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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50569 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50569)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Herakles, the Hero of Thebes, and Other
-Heroes of the Myth, by Mary E. Burt and Zenaïde A. Ragozin
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Herakles, the Hero of Thebes, and Other Heroes of the Myth
- Adapted from the Second Book of the Primary Schools of Athens, Greece
-
-Author: Mary E. Burt
- Zenaïde A. Ragozin
-
-Release Date: November 28, 2015 [EBook #50569]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HERAKLES, HERO OF THEBES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Shaun Pinder, Sam W. and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note
-
-The pronunciation guide at the end of the book includes some
-characters with macrons above (ā, ē, ī, ō, ū) and some with breves
-above (ă, ĕ). If these do not display correctly, you may wish to
-change your font or file encoding settings.
-
-
-
-
- HERAKLES
-
- THE HERO OF THEBES
-
- AND OTHER HEROES OF THE MYTH
-
-
- Adapted from the Second Book of the
- Primary Schools of Athens, Greece
-
-
- BY
-
- MARY E. BURT
-
- _Author of "Literary Landmarks," "Stories
- from Plato," "Story of the German Iliad,"
- "The Child-Life Reading Study"; Editor of
- "The Cable Story Book," "The Eugene Field
- Book"; Teacher in the John A. Browning
- School, New York City_
-
- AND
-
- ZENAÏDE A. RAGOZIN
-
- _Author of "The Story of Chaldea," "The
- Story of Assyria," Etc.; Member of the
- Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain
- and Ireland, of the American Oriental
- Society, of the Société Ethnologique of
- Paris, etc._
-
-
- NEW YORK
- CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
- 1900
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1900, by
- CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
-
-
- TROW DIRECTORY
- PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPANY
- NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
-SCRIBNER'S SERIES OF SCHOOL READING.
-
-
-In Uniform Binding; each 12mo, _net_, 60 Cents.
-
- Lobo, Rag and Vixen. From "Wild Animals I Have Known." By Ernest
- Seton-Thompson. Illustrated.
-
- The Howells Story Book. Edited by Mary E. Burt and Mildred
- Howells. Illustrated.
-
- The Cable Story Book. Selections for School Reading, with the
- Story of the Author's Life. Edited by Mary E. Burt and Lucy
- Leffingwell Cable. Illustrated.
-
- The Eugene Field Book. Verses, Stories, and Letters for School
- Reading. Edited by Mary E. Burt and Mary B. Cable. Introduction
- by George W. Cable. Illustrated.
-
- Fanciful Tales. By Frank R. Stockton. Edited by Julia E.
- Langworthy. Introduction by Mary E. Burt.
-
- The Hoosier School-Boy. By Edward Eggleston. Illustrated.
-
- Children's Stories in American Literature, 1660-1860. By
- Henrietta C. Wright.
-
- Children's Stories in American Literature, 1860-1896. By
- Henrietta C. Wright.
-
- Odysseus, the Hero of Ithaca. By Mary E. Burt. A Translation of
- the Story of Odysseus as used in the Schools of Athens and
- Berlin. Fully Illustrated.
-
- Poems of American Patriotism. Chosen by Brander Matthews. 285
- pages.
-
- Twelve Naval Captains. By Molly Elliot Seawell. 233 pages.
- Illustrated.
-
- Herakles, the Hero of Thebes. By Mary E. Burt. A Translation of
- the Story of Herakles and other Greek Heroes, as used in the
- Schools of Athens. Illustrated.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: HERAKLES SLAYING A CENTAUR.
- (Giovanni Bologna.)]
-
-
-
-
- To
-
- SEVEN
-
- LITTLE GENTLEMEN
-
- WILLIE MACY
-
- REGGIE CHARLES
-
- LOUIS OLIVER
-
- GRISWOLD
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-The child's heart goes out to the man of action, the man who makes
-short work of things and gets directly at a result. He responds to
-life, to energy, quick wit, the blow that hits the nail on the head at
-the first stroke.
-
-The rapidity of action in the stories of Herakles, Jason, and other
-Heroes of the Myth, the prowess and courage and untiring endurance of
-the men, render the characters worthy subjects of thought to young
-minds, and have secured the stories a permanent place in educational
-literature. It is not elegant literature alone that boys need, but
-inspiring ideals which will impel them to stand fearlessly to their
-guns, to do the hard thing with untiring perseverance, to reach the
-result with unerring insight.
-
-It is exactly this unbending courage in Herakles and his comrade
-heroes, that has made them the backbone of literature for ages,
-holding their own in spite of the sapless literary fungus crowding our
-book-shelves.
-
-While travelling in Greece I found the children of the primary schools
-reading these stories in the lower grades, the book being the one used
-next above the primer. The interest was enthusiastic, and I brought
-home a copy of the book, which, with Madame Ragozin's collaboration, I
-have arranged as a first or second book of reading for our own
-schools.
-
- Mary E. Burt.
-
-The John A. Browning School, New York, March 15, 1900.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- Introduction xi
-
- CHAPTER
- I. The Babe Herakles 1
-
- II. Herakles is Doomed to Serve Eurystheus 4
-
- III. The First Labor--The Nemean Lion 6
-
- IV. The Second Labor--Herakles Kills the Water-Snake of
- Lake Lerna 9
-
- V. The Third Labor--The Golden-Horned Hind 12
-
- VI. The Fourth Labor--The Erymanthian Boar 15
-
- VII. The Fifth Labor--Herakles Cleans the Augeian Stables 19
-
- VIII. The Sixth Labor--The Birds of Stymphalos 22
-
- IX. The Seventh Labor--Herakles Catches the Mad Bull
- of Crete 24
-
- X. The Eighth Labor--The Horses of Diomedes 25
-
- XI. The Ninth Labor--The Girdle of Hippolyte 27
-
- XII. The Tenth Labor--The Cattle of Geryon 30
-
- XIII. The Eleventh Labor--The Golden Apples of Hesperides 35
-
- XIV. The Twelfth Labor--Herakles Fetches Cerberus Out
- of Hades 40
-
- XV. Theseus, the Hero of Athens 43
-
- XVI. The First Exploits of Theseus. He Finds His Father 47
-
- XVII. The Adventures of Theseus 51
-
- XVIII. The Adventures of Theseus 56
-
- XIX. Jason, the Hero of Thessaly 60
-
- XX. Jason Claims His Throne 63
-
- XXI. The Expedition 69
-
- XXII. Jason Finds the Golden Fleece 74
-
- XXIII. Orpheus, the Hero of the Lyre 78
-
- XXIV. Pelops, the Hero of the Peloponnesos 83
-
- XXV. Perseus, the Hero of Argos 87
-
- XXVI. Perseus Finds the Gorgons 92
-
- XXVII. Perseus Rescues Andromeda 95
-
- XXVIII. Perseus Becomes King of Tiryns 100
-
- XXIX. Triptolemos, the Hero of Eleusis, and Demeter,
- the Earth-Mother 103
-
- XXX. Demeter's Grief 106
-
- XXXI. Demeter's Joy 111
-
- XXXII. Triptolemos Becomes a Hero. Demeter's Gift 116
-
- XXXIII. Prometheus, the Champion of Mankind 118
-
- XXXIV. Prometheus Unbound 122
-
- XXXV. Deukalion, the Champion of a New Race 126
-
- XXXVI. Dædalos, a Hero of Invention 132
-
- XXXVII. Phaethon, a Hero of Bad Fortune 136
-
- XXXVIII. The Death of Phaethon 141
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- Herakles Slaying a Centaur _Frontispiece_
-
- FACING PAGE
- The Priestess of Apollo at Delphi 6
-
- The Temple to Theseus at the Foot of the Acropolis
- in Athens 60
-
- Orpheus Leading Eurydike Out of Hades 80
-
- The Return of Persephone 114
-
- Dædalos and Ikaros 134
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-THE LAND OF THE HEROES
-
-
-One look at the map of Greece will show us that it is the smallest of
-European countries. For many hundreds of years it was inhabited by the
-handsomest, bravest, and most intelligent people in the world. But
-these people, the Greeks, or Hellenes, as they called themselves, had
-not always lived in the country.
-
-Thousands of years before the Hellenes came to Greece it was a perfect
-wilderness of mountains, narrow valleys, torrents, and tangled
-forests. It was a land of wild beasts, and they were so numerous and
-fierce that there was almost no room for men.
-
-Yet men did live there, but we know nothing about them or what they
-were like, except that they hid in caves and had hardly got beyond the
-art of making fire, trapping and killing the less dangerous animals
-with sticks or little arrows pointed with stones, and using their meat
-for food and hides for clothing.
-
-Then the new people, the Greeks, began to come into the country. They
-came in boats from across the sea and on foot from the north, through
-numberless mountain-passes. They did not come all at once, but in
-small detachments, in single tribes, so that it took them many years
-to spread over the country.
-
-The new race was nobler than the old, more advanced in knowledge and
-in the arts of civilized life. It was not a race to be content with
-caves and forest-dens, but each tribe, after it had chosen a district
-and taken possession of it, selected some high hill, built rude
-dwellings upon it and temples to its patron gods, a public
-treasure-house also, and enclosed the hill with strong walls. It had
-become a fortress, and was called Acropolis, in their language.
-
-Each tribe, of course, had its leaders, usually belonging to some
-family which had earned the gratitude and loyalty of the people by
-brave and affectionate service, and the leadership descended from
-father to son. These were the kings and they resided within the
-Acropolis.
-
-Around it and under the protection of its walls the people built their
-own huts and began to clear the land. They sowed various crops,
-planted the vine and the olive, and raised herds of sheep and goats.
-There was room enough within the walls for all the families, with
-their herds, to find shelter in the Acropolis in times of danger, from
-the attacks of the wild natives or of the still wilder beasts of the
-forests and fields.
-
-Now these latter were by far the most dangerous enemies of the new
-settlers, who soon found that they could venture but a few miles from
-their small home-farms without encountering huge and ferocious animals
-which the increased herds attracted and which their miserable weapons
-were utterly insufficient to slay or even put to flight.
-
-Each small district had its particular terror, just as many districts
-of India now have a man-eating tiger, which makes miles and miles of
-country around unsafe for man or beast.
-
-It became a question which of the two, the men or the wild animals,
-would remain in possession. Then young and courageous men, sons of the
-ruling families, athletes in strength, practised in the arts of war,
-commanding through their greater wealth the use of better weapons,
-felt it their duty to their people to do for them what the poor
-herdsmen and laborers had neither the strength nor the skill to do for
-themselves.
-
-From all the central royal cities they started singly or in small
-troops, a bevy of young heroes, as eager for the delights of adventure
-as for the public good. Year after year they wandered across country
-seeking the most impassable wildernesses, directed by the stories they
-heard on their way to the dens of the cruel monsters, which they
-usually overcame by force or cunning.
-
-Then they would return to their homes triumphant, bearing the proof of
-their incredible prowess, the hides, or horns, or heads of the
-monsters they had slain. Thus they put new heart into their people.
