode, a giantess, mother of Fenris, Hela, and the
|
|
Midgard serpent. She was dead, and Odin was forced to seek her in
|
|
Hela's dominions. This Descent of Odin forms the subject of Gray's
|
|
fine ode beginning:
|
|
|
|
"Uprose the king of men with speed
|
|
And saddled straight his coal-black steed."
|
|
|
|
But the other gods, feeling that what Frigga had done was quite
|
|
sufficient, amused themselves with using Baldur as a mark, some
|
|
hurling darts at him, some stones, while others hewed at him with
|
|
their swords and battle-axes; for do what they would, none of them
|
|
could harm him. And this became a favourite pastime with them and
|
|
was regarded as an honour shown to Baldur. But when Loki beheld the
|
|
scene he was sorely vexed that Baldur was not hurt. Assuming,
|
|
therefore, the shape of a woman, he went to Fensalir, the mansion of
|
|
Frigga. That goddess, when she saw the pretended woman, inquired of
|
|
her if she knew what the gods were doing at their meetings. She
|
|
replied that they were throwing darts and stones at Baldur, without
|
|
being able to hurt him. "Ay," said Frigga, "neither stones, nor
|
|
sticks, nor anything else can hurt Baldur, for I have exacted an
|
|
oath from all of them." "What," exclaimed the woman, "have all
|
|
things sworn to spare Baldur?" "All things," replied Frigga, "except
|
|
one little shrub that grows on the eastern side of Valhalla, and is
|
|
called Mistletoe, and which I thought too young and feeble to crave an
|
|
oath from."
|
|
As soon as Loki heard this he went away, and resuming his natural
|
|
shape, cut off the mistletoe, and repaired to the place where the gods
|
|
were assembled. There he found Hodur standing apart, without partaking
|
|
of the sports, on account of his blindness, and going up to him, said,
|
|
"Why dost thou not also throw something at Baldur?"
|
|
"Because I am blind," answered Hodur, "and see not where Baldur
|
|
is, and have, moreover, nothing to throw."
|
|
"Come, then," said Loki, "do like the rest, and show honour to
|
|
Baldur by throwing this twig at him, and I will direct thy arm towards
|
|
the place where he stands."
|
|
Hodur then took the mistletoe, and under the guidance of Loki,
|
|
darted it at Baldur, who, pierced through and through, fell down
|
|
lifeless. Surely never was there witnessed, either among gods or
|
|
men, a more atrocious deed than this. When Baldur fell, the gods
|
|
were struck speechless with horror, and then they looked at each other
|
|
and all were of one mind to lay hands on him who had done the deed,
|
|
but they were obliged to delay their vengeance out of respect for
|
|
the sacred place where they were assembled. They gave vent to their
|
|
grief by loud lamentations. When the gods came to themselves, Frigga
|
|
asked who among them wished to gain all her love and good will. "For
|
|
this," said she, "shall he have who will ride to Hel and offer Hela
|
|
a ransom if she will let Baldur return to Asgard." Whereupon Hermod,
|
|
surnamed the Nimble, the son of Odin, offered to undertake the
|
|
journey. Odin's horse, Sleipnir, which has eight legs and can outrun
|
|
the wind, was then led forth, on which Hermod mounted and galloped
|
|
away on his mission. For the space of nine days and as many nights
|
|
he rode through deep glens so dark that he could not discern anything,
|
|
until he arrived at the river Gyoll, which he passed over on a
|
|
bridge covered with glittering gold. The maiden who kept the bridge
|
|
asked him his name and lineage, telling him that the day before five
|
|
bands of dead persons had ridden over the bridge, and did not shake it
|
|
as much as he alone. "But," she added, "thou hast not death's hue on
|
|
thee; why then ridest thou here on the way to Hel?"
|
|
"I ride to Hel," answered Hermod, "to seek Baldur. Hast thou
|
|
perchance seen him pass this way?"
|
|
She replied, "Baldur hath ridden over Gyoll's bridge, and yonder
|
|
lieth the way he took to the abodes of death."
|
|
Hermod pursued his journey until he came to the barred gates of Hel.
|
|
Here he alighted, girthed his saddle tighter, and remounting clapped
|
|
both spurs to his horse, who cleared the gate by a tremendous leap
|
|
without touching it. Hermod then rode on to the palace, where he found
|
|
his brother Baldur occupying the most distinguished seat in the
|
|
hall, and passed the night in his company. The next morning he
|
|
besought Hela to let Baldur ride home with him, assuring her that
|
|
nothing but lamentations were to be heard among the gods. Hela
|
|
answered that it should now be tried whether Baldur was so beloved
|
|
as he was said to be. "If, therefore," she added, "all things in the
|
|
world, both living and lifeless, weep for him, then shall he return to
|
|
life; but if any one thing speak against him or refuse to weep, he
|
|
shall be kept in Hel."
|
|
Hermod then rode back to Asgard and gave an account of all he had
|
|
heard and witnessed.
|
|
The gods upon this despatched messengers throughout the world to beg
|
|
everything to weep in order that Baldur might be delivered from Hel.
