Greek Mythology
THE BIRTH AND NATURE OF ARTEMIS Zeus mated with the goddess LETO [lee'toh] (LATONA) and she bore ARTEMIS [ar'te-mis] (DIANA) and APOLLO [a-pol'loh] on the island of Delos. In some accounts, Artemis was born first and helped in the delivery of her brother. Thus she revealed at once her powers as a goddess of childbirth, which she shares with Hera and Eileithyia. The birth of the twin deities Artemis and Apollo links them closely together from the very beginning. Lovely Artemis will on occasion join her handsome brother in supervising the dances of the Muses and the Graces, and they both delight in the bow and arrow. Birth of Aphrodite Death of the Children of Niobe, Attic red-figure krater ca. 460 B.C. Artemis is shown drawing an arrow out of her quiver to kill the Niobids below. NIOBE AND HER CHILDREN The skill in archery of Apollo and Artemis is exemplified by their defense of the insulted honor of their mother, Leto. The women of Thebes greatly honored Leto and her two children. Their tributes seemed excessive to NIOBE [neye'o-bee], who boasted that she was better than Leto because she was not only rich, beautiful, and the queen of Thebes, but had borne seven sons and seven daughters, whereas Leto was the mother of only one son and one daughter. Leto complained to her children about Niobe's hubris and they exacted a swift vengeance. With unerring arrows, Apollo killed all seven sons of Leto, and Artemis all seven daughters. As Artemis was about to shoot the youngest, Niobe attempted to shield the girl and begged that this last one be spared, to no avail. Niobe herself was turned to stone and brought by a whirlwind to a mountaintop in her former homeland, Phrygia. There, tears trickling down wear away her face. ACTAEON ACTAEON [ak-tee'on], or AKTAION, was an ardent hunter. Once when he wandered off alone, away from his companions, he stumbled upon, by accident or fate, a woodland cave with a pool of water, where Artemis (or Diana, in Ovid's version of the tale) was bathing accompanied by her attendant followers, as was their custom. When they saw Actaeon entering the cave, they screamed and Diana, outraged that a man had seen her naked, took swift revenge. She splashed water in his face and immediately horns began to grow from his head and he was transformed into a stag, completely except for his mind. He ran away in fear and was sighted by his own hunting dogs who turned on him and tore him to pieces. CALLISTO AND ARCAS CALLISTO [kal-lis'toh], or KALLISTO ("most beautiful"), was a chaste huntress, just like the goddess Artemis whom she followed so devotedly. Zeus (or Jupiter, as Ovid tells it) no sooner saw Callisto than he fell in love with her and was determined to win her. He disguised himself as Artemis, knowing full well that in this transformation he could best win her confidence and affection. When Zeus pressed his attentions too ardently, his deception became only too clear to poor Callisto, who struggled in vain. Callisto rejoined Artemis and her companions but eventually, when they bathed together, she could not disguise the fact that she was pregnant. Artemis was furious with Callisto for her betrayal and expelled her from the sacred group. Hera (or Juno) had long been aware of her husband's guilt, and when Callisto gave birth to a son, named ARCAS [ar'kas], or ARKAS, she took her revenge. She turned Callisto into a bear, but her mind remained intact; thus alone and afraid, she wandered the forests. In his fifteenth year, while hunting, Arcas encountered his mother, Callisto, a bear whose human and relentless gaze frightened him. As he was about to drive a spear through her body, Zeus intervened and prevented the matricide. He brought the pair up to the heavens where he transformed them into constellations. Callisto became the Great Bear (Ursa Major); Arcas perhaps became the Little Bear (Ursa Minor) or the Bear Warden (Arctophylax, or Arcturus, or Boötes). ORION Another constellation myth linked to Artemis concerns the hunter ORION [oh-reye'on], whose story has many variations. He wooed Merope, the daughter of Oenopion ("wine-face"), king of the island of Chios, famous for its wines. While clearing the island of wild beasts, he encountered Artemis and tried to rape her. Enraged, the goddess produced a scorpion out of the earth that stung Orion to death. Both are seen in the sky. Others say Orion pursued the PLEIADES [plee'a-deez] (daughters of the titan Atlas and Pleione, an Oceanid), and they were all transformed into constellations, with SIRIUS [sir'ee-us], Orion's hunting dog, who became the Dog Star. ARTEMIS, SELENE, AND HECATE Artemis became predominantly a vehement virgin, as the stories above make terrifyingly clear. Yet she also possesses characteristics (e.g., her interest in childbirth and the young of both humans and animals) that suggest the fertility goddess. Also at Ephesus, a statue depicts her with what seem like multiple breasts. As a moon-goddess she was worshiped by women who linked her with the lunar cycle and their menstrual period. Nevertheless, above all, Artemis is the virgin huntress, the goddess of nature itself, not concerned with its teeming procreation (like Aphrodite) but with its pristine purity. Artemis, like the moon, appears as a symbol, cold, white, aloof, and chaste. Hecate's Suppers. As a moon-goddess, Artemis is linked with SELENE [se-lee'nee], another earlier goddess of the moon (see MLS, Chapter 3). She is also linked with her cousin HECATE [hek'a-tee], or HEKATE, a fertility goddess of the Underworld who is depicted like a Fury (see MLS, Chapters 14 and 15) with a scourge and blazing torch, and accompanied by fierce hounds. In particular she is a goddess of the crossroads, a place thought to be the center of ghostly activity in the dead of night. Skilled in the arts of black magic, Hecate is invoked by sorceresses and murderers (e.g., Medea and Lady Macbeth). Offerings of food were made to her (called Hecate's suppers) at triple-faced statues, erected at crossroads and depicting three aspects of the moon: Selene in heaven, Artemis on earth, and Hecate in the Underworld. EURIPIDES' HIPPOLYTUS HIPPOLYTUS [hip-pol'i-tus], or HIPPOLYTOS, is the son of Theseus by the Amazon HIPPOLYTA [hip-pol'i-ta], or ANTIOPE [an-teye'o-pee]. Theseus married Phaedra, the daughter of Minos, and Hippolytus grew up to be a young man troubled by his illegitimacy and obsessed with maintaining his virginity. Aphrodite, in a typically Euripidean prologue, describes her great power and her vehement anger against Hippolytus, a hunter who hubristically rejects love and prefers to follow Artemis. Aphrodite exacts her revenge by making Phaedra fall desperately in love with her stepson, a passion impossible to fulfill, which could only lead to tragedy. Phaedra first saw Hippolytus while he was being initiated into the Mysteries and was smitten by a hopeless lust. For two years Phaedra has suffered and now she lies ill, overcome by her guilty secret and determined to die because she is a noble woman and cannot commit this abominable adultery, unlike other unfaithful wives who could be false to their husbands under any circumstances. She desperately desires to preserve her own honor and also that of her sons, Theseus' legitimate heirs. Her faithful nurse wrests the truth from her, and the solution that she takes upon herself determines the tragic outcome. The nurse has Hippolytus swear an oath of secrecy, but when she tells him of Phaedra's passion, he is enraged and cries out that his tongue swore but not his mind. Phaedra overhears the angry exchange and fears Hippolytus will tell all to her ruin (but he never does violate his oath). She hangs herself, but before doing so leaves an incriminating note to save herself and her children by claiming that Hippolytus violated her. Theseus too quickly believes her accusation against the protests of his innocent son, whose purity and religious fanaticism he had always resented. With a curse given him by his father, Poseidon, he orders his son into exile. Poseidon sends a bull from the sea which frightens the horses of Hippolytus' chariot, entangling the youth in the wreckage. As he is dying, he is brought back to his father for a heartbreaking reconciliation, engineered by the deus ex machina Artemis, who explains to Theseus the truth and promises Hippolytus honors after his death for his devotion and that she will get even with Aphrodite. (In one version of Adonis' death, Artemis causes the boar to kill him.)
Chapter 10
THE BIRTH OF APOLLO Zeus mated with LETO [lee'toh] (LATONA), who conceived the twin gods ARTEMIS [ar'te-mis] (DIANA) and APOLLO [a-pol'loh]. The lengthy Hymn to Apollo tells in its first part ("To Delian Apollo") of Apollo's birth; no mention is made of Artemis. Leto roamed far and wide in her search for a refuge where she might give birth, but the many places she approached were afraid to receive her. Finally the island of Delos accepted her, but only after she assured the island (which is personified in the Hymn) with a great oath that a sacred precinct of Apollo would be built there and that it would become a place of prosperity, wealth, and prestige. When Leto had endured nine days and nights of labor, Eileithyia, the goddess of childbirth, was summoned by Iris from Olympus to help in the delivery. Goddesses present at the birth attended to the newborn child, and as soon as Apollo had been nursed on nectar and ambrosia, he miraculously became a mighty god who declared that the curved bow and the lyre were his and that he would prophesy to mortals the unerring will of Zeus. Leto was delighted with her son, and all of Delos blossomed with joy. In the conclusion of this part of the hymn, the poet (sometimes erroneously believed to be Homer) describes the great festival of Apollo at Delos with its famous chorus of maidens who can sing in all dialects and identifies himself as a blind man from Chios, "whose songs are the best forevermore." Bards, who are archetypally blind, see the Muses' truth. THE SANCTUARY OF APOLLO AT DELPHI The second part of the Homeric Hymn to Apollo ("To Pythian Apollo") tells how Apollo travelled in Greece until he found the proper place for the foundation of his oracle, Crisa, under Mt. PARNASSUS [par-nas'sus], or PARNASSOS, where he laid out his temple. Then he slew a dragon named PYTHO [peye'thoh], or PYTHON, and thus the site was called Pytho, Apollo was given the epithet PYTHIAN [pith'ee-an], and a prophetess of Apollo received the name of PYTHIA [pith'ee-a]. Originally at this site there had probably been an oracle of the great mother-goddess Gaia, and the slaying of the dragon may symbolize conquest by the Hellenes and their god Apollo, who thus becomes yet another to add to our list of dragon slayers. The OMPHALOS [om'fa-los], "navel," an archaic stone shaped like an egg with two birds perched on either side, was thought to designate the location of the sanctuary at the center of the world. According to legend, Zeus released two eagles from opposite ends of the earth and they met exactly at the spot of Apollo's sanctuary, which came to be known universally by the name of DELPHI [del'feye], or DELPHOI, for the following reason. After Apollo had established his sanctuary, he needed to recruit attendants. He spotted a ship sailing from Crete and he sprang aboard in the form of a dolphin. The crew was awed into submission and followed a course that led the ship to Crisa. Here Apollo revealed himself as a god and initiated them to his service, with directions to pray to him as Apollo DELPHINIUS [del-fin'ee-us], or DELPHINOS, a word meaning "dolphin," from which Crisa or Pytho received its new name of Delphi. Birth of Aphrodite Apollo Belvedere. Roman marble copy of earlier Greek bronze. THE PANHELLENIC SANCTUARY AT DELPHI The Panhellenic sanctuary of Apollo is in many ways representative of Panhellenic sites elsewhere, for example, the sanctuary of Zeus at Olympia (see