-Their trophies seemed to say: "You see these creatures were not so
-terrible as they might have been; what we have done others can do." So
-they did a double good--one immediate by the destruction of the
-dreaded foes and by the opening of the land to the planters and the
-tillers; the other even more far-reaching and more beneficent in its
-results by raising men's spirits, inspiring them with confidence and
-with the ambition to show that they were not mere helpless boors,
-cowed and dependent on their betters.
-
-The Greek nation in years to come proved itself a nation of heroes and
-was so called by fame. But who can tell how much these heroes were
-indebted for this honorable distinction which has remained by them to
-this day, to the early vigorous education which those doughty
-champions of old imparted to them, not by preaching or advice, but by
-their own dauntless example.
-
-Can we wonder if their people's passionate gratitude and unselfish
-admiration survived those glorious men through ages? Can we wonder if
-after centuries had come and gone the memory of their deeds and
-persons appeared to later generations through a halo of wonder and
-awe?
-
-Deeds of a remote past always assume gigantic proportions. "Surely,"
-men would say, "surely, those heroes were more than ordinary mortals!
-They had more than human strength, endurance, wisdom. Neither iron
-fang nor claw of steel could harm them. They died, indeed, but of
-their nature they must have been half divine; their mothers were
-human, but surely the gods themselves were their fathers."
-
-And thus it was settled, and for many, many hundreds of years the
-Greeks continued to honor their ancient heroes as half-divine men, or
-demi-gods, and to erect altars to them and come to them with prayers
-and offerings. The Greek had to grow in mind and soul high enough to
-grasp the truth that there can be only one God, and that no man, high
-as he may tower above his kind, can be more than human.
-
-But it was a beautiful and ennobling belief, and at first sight it
-seems a pity that it was ever lost, yet in reality it was a great
-gain, for men may think they have an excuse for not putting forth
-their bravest efforts if they believe that the gods only can achieve
-deeds of courage. There is no reason why men may not aspire to any
-height of bravery which has been gained by other men.
-
-The undying energy embodied in the characters of these old heroes is
-the inheritance of every child. The children of America are not born
-the sons of ruling houses. But they are destined to be the guardians
-and rulers of their native land. And if the children take into their
-future lives the heroism they first realize in ancient story, they
-will find themselves, when the time comes, armed with the same
-courage, endurance, and love of human beings which have made the
-heroes of all lands and ages.
-
-
-
-
-HERAKLES
-
-AND OTHER HEROES OF THE MYTH
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE BABE HERAKLES
-
-
-Far away in the land of Argos there once lived a beautiful maiden, the
-daughter of a brave king. She was tall and fair and her name was
-Alkmene. Her father was rich in the possession of many oxen.
-
-Her husband also owned great herds of oxen. He had so many that he
-could not tell them from those of the king. So he quarrelled with the
-king and slew him. Then he took Alkmene and fled from his native land.
-They came to Thebes and made it their home.
-
-Here Herakles was born, the babe who was stronger than the strongest
-of men. The goddess, Hera, hated Herakles. She was the wife of Zeus,
-the Lord of Thunder and King of Heaven. Hera was angry because Zeus
-loved him, and she was jealous because Zeus had foretold that
-Herakles would become the greatest of men. More than that Zeus had
-deceived Hera and sent the infant Herakles to her to be nursed that he
-might be made strong and god-like by tasting divine milk.
-
-So Hera sent two large snakes to devour the babe when she found out
-what child it was that she had fed. Herakles lay asleep in the great
-brazen shield which his father carried in battle, for he had no other
-cradle. The fearful serpents crept up with open mouths into the shield
-with the sleeping babe.
-
-As soon as Alkmene saw them she was terribly frightened and called in
-a loud voice for help. His father, hearing the outcry of Alkmene, ran
-into the house with his sword drawn and a great many warriors came
-with weapons in their hands.
-
-Herakles was only eight months old, but before his father could reach
-him he sat up in his bed and seized the serpents by their necks with
-his little hands. He squeezed and choked them with such force that
-they died.
-
-When Alkmene saw that the two snakes were dead and that Herakles was
-safe, she rejoiced greatly. But Hera's heart was filled with wrath and
-she began to plan more mischief against the child.
-
-Herakles had his free will as long as he was a boy. His teachers were
-celebrated heroes who taught him boxing, wrestling, riding, and all
-kinds of games. He learned to read and write and to hurl the spear and
-shoot with bows and arrows. Linos taught him music.
-
-Herakles had a violent temper, and one day as Linos was teaching him
-to play the lute, the good teacher had reason to punish him. Herakles
-flew into a rage at this and struck Linos and killed him. Then his
-father sent him to the hills and left him to the care of herdsmen.
-
-The boy grew to be very large and strong. While he was yet a youth he
-slew a lion of great size that had killed many of his father's cattle.
-He went home wearing the lion's skin as a sign of his victory.
-
-Because he was so brave the King of Thebes gave his daughter to him in
-marriage and he lived happily with her for many years. But a sudden
-insanity came upon him during which he mistook his wife and children
-for wild beasts and shot them down with his bow and arrows. When
-Herakles recovered from his insanity and saw what he had done his
-grief was boundless.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-HERAKLES IS DOOMED TO SERVE EURYSTHEUS
-
-
-The wrath of Hera followed Herakles. When Zeus saw that Hera's heart
-was filled with anger toward Herakles, he mused within his own mind
-how he might best appease her resentment and protect the young man.
-
-So he called the gods together in council and they advised that
-Herakles be placed in bondage to his uncle Eurystheus, to serve him as
-a slave, and they ordained that he should perform twelve hard tasks,
-after which he would be numbered among the gods.
-
-Eurystheus was a mean fellow, stupid and cowardly. He was glad enough
-to have a chance to bully a man wiser and stronger than himself. He
-was born in Tiryns, a great fortress with many castles, built upon a
-large rock, but he had been made King of Argos and lived in the
-capital, Mykenæ, and he resolved to keep Herakles as far away from the
-kingdom as possible, for in his heart he was afraid of him.
-
-Herakles was grieved at being compelled to serve a man so much below
-him in strength and character, so he consulted the oracle at Delphi
-to see if there was any escape, but he did not murmur, for he was
-willing to obey the law of the gods.
-
-The oracle of Delphi was a mysterious influence, a divine spirit which
-expressed itself through a priestess living in a sacred temple. It was
-supposed to be the voice of the god Apollo using this human agency for
-making known his will to men. The priestess became inspired to utter
-Apollo's holy laws by sitting on a golden tripod (or stool with three
-legs) over a chasm in the rock, from whence arose a sacred, sulphurous
-vapor which she breathed in as the breath of the god, and which caused
-her to breathe out his commands in wonderful sayings.
-
-The chasm from which the vapor issued was called The Chasm of the
-Oracle, and was in a large apartment or room in the temple. This
-celebrated temple had many columns of marble and splendid rooms made
-beautiful with thousands of marble statues. It stood on the side of
-Mount Parnassos, whose snow-covered head reaches into the clouds and
-looks down into the blue Gulf of Corinth below it to the south.
-
-It was here that Apollo killed the great dragon, Pytho, which had been
-the scourge of the land for many years, and the grateful people built
-the temple in his honor. The oracle bade Herakles go forth to be the
-slave of Eurystheus and so atone for all his sins, but it gave him as
-a compensation a dear friend, Iolaos, who was also his young nephew.
-Wherever Herakles went Iolaos went with him and helped him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE FIRST LABOR--THE NEMEAN LION
-
-
-It happened that a fearful lion lived in Nemea, a wild district in
-upper Argolis, and it devastated all the land and was the terror of
-the inhabitants. Eurystheus ordered Herakles to bring him the skin of
-this lion. So Herakles took his bow, his quiver, and heavy club and
-started out in search of the beast.
-
-When he had reached a little town which is in the neighborhood of
-Nemea he was kindly received by a good countryman, who promised to put
-him on the track of the lion if he would sacrifice the animal to Zeus.
-
- [Illustration: THE PRIESTESS OF APOLLO AT DELPHI.
- (Michael Angelo.)]
-
-Herakles promised, and the countryman went with him to show him the
-way. When they reached the place where traces of the lion were
-seen, Herakles said to his guide: "Remain here thirty days. If I
-return safely from the lion-hunt you must sacrifice a sheep to Zeus,
-for he is the god who will have saved me. But if I am slain by the
-lion you must sacrifice the sheep to me, for after my death I shall be
-honored as a hero." Having said this, Herakles went his way.
-
-He reached the wilderness of Nemea, where he spent several days in
-looking for the lion, but without success. Not a trace of him could be
-found, nor did he fall in with any human being, for there was no one
-bold enough to wander around in that wilderness. Finally he spied the
-lion as he was about to crawl into his den.
-
-The lion was indeed worthy of his terrible fame. His size was
-prodigious, his eyes shot forth flames of fire, and his tongue licked
-his bloody chops. When he roared, the whole desert resounded.
-
-But Herakles stood fearlessly near a grove from whence he might
-approach the lion, and suddenly shot at him with his bow and arrow,
-hitting him squarely in the breast. The arrow glanced aside, and
-slipping around the lion's neck, fell on a rock behind him. When
-Herakles saw this he knew that the lion was proof against arrows and
-must be killed in some other way, and seizing his club, he gave chase
-to him.
-
-The lion made for a cave which had two mouths. Herakles closed up one
-of the entrances with heavy rocks and entered the other. He seized the
-lion by the throat and then came a terrible struggle, but Herakles
-squeezed him in his mighty arms until he gasped for breath, and at
-last lay dead.
-
-Then Herakles took up the huge body and, throwing it easily over his
-shoulder, returned to the place where he had left the countryman. It
-was on the last of the thirty appointed days, and the rustic,
-supposing that Herakles had come to his death through the lion, was
-about to offer up a sheep as a sacrifice in his honor.
-
-He rejoiced greatly when he saw Herakles alive and victorious, and the
-sheep was offered up to Zeus. Herakles left the little town and went
-to Mykenæ to the house of his uncle and showed him the dead body of
-the terrible lion. Eurystheus was so greatly frightened at the sight
-that he hid himself within a tower whose walls were built of solid
-brass.
-
-And he ordered Herakles not to enter the city again, but to stay
-outside of its gates until he had performed the other labors.
-
-Herakles stripped the skin from the lion with his fingers, although
-it was so tough, and knowing it to be arrow-proof, took it for a cloak
-and wore it as long as he lived.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE SECOND LABOR--HERAKLES KILLS THE WATER-SNAKE OF LAKE LERNA
-
-
-Not far from Mykenæ is a small lake called Lerna. It is formed from a
-large spring at the foot of a hill. In this lake there lived a
-water-snake called the Hydra. It was a snake of uncommon size, with
-nine heads. Eight of the heads were mortal, but the one in the middle
-was immortal.
-
-The Hydra frequently came out of the water and swallowed up herds of
-cattle, laying waste the surrounding country. Eurystheus ordered
-Herakles to kill the snake, so he put on his lion's skin, and taking
-his club, started out. He mounted his chariot and took his faithful
-friend Iolaos, who acted as charioteer.