|
|
All things very willingly complied with this request, both men and
|
|
every other living being, as well as earths, and stones, and trees,
|
|
and metals, just as we have all seen these things weep when they are
|
|
brought from a cold place into a hot one. As the messengers were
|
|
returning, they found an old hag named Thaukt sitting in a cavern, and
|
|
begged her to weep Baldur out of Hel. But she answered:
|
|
|
|
"Thaukt will wail
|
|
With dry tears
|
|
Baldur's bale-fire.
|
|
Let Hela keep her own."
|
|
|
|
It was strongly suspected that this hag was no other than Loki
|
|
himself, who never ceased to work evil among gods and men. So Baldur
|
|
was prevented from coming back to Asgard.*
|
|
|
|
* In Longfellow's Poems will be found a poem entitled "Tegner's
|
|
Drapa," upon the subject of Baldur's death.
|
|
|
|
THE FUNERAL OF BALDUR.
|
|
|
|
The gods took up the dead body and bore it to the seashore where
|
|
stood Baldur's ship "Hringham," which passed for the largest in the
|
|
world. Baldur's dead body was put on the funeral pile, on board the
|
|
ship, and his wife Nanna was so struck with grief at the sight that
|
|
she broke her heart, and her body was burned on the same pile with her
|
|
husband's. There was a vast concourse of various kinds of people at
|
|
Baldur's obsequies. First came Odin accompanied by Frigga, the
|
|
Valkyrior, and his ravens; then Frey in his car drawn by Gullinbursti,
|
|
the boar; Heimdall rode his horse Gulltopp, and Freya drove in her
|
|
chariot drawn by cats. There were also a great many Frost giants and
|
|
giants of the mountain present. Baldur's horse was led to the pile
|
|
fully caparisoned and consumed in the same flames with his master.
|
|
But Loki did not escape his deserved punishment. When he saw how
|
|
angry the gods were, he fled to the mountain, and there built
|
|
himself a hut with four doors, so that he could see every
|
|
approaching danger. He invented a net to catch the fishes, such as
|
|
fishermen have used since his time. But Odin found out his
|
|
hiding-place and the gods assembled to take him. He, seeing this,
|
|
changed himself into a salmon, and lay hid among the stones of the
|
|
brook. But the gods took his net and dragged the brook, and Loki,
|
|
finding he must be caught, tried to leap over the net; but Thor caught
|
|
him by the tail and compressed it, so that salmons ever since have had
|
|
that part remarkably fine and thin. They bound him with chains and
|
|
suspended a serpent over his head, whose venom falls upon his face
|
|
drop by drop. His wife Siguna sits by his side and catches the drops
|
|
as they fall, in a cup; but when she carries it away to empty it,
|
|
the venom falls upon Loki, which makes him howl with horror, and twist
|
|
his body about so violently that the whole earth shakes, and this
|
|
produces what men call earthquakes.
|
|
|
|
THE ELVES.
|
|
|
|
The Edda mentions another class of beings, inferior to the gods, but
|
|
still possessed of great power; these were called Elves. The white
|
|
spirits, or Elves of Light, were exceedingly fair, more brilliant than
|
|
the sun, and clad in garments of a delicate and transparent texture.
|
|
They loved the light, were kindly disposed to mankind, and generally
|
|
appeared as fair and lovely children. Their country was called
|
|
Alfheim, and was the domain of Freyr, the god of the sun, in whose
|
|
light they were always sporting.
|
|
The black or Night Elves were a different kind of creatures. Ugly,
|
|
long-nosed dwarfs, of a dirty brown colour, they appeared only at
|
|
night, for they avoided the sun as their most deadly enemy, because
|
|
whenever his beams fell upon any of them they changed them immediately
|
|
into stones. Their language was the echo of solitudes, and their
|
|
dwelling-places subterranean caves and clefts. They were supposed to
|
|
have come into existence as maggots produced by the decaying flesh
|
|
of Ymir's body, and were afterwards endowed by the gods with a human
|
|
form and great understanding. They were particularly distinguished for
|
|
a knowledge of the mysterious powers of nature, and for the runes
|
|
which they carved and explained. They were the most skilful artificers
|
|
of all created beings, and worked in metals and in wood. Among their
|
|
most noted works were Thor's hammer, and the ship "Skidbladnir," which
|
|
they gave to Freyr, and which was so large that it could contain all
|
|
the deities with their war and household implements, but so
|
|
skilfully was it wrought that when folded together it could be put
|
|
into a side pocket.
|
|
|
|
RAGNAROK, THE TWILIGHT OF THE GODS.
|
|
|
|
It was a firm belief of the northern nations that a time would
|
|
come when all the visible creation, the gods of Valhalla and
|
|
Niffleheim, the inhabitants of Jotunheim, Alfheim, and Midgard,
|
|
together with their habitations, would be destroyed. The fearful day
|
|
of destruction will not, however, be without its forerunners. First
|
|
will come a triple winter, during which snow will fall from the four
|
|
corners of the heavens, the frost be very severe, the wind piercing,
|
|
the weather tempestuous, and the sun impart no gladness. Three such
|
|
winters will pass away without being tempered by a single summer.