MLS, Chapter 5). Yet the sacred area and the temple built on the lower slopes of Mt. Parnassus are particulary awe-inspiring, and the many dedications made to the god remind us of how Greek religion was responsible for the development of great and universal literature, poetry, drama, sculpture, and architecture. The Pythian games, celebrated every four years, included both physical and intellectual competitions and the worship of the god. The Oracle and Pythia at Delphi. The Panhellenic sanctuary at Delphi was the most important oracle in the Greek world. People in general and representatives of states in particular came from all over the Greek world and beyond to ask Apollo questions of every sort. The Pythia, the prophetess of Apollo, uttered the responses of the god as she sat on a tripod. Her answers came in incoherent ravings, which were transcribed by a nearby priest into intelligible prose or verse. In Plato's Apology we are told that Socrates learned from the Delphic oracle that he was the wisest of men, a response that this great philosopher took very seriously. FOUR OF APOLLO'S LOVES The Cumaean Sibyl. The general designation for a prophetess was SIBYL [sib'il], or SIBYLLA [si-bil'la]; a Sibyl at Delphi, however, was called specifically the Pythia, as we have noted. The sibyls at Cumae in Italy were famous. Most famous among them was the CUMAEAN [kou-mee'an] Sibyl, who was Aeneas' guide in the Underworld (see MLS, Chapter 15). We learn about this Sibyl from Ovid. Apollo offered her anything that she wished, if only she would yield to him. She picked up a heap of sand and asked for as many birthdays as the individual grains but forgot to ask for continuous youth along with the years. Nevertheless, Apollo would have given her long life and eternal youth, if she agreed to succumb to him. When she refused him, the god granted her original wish, and she withered away eventually to become only a voice. This story of the Cumaean Sibyl once again illustrates how our ignorant wishes may be granted to our woe (cf. Eos and Tithonus, MLS, Chapter 3). Cassandra. CASSANDRA [kas-san'dra], daughter of the Trojan King Priam (see MLS, Chapter 19) agreed to give herself to Apollo, who rewarded her with the gift of prophecy. When Cassandra changed her mind and rejected his advances, Apollo asked for one kiss and spit in her mouth, thus ensuring not only that Cassandra would keep her gift, but also that her true prophecies would never be believed. Marpessa. The daughter of Ares' son Evenus, called MARPESSA [mar-pes'sa], was wooed by IDAS [eye'das], one of the Argonauts, who carried her off in his chariot to the anger and dismay of her father, who commited suicide. Apollo stole Marpessa away from Idas in a similar fashion and the two rivals met face to face. Zeus ordered that Marpessa chose between her lovers. She chose the mortal Idas because she feared the immortal Apollo would leave her when she grew old. Cyrene. Most of Apollo's love affairs end tragically. A notable exception is his success with CYRENE [seye-ree'nee], or KYRENE, an athletic nymph with whom he fell in love when he saw her wrestling with a lion. He whisked her away in his golden chariot to the city in Libya that would bear her name. They had a son Aristaeus, who became a keeper of bees (see MLS, Chapters 7 and 16). APOLLO AND DAPHNE The story of Apollo's love for DAPHNE [daf'nee] ("laurel"), explaining why the laurel was sacred to him, is one of the most famous and inspiring of all myths because of Ovid's version. After Apollo had just slain the Python, he boasted to Cupid that the god of love with his bow and arrows could not compete with his glorious slaying of a dragon. Cupid got even for this slight by shooting at Daphne, the daughter of the river-god Peneus, a dull, leaden arrow that repels love and piercing Apollo's heart with a bright, short one that arouses passion. Daphne was extraordinarily beautiful but refused her many suitors. She vowed to remain a virgin devoted to Diana, the forests, and the hunt; both her father and Jupiter respected her wishes. As soon as Apollo saw her he was inflamed by passion and he desired to marry her, but because of Cupid his hopes were doomed. Daphne fled in fear as Apollo made his appeals and pursued her. Exhausted, she reached the waters of Peneus, and her prayer that the power of the river would destroy her too-enticing beauty was granted. She was transformed into a lovely laurel tree, and the heartbroken Apollo, as he embraced its trunk and branches, promised that since she could not be his wife, she would be his tree, and from it would come the laurel wreath, a symbol of love, honor, and glory forever. APOLLO AND HYACINTHUS Apollo, as the archetypal Greek god, was also susceptible to the love of young men. He was devoted to CYPARISSUS [si-pa-ris'sus], or KYPARISSOS, who was turned into a cypress tree, the meaning of his name (see MLS, Chapter 23). Apollo's devotion to HYACINTHUS [heye-a-sin'thus], or HYAKINTHOS, a handsome Spartan youth, also told by Ovid, is more famous. The god and the youth enjoyed competing with the discus. Apollo's first throw showed magnificent skill and great strength, for he sent the discus high up into the clouds. When it eventually came back to earth, an enthusiastic Hyacinthus dashed to pick it up, but as it hit the earth it bounced back and struck him full in the face. All of Apollo's medical arts were of no avail, and his beloved companion died. Overcome by grief and guilt, the god vowed everlasting devotion by singing of Hyacinthus to the tune of his lyre and by causing a new flower, the hyacinth, to arise from his blood. Apollo himself marked his laments on his petals, the mournful letters AI AI, and predicted the suicide of the valiant Ajax (see MLS, Chapter 19), whose initals (these same letters) would appear on this same flower, which would arise from his heroic blood. An annual festival, the Hyacinthia, was celebrated at Sparta in honor of Hyacinthus. APOLLO, CORONIS, AND ASCLEPIUS In the story of Hyacinthus, we see Apollo acting as a god of medicine, ineffective though he proved to be. His son Asclepius took over the role of god of medicine and most of the time was more successful than his father. Apollo loved a maiden from Thessaly, CORONIS [co-roh'nis], and she was pregnant with his child. Unfortunately, Apollo's bird, the raven, saw Coronis in the arms of another lover and told the god, who in a quick and violent rage shot her with one of his arrows. As she was dying she told him that their unborn child would die with her. Apollo too late regretted his anger, but to no avail. He was unable through his medical arts to revive his beloved. He embraced her in anguish and performed the proper burial rites over her corpse. As the flames of the funeral pyre were about to engulf her, he saved their baby by snatching it from her womb and giving it to the wise centaur Chiron to raise. The color of the raven, which had been white, he now changed to black. The child grew up to become ASCLEPIUS [as-klee'pee-us], or ASKLEPIOS (AESCULAPIUS for the Romans), a famous practitioner of medicine, worshiped as both a hero and a god. He had several children, among them the doctor Machaon [ma-kay'on] (in the Iliad) and more shadowy figures such as HYGEIA [heye-jee'a] or HYGIEIA ("health.") When Hippolytus died (see MLS, Chapter 10), Artemis appealed to Asclepius to bring her devoted follower back to life. He succeeded and enraged Zeus, who hurled the physician into the Underworld for such a disruption of the natural order. THE ALCESTIS OF EURIPIDES Apollo was enraged at the death of his son Asclepius and killed the Cyclopes who had forged the thunderbolt. For his crime, he was sentenced to live in exile for a year under the rule of ADMETUS [ad-mee'tus], or ADMETOS, king of Pherae in Thessaly. When Apollo found out that his master had only a short time to live, he induced the Fates (Moirai) to allow the king a longer life. They, however, demanded that someone else die in his place. No one (not even his aged parents) was willing to do so except for his wife, ALCESTIS [al-ses'tis], or ALKESTIS. In the end, Heracles arrived to save Alcestis from death and return her to her husband (see MLS, Chapter 22). Euripides' entertaining play Alcestis, however controversial, presents a touching portrait of a loving and devoted wife. Although Admetus must face the just attacks of critics for allowing Alcestis to die in his place, a case may be made that he recognized his selfishness too late, after he realized that life was not worth living without his Alcestis. APOLLO'S MUSICAL CONTEST WITH MARSYAS As we know, Apollo was an expert in the playing of the lyre, but two musicians, because of hubris, foolishly dared to challenge him. Athena invented the flute (see MLS, Chapter 8) but threw it away because her beautiful features became distorted when she played. MARSYAS [mar'si-as] the satyr picked it up. Although Athena gave him a thrashing for taking up her instrument, he became so proficient that he dared to challenge the great Apollo to a contest. The god imposed the condition that the victor could do what he liked with the vanquished. Inevitably Apollo won and he decided to flay Marsyas alive. Ovid in his Metamorphoses describes the agony of the satyr, during which the earth drank up all the tears of the woodland spirits and of the gods who wept for him. From these tears a stream was formed in Phrygia bearing the name of Marsyas. APOLLO'S MUSICAL CONTEST WITH PAN The second musical contest is also related by Ovid. While Pan was playing a dainty tune on his pipes (see MLS, Chapter 13) on Mt. Tmolus in Phrygia, he dared to belittle the music of Apollo and engaged in a contest with the god. TMOLUS [tmo'lus], or TMOLOS, the god of the mountain, was the judge. Pan played first on his rustic pipes, and then Apollo, in the stance of an artist, crowned with laurel, followed, plucking his exquisite ivory lyre, inlaid with gems, with a plectrum. Tmolus declared Apollo the victor, but MIDAS [meye'das], the king of Phrygia (who now had a loathing for riches, see MLS, Chapter 13) witnessed the contest. He still had not learned wisdom. He had become a worshiper of Pan and prefered his music and declared the verdict unjust. Apollo could not endure that such stupid ears retain their shape, and so he changed them into the ears of an ass. Midas hid his shame by wearing a turban. His barber, however, could not help but find out. He wanted desperately to tell but did not dare reveal Midas' secret. Since he could not keep quiet, he stole away and dug a hole into the ground and whispered into it that his master had ass's ears. He filled up the hole again but in a year's time a thick cluster of trembling reeds had grown up, and when the wind whistled in the reeds, you could hear the murmur of a whisper, revealing the truth: "King Midas has ass's ears." Two archetypal motifs are dominant in this story about Midas: the garrulousness of barbers and the stupidity of some critics. THE NATURE OF APOLLO Apollo is a very complex deity. As a god of shepherds, he was associated with music and was a protector of flocks. He was also god of medicine, and he replaced Hyperion and Helius as a god of the sun. He is often called PHOEBUS [fee'bus], or PHOIBOS, Apollo, an epithet that means "bright." There is a moving, tragic humanity to many of his stories. Yet he is subject to many moods and passions, not least of all his terrifying anger, however just. Yet this same god was worshiped as the epitome of classical restraint—handsome, strong, and intelligent, preaching the Greek maxims of "Know thyself" and "Nothing too much." He can bring enlightenment, atonement, truth, and a new civic order of justice. It is because of the disciplined and controlled side to his character that Apollo can be pitted against Dionysus to encompass the basic duality of human nature: the rational (Apollonian) and irrational (Dionysian). See MLS, Chapter 13.