-
-Every warrior had to have a charioteer to drive the horses, leaving
-him free to use both of his hands. But driving was by no means the
-charioteer's only duty; he had also to look out for danger and
-protect the warrior with his shield as well as to supply him with
-arrows from the quiver suspended at the side of every chariot, and
-with reserve spears when his own was broken in the fray.
-
-It is clear, therefore, that the warrior's life was entirely in the
-hands of his charioteer, so it is no wonder that only the hero's
-dearest and most trusted friends were allowed to serve him in this
-way.
-
-After driving along for a while through groves of olive-trees and past
-pleasant vineyards, they came to wild places and saw Lake Lerna
-gleaming through the trees. Having reached the lake, Herakles
-descended from the chariot, left the horses in care of Iolaos, and
-went to hunt for the snake.
-
-He found it in a swampy place where it was hiding. Herakles shot some
-burning arrows at the Hydra and forced it to come out. It darted
-furiously at him, but he met it fearlessly, put his foot upon its
-tail, and with his club began to strike off its heads. He could not
-accomplish anything in this way, for as fast as he knocked off one
-head two others grew in its place.
-
-The snake coiled itself so firmly around one of Herakles' legs that he
-was no longer able to stir from the place. Added to all this there
-came a huge crab to the assistance of the snake. It crept up to
-Herakles' foot, and seizing it with its sharp claws, inflicted painful
-wounds. Herakles killed the crab with his club and called Iolaos to
-help him.
-
-Under Herakles' directions Iolaos produced a fire-brand which he
-applied to the neck as fast as Herakles cut off one of the snake's
-heads, in this way preventing them from growing again. Finally it came
-the turn of the head which could not die. Cutting it off Herakles
-buried it in the ground, placing a heavy stone over it.
-
-Then he dipped some arrows into the Hydra's blood, which was
-poisonous, so that whoever was wounded by one of them could not be
-healed. The least scratch inflicted by such an arrow was incurable.
-
-Eurystheus, of course, had no word of praise for his great bondsman,
-but the people, knowing that the place was now safe, flocked to the
-land in great numbers and drained the lake, which was really not much
-more than a big marshy pond, and in their new homes they blessed the
-hero's name forever. That was the prize for which Herakles cared the
-most.
-
-If you should go to-day to that old battle-field of Herakles you
-would still find the spring flowing from the rocks, but Lake Lerna
-exists only in story.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE THIRD LABOR--THE GOLDEN-HORNED HIND
-
-
-The lower part of Greece is a most peculiar-looking bit of country.
-You would think it had been torn off from the bulk of the land but
-kept hanging on to it by a small narrow strip. Then, too, its shape is
-so queer that it has been compared to all sorts of things; sometimes
-to a mulberry leaf, sometimes to an open hand.
-
-If we keep to the latter comparison, we will find that the part which
-answers to the palm of the hand is a large and intricate knot of high
-wooded mountains which shoot out spurs in all directions. These spurs
-with the land attached to them stretch out into the sea as so many
-small peninsulas and not badly represent the fingers of the hand. The
-central knot of mountains is even now different from the country all
-around.
-
-The people there are wilder, very much given to robbery and violence
-and very slow to accept new ways of life or improvements of any kind.
-In the old heroic times of several thousand years ago that country was
-simply an impassable wilderness.
-
-It was overcrowded with wild beasts, among which the bear must have
-been the most plentiful since the land was named after him,
-Arcadia--the land of Bears. Wolves were known also to abound.
-
-The men who had their villages in the narrow valleys by the
-mountain-streams were fierce and lawless. There was nothing for them
-to do but to keep goats and hunt all day long. Arcadia was truly the
-paradise of hunters and therefore held as specially sacred to the
-beautiful huntress, the goddess, Artemis--the Lady of the Chase. She
-roamed over hills and valleys and through woods and groves by
-moonlight to protect the herds and flocks, this beautiful daughter of
-Zeus.
-
-In these same mountains of Arcadia there roamed a lovely Hind sacred
-to Queen Artemis, who gave her golden horns so that she might be known
-from other deer by the huntsmen. Thus they might be saved from the
-crime of slaying what was sacred to the gods. Eurystheus ordered
-Herakles to bring him the Hind alive, for he did not dare to have her
-killed.
-
-Herakles spent a whole year seeking her from the mountain-tops down
-to the valleys, through tangles of brush, over streams and in forests,
-but he was not able to catch her. After a long chase he forced her at
-last to take refuge on the side of a mountain and from that place to
-go down to a river to drink.
-
-In order that he might prevent the deer from crossing the water,
-Herakles was obliged slightly to wound one of her legs. Not till then
-was he able to secure his game and carry it to Eurystheus.
-
-On his way to Mykenæ Herakles was met by Artemis, who upbraided him
-for having captured the Hind belonging to her. Herakles made answer:
-"Great Goddess, if I have chased and caught thy deer, I did it out of
-necessity, not impiety; for thou well knowest that the gods ordered me
-to be a servant to Eurystheus and he commanded me to catch the Hind."
-
-With these words he soothed the anger of the goddess and brought the
-golden-horned Hind to Mykenæ.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE FOURTH LABOR--THE ERYMANTHIAN BOAR
-
-
-Elis is a beautiful plain lying to the north and west of Arcadia. Here
-once in five years there was a great festival in honor of Zeus, when
-all the men and boys ran races, wrestled, boxed and played all sorts
-of games. Between Arcadia and Elis there is a high mountain-range,
-called Erymanthos. There a terrible Boar had its lair.
-
-The Boar frequently left its den and came down into the plains and
-killed cattle, destroyed fields of grain and attacked people.
-Eurystheus, having heard of this Boar, made up his mind that he wanted
-the beast alive, and so ordered Herakles to bring it to him.
-
-The hero put on his lion skin once more and started for the mountain.
-On his way he stopped at a little town where the Centaurs had their
-home. These strange people were half man and half horse. We have heard
-that they were really men, but such good riders that they seemed to be
-one with their mountain ponies.
-
-Their home was just on the edge of a high plain, covered with
-oak-trees and looking down across a wild valley, through which flowed
-the Erymanthos River. There were many forests and little streams and
-dreadful gorges in the valley, where these horsemen used to hunt and
-fish.
-
-The Centaur Chief, Pholos, received Herakles as a guest and gave him
-cooked meat to eat, while he ate it raw himself, after the Centaurs'
-custom.
-
-When Herakles had eaten his fill, he said to Pholos: "Thy food is
-indeed good and tasteful. But I should enjoy it still more if I could
-have a sip of wine, for I am very thirsty." To which Pholos replied:
-"My dear guest, we have very fine and fragrant wine in this mountain,
-and I should like nothing better than to give thee some of it. But I
-am afraid to do so, because it has a strong aroma, and the other
-Centaurs, if they smelt it, might come to my cave and want some. They
-are very fierce and lawless, and might do thee great harm."
-
-"Let not that trouble thee," said Herakles. "I am not afraid of the
-Centaurs." So the wine was placed before him and he drank of it. In a
-little while a great noise was heard outside of the cave, a shouting
-of many wild voices and a stamping of many horses' feet. What Pholos
-feared had come to pass.
-
-The Centaurs had smelt the fragrance of the wine and in full armor
-had made for the cave of Pholos. Then began a terrible fight. The
-Centaurs fell upon Herakles with pine-branches, rocks, axes, and
-fire-brands, and the clouds, their mothers, poured a flood of water on
-him. But Herakles was too clever for them. He put two to flight,
-prevented others from entering the cave, and shot the rest down with
-his arrows.
-
-Pholos was a kind-hearted chief, and hearing one of the Centaurs
-crying for help outside of his cave, went out to him and tried to pull
-the arrow from his wound, wondering at the same time that so slight a
-weapon could cause his death. But the arrow slipped out of his hand
-and struck his own foot. It made only a scratch, but it could not be
-healed, for the arrow was one of those which Herakles had dipped in
-the blood of the Hydra, and poor Pholos breathed his last.
-
-The death of his kind host was a great sorrow to Herakles, for in
-those times, when there was so little safety in travelling, the bond
-of kindness and gratitude between host and guest was one of the
-closest and most sacred, often more so than that between members of
-the same family. In all their later lives, host and guest could never
-meet as enemies, and if the chances of war brought them face to face
-as foes, they were not expected to fight. They exchanged greetings and
-gifts and drove off in different directions.
-
-Herakles therefore sincerely mourned his friend, performed over him
-the proper funeral rites, and buried him with all due honors in the
-side of the mountain. There he left him, sore at heart, but comforted
-by knowing that he had done all he could do to reconcile the shade of
-Pholos, and that his soul would bear him no grudge in Spirit Land.
-
-Then Herakles went on his way in search of the Boar. He soon spied him
-in a dense thicket and chased him to the very top of the mountain. The
-mountain-top was covered with deep snow, which prevented the Boar from
-running fast enough to escape. So Herakles ran up to him, caught him
-in a net, threw him over his shoulder and carried him off alive to
-Mykenæ.
-
-It is said that Eurystheus hid himself in a large brazen bowl when he
-heard Herakles approaching the city, and that Herakles threw the Boar
-into the same brazen bowl as the safest place in which to keep him.
-How astonished Eurystheus must have been to find himself in such
-terrible company! And we can fancy that he scrambled out with all
-possible haste.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE FIFTH LABOR--HERAKLES CLEANS THE AUGEIAN STABLES
-
-
-We have already read about Elis, a plain in the southwestern part of
-Greece, where all the people used to worship Zeus and where they built
-a wonderful temple in his honor. They built a temple to Hera, his
-wife, also, and many other temples which were filled with statues.
-What a fine time you would have if you could only go and see this
-beautiful land. Perhaps you will some time.
-
-The temples are in ruins now, and they cover enough ground for a small
-town. The huge blocks of marble lie on the ground just as they fell,
-and there are the marble floors as people used to see them two
-thousand years ago. There is a high hill close to the ruins. It is
-called the mountain of Kronos, "Old Father Time." Kronos is said to
-have been one of the early kings of Elis and he was the father of
-Zeus. He swallowed up his children when they were babes, if we care
-to believe what is said of him, and the story could easily be true,
-for Time swallows everything if he is only long enough about it.
-
-The strong men and the boys used to come to Elis to have athletic
-games in honor of Zeus. They ran races, they boxed, they shot arrows
-and did all sorts of things to show how strong they were. There are
-two rivers at the foot of Mount Kronos, and beyond the rivers are many
-low hills where people used to sit and watch the games.
-
-There was at one time a king of Elis, Augeias, who was so rich in
-cattle that he hardly knew what to do with them and consequently he
-built a stable miles long and drove his cows into it. He did this year
-after year and the herds kept growing larger. He could not get men
-enough to take care of his stables and the cows could hardly get into
-them on account of the filth; or if they did get in they were never
-sure of getting out again because the dirt was piled so high.
-
-Eurystheus thought he had found a disagreeable and impossible task for
-Herakles, and so he ordered him to clean out the stables in one day.
-Herakles told Augeias that he must clean the barns and promised to do
-it in one day if he would give him one-tenth of all his cows. The
-king thought Herakles would never be able to do it in one day and
-readily promised him in the presence of his son one-tenth of the cows.