|
|
Three other similar winters will then follow, during which war and
|
|
discord will spread over the universe. The earth itself will be
|
|
frightened and begin to tremble, the sea leave its basin, the
|
|
heavens tear asunder, and men perish in great numbers, and the
|
|
eagles of the air feast upon their still quivering bodies. The wolf
|
|
Fenris will now break his bands, the Midgard serpent rise out of her
|
|
bed in the sea, and Loki, released from his bonds, will join the
|
|
enemies of the gods. Amidst the general devastation the sons of
|
|
Muspelheim will rush forth under their leader Surtur, before and
|
|
behind whom are flames and burning fire. Onward they ride over
|
|
Bifrost, the rainbow bridge, which breaks under the horses' hoofs. But
|
|
they, disregarding its fall, direct their course to the battlefield
|
|
called Vigrid. Thither also repair the wolf Fenris, the Midgard
|
|
serpent, Loki with all the followers of Hela, and the Frost giants.
|
|
Heimdall now stands up and sounds the Giallar horn to assemble the
|
|
gods and heroes for the contest. The gods advance, led on by Odin, who
|
|
engages the wolf Fenris, but falls a victim to the monster, who is,
|
|
however, slain by Vidar, Odin's son. Thor gains great renown by
|
|
killing the Midgard serpent, but recoils and falls dead, suffocated
|
|
with the venom which the dying monster vomits over him. Loki and
|
|
Heimdall meet and fight till they are both slain. The gods and their
|
|
enemies having fallen in battle, Surtur, who has killed Freyr, darts
|
|
fire and flames over the world, and the whole universe is burned up.
|
|
The sun becomes dim, the earth sinks into the ocean, the stars fall
|
|
from heaven, and time is no more.
|
|
After this Alfadur (the Almighty) will cause a new heaven and a
|
|
new earth to arise out of the sea. The new earth filled with
|
|
abundant supplies will spontaneously produce its fruits without labour
|
|
or care. Wickedness and misery will no more be known, but the gods and
|
|
men will live happily together.
|
|
|
|
RUNIC LETTERS.
|
|
|
|
One cannot travel far in Denmark, Norway, or Sweden without
|
|
meeting with great stones of different forms, engraven with characters
|
|
called Runic, which appear at first sight very different from all we
|
|
know. The letters consist almost invariably of straight lines, in
|
|
the shape of little sticks either singly or put together. Such
|
|
sticks were in early times used by the northern nations for the
|
|
purpose of ascertaining future events. The sticks were shaken up,
|
|
and from the figures that they formed a kind of divination was
|
|
derived.
|
|
The Runic characters were of various kinds. They were chiefly used
|
|
for magical purposes. The noxious, or, as they called them, the bitter
|
|
runes, were employed to bring various evils on their enemies; the
|
|
favourable averted misfortune. Some were medicinal, others employed to
|
|
win love, etc. In later times they were frequently used for
|
|
inscriptions, of which more than a thousand have been found. The
|
|
language is a dialect of the Gothic, called Norse, still in use in
|
|
Iceland. The inscriptions may therefore be read with certainty, but
|
|
hitherto very few have been found which throw the least light on
|
|
history. They are mostly epitaphs on tombstones.
|
|
Gray's ode on the "Descent of Odin" contains an allusion to the
|
|
use of Runic letters for incantation:
|
|
|
|
"Facing to the northern clime,
|
|
Thrice he traced the Runic rhyme;
|
|
Thrice pronounced, in accents dread
|
|
The thrilling verse that wakes the dead,
|
|
Till from out the hollow ground
|
|
Slowly breathed a sullen sound."
|
|
|
|
THE SKALDS.
|
|
|
|
The Skalds were the bards and poets of the nation, a very
|
|
important class of men in all communities in an early stage of
|
|
civilization. They are the depositaries of whatever historic lore
|
|
there is, and it is their office to mingle something of intellectual
|
|
gratification with the rude feasts of the warriors, by rehearsing,
|
|
with such accomplishments of poetry and music as their skill can
|
|
afford, the exploits of their heroes, living or dead. The compositions
|
|
of the Skalds were called Sagas, many of which have come down to us,
|
|
and contain valuable materials of history, and a faithful picture of
|
|
the state of society at the time to which they relate.
|
|
|
|
ICELAND.