Chapter 11
EARLY GREECE AND THE AEGEAN The study of classical mythology, especially Greek legend or saga with its basis in historical fact, is enhanced by a survey of the history of Greece in the Bronze Age, our knowledge of which has continually been expanded since the time of Heinrich Schliemann. Heinrich Schliemann (1822-1890), Founder of Modern Archaeology. Schliemann fervently believed in the historicity of Homer's picture of the age of heroes and amassed a great fortune before he turned to archaeological excavation to prove the truth of his seemingly romantic convictions. His extended excavations at Troy, Mycenae, and Tiryns, begun in the 1870s, confirmed that these cities had achieved a stature in wealth, power, and influence that accords well with Homer's depiction of the Mycenaean world. Sir Arthur Evans in Crete. Subsequently the archaeologist Sir Arthur Evans discovered the Bronze Age civilization that existed on the island of Crete. In 1899 he began his excavations at Cnossus, the center of power for the legendary King Minos, and thus the period of the Bronze Age in Crete is designated as "Minoan." A WORKABLE THUMBNAIL CHRONOLOGY Stone Age Paleolithic (Old Stone Age) before 70,000 B. C. Neolithic (New Stone Age) ca. 6,000-3,000 B. C. The Bronze Age (named Minoan for Crete, Cycladic for the Cyclades, the islands of the Aegean, and Helladic for mainland Greece, Hellas). Early Bronze Age (3000-2000 B. C.) Early Minoan Early Cycladic Early Helladic Middle Bronze Age (2000-1600 B. C.) Middle Minoan Middle Cycladic Middle Helladic Late Bronze Age (1600-1100 B. C.) Late Minoan Late Cycladic Late Helladic (also called Mycenaean because of the powerful city of Mycenae) Paleolithic Age. Greece was inhabited at this time, but our knowledge remains scanty. Neolithic Age. A migration of people from east and north of Greece settled into agricultural communities to judge from the archaeological remains: the foundations of dwellings, pottery, tools, and graves. The presence of small female "fetishes" or icons with exaggerated feminine characteristics have fostered the notion that this civilization worshiped a mother goddess. Smaller numbers of male statuettes have been interpreted by some as her lesser male consort. Bronze Age. The Bronze Age followed the Neolithic period with inhabitants moving into Greece, Crete and Cyclades from the east. To these peoples are attributed the construction of Minoan civilization on Crete. Minoan Civilization. Named after the legendary king Minos, Minoan civilization reached its zenith during the Late Bronze Age (1600-1100 B. C.). The large palatial complexes (especially the one at Cnossus) that have been unearthed reveal a sophisticated and wealthy civilization. Excavations at Cnossus and Phaestus confirm the historical and mythological tradition that Minoan Crete by its control of the sea extended a cultural hegemony throughout the Aegean islands and mainland Greece and support the interpretation that the mythological stories about King Minos and Theseus' slaying of the Minotaur in its labyrinth as a kind of quasi-historical remembrance. The collusion of the archaeological record and legend has continued to fascinate: the importance of the bull motif, especially provocative in the frescoes that depict the bull-leaping ritual or contest; the double-headed axe, or labrys, and its connection with the non-Greek word labyrinth; the complexity of the palace of Cnossus, suggesting a labyrinthine structure; the significance of the fertility mother goddess; the exaction of tribute by an ascendant Cretan power from lesser Greek states. Cretan power was undone by about 1400 B. C., though there is no consensus regarding the exact reasons. Generally speaking, scholars find themselves divided between those who hold that the Mycenaean Greeks assumed control over Crete and those who do not. The former hypothesis seems the more likely. For some, the cause of the eclipse of Cretan power is to be found in the volcanic eruption on the island of Thera (modern Santorini, some seventy miles northwest of Crete), though the archaeological remains seem to date the destruction of the island earlier than that of Crete. Some scholars also see in the eruption of Thera and the destruction of its sophisticated culture the seeds of Plato's myth of the destruction of Atlantis in his Critias and Timaeus. The Mycenaean Age. In the Middle Bronze Age an invasion or migration from the north and possibly the east brought into mainland Greece the first Greek-speaking people. The civilization that they established reached its peak in the Late Bronze Age and has been called Mycenaean, after one of its principal centers of power, Mycenae. Mycenaean civilization, although influenced by the earlier Minoan, differs from it in some striking ways. Mycenae, excavated by Heinrich Schliemann, seems to have lived up to its most famous Homeric epithet "rich in gold." Surrounded by monumental walls (called Cyclopean because they were said to have been built by the Cyclopes) and entered through the Lion Gate (with its relief above the entrance of two lions or lionesses flanking a single column), Mycenae was built, as were Cretan communities, around a complex palatial structure. Just inside the gate, Schliemann discovered a circle of shaft graves, which contained a considerable treasure. Also excavated were tholos tombs, beehive structures below the palace complex and typical of Mycenaean centers in general. Schliemann's finds established the generally accurate picture of the Homeric account of the sophistication and wealth of these Mycenaean Greek communities. Homer composed epic songs celebrating a heroic age, and it must be about these communities that he, and other poets, would continue to sing hundreds of years after their collapse. Of great significant is the work of Carl Blegen (1887-1971), who discovered the Mycenaean palace of the legendary King Nestor at Pylos. Particularly impressive is its well-preserved megaron, or central room, with an open hearth, a feature found in Mycenaean but not in Minoan palaces. In the sphere of religion, the Mycenaeans with their worship of a supreme sky-god Zeus differed fundamentally from the Minoans, who worshiped a fertility mother goddess. In many respects, Greek mythology can be seen as the synthesis of the tension between Minoan and Mycenaean culture. Linear B. In the excavation of Mycenaean civilization, clay tablets inscribed with writing have been found; an especially rich hoard was discovered at Pylos, preserved by the fire that brought destruction towards the end of the Bronze Age. These tablets, deciphered in 1952 by Michael Ventris, in collaboration with John Chadwick, have been found to be the earliest form of the Greek language that we possess. The script is called Linear B, to distinguish it from the earlier Minoan script (as yet undeciphered) found on Crete. On Linear B tablets, mention is made of deities familiar to us from later Greek mythology: Zeus, Hera, Poseidon, Hermes, Athena, Eileithyia, and Dionysus. Also recorded is the word paean, which would be a later epithet for Apollo, and the name Enualios, to be identified with Ares. The appearance of the word potnia (mistress or lady) suggests that the Mycenaeans worshiped a goddess of the mother-fertility type, in addition to their sky-god Zeus. Troy and the Trojan War. Schliemann and Wilhelm Dörpfeld conducted pioneering archaeological campaigns from 1871 to 1894 at Troy. The site was reexamined by Blegen from 1932 to 1938. In 1988 Manfred Korfmann began new excavations of the site, which are in progress today. Nine successive settlements have been identified on the hill of Hisarlik, the site of Troy. Troy I dates from the Early Bronze (ca. 2920-2450 B. C.). Troy VIII or Ilion was an important city between ca. 700 B.C. and 85 B. C. Under Augustus, the Romans, who traced their ancestry back to the Trojan Aeneas, began a large-scale restoration of the city (Troy IX, Ilium 85-ca. A. D. 500). A viable city survived there until the late 12th or early 13th centuries. At the level of Troy II (ca. 2600-2450) Schliemann unearthed a horde of treasure, which he inaccurately identified as belonging to Priam and the city of the Trojan War. This "Gold of Troy" was lost during World War II but rediscovered in the 1990s residing in the Pushkin Museum in Moscow. Subsequent excavations have identified Troy VI or Troy VIIa or both as the Troy of the Homeric epics. Dörpfeld claimed that Troy VI (Troia or Ilios, ca. 1700-1250), with its monumental walls, was the city of Priam. The current excavators under Korfmann, however, tend to believe, along with Blegen's earlier assessments, that an earthquake destroyed Troy VI. For Blegen Troy VII (Troy VIIa to be exact) showed signs of siege and fire and was to be identified as the city of epic song. There was a continuity of culture between Troy VI and Troy VIIa and the remains, taken together, show evidence of human destruction and may represent Priam's Troy at different stages of the conflict. Archaeology places the eclipse of Troy VI and VIIa at 1250-1150 B. C., which would coincide nicely with the traditional date of 1184 B. C. for the fall of Troy. The citadel at Troy VI reveals a place of prestige and power with significant fortification walls. The whole settlement, both citadel and lower area of habitation, was ca. 200,000 meters square, with a population of ca. 7000. The presence of hasty burials and piles of long-range weapons indicates the last struggles of Troy, the losing side in the war against the Mycenaean Greeks. Evidence suggests commercial ties between the two powers. Troy's strategic position guarding access through the Hellespont and her imposition of tolls suggest economic causes for the conflict. Hittite texts reveal close ties between the Hittites and a city called "Wilusa," which has plausibly identified with Ilios or Troy. Another text names the god Appaliunas, almost certainly to be identified with Apollo, one of the principal divine defenders of Troy in the Iliad. Excavations have also tended to confirm Homeric geography. Most tantalizing of all has been the discovery of a Mycenaean cemetery, contemporaneous with late Troy VI or VIIa, on the original seashore at the time of the Trojan War. It surely is more than a romantic notion to identify here the camp of the Greek invaders. End of the Mycenaean Age. Towards the end of the Late Bronze Age, the eastern Mediterranean experienced widespread upheaval. Within a generation, nearly all the centers of Mycenaean civilization suffered devastation. There are signs of siege and internal dissension. The tradition that the destruction of Mycenaean power coincided with an invasion of the Dorians from the north, though widely held, has come under fire. Some have attempted to attribute the end of Bronze Age Greece to the invading "sea peoples" mentioned in Egyptian records. Certainty has proven elusive. Homer. Greece now entered an Age of Iron; there is a decline in population, a loss of literacy, and a much-impoverished material culture. By the eighth century B. C., Greece began to re-emerge from its Dark Age, with the composition of the Iliad and the Odyssey. Through an uninterrupted oral tradition from the Bronze Age to the eighth century B. C., bards transmitted their poetic songs glorifying the earlier epoch. "Homer," whoever he was, or at least the material of the two epic poems, belongs to Asia Minor or one of the coastal islands. The Homeric question or questions, details about the composition and development of the Homeric epics, cannot be finally answered. Both poems convey a Greek point of view and are recorded in an epic language, an amalgamation of Greek dialects created by the bardic tradition. Though the poems glorify the Bronze Age heroes, they also portray the world of the later period, down to the eighth century B. C. At some point the Homeric poems were committed to writing, but when this occurred or to what degree writing itself played a part in their composition is a much-disputed question. The end of the Dark Age sees the development of a system of writing much more flexible than Linear B. By borrowing from the symbols of the Phoenician script, but distinguishing in a new way both vowels and consonants, the Greeks invent the first true alphabet.
Chapter 2
GENESIS FROM CHAOS Hesiod in his epic poem the Theogony offers the earliest Greek version of genesis. CHAOS ("yawning void") provides the beginning for creation. Out of Chaos the universe came into being. Later writers interpret Chaos as a mass of many elements (or only four: earth, air, fire, and water) from which the universe was created. From Hesiod's Chaos came Ge, Tartarus, Eros, Erebus, and Night. GAIA [geye'a], GAEA [jee'a], or GE [gay]. Most important and first, Gaia, the earth and fertility mother, came from Chaos. Contemporary feminist approaches to mythology lay great importance on the fact that many early societies first conceived of deity as a woman. EROS [er'os] (CUPID). From Chaos came Eros, the potent concept of Love, which is fundamental. TARTARUS [tar'ta-rus], or TARTAROS. Tartarus, which came out of Chaos, was an area in the depths of the earth. It became a place of punishment in the Underworld; EREBUS [er'e-bus], or EREBOS, its darkness, became another name for Tartarus itself. THE HOLY OR SACRED MARRIAGE OF EARTH AND SKY URANUS [ou'ra-nus and you-ray'nus], or OURANOS. Of the elements that Gaia, earth, produced on her own, most significant is Uranus, the male sky or heavens, with his lightning and thunder. The deification of the feminine, mother earth, and masculine, god of the sky, is basic to mythological and religious thinking. Their marriage is designated as a HOLY, or SACRED MARRIAGE, a translation of the Greek HIEROS GAMOS [hi'er-os ga'mos], which has become the technical term. THE CHILDREN OF URANUS AND GAIA The holy marriage of sky and earth produced the following: The three CYCLOPES [seye-klo'peez], or KYKLOPES: each CYCLOPS [seye'klops], o KYKLOPS, meaning "orb-eyed," had only one eye in the middle of his forehead. The Cyclopes forged lightning and thunderbolts. The three HECATONCHIRES [hek-a-ton-keye'reez], or HEKATONCHEIRES, "hundred-handed": strong and monstrous creatures. The twelve TITANS: six brothers and six sisters who mate with each other. SOME TITANS AND THEIR OFFSPRING Deities of Waters. The Titan OCEANUS [o-see'an-us], or OKEANOS was the stream of Ocean that encircles the disc of the earth in the early concept of geography. He is the father of the many spirits of waters (rivers, springs, etc.), the OCEANIDS [o-see'an-idz], three thousand daughters and three thousand sons. Gods of the Sun. The titan HYPERION [heye-per'i-on], god of the sun, was father of HELIUS [hee'li-us], or HELIOS, also a god of the sun. Later the god APOLLO [a-pol'loh] became a god of the sun as well. The sun-god dwells in the East, crosses the dome of the sky in his chariot drawn by a team of four horses, descends in the West into the stream of Oceanus, which encircles the earth, and then sails back to the East to begin a new day. The Son of a Sun-God. PHAËTHON [fay'e-thon], son of the sun-god, whether he be called Hyperion, Helius, or Apollo, wanted to be certain that the Sun was really his father and so he went to the splendid palace of the Sun to find out. The sun-god assured Phaëthon that he was his father, swearing a dread oath that the boy could have anything that he desired. Thus Phaëthon was granted his adamant request that he be allowed to drive the sun-chariot for one day. Too inexperienced to control the horses, Phaëthon created havoc, and in answer to the prayers of Earth was hurtled to his death by the lightning of the supreme god, Zeus or Jupiter. This tale illustrates the brave folly of youth, the conflict between parents and their children, and the search for identity. Goddesses of the Moon. SELENE [se-lee'nee], goddess of the moon, is a daughter of the titan Hyperion, and she drives a two-horse chariot. Later the goddess ARTEMIS [ar'te-mis] (DIANA) becomes a moon-goddess. Selene (or Artemis) fell desperately in love with the hunter ENDYMION [en-di'mi-on] and used to abandon her duties in the heaven to visit the cave of her beloved. In the end, Endymion was granted perpetual sleep and eternal youth. Goddess of the Dawn. EOS [ee'os] (AURORA), goddess of the dawn, was a third child of Hyperion. She, like Selene, drives a two-horse chariot. Eos fell in love with the mortal TITHONUS [ti-thoh'nus], or TITHONOS and carried him off. The supreme god Zeus granted her prayer that Tithonus be made immortal and live forever. Poor Eos forgot to ask for eternal youth for her beloved. Tithonus grew older and older, finally being turned into a shriveled grasshopper, while the passion of the eternally beautiful goddess cooled to become dutiful devotion. This tragic story illustrates how our ignorant wishes may be granted to our woe and illuminates the contrast between lovely and sensuous youth and ugly and debilitating old age. Eos and Tithonus had a son named Memnon, who is killed by Achilles in the Trojan saga (see M/L, Chapter 19). The amorous Eos also carried off other lovers, including Cephalus, who became the husband of Procris in Athenian saga (see M/L, Chapter 23). CASTRATION OF URANUS AND THE BIRTH OF APHRODITE Uranus hated his children, and as they were about to be born he hid them in the depths of Gaia, the mother earth. The mythic image is Hesiod's poetic merging of vast sky and earth imagined, at the same time, as man and woman, husband and wife. Gaia's anguished appeals for revenge were answered by the last-born, the wily Cronus. He agreed to accept the jagged-toothed sickle that his mother had fashioned and, from his ambush, he castrated his father as he was about to make love to his mother. The severed genitals of Uranus were cast upon the sea and from them a maiden grew, APHRODITE [af-roh-deye'tee] (VENUS), the powerful goddess of beauty and love. THE TITANS CRONUS AND RHEA AND THE BIRTH OF ZEUS CRONUS [kro'nus], or KRONOS (SATURN), and RHEA [ray'a and ree'a], two important Titans, had several children who were devoured by their father as they were born. Cronus, who had castrated and overthrown his own father, Uranus, was afraid that he too would be overcome by one of his children. Therefore, when his son ZEUS [zous] (JUPITER) was born, the mother, Rhea, contrived that the birth be hidden from Cronus. She bore Zeus on the island of Crete and gave her husband a stone wrapped in baby's clothes to devour. Zeus was hidden in a cave and grew up eventually to overthrow his unwitting father; he will marry his sister HERA [hee'ra] (JUNO) and they will become secure as king and queen of the gods.