-
-The king's stables were close to the two rivers, near Mount Kronos.
-Herakles cut channels and sent the rivers running into the stables.
-They rushed along and carried the dirt out so quickly that the king
-was astonished. He did not intend to pay the promised reward and
-pretended that he never made any such promise.
-
-And he said he would have the matter come before a court and the
-judges should decide it. Then Herakles called the little prince as a
-witness before the judges, and the boy told the truth about it, which
-caused the king to fall into such a rage that he sent both his son and
-Herakles out of the country. Herakles left the land of Elis and went
-back to Mykenæ. But his heart was filled with contempt for the
-faithless king.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-THE SIXTH LABOR--THE BIRDS OF STYMPHALOS
-
-
-On the northern limit of Arcadia is a huge cliff, over which pours a
-black ribbon of water. At the bottom of the cliff it is lost among
-piles of rocks. The water itself is not black, but it appears so
-because the rock is covered with black moss, and so the stream is
-called the Styx or Black Water.
-
-The Styx is icy cold and it runs along under the ground so that it
-seems to belong to the dead, and is called the River of Death. When
-the gods used to make a promise which they did not dare to break they
-said, "I promise by the Styx." This promise was called "the Great Oath
-of the Gods."
-
-Farther on in the land of Arcadia there is a vale called Stymphalos.
-It lies among the mountains and is open to the storms of winter and
-the floods of spring. And there are a lake and a city both called
-Stymphalos. The people of Athens hope to carry the water of this lake
-to Athens by means of an underground channel. All about the lake are
-hills covered with firs and plane-trees.
-
-Lake Stymphalos was the home of a countless number of birds which held
-noisy meetings in the woods. They had iron claws and their feathers
-were sharper than arrows. They were so strong and fierce that they
-dared attack men, and would tear them to pieces that they might feast
-upon human flesh. They bore a striking resemblance to the Harpies, and
-were the terror of all the people who lived near Stymphalos.
-
-Eurystheus ordered Herakles to drive the birds away. So Herakles took
-his bow and quiver and went to the lake. But the forests were so dense
-that he could not see the birds, and he sat down to think of the best
-way to drive them out. Suddenly the goddess of wisdom came to him to
-help him.
-
-The goddess gave him a huge rattle and told him how to use it.
-Herakles went up on to the highest mountain that lies near the lake
-and shook the rattle with a will. The birds were so frightened by the
-noise that they came out of the thick wood where their nests were and
-flew high up into the air.
-
-Their heavy feathers fell like flakes in a driving snow-storm.
-Herakles shot at the birds with his arrows. He killed a great many of
-them and the rest were so scared that they flew away and were never
-seen again at Stymphalos.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE SEVENTH LABOR--HERAKLES CATCHES THE MAD BULL OF CRETE
-
-
-There is an island south of Greece which is so large that it would
-take you from early morning until late at night to sail past it. There
-are high mountains all along the shore and they look as if they were
-covered with snow. There is a cave in one of the mountains where Zeus
-was hidden when he was a babe so that his father, Kronos, should not
-swallow him. The nymphs fed him on honey and a famous goat gave him
-milk.
-
-The name of this island was Crete, and Minos ruled there as king. It
-was his duty to sacrifice to Poseidon, the God of the Sea, whatever
-came up out of the water.
-
-Minos was rich and greedy. He loved his cattle better than the will of
-the gods. It came to pass that a wonderful Bull rose from the sea
-while Minos was king. When Minos saw him he admired the beauty of the
-animal so much that he resolved to keep him. He drove the Bull into
-his barn and sacrificed another to the God of the Sea.
-
-Poseidon grew angry with him and caused the Bull to become mad so that
-no one dared to approach him. Eurystheus ordered Herakles to catch him
-and bring him to Mykenæ.
-
-So Herakles went to Crete and begged Minos to give him the Bull. The
-king told him that he was entirely welcome to the Bull if he could
-catch him. Herakles seized him by the horns and bound his feet
-together and carried him off to Mykenæ.
-
-There he showed the mad animal to Eurystheus and then set him free.
-The Bull wandered off to Sparta and over the hills of Arcadia and
-crossing the Isthmus, he reached Marathon, where he left the land and
-swam off into the sea.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE EIGHTH LABOR--THE HORSES OF DIOMEDES
-
-
-Greece was bounded on the north by a wild and mountainous land, called
-Thrace. The natives were not of Greek stock and remained fierce,
-lawless, and cruel for a long time after Greece had become the most
-civilized of countries. They were so quarrelsome and such desperate
-fighters that their country was supposed to be the favorite residence
-of the war god, Ares.
-
-The king who reigned in Thrace at the time of Herakles was so much
-worse than the rest of the people that he was said to be Ares' own
-son, and he was called the storm king. He was very fond of horses and
-kept a breed of them after his own heart. They were man-eating horses,
-which he fed on the flesh of any strangers who came to that country or
-that were wrecked on the shore, thus breaking the most sacred laws and
-making himself hated by men and gods. The horses were blood-thirsty
-and so furious that they had to be chained to their stalls.
-
-Eurystheus commanded Herakles to bring these horses to his stables in
-Mykenæ. This time Herakles took several friends with him, who helped
-him catch the horses and lead them to the shore. Diomedes, having
-heard of the robbery, started in pursuit with many armed men.
-
-Herakles and his friends went by sea. They attacked the guards and led
-the horses down to the ship. A terrible battle followed, in which the
-wicked king was slain by Herakles, who threw him as food to the
-horses. The warriors who helped Diomedes were put to flight and some
-of Herakles' best men were also killed. With the rest he drove the
-horses into his ship and brought them safely to Mykenæ.
-
-Eurystheus, of course, had no intention of keeping them in his stables
-and had them set loose. They ran off into the forests of Arcadia and
-were never seen again. It was thought that they were devoured by the
-mountain wolves.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE NINTH LABOR--THE GIRDLE OF HIPPOLYTE
-
-
-Eurystheus, as we have seen, sent Herakles a little farther every time
-in hopes of never seeing him again. It would take you a whole day
-going on the best steamer to get to Crete from Athens, and in those
-days, when steamers had not been thought of, the sailing must have
-been slow indeed. Eurystheus now sent the hero yet farther off to the
-Black Sea, on the southern shore of which there lived the Amazons, a
-nation of warlike women.
-
-The Amazons were brought up like men. Their main occupation was war,
-and they were excellent horsewomen. They were sharpshooters with the
-bow and arrow. Hippolyte, the queen of the Amazons, was a brave and
-handsome woman. She wore a celebrated girdle, the gift of Ares, as a
-sign of her queenly rank.
-
-Eurystheus had a daughter who had heard of the beauty of the famous
-girdle which was worn by the Amazon queen. She begged her father to
-send Herakles to bring it to her. Then Eurystheus ordered Herakles to
-fetch the girdle, and he manned a ship and sailed away, taking several
-companions with him.
-
-After many wanderings they reached the Black Sea and sailed to the
-Amazon country. Queen Hippolyte was at once informed that some
-strangers had arrived from a far-off land, and she came down to the
-shore to learn why they had come. Herakles told her that a princess
-had sent him to get the girdle given her by Ares. Hippolyte admired
-the bold hero for his frankness and promised that she would give it to
-him.
-
-But Hera changed herself into an Amazon and rushing into the midst of
-an army of them cried out, "The strangers are carrying off our queen!"
-Then all the Amazons snatched up their arms and rushed on horseback
-to the ship. When Herakles saw them coming armed to attack his men, he
-thought Hippolyte had betrayed him and he slew her and took her
-girdle.
-
-Then he attacked the rest of the Amazons and put them to flight. When
-the battle was over, Herakles and his companions went on board the
-ship and sailed for home.
-
-Soon after they had started on their way to Mykenæ they found Hesione,
-the daughter of Laömedon, on the shore chained to a rock. Laömedon was
-at that time king of Troy, and Herakles and his companions stopped to
-find out why the daughter of a great king had to suffer such a
-terrible punishment. She told Herakles that Apollo, the sun god, and
-Poseidon, the god of the sea, once took on the form of man and began
-to build walls around the city of Troy. Her father promised to aid
-them but neglected to keep his promise. This conduct made the gods
-indignant and Apollo sent a pestilence to rage in the city while
-Poseidon sent a sea-monster which came up out of the ocean and
-devoured the people.
-
-Laömedon asked the priest of Apollo how he might appease the wrath of
-the gods. The priest answered that the city would be freed from the
-double plague if Laömedon would chain his daughter to the rock on the
-shore where the monster might devour her.
-
-Laömedon obeyed the oracle and had her chained to the cliff near the
-sea. Just then Herakles arrived and stopped near the shore, when
-Laömedon with hot tears entreated him to save his daughter. Herakles
-promised to do it under the condition that Laömedon should give him as
-a reward a famous horse in his possession.
-
-Herakles killed the sea-monster, but Laömedon again did not keep his
-promise and Herakles left Troy, his heart filled with scorn for the
-faithless king. On his return to Mykenæ he gave the girdle of the
-Amazon queen to his cousin, the daughter of Eurystheus.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-THE TENTH LABOR--THE CATTLE OF GERYON
-
-
-Iberia, now called Spain, lies at the farthest end of Europe, and
-beyond it, in the Atlantic, is an island which was once the home of
-Geryon, a famous giant. His body was as large around as three other
-men's bodies put together. He had three heads and three pairs of legs
-and six arms. He had huge wings also and carried dangerous weapons.
-
-Geryon was the lord of many herds of cattle. He had one herd of red
-oxen, as red as the sky at the setting of the sun, and they were
-guarded by a trusty herdsman and a fierce two-headed dog. Eurystheus
-ordered Herakles to bring the cattle to Mykenæ.
-
-Herakles having overcome numberless difficulties, wandering through
-wild deserts and unknown lands, finally reached the open ocean, the
-end of all. There he erected as a monument two pillars opposite each
-other, one on the African shore, and one in Europe. These were called
-the Pillars of Herakles in those days, but now they are known as the
-Rocks of Ceuta and Gibraltar.
-
-Helios, the Sun, admiring the bravery of Herakles, lent him his golden
-skiff, shaped like a cup. Helios always sailed round the world every
-night from west to east in this cup, and Herakles, although he feared
-a storm, took his place in the strange boat and started for the island
-where Geryon tended his red cattle. The world, as the Greeks saw it,
-was in the form of a great plate, and the ocean was a river
-surrounding it as the rim surrounds the plate.
-
-When the two-headed dog saw Herakles he rushed at him with fury, and
-the herdsman also attacked him at the same time. Herakles slew them
-both with his club, took the cattle and fled toward the boat. Then
-Geryon sprang upon him and forced him to fight for his life. They had
-a dreadful battle, in which Herakles drew his bow and shot at the
-giant with one of his deadly arrows and Geryon died.
-
-Herakles at once drove the oxen down to the boat, and after a safe
-voyage landed them in Iberia. Then he started for home on foot,
-driving his cattle northward over the Pyrenees into Gaul or France.
-Here he was attacked by hundreds of people who wanted to rob him of
-his cattle.