|
|
|
|
The Eddas and Sagas have come to us from Iceland. The following
|
|
extract from Carlyle's lectures on "Heroes and Hero Worship" gives
|
|
an animated account of the region where the strange stories we have
|
|
been reading had their origin. Let the reader contrast it for a moment
|
|
with Greece, the parent of classical mythology:
|
|
"In that strange island, Iceland,- burst up, the geologists say,
|
|
by fire from the bottom of the sea, a wild land of barrenness and
|
|
lava, swallowed many months of every year in black tempests, yet
|
|
with a wild, gleaming beauty in summer time, towering up there stern
|
|
and grim in the North Ocean, with its snow yokuls [mountains], roaring
|
|
geysers [boiling springs], sulphur pools, and horrid volcanic
|
|
chasms, like the waste, chaotic battlefield of Frost and Fire,- where,
|
|
of all places, we least looked for literature or written memorials,-
|
|
the record of these things was written down. On the seaboard of this
|
|
wild land is a rim of grassy country, where cattle can subsist, and
|
|
men by means of them and of what the sea yields; and it seems they
|
|
were poetic men these, men who had deep thoughts in them and uttered
|
|
musically their thoughts. Much would be lost had Iceland not been
|
|
burst up from the sea, not been discovered by the Northmen!"
|
|
CHAPTER XLI.
|
|
THE DRUIDS- IONA.
|
|
|
|
THE DRUIDS.
|
|
|
|
THE Druids were the priests or ministers of religion among the
|
|
ancient Celtic nations in Gaul, Britain, and Germany. Our
|
|
information respecting them is borrowed from notices in the Greek
|
|
and Roman writers; compared with the remains of Welsh and Gaelic
|
|
poetry still extant.
|
|
The Druids combined the functions of the priest, the magistrate, the
|
|
scholar, and the physician. They stood to the people of the Celtic
|
|
tribes in a relation closely analogous to that in which the Brahmans
|
|
of India, the Magi of Persia, and the priests of the Egyptians stood
|
|
to the people respectively by whom they were revered.
|
|
The Druids taught the existence of one god, to whom they gave a name
|
|
"Be' al," which Celtic antiquaries tell us means "the life of
|
|
everything," or "the source of all beings," and which seems to have
|
|
affinity with the Phoenician Baal. What renders this affinity more
|
|
striking is that the Druids as well as the Phoenicians identified
|
|
this, their supreme deity, with the Sun. Fire was regarded as a symbol
|
|
of the divinity. The Latin writers assert that the Druids also
|
|
worshipped numerous inferior gods.
|
|
They used no images to represent the object of their worship, nor
|
|
did they meet in temples or buildings of any kind for the
|
|
performance of their sacred rites. A circle of stones (each stone
|
|
generally of vast size), enclosing an area of from twenty feet to
|
|
thirty yards in diameter, constituted their sacred place. The most
|
|
celebrated of these now remaining is Stonehenge, on Salisbury Plain,
|
|
England.
|
|
These sacred circles were generally situated near some stream, or
|
|
under the shadow of a grove or widespreading oak. In the centre of the
|
|
circle stood the Cromlech or altar, which was a large stone, placed in
|
|
the manner of a table upon other stones set up on end. The Druids
|
|
had also their high places, which were large stones or piles of stones
|
|
on the summits of hills. These were called Cairns, and were used in
|
|
the worship of the deity under the symbol of the sun.
|
|
That the Druids offered sacrifices to their deity there can be no
|
|
doubt. But there is some uncertainty as to what they offered, and of
|
|
the ceremonies connected with their religious services we know
|
|
almost nothing. The classical (Roman) writers affirm that they offered
|
|
on great occasions human sacrifices; as for success in war or for
|
|
relief from dangerous diseases. Caesar has given a detailed account of
|
|
the manner in which this was done. "They have images of immense
|
|
size, the limbs of which are framed with twisted twigs and filled with
|
|
living persons. These being set on fire, those within are
|
|
encompassed by the flames." Many attempts have been made by Celtic
|
|
writers to shake the testimony of the Roman historians to this fact,
|
|
but without success.
|
|
The Druids observed two festivals in each year. The former took
|
|
place in the beginning of May, and was called Beltane or "fire of
|
|
God." On this occasion a large fire was kindled on some elevated spot,
|
|
in honour of the sun, whose returning beneficence they thus welcomed
|
|
after the gloom and desolation of winter. Of this custom a trace
|
|
remains in the name given to Whitsunday in parts of Scotland to this
|
|
day. Sir Walter Scott uses the word in the "Boat Song" in the "Lady of
|
|
the Lake":
|
|
|
|
"Ours is no sapling, chance sown by the fountain,
|
|
Blooming at Beltane in winter to fade;" etc.
|
|
|
|
The other great festival of the Druids was called "Samh' in," or
|
|
"fire of peace," and was held on Hallow-eve (first of November), which
|
|
still retains this designation in the Highlands of Scotland. On this
|
|
occasion the Druids assembled in solemn conclave, in the most
|
|
central part of the district, to discharge the judicial functions of
|
|
their order. All questions, whether public or private, all crimes
|
|
against person or property, were at this time brought before them
|
|
for adjudication. With these judicial acts were combined certain
|
|
superstitious usages, especially the kindling of the sacred fire, from
|
|
which all the fires in the district, which had been beforehand
|
|
scrupulously extinguished, might be relighted. This usage of
|
|
kindling fires on Hallow-eve lingered in the British islands long
|
|
after the establishment of Christianity.