Chapter 3
THE TITANOMACHY: ZEUS DEFEATS HIS FATHER CRONUS This epic battle was waged for ten years between Zeus and the Olympians and Cronus and the Titans. Cronus fought from Mt. Othrys; his allies were the Titans except for Themis and her son PROMETHEUS [proh-mee'the-us]. Prometheus' brother ATLAS [at'las] sided with Cronus. Zeus fought from Mt. Olympus and his allies, in addition to Themis and Prometheus, were his brothers and sisters, who had been swallowed by Cronus but later regurgitated, namely: Hestia, Demeter, Hera, Hades, and Poseidon. Also on his side were the Hecatonchires and the Cyclopes. Zeus was victorious and the Titans were imprisoned in Tartarus, guarded by the Hecatonchires; and Atlas was punished with the task of holding up the sky. THE GIGANTOMACHY: ZEUS DEFEATS THE GIANTS AND TYPHOEUS Giants, called GEGENEIS [jee'je-nays and gay'ge-nays], since they were "born from the Earth," challenged Zeus and the new order of the gods. They were defeated in a fierce battle and were imprisoned under the earth. Volcanoes, when they erupt, reveal the presence of the giants below. TYPHOEUS [teye-fee'us], also called TYPHAON [teye-fay'on] or TYPHON [teye'fon] was a ferocious dragon-god, whom earth produced to do battle with Zeus, either separately, or alongside the giants in the great Gigantomachy. Zeus' triumph singles him out as an archetypal dragon-slayer. The giants, OTUS [oh'tus] or OTOS and EPHIALTES [ef-i-al'teez], in a separate attack, failed in their attempt to storm heaven by piling Olympus, Ossa, and Pelion, one upon the other. The Titanomachy and the Gigantomachy are often confused in literature and art, and details vary considerably. THE FOUR OR FIVE AGES There are several conflicting versions about the creation of mortals. According to the myth of the ages of humankind, men and women are the creation of the gods or Zeus himself. The following is a summary of Hesiod's account. Ovid describes only four ages, omitting the Age of Heroes. This tale of human degeneration mingles fact and fancy in an astonishing manner, for ages of bronze and of iron are historically very real indeed. The Age of Gold. In the time when Cronus (Saturn) was king in heaven, the Olympian gods made a golden race of mortals, who lived as though in a paradise, without toil, trouble or cares. All good things were theirs in abundance, and the fertile earth brought forth fruit of its own accord. They lived in peace and harmony, never grew old, and died as though overcome by sleep. The earth covered over this race, but they still exist as holy spirits who wander over the earth. The Age of Silver. The Olympian gods made a second race of silver, far less favored than the one of gold. Their childhood lasted a hundred years and when they grew up their lives were short and distressful. For they were arrogant against one another and refused to worship the gods or offer them sacrifice. Zeus in his anger at their senselessness hid them under the earth where they still dwell. The Age of Bronze. Zeus made a third race of mortals, a terrible and mighty one of bronze. Their implements and weapons were of bronze, and they relentlessly pursued the painful and violent deeds of war. They destroyed themselves by their own hands and went down to the realm of Hades without leaving a name. The Age of Heroes. Zeus made still another race, also valiant in war but more just and more civilized. This was the race of the heroes, also called demigods, who were involved in the legendary events of Greek saga. They fought, for example, at Thebes and in the Trojan War. When they died, Zeus sent some of these heroes to inhabit the Islands of the Blessed, a paradise at the far ends of the earth, ruled over by Cronus (Saturn), who had been deposed and freed by Zeus. The Age of Iron. Zeus made still another race, that of iron, troubled by toil and misery, although good is intermingled with their evils. It is in this age that the poet Hesiod lived, and he exclaims in woe: "Would that I were not a man of the fifth generation but had either died before or had been born later." He predicts further moral and physical disintegration and annihilation through war, until Zeus will finally destroy human beings when it comes to pass that they are born with gray hair on their temples. More and more will this become an age of wickedness, strife, and disrespect for the gods, until Shame itself and righteous Retribution will abandon mortals to their evil folly and doom. PROMETHEUS OUR CREATOR Dominant in the tradition about creation is the myth that Prometheus (not Zeus) was the creator of human beings from clay and Athena breathed into them the divine spirit. In the version of Hesiod, although his account is far from logical and clear, it seems that Prometheus fashioned only mankind. Womankind was created later, through the agency of Zeus, in the person of Pandora. PROMETHEUS AGAINST ZEUS Although Prometheus had fought on the side of Zeus in his war against Cronus, the two mighty gods soon came into conflict once Zeus had assumed supreme power. The Nature of Sacrifice. Their antagonism began when Prometheus dared to match wits with Zeus. There was a quarrel between mortals and the gods, apparently about how the parts of the sacrificial animals should be apportioned. Prometheus divided up a great ox and for his creatures, us mortals, he wrapped the flesh and the rich and fatty innards in the ox's paunch. For the gods, however, he deviously and artfully wrapped up the bones of the ox in its enticing, rich, white fat. He asked Zeus to take his choice between the two portions, and Zeus, fully aware of Prometheus' deception, chose the bones attractively wrapped in fat. Thus it was that when the Greeks made sacrifice to the gods, they enjoyed feasting upon the best edible portions of the animals, while only the white bones that remained were burned for the gods. The Theft of Fire. Zeus was enraged at Prometheus' attempt to deceive him and wreaked his vengeance upon mortals, the creatures of Prometheus. He took away from them fire, essential to their livelihood and progress. Prometheus, defiantly our champion, once again tricked Zeus (who this time was presumably at first unaware?) by stealing in a hollow fennel stalk fire from heaven and restoring it to earth. Zeus was stung to the depths of his heart by Prometheus' outrage and "contrived an evil thing for mortals in recompense for the fire," namely, the woman Pandora. The Punishment of Prometheus. A further defiance of Prometheus was his refusal to reveal to Zeus a crucial secret that he knew and Zeus did not. If Zeus mated with the sea-goddess Thetis, she would bear a son who would overthrow his father. Thus Zeus faced the terrible risk of losing his power as supreme god, like Cronus and Uranus before him. The outcome of Zeus' anger against Prometheus for his rebellious championship of mortals and his obstinate refusal to warn Zeus about Thetis was a dire punishment. Zeus had the wily and devious Prometheus bound in inescapable bonds to a crag of the remote Caucasus Mountains in Scythia, with a shaft driven through his middle. And he sent an eagle to eat his immortal liver each day, and what the eagle ate would be restored again each night. Generations later, however, Zeus worked out a reconciliation with Prometheus and sent his son Heracles to kill the eagle with an arrow and release Prometheus. Zeus avoided mating with Thetis, who married a mortal, Peleus, and bore a son Achilles to become mightier than his father. PANDORA The woman that Zeus sent as a beautiful and treacherous evil to mortals in punishment for their possession of Prometheus' stolen fire was named PANDORA [pan-dor'a] ("all gifts"). He had Hephaestus fashion her out of earth and water in the image of a modest maiden, beautiful as a goddess. Athena clothed her in silvery garments and her face was covered with a wondrously embroidered veil. She placed on her head lovely garlands of flowers and a golden crown, beautifully made and intricately decorated by Hephaestus; and she taught her weaving. Aphrodite bestowed upon her the grace of sexual allurement and desire and their pain. Hermes contrived in her breast wheedling words and lies and the nature of a thief and a bitch. All at the will of Zeus. Zeus sent this snare to the brother of Prometheus, named EPIMETHEUS [ep-i-mee'the-us], who received the gift even though his brother had warned him not to accept anything sent from Zeus. The name Prometheus means forethought, but Epimetheus means afterthought. Pandora's Jar. Zeus sent with Pandora a jar, urn, or box, which contained evils of all sorts, and as well hope. She herself removed the cover and released the miseries within to plague human beings, who previously had led carefree and happy lives: hard work, painful diseases, and thousands of sorrows. Through the will of Zeus, hope alone remained within the jar, because life without hope would be unbearable in the face of all the horrible woes unleashed for poor mortals. In Hesiod, Pandora is not motivated toopen the jar by a so-called feminine curiosity, whatever later versions may imply. AESCHYLUS' PROMETHEUS BOUND In addition to Hesiod's account, Aeschylus' play Prometheus Bound is fundamental for an understanding of the archetypal Prometheus. Aeschylus powerfully establishes Prometheus as our suffering champion who has advanced human beings, through his gift of fire, from savagery to civilization. Furthermore, Prometheus gave us the hope denied to us by Zeus, which, however blind, permits us to persevere and triumph over the terrible vicissitudes of life. Prometheus is grandly portrayed as the archetypal trickster and culture-god, the originator of all inventions and progress in the arts and the sciences. At the end of the play, Prometheus is still defiant, chained to his rock, and still refusing to reveal the secret of the marriage of Thetis. The conflict between the suffering hero and the tyrannical god was resolved in the lost plays of Aeschylus' Prometheus trilogy (i.e., group of three connected plays). In that resolution, Aeschylus presumably depicted Zeus as a god of wisdom who, through the suffering of Prometheus, established himself in the end as a triumphant, almighty god secure in his supreme power, brought about through his divine plan for reconciliation. Io. This divine plan of Zeus for reconciliation with a defeated Prometheus entailed the suffering of IO [eye'oh], a priestess of Hera who was loved by Zeus. Hera found out and turned Io into a white cow. She appointed a guard to watch over Io, a very good one indeed, since he had many eyes (perhaps as many as one hundred), and his name was ARGUS [ar'gus] PANOPTES [pan-op'teez] ("all-seeing"). Zeus rescued Io by sending Hermes to lull Argus to sleep and cut off his head. Henceforth Hermes was given the title ARGEIPHONTES [ar-ge-i-fon'teez] ("slayer of Argus"). Hera set Argus' eyes in the tail of a peacock, her favorite bird, and continued her jealous persecution of Io by sending a gadfly to drive her mad. Frenzied, Io in her wanderings over the world encountered Prometheus. In Aeschylus, these two "victims" of Zeus commiserate with each other. We learn, however, that Io will find peace in Egypt, where she will be restored to her human form and bear a son, EPAPHUS [ep'a-fus] or EPAPHOS, a name that means "he of the touch." Io had become pregnant, not through sexual rape, but by the mere touch of the hand of god, and among the descendants of Epaphus would be mighty Heracles destined to bring about the release of Prometheus. The fulfillment of the will of Zeus was in the end accomplished. THE FLOOD Lycaon and the Wickedness of Mortals. In the Age of Iron, Zeus took the form of a man to find out whether reports of the great wickedness of mortals were true. He visited the home of LYCAON [leye-kay'on] or LYKAON and announced that a god was present, but Lycaon, an evil tyrant, only scoffed and planned to kill Zeus during the night to prove that the visitor was not a god. Lycaon even went so far as to slaughter a man and offer human flesh as a meal for Zeus, who in anger brought the house down in flames. Lycaon fled but was turned into a howling, bloodthirsty wolf, a kind of werewolf in fact, since in this transformation he still manifested his human, evil looks and nature. Disgusted with the wickedness that he found everywhere he roamed, Zeus decided that the human race must be destroyed by a great flood. Deucalion and Pyrrha. Zeus allowed only two pious mortals to be saved, DEUCALION [dou-kay'li-on] or DEUKALION (the Greek Noah), the son of Prometheus, and his wife PYRRHA [pir'ra], the daughter of Epimetheus. When the flood subsided they found themselves in their little boat stranded on Mt. Parnassus. They were dismayed to discover that they were the only survivors and consulted the oracle of Themis about what they should do. The goddess ordered them to toss the bones of their great mother behind their backs. Deucalion understood that the stones in the body of earth are her bones. And so the stones that Deucalion tossed behind his back were miraculously transformed into men, while those cast by Pyrrha became women. In this way the world was repopulated. Hellen and the Hellenes. Deucalion and Pyrrha had a son named HELLEN [hel'len]. The ancient Greeks called themselves HELLENES [hel'leenz] and their country HELLAS [hel'las], and so Hellen was their eponymous ancestor. PARALLELS IN MYTHS OF GREECE AND THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST It cannot escape notice that many Greek myths that explain the creation of the world have been influenced by Near Eastern forerunners. Though the exact path of that influence is now impossible to reconstruct, the consequences of this early Greek contact with the older civilizations of the Tigris-Euphrates river valley cannot be denied. Commercial contact between the Greeks and the Near East seems the most likely conduit. This contact took place mainly in two distinct periods: the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries B.C. and the eighth and seventh centuries B. C. Five basic myths have proved especially fertile: the Creation, Succession, the Flood, the Descent to the Underworld, and the hero-king Gilgamesh. A number of peoples have told and retold these myth archetypes in many different versions. The most important of these civilizations, for our purposes, are the following: The Sumerians (fourth millennium B. C.), with centers at Ur and Uruk, developed cuneiform ("wedge-shaped") writing and the unique religious structure known as the ziggurat (a temple tower). The Akkadians (third millennium B. C.) absorbed the Sumerians; their chief center was at Babylon, which reached the pinnacle of its development around 1800 under King Hammurabi. The Assyrians (late second millennium B. C.), a northern Akkadian people, conquered Babylon in 1250 and established an empire with its capital at Nineveh. The Hittites (second