-
-Herakles shot at them with his arrows and killed great numbers, and
-they stoned him in return with large stones. Herakles would have lost
-the battle but Zeus sent down a shower of rocks of vast size, and
-Herakles hurled them at his foes, driving them away like frightened
-sheep. These enormous rocks are still to be seen in the south of
-France.
-
-After this adventure Herakles drove his cattle over the Alps and down
-into Italy across the Tiber, and they came to the Seven Hills of Rome.
-In one of these hills there was a cave, the home of a lawless giant
-named Cacus. He was a creature of iron strength, and was hideously
-ugly. He breathed out fire and smoke, often killing people in this
-way, and everybody in all the country about feared him. Cacus saw
-Herakles coming with his cattle over the river and among the hills,
-and he determined to steal the cattle and hide them in his den.
-
-So when Herakles was asleep and the cattle were grazing quietly, Cacus
-slipped out of his cave and, seizing great numbers of them by the
-tails, dragged them backward into the cavern that their tracks might
-point away from the cave and not toward it. When Herakles awoke he
-missed his cattle and began to look for them. He found their tracks
-and went in the direction they seemed to point out, getting farther
-and farther from their place of hiding. The oxen bellowed, and their
-noises were muffled by the rocks of the cavern, but Herakles heard
-them and returned to the Seven Hills. Listening intently he traced
-them to the right hill, but Cacus had braced a stone slab against the
-opening and it could not be moved from the outside.
-
-Herakles went around to the other side of the hill and, tearing the
-stones away, forced a new entrance. He sprang into the cave and
-seized the terrible monster by the throat. Cacus blew flames into the
-hero's face and tried to burn him to death, but Herakles held on and
-strangled the giant to death. A volume of black smoke came from his
-mouth and a stream of melted lead as he fell back dead. Herakles tore
-the slab from the door of the cave and threw the body of Cacus out on
-the hill, and all the people came to see it and rejoice that their foe
-was slain. And they built an altar to Herakles and instituted games to
-be held every year in his honor.
-
-Herakles left the Seven Hills and drove his cattle southward. Being
-tired, he lay down to rest on a mountain near Locri, and the
-grasshoppers came around him singing in such shrill tones that he
-could not sleep. He prayed to the gods to drive them away, and the
-gods swept them out of that region so that they never came back.
-
-One of the wild oxen ran away to the southwest and escaped to an
-island. Herakles followed, driving the whole herd over to the island.
-The cattle swam across, and Herakles, sitting on the back of one of
-the oxen and holding on by its horns, was safely taken over. He
-captured the runaway and wandered for a long time through the island,
-enjoying the fresh water of the springs and the kindness of the
-people. Then he drove his cattle back to Italy and passed up the
-shores of the Ionian Sea.
-
-But Hera sent gadflies to make the cattle wilder than they were
-before, and they scattered over the mountain-heights as clouds are
-scattered by a hot wind. They fled far to the east, until they came to
-Thrace. There Herakles gathered together as many as he could and
-brought them to Mykenæ, where Eurystheus sacrificed them to Hera.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-THE ELEVENTH LABOR--THE GOLDEN APPLES OF HESPERIDES
-
-
-When the wedding between Zeus and Hera was celebrated all the gods
-brought presents. Mother Earth brought some apple-trees as her gift.
-These trees bore precious golden apples, and Zeus and Hera were so
-pleased with their wonderful wedding-present that they appointed four
-maidens, called the Daughters of the West, to guard the apples, and
-also they placed a dragon there with a hundred heads, who never slept.
-
-The fruit was so inviting that even the maidens would have been
-tempted to eat it if the terrible dragon had not kept close to the
-tree. A roar like thunder came out of each of his hundred mouths and
-frightened everything away that dared approach the trees, and
-lightning darted from his eyes to strike down intruders.
-
-The trees grew more and more beautiful from year to year, and the
-apples were so heavy that the boughs bent beneath the golden load.
-They grew in the Garden of the Hesperides, in islands way off to the
-west, and were watered by springs of nectar which had their rise near
-the throne of Zeus.
-
-Eurystheus had heard of the apples and he ordered Herakles to bring
-them to him. For a long time Herakles wandered about in various lands
-until he came to the river Rhone, where the water-goddesses or nymphs
-advised him to ask counsel from the ancient lord of the deep sea, who
-knew all the secrets of the ocean depths and whose wisdom was beyond
-that of the gods. He is called by many names, but his gentlest name is
-Nereus, and he does not like to be questioned unless he can take any
-shape he pleases.
-
-He usually escapes intruders, but to those who are not afraid and who
-manage to grasp and to hold him, he freely opens the store of his
-wisdom. This was what Herakles did. Nereus took on the form of a lion,
-a serpent, a fish, a stream of water, and at last, of an old man, but
-Herakles held him close and learned from him the road to the Garden of
-the Hesperides.
-
-Leaving Nereus, Herakles travelled south into Africa, where he met
-Antæos, a huge giant who lived in the desert. Antæos was a son of
-Earth and Ocean, and he was as strong as the terrible sand-storms. He
-was cruel to all travellers who crossed his domains and slew them, but
-he loved and protected the tiny Pygmies that lived all around him. No
-one had ever been able to vanquish him in battle, for Mother Earth
-gave him new strength and vigor every time he lay down or touched the
-ground.
-
-Herakles wrestled with him and threw him down many times, but Antæos
-sprang up stronger than ever. At last Herakles caught him up with one
-hand, and holding him high in the air where he could not receive help
-from Mother Earth, squeezed him to death.
-
-Herakles was tired out with this tremendous exertion and lay down in
-the desert to rest. But he did not sleep long, for a whole army of
-the little people, seeing their beloved giant lying dead, came with
-their weapons to attack Herakles. He found himself covered with them
-from head to foot. He sprang up, and quickly gathering up his lion's
-skin, crushed a multitude of the Pygmies and killed them.
-
-Then he hurried away toward the east, going through many countries
-until he came to India, and finding himself travelling in the wrong
-direction, turned to the north and west and came to the Caucasus
-Mountains. Here he found Prometheus chained to the rocks of a high
-mountain-peak. Prometheus had taught mankind the use of fire and how
-to build houses and had otherwise interfered with the work of the
-gods, thereby bringing this punishment upon himself. Herakles took
-pity on him and set him free. In return for this kindly act Prometheus
-told him the most direct way to the Garden of the Hesperides, which
-was through Scythia and the region of the Hyperboreans at the back of
-the North Wind.
-
-On his way Herakles stopped to visit Atlas, who as a punishment for
-once having rebelled against the gods was obliged to carry the heavens
-on his shoulders. "Let me relieve thee for awhile, friend Atlas," said
-Herakles, after greeting him in a most cordial manner. "Let me take
-the heavens on my shoulders and I will let thee do me a great service
-in return. I must have the Golden Apples that grow in the Garden of
-the Hesperides to take to Eurystheus, and thou canst bring them to
-me."
-
-Atlas gladly placed the heavy firmament on Herakles' shoulders and
-took his way to the Garden. There he contrived to put the many-headed
-dragon to sleep and then slay him. Taking possession of the Golden
-Apples, he returned with them to Herakles.
-
-"I thank thee very much, friend Atlas," said Herakles. "Take thy place
-again and give me the apples."
-
-"Nay, I have borne the weight of the heavens for a long time,"
-answered Atlas. "Thou hadst better keep my place and I will carry the
-Golden Apples to Eurystheus."
-
-Herakles was taken aback at this reply and began to consider how he
-might escape from this unexpected dilemma. At last he spoke. "Very
-well, I will willingly remain in thy place, friend Atlas," he said.
-"One thing only I must first ask of thee. Take the heavens back just
-for a moment while I get a pad to put on my head so that the weight
-may not hurt it. Otherwise the heavens will fall and crush us both."
-
-Poor, simple old Atlas agreed to this, and putting the Golden Apples
-on the ground he again took the firmament on his shoulders. Herakles
-picked up the apples and went off saying, "We must not bear malice
-toward each other, friend Atlas. Good-by."
-
-With this he departed and hastened back to Mykenæ.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-THE TWELFTH LABOR--HERAKLES FETCHES CERBERUS OUT OF HADES
-
-
-According to the terms of the doom that was laid upon Herakles, the
-performance of the last task was to free him from Eurystheus. Eleven
-were now fulfilled and the tyrant's heart failed him when he thought
-of what he might expect at the hands of the hero he had used so ill
-when once he was free from his power.
-
-Cowards always fear those whom they have ill-treated, so he determined
-to send Herakles on an errand from which he thought he could not
-possibly return. He had come back unharmed from every known and
-unknown country on the face of the earth, but who was ever known to
-return alive from the land of the dead? So Eurystheus as a last task
-ordered him to go down to Hades and bring out alive Cerberus, the
-three-headed dog that guards the entrance to the lower world, feeling
-sure that Herakles would remain forever in Hades.
-
-Cerberus was a terrible monster. Besides having three heads, he had a
-tail which ended in a serpent's head, and all along his spine he had
-serpents' heads instead of hair. His duty was to see that no dead
-should escape from Hades after once entering its gates.
-
-There was a long dark cave leading down to Hades and the river Styx
-flowed across it. A white-haired old ferryman, Charon by name, waited
-with his boat on the shore to carry the spirits of all who died. There
-they were met by Minos, the great judge, who told them whether they
-could go into the fields of the Blessed or whether they were doomed to
-the region of the Unhappy. Charon's boat was but a delicate skiff and
-adapted only to carrying souls without bodies, so Herakles was not a
-welcome passenger.
-
-Herakles found his way into Hades in spite of all the difficulties,
-and presenting himself to Pluto, the King of the Dead, begged him to
-give him the Dog.
-
-Pluto replied: "Take him and lead him out into the world and thou
-shalt have him. But thou must not use any weapon." Herakles answered,
-"I will use no weapon but my hands, and with them alone I will conquer
-him." Wearing his breastplate and clad in the lion's skin he
-approached Cerberus, who stood on guard at the gates. He threw his
-arms around the Dog's three heads and pressed them with all his might.
-The Dog fought with great fury, and bit him with the snake's mouth
-which he had at the end of his tail. Herakles threw his lion's skin
-over the head of the Dog and dragged him out by another gate into the
-daylight. Cerberus had never seen the light of the sun and was
-frightened beyond measure. He foamed at the mouth, and wherever the
-foam fell upon the ground it caused a poisonous plant to grow.
-
-Herakles took Cerberus to Eurystheus, who was not pleased to see the
-Dog or the Hero. Then he carried him back to Hades and restored him to
-Pluto, and so were the twelve great labors ended.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-THESEUS, THE HERO OF ATHENS
-
-
-The land of Attica is very different from Arcadia. It was cleared at a
-much earlier time than the southern part of Greece, which could be
-done the more easily as the soil being naturally rather barren was not
-covered with the thick, bristling forests which there sheltered so
-many dangerous animals, and made it such hard work for the peasants to
-clear the smallest patch of farm.