|
|
Besides these two great annual festivals, the Druids were in the
|
|
habit of observing the full moon, and especially the sixth day of
|
|
the moon. On the latter they sought the Mistletoe, which grew on their
|
|
favourite oaks, and to which, as well as to the oak itself, they
|
|
ascribed a peculiar virtue and sacredness. The discovery of it was
|
|
an occasion of rejoicing and solemn worship. "They call it," says
|
|
Pliny, "by a word in their language, which means 'heal-all,' and
|
|
having made solemn preparation for feasting and sacrifice under the
|
|
tree, they drive thither two milk-white bulls, whose horns are then
|
|
for the first time bound. The priest then, robed in white, ascends the
|
|
tree, and cuts off the mistletoe with a golden sickle. It is caught in
|
|
a white mantle, after which they proceed to slay the victims, at the
|
|
same time praying that God would render his gift prosperous to those
|
|
to whom he had given it." They drink the water in which it has been
|
|
infused, and think it a remedy for all diseases. The mistletoe is a
|
|
parasitic plant, and is not always nor often found on the oak, so that
|
|
when it is found it is the more precious.
|
|
The Druids were the teachers of morality as well as of religion.
|
|
Of their ethical teaching a valuable specimen is preserved in the
|
|
Triads of the Welsh Bards, and from this we may gather that their
|
|
views of moral rectitude were on the whole just, and that they held
|
|
and inculcated many very noble and valuable principles of conduct.
|
|
They were also the men of science and learning of their age and
|
|
people. Whether they were acquainted with letters or not has been
|
|
disputed, though the probability is strong that they were, to some
|
|
extent. But it is certain that they committed nothing of their
|
|
doctrine, their history, or their poetry to writing. Their teaching
|
|
was oral, and their literature (if such a word may be used in such a
|
|
case) was preserved solely by tradition. But the Roman writers admit
|
|
that "they paid much attention to the order and laws of nature, and
|
|
investigated and taught to the youth under their charge many things
|
|
concerning the stars and their motions, the size of the world and
|
|
the lands, and concerning the might and power of the immortal gods."
|
|
Their history consisted in traditional tales, in which the heroic
|
|
deeds of their forefathers were celebrated. These were apparently in
|
|
verse, and thus constituted part of the poetry as well as the
|
|
history of the Druids. In the poems of Ossian we have, if not the
|
|
actual productions of Druidical times, what may be considered faithful
|
|
representations of the songs of the Bards.
|
|
The Bards were an essential part of the Druidical hierarchy. One
|
|
author, Pennant, says, "The Bards were supposed to be endowed with
|
|
powers equal to inspiration. They were the oral historians of all past
|
|
transactions, public and private. They were also accomplished
|
|
genealogists," etc.
|
|
Pennant gives a minute account of the Eisteddfods or sessions of the
|
|
Bards and minstrels, which were held in Wales for many centuries, long
|
|
after the Druidical priesthood in its other departments became
|
|
extinct. At these meetings none but Bards of merit were suffered to
|
|
rehearse their pieces, and minstrels of skill to perform. Judges
|
|
were appointed to decide on their respective abilities, and suitable
|
|
degrees were conferred. In the earlier period the judges were
|
|
appointed by the Welsh princes, and after the conquest of Wales, by
|
|
commission from the kings of England. Yet the tradition is that Edward
|
|
I, in revenge for the influence of the Bards in animating the
|
|
resistance of the people to his sway, persecuted them with great
|
|
cruelty. This tradition has furnished the poet Gray with the subject
|
|
of his celebrated ode, the "Bard."
|
|
There are still occasional meetings of the lovers of Welsh poetry
|
|
and music, held under the ancient name. Among Mrs. Hemans' poems is
|
|
one written for an Eisteddfod, or meeting of Welsh Bards, held in
|
|
London, May 22, 1822. It begins with a description of the ancient
|
|
meeting, of which the following lines are a part:
|
|
|
|
"...midst the eternal cliffs, whose strength defied
|
|
The crested Roman in his hour of pride;
|
|
And where the Druid's ancient cromlech frowned,
|
|
And the oaks breathed mysterious murmurs round,
|
|
There thronged the inspired of yore! on plain or height,
|
|
In the sun's face, beneath the eye of light,
|
|
And baring unto heaven each noble head,
|
|
Stood in the circle, where none else might tread."
|
|
|
|
The Druidical system was at its height at the time of the Roman
|
|
invasion under Julius Caesar. Against the Druids, as their chief
|
|
enemies, these conquerors of the world directed their unsparing
|
|
fury. The Druids, harassed at all points on the mainland, retreated to
|
|
Anglesey and Iona, where for a season they found shelter and continued
|
|
their now dishonoured rites.
|
|
The Druids retained their predominance in Iona and over the adjacent
|
|
islands and mainland until they were supplanted and their
|
|
superstitions overturned by the arrival of St. Columba, the apostle of
|
|
the Highlands, by whom the inhabitants of that district were first led
|
|
to profess Christianity.
|
|
|
|
IONA.