millennium B. C.) would absorb the Hurrians of northern Syria after 1400 and establish an empire in Anatolia (the central and eastern area of modern Turkey). Their capital was at Hattusas (modern Boghaz-Köy). Sumerian, Babylonian, and Akkadian myths tell, like Hesiod, of order arising out of disorder, without an intelligent creator (cf. the creation story in Genesis). There is a concept akin to the Greek Chaos ("void"). These creation accounts, by their very nature, include myths of Succession, the Flood, and the creation and recreation of man. Enuma Elish. The Babylonian Enuma Elish ("When on high..."), ca. the second millennium B.C. is the best-known myth of creation. In the beginning APSU (the freshwater ocean) and TIAMAT (the saltwater ocean) beget ANU (sky) and EA or ENKI (earth). Ea destroys Apsu and brings forth MARDUK. Marduk, a god of the younger generation, usurps the rule of the god Enlil and battles Tiamat, much as Zeus battles Typhoeus. Tiamat is blown up like an enormous balloon and rent in two. After the death of Tiamat, Marduk creates in the sky Esharra as a home for the gods. Those who followed Tiamat, such as KINGU, are imprisoned. Marduk brings order to the world and creates human beings from the blood of Kingu, who by this time has been killed. Human beings are to serve the gods. Marduk's temple with its ziggurat is constructed at Babylon and called Esagila. Atrahasis. The Babylonian Atrahasis ("the extra-wise one"), composed around 1700, recounts the exploits of the hero ATRAHASIS, who corresponds to UT-NAPISHTIM of the Gilgamesh Epic. Both are akin to the Hebrew Noah and the Greek Prometheus (god of wisdom and crafts) and Deucalion (survivor of the flood). In this version the gods bitterly chafe under Enlil's rule, and as a consequence Enlil orders the creation of human beings, to perform the labors previously demanded of the gods; and so Enlil orders the death of the wise god GESHTU-E and from a mixture of earth and Geshtu-e's flesh and blood, human beings are created. Enlil will later order the destruction of human beings by flood, but Atrahasis, who is favored by Enki, will survive. Eventually there is a reconciliation between Enlil and Enki. Epic of Gilgamesh. The Epic of Gilgamesh contains the best known of the early flood myths. GILGAMESH, hero and god, king of Uruk, has been oppressing his people. To mediate his harsh rule, the gods create a rival, a "wild-man" of the forest, known as ENKIDU. Enkidu wrestles Gilgamesh but is defeated, after which the two become fast friends. They go on a quest to kill HUMBABA (or HUWAWA), the guardian of the Pine (or Cedar) Forest and there cut down a sacred tree. After they return to Uruk, Gilgamesh spurns the advances of ISHTAR, who sends the Bull of Heaven to destroy him. Gilgamesh and Enkidu slay the bull, but one of them must atone for this sacrilege with his life. The gods decide that Enkidu must die. After Enkidu's painful death, Gilgamesh, now in turmoil over the presence of death in the world, goes on a quest to find immortality. Gilgamesh's journey is a type of Underworld experience, where he must cross the waters of death and meet Ut-napishtim, who lives at "the mouth of the rivers." Ut-napishtim has achieved immortality as a survivor of the flood. Gilgamesh will be unsuccessful in his quest and eventually will return to Uruk. This brief sketch of the main elements in the Epic of Gilgamesh will serve to highlight a few observations. Gilgamesh himself was an historical figure, king of Sumerian Uruk, ca. 2700 B. C. His legends were refashioned into various Assyrian versions dating from about 1700. He stands as a figure akin to Odysseus or Heracles, a wise hero and slayer of beasts. Like Odysseus, his quest for immortality requires a descent to the Underworld. Like the relationship between Achilles and Patroclus, the friendship between Gilgamesh and Enkidu serves as a major theme. Though the flood myth is not of particular significance in Greek myth, it has a stronger presence in Ovid's (Latin) narrative of Deucalion and Pyrrha (Metamorphoses 1.260-421) and the Lydian flood involving Baucis and Philemon (Metamorphoses 8.689-720). Kingship in Heaven. The Hittite-Hurrian poem Kingship in Heaven recounts myths of succession and of the separation of earth and sky. KUMARBI (corresponding to the Sumerian Enlil) bites off the genitals of Anu (a sky-god) and swallows them. From the genitals is born TESHUB or TARKHUN (a storm-god). After his birth, Teshub plots with Anu to overthrow Kumarbi. Though the poem is fragmentary, Teshub appears to have been successful. Thus in the succession myths we have a structure that is paralleled in Greek mythology: Apsu/Enlil/Marduk; Anu/Kumarbi/Teshub; and Uranus/Cronus/Zeus. The Descent of Ishtar to the Underworld. The Akkadian poem The Descent of Ishtar to the Underworld (second millennium B. C.) contains the most important example of an early myth of the descent to the Underworld. (The Akkadian version reworked an earlier Sumerian tradition in which Ishtar is called by her Sumerian name, INANNA.) Ishtar/Inanna is a daughter of Anu and sister of ERESHKIGAL, queen of the Underworld and wife of NERGAL. Ishtar has many of the same associations of Aphrodite, including love and sexual procreation. Ereshkigal corresponds to Persephone. Ishtar, like Persephone and Eurydice (wife of Orpheus), must depart from and later return to the Underworld. Her consort, DAMUZI (TAMMUZ), is similar to Adonis and Attis. In both versions of the story Ishtar decides to visit the Underworld; she leaves instructions to help her return to the world of the living, should she die there. Ereshkigal orders her death, but she is restored to life through the advice of Enki (Sumerian version) or the help of her vizier (Akkadian version). The Akkadian narrative ends with Ishtar mourning the death of Damuzi. In the Sumerian version Ishtar is angry with Damuzi for failing to mourn her later return to the world, and she hands him over to demons to suffer death. Though some of the similarities between the Greek creation myths and the Near Eastern counterparts may be due to no more than chance, the myths of succession, the Flood, the Epic of Gilgamesh, and the myth of Ishtar and Damuzi show strong evidence for direct contact between the Greeks and cultures of the Near East.
Chapter 4
THE OLYMPIAN DEITIES GREEK NAME [pronunciation] (ROMAN EQUIVALENT) APHRODITE [af-roh-deye'tee] (VENUS) APOLLO [a-pol'loh] ARES [ar'eez] (MARS) ARTEMIS [ar'te-mis] (DIANA) ATHENA [a-thee'-na] or ATHENE (MINERVA) DEMETER [de-mee'ter] (CERES) DIONYSUS [deye-o-neye'sus] or DIONYSOS (BACCHUS) HADES [hay'deez] (PLUTO) HEPHAESTUS [he-fees'tus and he-fes'tus] or HEPHAISTOS (VULCAN) HERA [hee'ra] (JUNO) HERMES [her'meez] (MERCURY) HESTIA [hes'ti-a] (VESTA) POSEIDON [po-seye'don] (NEPTUNE) ZEUS [zous] (JUPITER) The fourteen major deities are listed above, alphabetically. Zeus is the supreme god and his wife is Hera; they are king and queen, father and mother of gods and mortals. Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades are the trinity who control the important spheres of power: Zeus, god of the sky, Poseidon, god of the sea, and Hades, god of the Underworld. Apollo has the same name for both the Greeks and the Romans. The fourteen deities are reduced to a canon of twelve Olympians: Hestia is removed from the list and so is Hades, whose home is not Mt. Olympus but the Underworld. HESTIA, GODDESS OF THE HEARTH AND ITS FIRE HESTIA [hes'ti-a], "hearth," (VESTA) was the august and revered goddess of the hearth and its fire, which was considered sacred and a symbol of both the home and community. She remained a virgin and was a goddess of chastity, just like Athena and Artemis. For the Romans she was the goddess VESTA, and Vestal Virgins attended to her worship. ZEUS AND HERA ZEUS [zous], "bright" (JUPITER), originally a god of the sky, became the supreme god with final authority. He appears as a bearded, regal figure with a scepter and a bolt of lightning and thunder in his hand. He often carries his shield, the AEGIS, which is also an attribute of his favorite daughter Athena. He married his sister HERA [hee'ra] (JUNO), originally an earth mother goddess. As the wife and consort of Zeus, she retains much of her inherent dominance to become a difficult partner. The characterization of Zeus is most complex. On the one hand, he mirrors the harassed, philandering husband, who has countless affairs and is upbraided and intimidated by a self-righteous, nagging wife. On the other, he emerges as the almighty god of morality and religion, a just god who rewards the good and punishes the wicked. THE SANCTUARY OF ZEUS AT OLYMPIA The most important sanctuary of Zeus was at Olympia beside the river Alpheus in the territory of the city of Elis in the northwestern Peloponnese. Here the Olympic Games originated in 776 B.C., said to have been founded by Zeus' son Heracles. Among its many buildings was an imposing temple of Hera, but the temple of Zeus was the most magnificent, adorned with the following sculpture: West pediment: the battle of the Greeks and the centaurs at the wedding of the Lapith king Perithoüs (a son of Zeus). Particularly impressive is the central figure of Apollo (another son of Zeus) with arm outstretched, imposing order on the scene of violence and chaos (see MLS, Chapter 5 and p. 260). East pediment: the fateful chariot race between Pelops and Hippodamia and her father Oenomaüs; the central figure of Zeus assured Pelops' victory in the coming race and the winning of Hippodamia as his wife (see MLS, Chapter 18). Doric frieze: metopes (relief sculpture) depicting the Twelve Labors of Heracles. The cult statue of Zeus in the naos (or cella), made by the Athenian sculptor Pheidias; it was huge, with its surfaces inlaid in gold and ivory. This regal Zeus was seated on a throne that was elaborately decorated with various mythological motifs. THE SANCTUARY OF ZEUS AT DODONA Dodona in northern Greece was another significant sanctuary of Zeus. Here, however, the oracle of Zeus was the most important element. Private individuals and political representatives came to Dodona with questions of every sort. The god answered by means of various omens (such as the rustling of the leaves of his sacred oaks) and eventually through a priestess (in a manner similar to the more famous sanctuary of Apollo at Delphi). CHILDREN OF ZEUS AND HERA: EILEITHYIA, HEBE, HEPHAESTUS, AND ARES EILEITHYIA [eye-leye-theye'a] was a goddess of childbirth, like her mother, Hera, and Artemis. HEBE [hee'bee], "youthful bloom," was a cupbearer of the gods. She became the wife of Heracles. HEPHAESTUS [he-fees'tus and he-fes'tus], or HEPHAISTOS (VULCAN), was sometimes considered to be the son of Hera alone. He was lame from birth and Hera, ashamed of his deformity, cast him out of Olympus; we are also told that once, when he interfered in a quarrel between Zeus and Hera on behalf of his mother, Zeus hurled him down from Olympus and he landed on the island of Lemnos, which became his cult-place. In either case, he was restored to Olympus. Hephaestus was above all a divine artisan and smith, a god of the forge and its fire, whose workshop was said to be in various places, including Olympus. Assisted by the three Cyclopes, he could create marvelous masterpieces of every sort, among them the shield of Achilles. Ares, marble sculpture, pp 123 Ares, Roman copy of a Greek original (possibly by Skopas) of ca. 340 B.C. ARES [ar'eez] (MARS) was the virile and brutal god of war, associated with the area of Thrace. HEPHAESTUS, APHRODITE, AND ARES The wife of Hephaestus was Aphrodite [af-roh-deye'tee] (VENUS); theirs was an archetypal union between the lame intellectual and the sensuous beauty. Aphrodite turned to the handsome and whole Ares for sexual gratification (playing out yet another archetype); but military Ares and promiscuous Aphrodite were outwitted by the ingenious and moral Hephaestus, who fashioned unbreakable chains that were fine as a spider's web and hung them as a trap on the bedposts above his bed. Thus he ensnared the unwitting lovers in the midst of their illicit lovemaking and summoned the gods down from Olympus to witness the ludicrous scene. Ares and Aphrodite were released from their chains only when it was agreed that Ares should pay an adulterer's fine. For the Romans, the relationship between Vulcan (Ares) and Venus (Aphrodite) was of serious poltical import. Their union represented allegorically the conquest of war by love. The Roman Peace (Pax Romana) was the happy and noble result. GANYMEDE Zeus, in the form of an eagle or a whirlwind, carried off the handsome Trojan GANYMEDE [gan'i-meed] to be, like Hebe, a cupbearer to the gods. The Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite explains: Zeus in his wisdom seized and carried off fair-haired Ganymede because of his beauty, so that he might be in the company of the gods and pour wine for them in the house of Zeus, a wonder to behold, esteemed by all the immortals, as he draws red nectar from a golden bowl. Zeus took pity on Ganymede's father, who mourned since his son had mysteriously disappeared, and gave him the gift of wondrous horses. To console the father, Zeus sent Hermes to explain how Ganymede would never grow old but be immortal just like the gods. And the father rejoiced. The innocence of this depiction implies the joyous calling of a young man chosen by god for a special immortality. The sensual appreciation of beauty, on the other hand, encourages another interpretation: the passionate, homosexual love of the supreme god Zeus for the young and handsome Ganymede. THE NINE MUSES, DAUGHTERS OF ZEUS AND MEMORY Zeus mated with MNEMOSYNE [ne-mos'i-nee] ("memory"), to produce the nine MUSES [myou'zez] ("reminders"), patron goddesses of the arts; thus allegorically, god and memory provide creative inspiration. The Muses live in Pieria in northern Thessaly (and are called the PIERIDES, peye-er'i-deez) or near the Hippocrene Fountain on Mt. Helicon in Boeotia. Their spheres are sometimes specifically assigned: CALLIOPE (kal-leye'o-pee), epic poetry CLIO (kleye'oh), history, lyre playing ERATO (er'a-toh), love poetry, hymns to the gods, lyre playing EUTERPE (you-ter'pee), lyric poetry, tragedy, flute playing MELPOMENE (mel-pom'e-nee), tragedy, lyre playing POLYHYMNIA (pol-i-him'ni-a), sacred music, dancing TERPSICHORE (terp-sik'o-ree), choral dancing, flute playing THALIA (tha-leye'a), comedy URANIA (you-ray'ni-a), astronomy THE THREE FATES The three Fates, the MOIRAI (moi'reye), the Roman Parcae, were the daughters of Zeus and Themis (or Night and Erebus). They were imagined as three old women spinners, and were considered to control the thread of life and thus each person's destiny: CLOTHO (kloh'thoh), "spinner," spins out the thread of life. LACHESIS (lak'e-sis), "apportioner," measures the thread. ATROPOS (at'ro-pos), "inflexible," cuts the thread.