-
-Then, although the land offers but scanty pasture for cattle and bears
-but few kinds of trees and crops, it happens that those which it does
-bear are the very ones that were the greatest favorites with Greek
-farmers--the olive and the vine. Besides which, being a peninsula, and
-therefore almost entirely surrounded by the sea, fish and other
-sea-food was very plentiful, and trade with more or less distant
-neighbors very easy.
-
-Attica has no very high mountains, but those that there are supply the
-country with beautiful marbles, both white and colored. The people,
-having such lovely material within reach, became from the earliest
-times the most skilful of builders. Their Acropolis, for which nature
-itself supplied them with a beautiful, tall rock, of bright-colored
-stone, soon became their greatest pride. It was the envy of their
-neighbors, because of the splendid marble palaces and temples which
-they could raise there at so little cost.
-
-The city which grew up at the foot of the Acropolis was named Athens,
-after the goddess of wisdom and cunning craft, Athena, the favorite
-daughter of Zeus. It is clear from this that the Athenians considered
-themselves more civilized and in every way superior to the other
-Greeks. Indeed, they were all that, and even as far back as the heroic
-times their city began to be famous above others.
-
-In this favored land of Attica, at the same time that Herakles
-astonished the world with his miraculous deeds, there reigned a king,
-Ægeus, who, having no child to succeed him on the throne, was grieved
-at heart. So Ægeus went to Delphi to consult the Oracle, and the
-priestess told him that he should go to Trœzene, where he would find a
-beautiful and gentle wife, the Princess Æthra, daughter of Pittheus,
-the King of Trœzene. And the Oracle promised that his wife should bear
-him a son whose name would become famous over all the world.
-
-So Ægeus took his way to Trœzene, where he found Pittheus, the wise
-old king, who received him hospitably and gave him his daughter,
-Æthra, in marriage. Ægeus grew very fond of his wife, but after awhile
-he had to think of returning to his own kingdom, which he could not
-leave to itself forever. Æthra's father was old and feeble, and she
-did not like to leave him to the care of slaves; so Ægeus agreed to
-let her stay with him.
-
-But before Ægeus departed he took Æthra to an out-of-the-way place and
-dug a pit in which he hid his sword and sandals. Then he rolled a
-large stone over the pit and said to his wife: "Listen, Æthra; take
-good care of the son which the gods are about to send us, but do not
-tell him who his father is. When he has grown to be a youth, bring him
-to this spot, and if he is able to lift the stone, let him take the
-sword and the sandals and come to me with them." After saying these
-words, Ægeus kissed his wife, and bidding her an affectionate
-farewell, returned to Athens.
-
-When Theseus was born, Æthra rejoiced greatly, and brought him up with
-great care, as she had promised Ægeus she would do. He was the pride
-of his grandfather's court, and the good old king had him trained in
-all kinds of games and athletic exercises and in the use of the lyre.
-When he had grown up, Æthra led him to the rock, and after having told
-him the name of his father, she said to him: "My son, lift up this
-heavy stone. You will find under it what your father left for you.
-Take his gift and go to Athens with it."
-
-Theseus, without any difficulty, raised the stone with his strong
-arms, and Æthra hung his father's sword over his shoulder and tied the
-sandals to his feet. Then Theseus was ready to set out for Athens.
-Æthra advised him to go by sea. It was the quickest and safest way.
-The woods by land were everywhere full of dangers from wild beasts and
-wicked men.
-
-But Theseus, having heard of the great deeds of Herakles and envying
-the fame of the hero, said: "Herakles was set the task to destroy the
-wicked and to cleanse the land and sea from evil-doers; and so I will
-not shirk tasks which lie under my very feet and I will not shame my
-father, fleeing ingloriously over the sea, where I can perform no
-noble deeds by which I might prove myself a worthy son to him, and do
-honor to my mother's wisdom in bringing me up in the way she has
-done."
-
-Theseus kissed his mother and grandfather and started on his journey
-by land. The worst part of his road lay across the Isthmus of Corinth,
-which was so narrow that it gave little chance for escape.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-THE FIRST EXPLOITS OF THESEUS. HE FINDS HIS FATHER
-
-
-To the northwest of Trœzene is a tongue of land projecting into the
-Ægean Sea. In ancient times the town of Epidauros was situated upon
-it, and the temple, where Asklepios, the God of Healing, was
-worshipped, stood near by. It was a wild country whose hills were
-covered with trees and shrubs--the hiding-place of lawless robbers,
-the boldest of whom was named Periphetes. He was also called
-Korynetes, and he used an iron crown for a weapon, and with it he
-smashed the heads of travellers.
-
-Periphetes put himself in Theseus' way and would not let him go on.
-But the youth grappled with him, and taking his iron crown from him,
-crushed him to death with it. Theseus carried the crown as his own
-particular weapon, just as Herakles wore the skin of the Nemean lion.
-
-The most cruel of all the robbers lived a few miles farther to the
-north, on the Isthmus of Corinth, and his name was Sinis. He was
-called the Tree-bender, because he used to bend together two young
-pines. Then he would tie a man by a leg and arm to each tree and let
-the trees spring back, tearing the poor wretch to pieces. Theseus
-punished this malefactor by giving him the same treatment that he gave
-to others, and the people of the Isthmus were so grateful that they
-started a festival, called the Isthmian Games, to be held in honor of
-the hero every year.
-
-On to the north went Theseus. He slew a man-eating boar at Krommyon,
-which had long terrified the people of that district. Coming among the
-wild cliffs near the sea in Megaris, he heard of the cruel giant
-Skiron, who used to lie in wait for travellers. This evil-doer
-compelled those who fell into his power to wash his feet. This task
-performed, he flung the unlucky traveller into the sea.
-
-When Theseus passed his den Skiron ordered him to wash his feet, and
-Theseus answered: "To tell the truth, friend Skiron, thy demand is too
-small. I would willingly do more for thee. Not only are thy feet in
-need of a bath but so is thy whole body. The sea is near and I will
-give thee a thorough washing." And he seized Skiron around the body
-and flung him over the rocks into the breakers. From that time until
-to-day the rocks are called the Skironian Cliffs.
-
-A little farther on Theseus came upon another famous robber known far
-and near as the Stretcher, Korydallon, or Prokrustes. This robber used
-to force the wayfarer to lie down on a bed which was always too long
-or too short for him. If the traveller proved too tall for the bed,
-Prokrustes would cut off his feet and legs to make him short enough to
-fit it. But if the traveller were too short for the bed, he would have
-him stretched until his feet touched the foot-board. Prokrustes
-invited Theseus to try the bed, but Theseus answered him: "Thou shalt
-try it first, friend Prokrustes, and I will try it after thee." Then
-Prokrustes was compelled to lie down in the bed, which was much too
-short for him, and Theseus cut off his head and his feet to make him
-fit the bed, as the cruel Stretcher had done to so many hapless
-strangers. Theseus exterminated a great many more cruel robbers who
-had made the roads to Athens unsafe, and the glory of his deeds went
-on before him.
-
-Theseus, having performed these brave deeds, reached Athens; but the
-rougher class, seeing a stranger who wore a garb of a different
-fashion from their own, scoffed at him, as is the custom of vulgar
-people. His hair was long and his form slender, so they called him a
-girl and told him that he ought to take his nurse with him to protect
-him. As he walked along among these coarse people he came to a wagon
-heavily laden. He took up the wagon with its load and tossed it high
-in the air as easily as he would toss a ball, much to the astonishment
-of his tormentors.
-
-Theseus having come to the king's palace in Athens, at once presented
-himself before Ægeus. But he did not immediately make himself known as
-his son. When he was called to the table as a guest he drew his sword
-as if he wanted to eat the meat with it, and Ægeus recognized him as
-his son and received him with joy and affection. Calling together the
-citizens he proclaimed Theseus his son and successor.
-
-The citizens had heard of his heroic exploits, and acknowledged him
-heir to the throne amid general rejoicings. Only the nephews of Ægeus
-were sorry that Theseus had appeared in their midst. They had hoped to
-inherit the kingdom after their uncle's death, believing that he had
-no children. But now that Theseus came among them as a successor to
-the throne, they rebelled.
-
-Theseus was brave and strong enough to defend his father and himself.
-He fought the rebels one after another and killed them. These
-victories increased his glory greatly and won him the hearts of the
-people of Athens.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-THE ADVENTURES OF THESEUS
-
-
-_I. The Marathonian Bull_
-
-Theseus was too active to love an idle life and began to look around
-him to find ways of helping his father's people. He wanted to be
-worthy of the throne. "It is not enough," he said, "that I am of royal
-descent. I should also have a royal heart and be of real service to
-mankind. I must be a leader in deeds as well as in words." He soon
-found an opportunity to show his prowess.
-
-To the northeast of Athens is a beautiful mountain-ridge with a white
-marble band across it. This is the famous Pentelikon, and the purple
-mountain of Hymettos is separated from it by a narrow pass. Beyond
-these mountains is the plain of Marathon sloping down to the blue sea.
-In the plain of Marathon the terrible Bull which Herakles had brought
-from Crete to Eurystheus still roamed, but the tyrant had turned it
-loose. This Bull did great havoc among the inhabitants of the
-surrounding country.
-
-Theseus heard of their distress and promised to free them from the
-fearful beast. He armed himself with a tough shield and a long spear
-and went to Marathon. When he found out the Bull's hiding-place he
-chased and overtook him. He grappled him by the horns with his
-powerful hands and dragged him back to Athens. The people of Athens
-and all the country about came to meet Theseus. They rejoiced because
-he had rid them of such a pest and they admired his strength, but they
-did not dare to help him, and stood ready to run for their lives in
-case the Bull should slip away from him. Theseus went through the
-midst of the city holding on to the Bull, which he took to the temple
-of Apollo and offered up as a sacrifice to that god. Old Ægeus shed
-tears of joy when he saw how the gods honored him in the possession of
-such a son.
-
-
-_II. Theseus Sails to Crete_
-
-But there was a greater adventure with greater glory awaiting Theseus,
-for Athens had a more terrible enemy than the mad Bull of Marathon. It
-had happened years before that a son of Minos, the wise and powerful
-King of Crete, had come to Athens to take part in the yearly festival
-held in honor of the goddess Athena. He took part in all their public
-games and came off victor every time. The athletes of Athens were very
-angry that a man from another country should show more skill and carry
-off all the prizes, so with Ægeus' consent they killed him.
-
-Then Minos made war on the Athenians and killed a great number of
-them, and the gods also punished them for this treacherous murder by
-letting the land bear no crops and by sending on them a deadly fever.
-
-The Athenians were compelled to surrender to Minos, and they had to
-agree to the most humiliating terms. They promised to send seven
-youths and seven maidens every year to Crete.
-
-Now Minos had a park laid out by the most cunning man of his times.
-There were walks and paths so many and so winding that no one who got
-into it could get out again, but had to wander on and on, getting more
-and more confused. This park was called the Labyrinth, and in the
-centre of it was a cave in which just at that time King Minos kept a
-dangerous monster which had the body and limbs of a man but the head
-of a bull.
-
-The creature was called the Minotaur and it was fierce and cruel.