|
|
|
|
One of the smallest of the British Isles, situated near a rugged and
|
|
barren coast, surrounded by dangerous seas, and possessing no
|
|
sources of internal wealth, Iona has obtained an imperishable place in
|
|
history as the seat of civilization and religion at a time when the
|
|
darkness of heathenism hung over almost the whole of Northern
|
|
Europe. Iona or Icolmkill is situated at the extremity of the island
|
|
of Mull, from which it is separated by a strait of half a mile in
|
|
breadth, its distance from the mainland of Scotland being thirty-six
|
|
miles.
|
|
Columba was a native of Ireland, and connected by birth with the
|
|
princes of the land. Ireland was at that time a land of gospel
|
|
light, while the western and northern parts of Scotland were still
|
|
immersed in the darkness of heathenism. Columba with twelve friends
|
|
landed on the island of Iona in the year of our Lord 563, having
|
|
made the passage in a wicker boat covered with hides. The Druids who
|
|
occupied the island endeavoured to prevent his settling there, and the
|
|
savage nations on the adjoining shores incommoded him with their
|
|
hostility, and on several occasions endangered his rife by their
|
|
attacks. Yet by his perseverance and zeal he surmounted all
|
|
opposition, procured from the king a gift of the island, and
|
|
established there a monastery of which he was the abbot. He was
|
|
unwearied in his labours to disseminate a knowledge of the
|
|
Scriptures throughout the Highlands and islands of Scotland, and
|
|
such was the reverence paid him that though not a bishop, but merely a
|
|
presbyter and monk, the entire province with its bishops was subject
|
|
to him and his successors. The Pictish monarch was so impressed with a
|
|
sense of his wisdom and worth that he held him in the highest
|
|
honour, and the neighbouring chiefs and princes sought his counsel and
|
|
availed themselves of his judgment in settling their disputes.
|
|
When Columba landed on Iona he was attended by twelve followers whom
|
|
he had formed into a religious body of which he was the head. To
|
|
these, as occasion required, others were from time to time added, so
|
|
that the original number was always kept up. Their institution was
|
|
called a monastery and the superior an abbot, but the system had
|
|
little in common with the monastic institutions of later times. The
|
|
name by which those who submitted to the rule were known was that of
|
|
Culdees, probably from the Latin "cultores Dei"- worshippers of God.
|
|
They were a body of religious persons associated together for the
|
|
purpose of aiding each other in the common work of preaching the
|
|
gospel and teaching youth, as well as maintaining in themselves the
|
|
fervour of devotion by united exercises of worship. On entering the
|
|
order certain vows were taken by the members, but they were not
|
|
those which were usually imposed by monastic orders, for of these,
|
|
which are three- celibacy, poverty, and obedience,- the Culdees were
|
|
bound to none except the third. To poverty they did not bind
|
|
themselves; on the contrary they seem to have laboured diligently to
|
|
procure for themselves and those dependent on them the comforts of
|
|
life. Marriage also was allowed them, and most of them seem to have
|
|
entered into that state. True, their wives were not permitted to
|
|
reside with them at the institution, but they had a residence assigned
|
|
to them in an adjacent locality, Near Iona there is an island which
|
|
still bears the name of "Eilen nam ban," women's island, where their
|
|
husbands seem to have resided with them, except when duty required
|
|
their presence in the school or the sanctuary.
|
|
|
|
Campbell, in his poem of "Reullura," alludes to the married monks of
|
|
Iona:
|
|
|
|
"...The pure Culdees
|
|
Were Albyn's earliest priests of God,
|
|
Ere yet an island of her seas
|
|
By foot of Saxon monk was trod,
|
|
Long ere her churchmen by bigotry
|
|
Were barred from holy wedlock's tie.
|
|
'Twas then that Aodh, famed afar,
|
|
In Iona preached the word with power,
|
|
And Reullura, beauty's star,
|
|
Was the partner of his bower."
|
|
|
|
In one of his "Irish Melodies," Moore gives the legend of St.
|
|
Senanus and the lady who sought shelter on the island, but was
|
|
repulsed:
|
|
|
|
"O, haste and leave this sacred isle,
|
|
Unholy bark, ere morning smile;
|
|
For on thy deck, though dark it be,
|
|
A female form I see;
|
|
And I have sworn this sainted sod
|
|
Shall ne'er by woman's foot be trod."
|
|
|
|
In these respects and in others the Culdees departed from the
|
|
established rules of the Romish church, and consequently were deemed
|
|
heretical. The consequence was that as the power of the latter
|
|
advanced that of the Culdees was enfeebled. It was not, however,
|
|
till the thirteenth century that the communities of the Culdees were
|
|
suppressed and the members dispersed. They still continued to labour
|
|
as individuals, and resisted the inroads of Papal usurpation as they
|
|
best might till the light of the Reformation dawned on the world.
|
|
Iona, from its position in the western seas, was exposed to the
|
|
assaults of the Norwegian and Danish rovers by whom those seas were
|
|
infested, and by them it was repeatedly pillaged, its dwellings
|
|
burned, and its peaceful inhabitants put to the sword. These
|
|
unfavourable circumstances led to its gradual decline, which was
|
|
expedited by the subversion of the Culdees throughout Scotland.