Chapter 5
THE NATURE OF THE GODS Anthropomorphism. The Greeks and Romans (like most peoples) conceived of their deities as ANTHROPOMORPHIC, that is, human in form and character. These gods and goddess are idealized mortals in their physical beauty (although Hephaestus is lame), human beings made larger than life through the intensity of their emotions (however grand or petty these may be) and their superhuman powers. They perform extraordinary feats, change shape, become invisible, and fly. On the other hand, they appear tragically human in their pain and sorrows, their rivalries, and their sins. ICHOR, not blood, runs through their veins, and they feast not on the food of mortals but instead drink NECTAR and eat AMBROSIA. In the last analysis, proof of their divinity lies in their immortality. Olympian Deities. The major deities have as their home Mt. Olympus, where they dwell in splendid houses and enjoy opulent feasts in halls that echo with their inextinguishable laughter. Individual gods and goddesses frequent favorite cult-places or cities. These immortals are worshiped by mortals in temples and honored with statues, altars, and animal sacrifices. Priests and priestesses serve them and officiate at celebrations; at an oracular shrine such as Delphi, they convey the god's responses to the prayers and inquiries of suppliants. Chthonic Deities. Those gods and goddesses who are primarily associated with the Underworld are called CHTHONIC ("of the earth"). Although Hades is an Olympian, he is primarily a chthonic deity because he is king of the Underworld and so is his wife and queen, Persephone, at least for the part of the year that she is with him. Hecate and the Furies are other examples of important chthonic deities. Nymphs. Among the various lower echelons of divinity are spirits who animate aspects of nature, all of whom may not necessarily be immortal but merely long-lived. The feminine spirits are often imagined as attractive nymphs, called NAIADS if they inhabit waters and DRYADS if they inhabit trees. Zeus and Greek Monotheism. Within the polytheistic cast of Greek and Roman mythology and religion, there is a strong element of monotheism from the very beginning. In both Homer and Hesiod, Zeus is unquestionably the sovereign deity, and he is very much concerned with moral values. Yet his monotheism and patriarchy are severely tested by other divinities, especially goddesses. Hera's power is able to thwart Zeus' plans. Aphrodite can bend all the gods to her will, Zeus included, except for the three virgins, Hestia, Athena, and Artemis. Demeter, angry at the rape of her daughter, Persephone, forces Zeus and the gods to come to her terms. And Zeus yields to fate or the Fates, although this need not always be the case. At the same time, in the evolution of Zeus as the one supreme god, he became the almighty god of morality and justice until he could be referred to without a name and simply as god in an abstract, rather than as a specific, anthropomorphic conception. This greater sophistication in thought, which gave Zeus a more unquestionable, absolute authority, came about through the writings of religious poets and philosophers. Ultimately in the sixth century B.C., Xenophanes argued against the folly of conceiving deities as human beings and insisted (frag. 23) that there is "one god, greatest among gods and mortals, not at all like them, either in body or in mind." Greek Humanism. A belief in the inevitability of fate or the Fates created a particularly somber mood for the development of Greek literature. This sense of predetermined destiny for each individual was analyzed in terms of the meaning and possibility of free will and independent action. There also developed a strong and realistic awareness of the misery, uncertainty, and unpredictability of human life ordained by the gods. If we are lucky, our lives will be more blessed by happiness than doomed to misery; still, the terrible vicissitudes of life lead to only one conclusion: it is better to be dead than alive. In opposition to this pessimism was an uplifting faith in the potential of human endeavor to triumph against all divine odds. According to the fifth-century philosopher Protagoras, "Man is the measure of all things," meaning that mortals, not gods, are the arbiters of the human condition. In this optimistic mood about the hope and achievement possible in this life, Achilles in Homer's Odyssey cries out that he would sooner be alive, the slave of a poor man, than dead, a king in the Underworld. These two seemingly irreconcilable views account for a unique humanism originated by the Greeks, its emphasis upon the beauty and wonder of mortal achievement attained in the face of horrible disasters, which a vindictive god may dispense at any moment. THE LEGEND OF SOLON AND CROESUS In his History of The Persian Wars, Herodotus presents a brilliant crystallization of the tragic, yet uplifting nature of Greek humanism, which can be truly understood only through the emotional and intellectual experience afforded by great art. Tellus the Athenian. After a year of office in Athens with extraordinary powers (594/3 B.C.) during which he wrought many political and economic reforms, the wise man SOLON [soh'lon] set out to see the world. Among those he visited was the rich and powerful CROESUS [kree'sus], or KROISOS, the king of Lydia, whose capital was at Sardis. Croesus tried to impress his guest with a tour of his vast treasures, before he asked Solon the question, "Who is the happiest of human beings?" Croesus, of course, expected that he would be so designated, but Solon, surprisingly, identified an unknown Athenian, named TELLUS [tel'lus], or TELLOS. His reasons for the choice were as follows: Tellus came from a prosperous city and was prosperous himself (by the standards of Athens, not Lydian Croesus) so that he could fulfill his full potential as a human being. He had beautiful and good children, to whom he saw children born and all survive. Finally he died gloriously fighting on behalf of his family and his city, and was honored with burial at public expense in the place where he fell. Cleobis and Biton. Despotic Croesus, taken back, persisted in asking who was the second happiest, fully expecting that he would at least win second place. But Solon refused to flatter or be intimidated and named two young men from Argos, CLEOBIS [kle'-o-bis], or KLEOBIS, and BITON [beye'ton], who had won prizes in the athletic games. Their mother was a priestess of Hera, who had to be present at the festival of the goddess. Once when the oxen did not arrive in time, her two sons yoked themselves to their mother's chariot and brought her to the temple, a journey of five miles. The whole congregation marveled at this deed, congratulating the youths for their strength and their mother for having such fine sons. She was overjoyed and prayed before the statue of the goddess to give her sons the best thing for human beings to attain. After they had sacrificed and feasted, Cleobis and Biton went to sleep in the temple and never woke up. The end of their life was the very best, and thereby the god showed clearly how it is better to be dead than alive. Statues of the brothers were set up in Delphi, since they had been the best of men. The Nature of God and Human Life. Angrily, Croesus asked why his happiness was dismissed as nothing and he was not even put on a par with ordinary men. Solon explained. All deity is jealous and fond of causing trouble. Furthermore, in the length of a lifetime of seventy years there is much that one does not wish to see and not one of the days in all those years will bring exactly the same experiences. A human being is completely a thing of chance. A human life cannot be judged happy until it has been completed. The one from whom fate has kept most evils and misfortunes and to whom fate has given most blessings and good fortune, this one is the happiest, provided as well that his death at the end is good. It is too soon to judge Croesus happiest because his life is not yet over and can not be reviewed in its entirety. A rich king, seemingly blessed with happiness now, may at any time in the future meet with disasters, just like any other ordinary mortal. Croesus considered Solon a fool, but NEMESIS ("retribution") punished him for his hubris in thinking that he was the happiest of mortals. Croesus and His Son Atys. Croesus had a fine son named ATYS [a'tis], "the doomed one," in whom he placed all his hopes. A dream came to Croesus as he slept and foretold that Atys would die, struck by the point of an iron weapon. Croesus forbade his son to engage in any further military activity, removed all weapons from the men's quarters, and arranged that his son should get a wife. In the midst of preparations for the marriage, an unfortunate suppliant, polluted by blood, arrived and begged Croesus for purification. His name was ADRASTUS [a-dras'tus], or ADRASTOS ("the one who cannot escape fate"), a Phrygian from a royal family; he had killed his brother unintentionally and had been driven out by his father. Croesus benevolently purified Adrastus and accepted him in his palace. The Mysian Boar Hunt. It happened that the neighboring Mysians were unable to overcome a monstrous boar that was destroying their lands. They appealed to Croesus to send his son with an expedition to come to their aid. Croesus, remembering the dream, refused. But his valiant son, anxious to help the Mysians, convinced his father to allow him to go. Atys argued that the fight was not against men but a boar; since a boar did not have hands or an iron weapon, how could he possibly die by the point of an iron weapon, if he went on the hunt? Croesus was won over but, nevertheless, was still concerned about his son's safety. So he asked Adrastus that, in return for the great kindness that he had done him, he go along with Atys to act as his guardian. Adrastus, although reluctant, could not refuse Croesus' request. In the midst of the hunt, as the attackers hurled their weapons against the wild beast, Adrastus missed his aim and hit instead Atys, and killed him. And the prophecy of the dream was fulfilled. The Suicide of Adrastus. When the expedition arrived home, Adrastus stood before the corpse and begged Croesus to kill him. But the bereaved Croesus answered that it was the god who had warned him of this evil who was responsible. He forgave Adrastus. Yet Adrastus could not forgive himself. Alone at the grave of Croesus' son, Atys, whom he had murdered, he slaughtered himself on the tomb, realizing that he was the unhappiest of mortals, most oppressed by misfortune. In the final scene of this tragedy, we cannot help but contrast the unfortunate and most unhappy Adrastus with Tellus and Cleobis and Biton, the happiest of men who ended their lives well. Croesus on the Pyre, Attic red-figure amphora by Myson, ca. 500 B.C. The Defeat of Croesus by Cyrus the Great. CYRUS [seye-rus], or KYROS THE GREAT, king of the Persians, had been carving out a vast empire to the east. Now, however, he threatened Croesus' kingdom of Lydia to the west. Croesus sent magnificant offerings to Delphi before consulting the great oracle of Apollo there for advice. The ambiguous answer given by the god was that if he marched against Persia, a great empire would fall. Croesus foolishly did march against Cyrus, but it was his own Lydian empire, not that of the Persians, which fell. The Enlightenment and Salvation of Croesus. When Sardis, the capital of Lydia, was captured, Cyrus had a great pyre built and Croesus placed upon it. As Croesus stood on the pyre, about to be burned alive, he now understood that the words of Solon about the nature of happiness for mortals were inspired by god. Croesus called out the name of Solon three times, and Cyrus, who heard him, was perplexed, and Croesus explained the truth expounded to him by Solon: bo one can by judged happy until dead. After the fire was lit and the flames began to burn the outer edges of the pyre, Cyrus, fearing retribution for himself, ordered the fire quenched and Croesus saved. When Croesus realized Cyrus' change of heart, and saw that the men were unable to put out the fire, in tears he called to Apollo. The god answered him by sending out of the clear and calm sky, torrents of rain that extinguished the fire. Cyrus knew then that Croesus was a good man, beloved by god and made him his wise and benevolent counselor. Later Croesus inquired at Delphi why Apollo had deceived him by his oracle. Apollo, his savior, answered that it was Croesus' own fault for misinterpreting the oracle and not inquiring for further elucidation; Croesus agreed.