-There was only one way to prevent him from roaming the fields and
-endangering the lives of the people. He had to be kept in a good
-humor, and this could be done only by feeding him now and then on
-human flesh. So Minos bethought him of using the Athenian captives for
-that purpose.
-
-When the time of the third tribute arrived, the citizens of Athens
-began to urge Ægeus to do something to prevent the dreadful sacrifice.
-They accused him of being the sole cause of the trouble. They told him
-that it was shameful that he had no share in the punishment. These
-complaints wounded the ambitious Theseus to the quick.
-
-His sense of justice told him that it would be only right for him to
-share the troubles of the citizens, and therefore he insisted on going
-to Crete with the seven youths and the seven maidens.
-
-The citizens felt sorry for Theseus, and Ægeus prayed his son to
-remain at home with him, but Theseus answered: "My dear father, how
-can I be happy when the whole nation suffers? How can I abide in
-safety when our subjects are sacrificed? Do not try to dissuade me,
-for honor calls."
-
-The vessel which was to take them to Crete was ready to start. It
-carried a black sail, a sign of its direful errand. Theseus tried to
-console his father by telling him that he was going to kill the
-Minotaur. Ægeus was quick to believe in the valor of his son and gave
-another sail, a white one, to the pilot, telling him to hoist it if
-they returned happily, but to leave the black one up if Theseus failed
-to win the victory. The ship sailed away and the parents and relatives
-of the youths and maidens wept bitter tears, but all the citizens
-called aloud to the gods to give Theseus success in his generous
-undertaking.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-THE ADVENTURES OF THESEUS
-
-
-_III. Theseus Kills the Minotaur_
-
-The ship reached Crete and Minos ordered the weeping youths and
-maidens to be thrown into the den of the Minotaur and Theseus with
-them. By a lucky chance Ariadne, the daughter of the king, saw Theseus
-and was moved with pity and a wish to save him. She slyly gave him a
-ball of yarn and told him to fasten one end of it to the inside
-entrance to the Labyrinth and then wind it off as he walked along that
-he might find his way back again.
-
-Theseus took the ball and went with his companions into the Labyrinth.
-He fastened one end of the thread firmly to the inside of the
-entrance, and as he walked along the thread caught and held on to the
-bushes. They could hear the bellowing of the Minotaur as they
-approached the cave, and the companions of Theseus hid themselves in
-the bushes, trembling with fright. But Theseus approached fearlessly,
-and rushing upon the Minotaur, thrust his sword through him and the
-monster fell dead.
-
-The youths and maidens came out from their hiding-places, and
-surrounding Theseus, kissed his hands and called him their preserver.
-Theseus, guided by the thread which Ariadne had given him, led his
-companions safely to the entrance of the Labyrinth. And when they were
-free from its entanglements, Theseus gratefully raised up his hands to
-heaven and offered a prayer of thanks to the gods for their escape.
-
-Theseus and the companions whom he had saved reached the sea-shore
-unhindered, hurried their vessel into the water, unfurled the sail,
-and rowed with all their might in order to escape as quickly as
-possible from Crete and return to their own beloved country. The wind
-was favorable and the vessel cut through the sea like a swan. They
-passed through the midst of the islands of the sea and first landed at
-Delos, the home of the god, Apollo. This beautiful land was like a
-floating star and was said to be surrounded by a wall of pure gold.
-
-Theseus offered a sacrifice to Apollo and danced with the youths and
-maidens a dance in which they represented the winding passages of the
-Labyrinth. But in their great joy neither he nor the pilot thought of
-unfurling the white sail. Old Ægeus came every day to the sea-shore to
-watch for the return of the ship. There he sat on a high cliff and
-gazed over the wide waters; he hoped to see the boat coming with the
-white sail hoisted, and was in great agony of mind for fear he should
-see it coming with the black sail up.
-
-At last he espied, one day, a ship coming from afar. The nearer it
-came the greater grew the old king's anxiety. Soon he recognized the
-boat. It was the one which had borne away his beloved Theseus. But
-alas! the ship still carried the black sail, the sign of sorrow.
-
-"My son is dead!" exclaimed the unhappy king. "My only son is dead! My
-beloved Theseus!"
-
-The grief of Ægeus was beyond bounds and his reason left him. In
-despair he threw himself from the cliff into the sea and was drowned,
-and from that time all that water has been called the Ægean Sea.
-
-The ship entered the port near Athens and Theseus brought the
-thanksgiving offerings which he had promised the gods when he left the
-port, and he sent a herald into the city to announce their safe
-return.
-
-The Athenians, as soon as they learned that Theseus and the seven
-youths and seven maidens had returned safely, hastened to the palace,
-men, women, and children, and received him with joy and honors. But
-Theseus' pleasure changed to grief when he learned that his father had
-died on account of his great love for his son.
-
-The Athenians led him forth, however, amidst the greatest
-demonstrations of enthusiasm and proclaimed him their king. Thus
-Theseus became King of Athens not only because he was of royal descent
-but because he was manly and loved his country better than himself.
-The court of Theseus became celebrated for its splendor and he ruled
-with prudence. The villages of the plain of Attica had formerly been
-at war with each other. Now they united under one government, with
-Athens as the chief city. Theseus founded festivals and encouraged
-education, and was in every way a good and wise leader.
-
-Long after his death there was a beautiful temple erected in his
-honor, and it stands in Athens to this day. The stories of his great
-deeds are carved in its stones, which are much worn by time. There you
-can see the hero slaying Prokrustes, Skiron, the Minotaur, and
-Periphetes. And you can see the capture of the wild Bull of Marathon.
-There, too, are the stories of Herakles, in stone, as he slew the lion
-and hydra and performed other valiant deeds.
-
-We speak of these heroes as if they had once lived in the flesh and
-died like mortals, but no one can tell whether or not they are purely
-Heroes of the Myth.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-JASON, THE HERO OF THESSALY
-
-
-_Phrixos and Helle_
-
-Bœotia is a district northwest of Athens and quite different from the
-Attic plain. The name means The Land of Cattle, because it abounds in
-fat pasture-lands, is moist and fertile, and its beautiful green
-meadows slope up to the wooded mountains and lead down to well-watered
-valleys. Bœotia was always the paradise of farmers, who from the
-conditions of their life became famous for their stupidity.
-
- [Illustration: THE TEMPLE TO THESEUS AT THE FOOT OF THE ACROPOLIS
- IN ATHENS.]
-
-Thebes was the capital of Bœotia, but each district had its own
-smaller city and its own ruling family, whose sons called themselves
-kings. One of these petty kings, Athamas, had a son and daughter
-named Phrixos and Helle, and when their mother died he took another
-wife, the fair Ino, but she was not as good as she was fair, for she
-was jealous of her step-children. So she contrived a plot for getting
-rid of them which was well carried out. Ino persuaded all the women of
-the country to use the seed grain or hide it so that none of it could
-be used for the next year's crop.
-
-The women followed the queen's advice and the next year there was a
-great famine in the land. The women did not dare to tell their secret,
-although their families were beginning to starve. Then Athamas sent to
-the Oracle at Delphi in order to find out the cause of the trouble,
-and how he might deliver the country from the distress.
-
-But Ino secretly persuaded the messenger to say that the Oracle had
-given the following answer: "The famine will cease when Athamas has
-sacrificed Phrixos to Zeus."
-
-The king was almost stunned with grief when he received this message.
-How was it possible for him to sacrifice his own beloved son? But the
-wicked Ino published the false Oracle among the starving people, who,
-driven by hunger, clamored loudly for the death of Phrixos. The king
-being compelled by his people, allowed Phrixos to be led to the altar
-to be sacrificed.
-
-But the spirit of the child's own mother came down in the form of a
-cloud to save him. She brought a large ram whose fleece was of shining
-gold, and said to the two children: "My dear unfortunate little ones,
-come and sit on this golden sheep and he will fly away with you and
-carry you safely into a far country, where the wicked Ino will no
-longer have the power of injuring you." Then she helped Phrixos to
-mount to the back of the ram and she placed his little sister Helle
-behind him with both her arms around him, and disappeared.
-
-The ram flew up into the air like a bird and soared away over
-mountains and valleys and rivers and plains. Away, away they went
-through the blue sky until they reached the straits which separate
-Europe from Asia. There Helle lost her balance and fell into the sea.
-In vain did Phrixos try to save his sister, who cried and stretched
-out her arms to him. The poor child was swallowed by the waves and
-devoured by sea-monsters. From that time the sea in that place has
-been called the Hellespont.
-
-Phrixos sailed on alone, on the back of the ram, which took him to
-the farthest shore of the Black Sea and landed him at Kolchis. There
-the king received Phrixos kindly. Phrixos sacrificed the ram to Zeus
-and hung up the golden fleece in a grove which was sacred to Ares, the
-God of War. The golden fleece was priceless in value and was guarded
-by a terrible sleepless dragon.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-JASON CLAIMS HIS THRONE
-
-
-More than a hundred miles northwest of Athens is Thessaly, the most
-northern country of Greece. The greater part of it consists of
-mountains, the highest and steepest of all Greece. Among these the
-loftiest is Mount Olympos, whose summit, with its three snowy peaks
-standing out like glittering marble against the blue sky, rises high
-above the surrounding ridges. So glorious and so pure and so high did
-it appear to the ancient Greeks, that they imagined it to be the
-dwelling-place of the gods. It seemed the very end of the world as it
-rose up and shut off this horizon; and they believed the throne of
-Zeus, himself, to be on its summit.
-
-When the shining crest was obscured by clouds, pious people from many
-countries around turned to it in awe and said that the Lord of Heaven
-had hid his face, and waited for him to hurl his lightnings and speak
-in thunder. And the people of Thessaly loved to walk in the Vale of
-Tempe, where the wild fig-tree and wild grape, the willow, and ivy
-clung with tough roots to the rugged rocks at the foot of the
-mountain.
-
-The most mountainous portion of Thessaly was, of course, wild and
-inhospitable. The Centaurs were said to dwell in its gorges and caves,
-and it was claimed that they were wiser and gentler than the Centaurs
-of Arcadia. They were said to have gathered much lore of herbs and
-forest things, and to have been excellent surgeons. The same was told
-by fame of the Thessalian mountain-women, who, while as rugged and
-fierce as the men, were said to be extremely handsome and great
-mistresses in the art of making ointments and magic waters and juices
-for the casting of spells; in short, they were famous all over Greece
-as the most knowing and dangerous witches.
-
-The land changed wonderfully where it sloped down to the sea. The
-narrow valleys spread out into broad plains. The moisture, gathered
-and treasured by the forests and protected by their shade, filtered
-through the soil, keeping the grass green for the large herds which at
-that time were the greatest wealth, both of farmer and king; while the
-thousand rivulets and streamlets that hurried down the mountain-side
-in brooks and torrents ran together and formed handsome rivers which
-scarcely ever became dry or even shallow, as did the small and stony
-streams of Attica. Many of the rivers of Attica are so small that they
-never reach the sea at all, but run into the sand and waste
-themselves, while the Thessalian rivers all carry their waters to the
-sea.