|
|
Under the reign of Popery the island became the seat of a nunnery, the
|
|
ruins of which are still seen. At the Reformation, the nuns were
|
|
allowed to remain, living in community, when the abbey was dismantled.
|
|
Iona is now chiefly resorted to by travellers on account of the
|
|
numerous ecclesiastical and sepulchral remains which are found upon
|
|
it. The principal of these are the Cathedral or Abbey Church and the
|
|
Chapel of the Nunnery. Besides these remains of ecclesiastical
|
|
antiquity, there are some of an earlier date, and pointing to the
|
|
existence on the island of forms of worship and belief different
|
|
from those of Christianity. These are the circular Cairns which are
|
|
found in various parts, and which seem to have been of Druidical
|
|
origin. It is in reference to all these remains of ancient religion
|
|
that Johnson exclaims, "That man is little to be envied whose
|
|
patriotism would not gain force upon the plains of Marathon, or
|
|
whose piety would not grow warmer amid the ruins of Iona."
|
|
In the "Lord of the Isles," Scott beautifully contrasts the church
|
|
on Iona with the cave of Staffa, opposite:
|
|
|
|
"Nature herself, it seemed, would raise
|
|
A minster to her Maker's praise!
|
|
Not for a meaner use ascend
|
|
Her columns, or her arches bend;
|
|
Nor of a theme less solemn tells
|
|
That mighty surge that ebbs and swells,
|
|
And still between each awful pause,
|
|
From the high vault an answer draws,
|
|
In varied tone, prolonged and high,
|
|
That mocks the organ's melody;
|
|
Nor doth its entrance front in vain
|
|
To old Iona's holy fane,
|
|
That Nature's voice might seem to say,
|
|
Well hast thou done, frail child of clay!
|
|
Thy humble powers that stately shrine
|
|
Tasked high and hard- but witness mine!"
|
|
CHAPTER XLII.
|
|
BEOWULF.
|
|
|
|
ALTHOUGH the manuscript which contains the epic of Beowulf was
|
|
written about 1000 A.D., the poem itself was known and had been
|
|
elaborated upon for centuries by minstrels who recited the heroic
|
|
exploits of the son of Ecgtheow and nephew of Hygelac, King of the
|
|
Geats, whose kingdom was what is now Southern Sweden.
|
|
In his boyhood Beowulf gave evidence of the great feats of
|
|
strength and courage which in manhood made him the deliverer of
|
|
Hrothgar, King of Denmark, from the monster, Grendel, and later in his
|
|
own kingdom from the fiery dragon which dealt Beowulf a mortal blow.
|
|
Beowulf's first renown followed his conquest of many sea-monsters
|
|
while he swam for seven days and nights before he came to the
|
|
country of the Finns. Helping to defend the land of the Hetware, he
|
|
killed many of the enemy and again showed his prowess as a swimmer
|
|
by bringing to his ship the armor of thirty of his slain pursuers.
|
|
Offered the crown of his native land, Beowulf, just entering
|
|
manhood, refused it in favor of Heardred, the young son of the
|
|
queen. Instead, he acted as guardian and counsellor until the boy-king
|
|
grew old enough to rule alone.
|
|
For twelve years, Hrothgar, King of Denmark, suffered while his
|
|
kingdom was being ravaged by a devouring monster, named Grendel.
|
|
This Grendel bore a charmed life against all weapons forged by man. He
|
|
lived in the wastelands and nightly prowled out to visit the hall of
|
|
Hrothgar, carrying off and slaughtering many of the guests.
|
|
Beowulf, hearing from mariners of Grendel's murderous visits, sailed
|
|
from Geatland with fourteen stalwart companions to render Hrothgar the
|
|
help of his great strength. Landing on the Danish coast, Beowulf was
|
|
challenged as a spy. He persuaded the coastguards to let him pass, and
|
|
he was received and feasted by King Hrothgar. When the king and his
|
|
court retired for the night, Beowulf and his companions were left
|
|
alone in the hall. All but Beowulf fell asleep. Grendel entered.
|
|
With a stroke he killed one of Beowulf's sleeping men, but Beowulf,
|
|
unarmed, wrestled with the monster and by dint of his great strength
|
|
managed to tear Grendel's arm out at the shoulder. Grendel, mortally
|
|
wounded, retreated, leaving a bloody trail from the hall to his lair.
|
|
All fear of another attack by Grendel allayed. the Danes returned to
|
|
the hall, and Beowulf and his companions were sheltered elsewhere.
|
|
Grendel's mother came to avenge the fatal injury to her monster son
|
|
and carried off a Danish nobleman and Grendel's torn-off paw.
|
|
Following the blood trail, Beowulf went forth to despatch the
|
|
mother. Armed with his sword, Hrunting, he came to the water's edge.
|
|
He plunged in and swam to a chamber under the sea. There he fought
|
|
with Grendel's mother, killing her with an old sword he found in the
|
|
sea cavern. Nearby was Grendel's body. Beowulf cut off its head and
|
|
brought it back as a trophy to King Hrothgar. Great was the
|
|
rejoicing in the hall and greater was Beowulf's welcome when he
|
|
returned to Geatland, where he was given great estates and many high
|
|
honors.