Chapter 6
MAJOR DEITIES OF THE SEA We have already met some of these many deities of the sea. POSEIDON [po-seye'don] (NEPTUNE) became established as the mighty god of the seas. His wife was AMPHITRITE [am-fi-treye'tee]. PONTUS [pon'tus], or PONTOS ("sea"), produced by Gaia in the first stages of creation. OCEANUS [o-see'an-us], or OKEANOS, the stream of Ocean, and his mate Tethys, titans who produced thousands of children, the Oceanids [oh-see'a-nidz]. TRITON [treye'ton], son of Poseidon and Amphitrite, a merman, human above the waist, fish-shaped below (many male deities of the deep are often so depicted). His most distinguishing characteristic was that he blew on a conch shell and thus he was known as the trumpeter of the sea. PROTEUS [proh'te-us], a pre-Olympian deity who became an attendant or son of Poseidon and Amphitrite, was an old man of the sea who could foretell the future and could also change his shape at will. NEREUS [nee're-us] was another old man of the sea and, like Proteus, could foretell the future and change his shape. He was a son of Pontus and Gaia. Nereus mated with one of the Oceanids (Doris) and became the father of fifty daughters called NEREIDS [nee're-idz]; three of these are important: THETIS [thee'tis], GALATEA [gal-a-tee'a], and AMPHITRITE [am-fi-treye'tee]. Nereids are beautiful and often, but not always, depicted as mermaids; and usually they can shange their shape. PELEUS AND THETIS Zeus learned from Prometheus the secret that Thetis was destined to bear a son mightier than his father, and so he avoided her. Instead, a mortal named Peleus wooed and won her, not without difficulty, because she changed herself into all sorts of things, a bird, a tree, and a tigress. The wedding of Peleus and Thetis was one of the most famous in mythology and their son Achilles (the hero of the Trojan War) did become mightier than his father. ACIS, GALATEA, AND POLYPHEMUS The second Nereid, Galatea, fell in love with ACIS [ay'sis], the handsome son of a sea-nymph, who was daughter of the river-god Symaethus, in Sicily. To her dismay, she was wooed by the Cyclops POLYPHEMUS [po-li-fee'mus], or POLYPHEMOS, son of Poseidon. This monstrous and boorish giant, with one eye in the middle of his forehead, tried to mend his savage ways but to no avail. Galatea would listen to his love songs, cowering in the arms of her lover Acis. Enraged with jealousy, Polyphemus finally turned on the two lovers. He pursued Acis and hurled a jagged mass, torn from the mountain, which buried him completely. But with the help of his beloved goddess of the waters, Galatea, Acis was transformed into a river-deity, fulfilling his ancestry. POSEIDON AND AMPHITRITE The third Nereid, Amphitrite, became the wife of Poseidon, and herein lies her importance. Poseidon himself looks very much like his brother Zeus, a majestic and bearded king, only more severe and harsh. He can be identified by his trident, a long, three-pronged fork resembling a fisherman's spear. Poseidon has many moods, just like the sea that he controls. He is often ferocious and relentless in his hostility, as in the case of his devastating anger against Odysseus for the blinding of his son, the Cyclops Polyphemus. Poseidon, as the earthshaker, was a god of earthquakes as well as of storms. His virility and power are symbolized by his association with horses and bulls. SCYLLA AND CHARYBDIS Poseidon made advances to SCYLLA [sil'la], or SKYLLA (a granddaughter of Pontus). Amphitrite was jealous and threw magic herbs into Scylla's bathing place, which turned her into a vicious monster, encircled with a ring of dog's heads. She lived in a cave in the stormy Strait of Messina between Sicily and Italy. With her was CHARYBDIS (ka-rib'dis], daughter of Poseidon and Gaia, an equally formidable ally, who drew in mountains of water and spewed them out again. Scylla and Charybdis were a menace to heroes such as Odysseus. Another version of this myth has become famous because it is told by Ovid. A mortal GLAUCUS [glaw'kus], or GLAUKOS, was transformed into a sea-god. He became enamored of Scylla, who rejected him. He turned for help to the sorceress Circe, but she fell in love with him and through jealousy poisoned the waters of Scylla's bathing place. IRIS Many were the progeny of the sea; some of them we shall meet later in saga, for example the Graeae, the Gorgons, and the Harpies. Progeny of the sea often appear grotesque or fantastic. At this point, however, we single out only IRIS [eye'ris], a beautiful descendant of Pontus and Gaia. Iris, fleet-footed and winged, is the lovely goddess of the rainbow, the meaning of her name. She is also (like Hermes) a messenger of the gods, only Iris often becomes the particular servant of Hera.
Chapter 7
THE BIRTH OF ATHENA Zeus swallowed his consort METIS [mee'tis] ("wisdom"), after he had made her pregnant, because he feared that she would bear a son who would overthrow him. And so ATHENA [a-thee'na], or ATHENE (MINERVA), was born from the holy head of Zeus. Hephaestus, with his ax, may have facilitated the birth. The occasion was awesome as Athena sprang forth fully grown, a beautiful young woman in full armor, fearlessly announcing her arrival with a thunderous war-cry. CHARACTERISTICS OF ATHENA Athena's birth allegorically proclaims her essential character: her divine wisdom drawn from the head of god; the special bond of affection between father and daughter; her championship of heroes and male causes, born as she was from the male, and not from a mother's womb. A dread goddess of war, she remained a virgin. APPEARANCE OF ATHENA Athena bears an aloof kind of loveliness, akin to the beauty of youthful masculinity. She is associated with the owl and the snake. She is usually represented with helmet, spear, and shield or aegis that bore a depiction of the head of Medusa. With her there may be a female winged figure (called NIKE [nee'kay], "victory"), bearing a crown or garland of success. Athena herself as victorious war goddess was called Athena Nike and the simple but elegant temple of Athena Nike stands to the right of the entrance to the Acropolis. THE CONTEST BETWEEN ATHENA AND POSEIDON Athena and Poseidon vied for control of Athens and its surrounding territory, Attica. The contest took place on the Acropolis. Poseidon struck the rock with his trident and produced a salt spring or a horse. Athena brought forth an olive tree from the ground by the touch of her spear and she was proclaimed the victor. The olive was fundamental to Athenian economy and life. Angry at losing, Poseidon was appeased and continued to be worshiped in Athens, especially in conjunction with the Athenian hero ERECHTHEUS [e-rek-thee'us] (see MLS, Chapter 23). In his lovely temple the ERECHTHEUM [e-rek-thee'um], or ERECHTHEION, on the Acropolis, just across from the Parthenon, the marks of the blow of his trident supposedly could be seen, and nearby it, the olive tree that Athena had produced continued to grow. THE PANATHENAEA OR PANATHENAIC FESTIVAL The PANATHENAEA [pan-ath-e-nee'a], or PANATHENAIA, was an annual festival celebrating the birthday of Athena; every fourth year the celebration of the Great Panathenaea was especially splendid. Important in the ceremonies were sacrifices and games; the prizes for winners in the games were special Panathenaic amphoras—vases inscribed and decorated with a depiction of Athena and containing sacred olive oil. A Panathenaic procession wound its way through the city ending with the presentation of an embroidered robe (peplos) to Athena on the Acropolis. Athenians (young and old, male and female) carrying sacred implements, leading sacrificial animals, with chariots or on horseback, figured in the procession. THE PARTHENON AND ITS SCULPTURE The PARTHENON [par'the-non] is the great temple to Athena Parthenos on the Acropolis of Athens that was built in the fifth century B.C. PARTHENOS [par'the-nos], an adjective meaning "virgin," was a standard epithet of Athena. It is a most beautiful Doric temple (even in its ruined state today), and its sculpture (created under the aegis of the great Athenian sculptor Pheidias) bears tribute to Athena herself and her city and all that they mean forever. East pediment: the dramatic moment of the birth of Athena, who stood in the center before the throne of Zeus, from whose head she had just spring, fully grown and fully armed. Other divine figures are present at the miracle. At the corners, the horses of Helius (the Sun) and those of Selene (the Moon) set the momentous event in cosmic time. West pediment: the contest between Athena and Poseidon, described above; these two central figures pull away from each other as they produce the gifts with which they vie. On either side, figures of Athenian divinities and heroic kings are witnesses. Doric frieze: on the exterior are metopes (relief sculpture) depicting four subjects: the battle between the Lapiths and the Centaurs; the sack of Troy; the Gigantomachy; and the battle between the Greeks and the Amazons. Ionic frieze: in the interior, on the outer wall of the naos (or cella), continuous relief sculpture renders the splendid Panathenaic procession described above. Athenian men and women are shown as marshals, attendants, horsemen, hoplites and assistants in the worship, along with the animals of ritual sacrifice. At the climax the ceremonial robe is presented to a priestess of Athena while, on either side, enthroned Olympian deities witness the joyous celebration of civic piety. The Athena Parthenos: this monumental statue of Athena stood in the cella (or naos). The surfaces of the standing goddess were made of gold and ivory and she held a figure of Nike (Victory) in her right hand; she wore a helmet and the aegis with the head of Medusa, and a spear and shield are at her side; elaborate decorative reliefs enhanced the statue, which has not survived. PALLAS ATHENA TRITOGENEIA Athena is often called Pallas Athena and sometimes she is given the obscure title TRITOGENEIA [tri-to-je-neye'a or tri-to-je-nee'a], which suggests her links with Triton, a river-god. Triton had a daughter named PALLAS [pal'las] who used to practice the arts of war with Athena. As the result of a quarrel, Athena impulsively wounded Pallas. Pallas died and Athena was distraught when she fully realized what she had done. In her sorrow, she made a wooden statue of the girl which was called the PALLADIUM [pal-lay'di-um], or PALLADION. Through the agency of Zeus this Palladium fell into the territory of the Trojans, where, as a talisman, it carried with it the destiny of their city. The word Pallas probably means "maiden" and designates Athena's virginity, like the epithet parthenos, "virgin." THE INVENTION OF THE FLUTE; ATHENA AND MARSYAS Athena invented the flute upon hearing the lamentations and the sound of the hissing of the serpent hair of the surviving Gorgons, after Perseus had killed their sister, Medusa (see MLS, Chapter 21). She quickly grew to dislike her invention because her beautiful cheeks became distorted when she blew into the instrument, and so she threw it away. The satyr MARSYAS [mar'si-as] picked up the flute and became so excellent a player that he dared to compete with Apollo in a musical contest, with dire consequences for himself (see MLS, Chapter 11). ATHENA AND ARACHNE ARACHNE [a-rak'nee] was born in a lowly family, but her skill in spinning and weaving was extraordinary. When Athena (or Minerva in Ovid's account) learned that Arachne's fame as a worker of wool rivaled her own, she was determined to destroy her. Arachne was foolish enough not to admit that Athena was her teacher and challenged her to a contest. Disguised as an old woman, Athena warned Archane about the danger of her hubris but Arachne persisted. Athena in anger threw off her disguise and accepted the challenge. She wove at her loom, with surpassing skill, a tapestry depicting noble scenes from mythology. Arrogant Arachne, on the other hand, wove into her tapestry scenes of the gods' less honorable amorous conquests. Athena was furious, particularly since she could find no fault with Arachne's excellent work. She tore up the embroidered tapestry and beat Arachne's face with the shuttle. Grief-stricken, Arachne strangled herself with a noose, but Athena took pity and transformed her into a spider; as such, she and her descendants practice the art of weaving forever.
Chapter 8
THE DUALITY OF APHRODITE (VENUS) Aphrodite Urania. We know that Aphrodite arose amidst the foam (aphros) from the severed genitals of Uranus that were cast upon the sea. Hesiod's account of her birth allegorizes the powerful sexuality of her nature. Yet this APHRODITE URANIA [a-froh-deye'tee you-ray'ne-a], born from the male alone and not as the result of sexual union, came to be characterized as the goddess of pure love that has as its end not physical satisfaction but spiritual gratification. The sensual Aphrodite Urania, sprung from Uranus, god of the heavens, became the HEAVENLY, or CELESTIAL, APHRODITE of philosophy and religion. Aphrodite Pandemos. In stark contrast to celestial Aphrodite, another Aphrodite was identified, the daughter of Zeus and his mate DIONE [deye-oh'nee], about whom we know little. Their daughter was APHRODITE PANDEMOS [pan-dee'mos] ("Aphrodite of the people" or "common Aphrodite"), the goddess of sex and the procreation of children, whose concerns are of the body and not of the mind, the spirit, or the soul. This duality in Aphrodite's nature came to be described as sacred and profane love, the most universal of all archetypal conceptions. Aphrodite received two epithets in connection with her birth on the sea, CYTHEREA [si-the-ree'a] and CYPRIS [si'pris or seye'pris], since she was brought first to the island of Cythera and then Cyprus, the latter especially associated with her worship. THE CHARACTER OF APHRODITE In general, Aphrodite was the captivating goddess of beauty, love, and marriage and her power was very great. Her universality led to a gamut of conceptions of this goddess, who presided over everything from hallowed married love to temple prostitution. Depictions of her in art, literature, and music reflect not only the duality but also the multiplicity of her nature. ATTENDANTS OF APHRODITE The Three Graces. The CHARITES [kar'i-teez] are feminine personifications of aspects of charm and loveliness. The Hours or Seasons. The name of these daughters of Zeus and Themis is HORAE [hoh'ree], or HORAI, meaning hours, and then time, and then seasons. Their number increases from two to four, and they represent the attractive attributes of the various times of the year. THE ITHYPHALLIC PRIAPUS PRIAPUS [preye-ay'-pus], or PRIAPOS, the son of Aphrodite, personifies the elemental, sexual side of his mother's nature. He bears a huge and erect phallus and began as a respectable fertility god bringing good fortune for crops and procreation. He developed into an erotic and sometimes obscene inspiration for later art and literature. PYGMALION Ovid's story of PYGMALION [pig-may'li-on] is most influential. Venus, enraged because the women of her own cult-place of Cyprus denied her divinity, caused them to be the first women to prostitute themselves. The sculptor Pygmalion would have nothing to do with these licentious women. In his loneliness, he fashioned an ivory statue of surpassing beauty, so realistic that he fell in love with his creation and treated it as though it were alive. On the feast day of Venus, Pygmalion timidly prayed to Venus that his ivory maiden would become his wife. He returned home to find that his lovely statue was alive. He gave thanks to Venus, who was present at the marriage of the happy couple. The son of Pygmalion and GALATEA [ga-la-tee'a] (her name is not in Ovid) was PAPHOS [pa'fos], after whom Venus' favorite city in Cyprus was named. APHRODITE AND ADONIS The classic version of this myth is by Ovid. KINYRAS [sin'i-ras], or KINYRAS (the son of Paphos), had a daughter named MYRRHA [mir'ra], who fell in love with her father. The faithful nurse of guilty Myrrha prevented her from committing suicide by convincing her to satisfy her passion. So Myrrha carried on an incestuous relationship with her father, who was unaware of her identity. When Cinyras found out, he pursued his daughter, who fled from his rage. In answer to her prayers, Myrrha was turned into a myrrh tree. She had become pregnant by her father and from the tree was born ADONIS [a-don'is], who became a most handsome youth and keen hunter. Aphrodite fell desperately in love with Adonis and warned him of the dangers of the hunt, but to no avail. While he was hunting a wild boar, it buried its deep tusk into his groin and Adonis died in the arms of a grief-stricken Aphrodite. The goddess ordained that from his blood a flower, the anemone, should arise. Here is allegorized the important recurrent theme of the Great Mother and her lover, who dies as vegetation dies and comes back to life again. This motif of death and resurrection becomes even clearer in the following variation. When Adonis was an infant, Aphrodite put him in a chest for PERSEPHONE [per-sef'o-nee] (PROSERPINA), the queen of the Underworld, to keep. But Persephone looked upon the child's beauty and refused to give him back. It was agreed that Adonis would spend one part of the year below with Persephone and one part in the upper world with Aphrodite. Celebrations honoring the dead and risen Adonis share similarities with Easter celebrations for the dead and risen Christ. CYBELE AND ATTIS The myth of the great Asiatic mother goddess called CYBELE [si'be-lee and si-bee'lee], or KYBELE, in the Greek and Roman world, and her consort, ATTIS [at'tis], is another variation on the archetype of the Great Mother and her lover. Cybele originally was a bisexual deity who was castrated. From the severed organ an almond tree arose. Nana, daughter of a river-god, put a blossom from the tree to her bosom; it disappeared and she became pregnant. The beautiful Attis was born, and when he grew up, Cybele fell passionately in love with him. But he loved another, and Cybele, because of her jealousy, drove him mad. In his madness Attis castrated himself, and a repentant Cybele obtained Zeus' promise that the body of Attis would never decay. Religious ceremonies in honor of Attis celebrated resurrection and new life through the castration and death of the subordinate male in the grip of the eternal, dominant female. This is the powerful theme of Catullus' great poem, translated in the Archives section of this website. Aphrodite of Melos (Venus de Milo), late second century B.C., marble sculpture. APHRODITE AND ANCHISES The Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite tells how Zeus put into the heart of Aphrodite an overwhelming desire for the mortal Trojan ANCHISES [an-keye'seez]. Using all her wiles, Aphrodite seduced Anchises by tricking him into believing that she was a mortal. Discovering that he had slept with a goddess, he was terribly afraid that he would be enfeebled, "for no man retains his full strength who sleeps with an immortal goddess." Here is yet again the eternal theme of the Great Mother and the castration of her lover, only in a more muted form. The son of Aphrodite and Anchises was AENEAS [e-nee'as], the great hero of the Romans. EROS As with Aphrodite, there are various facets to the character of EROS [e'ros] (CUPID). He came out of Chaos, and he attended Aphrodite after she was born from the sea-foam. He (or a different Eros?) was said to be the son of Aphrodite and Ares. Eros was a young, handsome god of love and desire in general, but by the fifth century B.C. he had become very much the god of male homosexuality. THE SYMPOSIUM OF PLATO Plato's dialogue presents a profound analysis of love, the topic of this famous dinner party. Two of the speeches are particularly illuminating. The Speech of Aristophanes. Since this speech is by the famous writer of Greek Old Comedy, not surprisingly, it is both amusing and wise. Aristophanes explains that originally there were not just two sexes but a third, an androgynous sex, both male and female. These creatures (all three sexes) were round; they had four hands and feet, one head with two faces exactly alike but each looking in opposite directions, a double set of genitals, and so on. They were very strong and they dared to attack the gods. Zeus, in order to weaken them, decided to cut them in two. So all those who were originally of the androgynous sex became heterosexual beings, men who love women, and women who love men. Those of the female sex who were cut in half became lesbians and pursued women; those bisected from the male became male homosexuals who pursue males. Thus, like our ancestors, according to our own nature, we pursue our other half in a longing to become whole once again. Eros is the yearning desire of lover and beloved to become one person not only in life but also in death. Aristophanes by his creative humor has given a serious explanation through mythic truth of why some persons are heterosexual while others are homosexual; he also articulates a compelling definition of love, reiterated throughout the ages: Eros inspires that lonely and passionate search for the one person who alone can satisfy our longing for wholeness and completion. The Speech of Socrates. The great philosopher Socrates elucidates Platonic revelation about Eros. Socrates claims that his wisdom in the nature of love came from a woman from Mantinea named DIOTIMA [deye-o-tee'ma]. A new myth is told about the birth of Eros to explain his character. He is squalid and poor, not beautiful himself, but a lover of beauty and very resourceful, forever scheming and plotting to obtain what he desires passionately but does not himself already possess—beauty, goodness, and wisdom. This is the Eros who must inspire each of us to move from our love of physical beauty in the individual to a love of beauty in general, and to realize that beauty of the soul is more precious than that of the body. When two people have fallen in love with the beautiful soul of each other, they should proceed upward to pursue together a love of wisdom. Platonic Eros is a love inspired in the beginning by the sexual attraction of physical beauty, which must be transmuted into a love of the beautiful pursuits of the mind and the soul. Although Socrates' discourse dwells upon male homosexual attachments as his paradigm, his message transcends sexuality. Platonic lovers of both sexes, driven by Eros, must be capable of making the goal of their love not sexual satisfaction at all nor the procreation of children, but spiritual gratification from the procreation of ideas in their intellectual quest for beauty, goodness, and wisdom. CUPID The Greek Eros develops into the Roman Cupid, still a very familiar deity today. This mischievous little darling with a bow and arrows, who attends Venus, can inspire love of every kind, often very serious or even deadly, but usually not intellectual. CUPID AND PSYCHE The canonical version of this famous tale comes from the Roman novel, Metamorphoses, or The Golden Ass by the African author Apuleius. Thus Eros is called Cupid, who appears as a handsome, winged youth. PSYCHE [seye'kee] means "soul," and here is an allegory of the union of the human soul with the divine. Once upon a time, a king and queen had three daughters, of whom Psyche was so beautiful that Venus was jealous. She ordered Cupid to make Psyche fall in love with the most vile of creatures, but instead Cupid himself fell in love with Psyche. She was transported to a magnificent palace, where each night Cupid, as an anonymous bridegroom, visited her and departed quickly before sunrise. Psyche's two sisters, who were very jealous, visited her. Cupid warned of their treacherous purpose to persuade Psyche to look upon his face. He told her that she was pregnant and that she must keep their secret. Nevertheless, Psyche was tricked by her sisters into believing that she was sleeping with a monster and, at their advice, she hid a sharp knife and a burning lamp with the intention of slashing her lover in the neck when he was asleep. In the night her husband made love to Psyche and then fell asleep. As she raised the lamp, knife in hand, she saw the gentle and beautiful Cupid. Overcome by desire, she kissed him so passionately that the lamp dropped oil on the god's shoulder. Cupid leaped out of bed, and as he flew away, Psyche caught hold of his leg and soared aloft with him. Her strength gave way and she fell to earth, only to be admonished by Cupid for ignoring his warnings. In her despair, Psyche attempted unsuccessfully to commit suicide. As she wandered disconsolate she encountered her two evil sisters and lured each to her death. When Venus learned from Cupid all that had happened, she was enraged and imposed upon Psyche four impossible tasks. First, Psyche had to sort out a vast heap of a mixed variety of grains. She did this successfully with the help of an army of ants. Next, Psyche had to obtain the wool from dangerous sheep with thick golden fleeces. A murmuring reed told her to shake the trees under which the sheep had passed after which she could gather the woolly gold clinging to the branches. Then, Psyche was ordered to climb to the top of a high mountain, face the terrors of a frightening dragon, and collect in a jar chill water from a stream that fed the Underworld river of Cocytus. This she accomplished with the help of Zeus' eagle. Finally, Venus imposed the ultimate task, descent into the Underworld itself. Psyche was commanded to obtain from Persephone a box containing a fragment of her own beauty. As Psyche, in despair, was about to leap to her death from a high tower, the tower spoke to her and told her to take sops to mollify Cerberus, the dread hound guarding the realm of Hades, and money to pay the ferryman Charon; most important of all, she was not to look into the box. Of course Psyche looked into the box, which contained not the beauty of Persephone but the sleep of the dark night of the Underworld, and she was enveloped by this deathlike sleep. At last Cupid flew to the rescue of his beloved. He put sleep back into the box and, after reminding her that curiousity once before had been her undoing, told her to complete her final task. In the end, Venus was appeased. Psyche became one of the immortals, and on Mt. Olympus Jupiter ratified the marriage of Cupid and Psyche with a glorious wedding. A daughter was born to them called Pleasure (Voluptas) and they lived happily ever after.
Chapter 9