|
|
Shortly afterward, Heardred, the boy-king, was killed in the war
|
|
with the Swedes. Beowulf succeeded him to the throne.
|
|
For fifty years Beowulf ruled his people in peace and serenity. Then
|
|
suddenly a dragon, furious at having his treasure stolen from his
|
|
hoard in a burial mound, began to ravage Beowulf's kingdom. Like
|
|
Grendel, this monster left its den at night on its errand of murder
|
|
and pillage.
|
|
Beowulf, now an aged monarch, resolved to do battle, unaided, with
|
|
the dragon. He approached the entrance to its den, whence boiling
|
|
steam issued forth. Undaunted, Beowulf strode forward shouting his
|
|
defiance. The dragon came out, sputtering flames from its mouth. The
|
|
monster rushed upon Beowulf with all its fury and almost crushed him
|
|
in its first charge. So fearful grew the struggle that all but one
|
|
of Beowulf's men deserted and fled for their lives. Wiglaf remained to
|
|
help his aged monarch. Another rush of the dragon shattered
|
|
Beowulf's sword and the monster's fangs sunk into Beowulf's neck.
|
|
Wiglaf, rushing into the struggle, helped the dying Beowulf to kill
|
|
the dragon.
|
|
Before his death, Beowulf named Wiglaf his successor to the throne
|
|
of Geatland and ordered that his own ashes be placed in a memorial
|
|
shrine at the top of a high cliff commanding the sea. Beowulf's body
|
|
was burned on a vast funeral pyre, while twelve Geats rode around
|
|
the mound singing their sorrow and their praise for the good and great
|
|
man, Beowulf.
|
|
PROVERBIAL EXPRESSIONS
|
|
|
|
No. 1
|
|
MATERIEM superabat opus.- Ovid.
|
|
The workmanship surpassed the material.
|
|
|
|
No. 2.
|
|
Facies non omnibus una,
|
|
Nec diversa tamen, qualem decet esse sororum.- Ovid.
|
|
Their faces were not all alike, nor yet unlike, but such as those of
|
|
sisters ought to be.
|
|
|
|
No. 3.
|
|
Medio tutissimus ibis.- Ovid.
|
|
You will go most safely in the middle.
|
|
|
|
No. 4.
|
|
Hic situs est Phaeton, currus auriga paterni,
|
|
Quem si non tenuit, magnis tamen excidit ausis.- Ovid.
|
|
Here lies Phaeton, the driver of his father's chariot, which if he
|
|
failed to manage, yet he fell in a great undertaking.
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No. 5.
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Imponere Pelio Ossam.- Virgil.
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To pile Ossa upon Pelion.
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No. 6.
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Timeo Danaos et dona ferentes.- Virgil.
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I fear the Greeks even when they offer gifts.
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No. 7.
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Non tali auxilio nec defensoribus istis
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Tempus eget.- Virgil.
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Not such aid nor such defenders does the time require.
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No. 8.
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Incidit in Scyllam, cupiens vitare Charybdim.
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He runs on Scylla, wishing to avoid Charybdis.
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No. 9.
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Sequitur patrem, non passibus aequis.- Virgil.
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He follows his father with unequal steps.
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No. 10.
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Monstrum horrendum, informe, ingens, cui lumen ademptum.- Virgil.
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A horrible monster, misshapen, vast, whose only eye had been put out.
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No.11.
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Tantaene animis coelestibus irae?- Virgil.
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In heavenly minds can such resentments dwell?
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No. 12.
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Haud ignara mali, miseris succurrere disco.- Virgil.
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Not unacquainted with distress, I have learned to succour the
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unfortunate.
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No. 13.
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Tros, Tyriusve mihi nullo discrimine agetur.- Virgil.
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Whether Trojan or Tyrian shall make no difference to me.
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No. 14.
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Tu ne cede malis, sed contra audentior ito.- Virgil.
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|
Yield thou not to adversity, but press on the more bravely.
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No. 15.
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Facilis descensus Averni;
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Noctes atque dies patet atri janua Ditis;
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|
Sed revocare gradum, superasque evadere ad auras,
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Hoc opus, hic labor est.- Virgil.
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|
The descent to Avernus is easy; the gate of Pluto stands open
|
|
night and day; but to retrace one's steps and return to the upper air,
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that is the toil, that the difficulty.
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No. 16.
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Uno avulso non deficit alter.- Virgil.
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|
When one is torn away another succeeds.
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No. 17.
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Quadrupedante putrem sonitu quatit ungula campum.- Virgil.
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|
Then struck the hoofs of the steeds on the ground with a four-footed
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trampling.
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No. 18.
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Sternitur infelix alieno vulnere, coelumque
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Adspicit et moriens dulces reminiseitur Argos.- Virgil.
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He falls, unhappy, by a wound intended for another; looks up to
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the skies, and dying remembers sweet Argos.
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THE END
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