-
-The largest of them, that which flows through the richest and most
-fertile country, is the Peneus, famed in song and story. In this
-beautiful land of Thessaly lived a king, Pelias. He really had no
-right to the throne, for he had an older brother. But that brother,
-being of a peaceful nature, allowed Pelias to take the crown from him,
-while he himself retired to some land he had in the mountains. His
-son, Jason, a handsome youth of great promise, he sent for his
-education to the wise Centaur, Chiron, who made his home in the
-deepest mountain-caves.
-
-When Jason was twenty years old and his education in manly sports and
-in the art of war, in song and in music, was such as to do honor to
-his master, Chiron, he was directed by an Oracle to go straight to his
-uncle Pelias and boldly claim his father's kingdom. This was an
-undertaking after his own heart. Shortly after this Pelias celebrated
-the yearly festival of Poseidon, the God of the Sea, by solemn
-sacrifices offered on the shore. This was a grand national occasion,
-so he invited everyone around and did not dare to leave Jason out.
-
-Jason accepted the invitation. He donned the skin of a panther which
-he had killed himself, and taking two long spears, started on his way.
-Now Pelias had learned from an Oracle that he should lose his kingdom,
-and he was always in fear. The Oracle had said that a descendant of
-Œolus would take his crown and throne from him, and that this person
-would come to him with only one sandal on. Pelias, therefore, was
-always on the lookout for the man with one sandal.
-
-As Jason came along he saw an old woman sitting on the bank of a river
-which he had to cross. She begged him to take her over. The young
-Greeks were taught that their first duty was to be helpful and
-respectful to old people. Jason willingly took the old woman in his
-arms and carried her over as if she had been a child. She thanked him
-and wished him good luck.
-
-The current of the river was strong and rapid and it swept away one of
-Jason's sandals. He set the old woman down on the shore after crossing
-and then stood in doubt as to whether he had better go back to look
-for his sandal. The old woman, however, advised him to proceed on his
-way. Then she disappeared. This meeting turned out to be of much
-greater importance to the young man than he could have imagined, for
-it was the goddess Hera, the Queen of Heaven, herself, who had taken
-the shape of an old woman to test his kindness and good-breeding.
-Being pleased with both, she remained his friend and protector.
-
-The public square was full of people when Jason arrived. His face was
-comely, his figure heroic, and his long hair hung down to the
-panther's skin on his shoulders. He carried two long spears and walked
-like a king. Everybody turned in wonder to gaze at him, and some of
-them said to one another, "This stranger is no mortal man--he must be
-Apollo in disguise." Others said, "No, it is the God of War. Look at
-his powerful, athletic frame."
-
-Just at this moment Pelias came driving by on his chariot drawn by
-two fleet-footed mules. His eyes were also attracted by the beauty of
-the youthful stranger, but when he noticed that he wore only one
-sandal he trembled with fear. Pelias, being old and crafty, concealed
-his anxiety and received his young kinsman with cordial friendliness
-seemingly. Jason at once announced his right to the king's throne, and
-Pelias admitted his claim.
-
-But Pelias told him that he was too young to take such a responsible
-place, and suggested that so stalwart a youth ought to do some valiant
-deed to win the respect and admiration of his people before coming
-into power. "The people would not care for thee," he said, "if thou
-shouldst take the crown as a birthright and not because of thy
-prowess."
-
-Then King Pelias proposed, as a suitable and honorable test of Jason's
-qualities as hero and leader, that he should cross the Black Sea and
-bring from Kolchis the golden fleece of Phrixos' ram. The wily old man
-had judged Jason at a glance and knew that no words or offer of his
-could appeal more powerfully to the young hero's generous instincts;
-he also knew that the danger of such an undertaking would be
-attractive to his youthful imagination. But he smiled wickedly under
-his beard when Jason delightedly agreed to his proposal. Pelias
-thought to himself, "No sane man would ever go on such an expedition,
-and not the bravest man could return alive. He will never come back,
-and I shall remain the King of Iolkos."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-THE EXPEDITION
-
-
-Jason cared little about the motives of the king in sending him after
-the Golden Fleece. His courage ran high and the anticipation of seeing
-other countries and doing valiant deeds filled his mind. He set about
-building a large ship, the finest the world had ever seen, and to do
-this he employed Argos, a famous shipbuilder. No expense or labor was
-spared, and when the ship was finished it was named the Argo in honor
-of the builder. It was the largest ship that had ever sailed from
-Greece.
-
-When the ship was ready Jason assembled the noblest heroes of all
-Hellas, Herakles, Kastor and Pollux, Meleagros, Peleus, Admetos,
-Theseus, Orpheus and two sons of Boreas, and many others of great
-renown. Jason invited them to go with him on this expedition, and
-they gladly accepted the invitation. They praised the ship; it was
-such a remarkable piece of work, and said that Athena must have
-advised and helped Argos, for no human being could make such a good
-boat. Jason was to be the captain, and all those who embarked on it
-with him would receive the name Argonauts, which means those who sail
-in the Argo.
-
-Before sailing, the heroes gathered around the altar of Zeus, and
-Jason offered up a sacrifice and prayed for a sign of good luck, if
-the God looked favorably on their undertaking. Zeus answered with a
-peal of thunder and a flash of lightning, which pleased Jason and gave
-the heroes courage. At first the voyage went so smoothly that it
-seemed like a grand holiday trip. As they sailed out from the
-olive-clad plains surrounding Iolkos, Orpheus with his god-like voice
-and magic lyre quieted the wild waves of the sea, and inspired the men
-on the Argo with love for battle.
-
-In this way they sailed along until they came to the island of Lemnos,
-where they were received in kindly fashion and remained a long time
-enjoying the new scenes and the festivals. Then they set sail again
-and came to a small island where they stayed a short time. Herakles
-had broken his oar and he wanted to replace it. He left the ship,
-taking with him a beautiful youth, Hylas, and they went into the woods
-to cut down a tree to make a new oar.
-
-But the wood-nymphs saw Hylas and said to each other, "We will keep
-this beautiful youth to ramble with us in the forest, for he is gentle
-and kind and would be an agreeable companion. He is strong and will
-protect us against the rude creatures that cause us alarm." So they
-carried Hylas away and hid him, and Herakles would not leave the
-island without him. Then the Argo sailed on toward Kolchis, and the
-heroes mourned the loss of their two comrades.
-
-They landed again soon on another island, where lived a king who was
-known to fame as a great boxer. He was cruel to travellers. He
-challenged them to boxing matches and killed them in the sport. The
-Argonauts asked him to give them a supply of fresh water for their
-ship, and in return he asked them to box with him. Pollux accepted the
-challenge, and gave him such a beating that his bones were broken.
-Then they took all the fresh water they needed and went back to the
-ship. After this, Pollux, instead of the cruel and boastful king, was
-known as the great boxer.
-
-The Argo sailed on across the Ægean Sea and through the Hellespont,
-where the unfortunate Helle was drowned, and reached the straits of
-the Bosporus. There were the immense Symplegades, two high cliffs that
-were not solidly rooted in the ground, but clashed together under the
-power of the winds, making the passage through the sea dangerous. It
-seemed impossible for the Argo to pass them without being crushed.
-
-But they were saved from this peril by the advice of Phineus, the
-blind old king of the district, who was also a soothsayer. Phineus had
-long suffered a terrible penalty, which the gods had sent on him for
-some unkindness, and he had been punished quite enough. Whenever he
-sat down to a meal the Harpies pounced upon his food, devouring the
-most of it and polluting the rest of it so that it was unspeakably
-filthy. When the Argonauts asked him to direct them past the
-Symplegades, he promised to do so if they would free him from the
-Harpies. This the Argonauts promised to do.
-
-They set a table before him laden with food, and the Harpies rushed
-down with great cries, perching on the table, eating greedily and
-snatching the food with their brazen claws.
-
-Then the winged sons of Boreas, who were with Jason, rose into the
-air and pursued the Harpies with swords. The feathers of the Harpies
-flew like dirt in a windstorm as they rushed screaming this way and
-that. They fled from that region, and so Phineus was rescued.
-
-Phineus showed the Argonauts how to steer their ship. He advised them
-to let a pigeon fly across the Symplegades, and if the bird passed
-unhurt they should quickly follow. When the Argonauts had come near
-the rocks they let a pigeon loose from the prow of their ship. It flew
-through between the cliffs, and the clashing together of the rocks
-caught only the end of its tail. Watching for the moment when the
-rocks should open and swing away from each other, the Argonauts sailed
-between them, rowing with all their might.
-
-They called on Hera for assistance, and the goddess bade the rocks
-move slowly. The cliffs did not have time to close together upon the
-ship, and she got through safely, except that a small portion of the
-rudder was broken off. From that time on the Symplegades became one
-rock and remained firm. After this the Argonauts sailed along the
-whole coast of the Black Sea toward the east, and finally reached
-Kolchis.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-JASON FINDS THE GOLDEN FLEECE
-
-
-When the Argonauts had drawn their ship up on the beach, Jason
-presented himself before the king and said: "Oh, king, we have come to
-ask thee for the Golden Fleece, which belongs to the Greeks at Iolkos.
-The ram which it covered was given to Phrixos and he dedicated it to
-Zeus; but the Fleece he hung up in the garden sacred to Ares.
-Moreover, the King of Iolkos has sent me to bring it back to Hellas."
-
-The king answered: "Oh, stranger, thou art welcome to the Fleece. Take
-it back to Hellas, I pray thee. But first thou must yoke two wild
-bulls, which no one has ever yet been able to manage, to a plough, and
-turn up furrows in a field and sow it with dragons' teeth. The bulls
-snort fire with every breath and have brass hoofs. Beware lest they
-turn upon thee and burn thee to death with the fire of their nostrils,
-and trample thee into the earth."
-
-Jason did not know how to tame the terrible bulls, and began to
-ponder. But Medea, the daughter of the king, saw Jason and pitied
-him. Medea was very much of a witch and could make all sorts of charms
-and mixtures of enchantment. She gave a magic ointment to Jason and
-said: "Stranger, I would gladly help thee to tame the wild bulls. Take
-this box of magic ointment and anoint thyself, also the end of thy
-spear and thy shield. It will make thee proof against fire and steel
-for one day, so that they cannot harm thee.
-
-"And thou shouldst know that out of the dragons' teeth which thou art
-to sow, men will spring up all clad in armor. Hide thyself where these
-men cannot see thee, and when they stand close together throw stones
-among them." Jason took the drug and did as he was told. He anointed
-himself and his spear and shield, and went in search of the fiery
-bulls.
-
-As soon as he found them he went boldly up and hitched them to a
-plough. They breathed fire at him and tried to strike him with their
-brazen hoofs. But he ploughed the field, turning back furrow after
-furrow. Then he went back to sow the field with dragons' teeth and hid
-himself nearby. Soon armed giants arose out of the ground. Jason threw
-a large stone into the midst of them, which made them think that some
-one of their own company was attacking the others. They began fighting
-among themselves, and became so furious with one another that they
-did not see Jason approach. He took his sword and slew them all. Then
-he returned to the king to receive the Golden Fleece.
-
-But the king was surprised, for he had no intention of keeping his
-promise. He expected that Jason would be slain and never come back.
-And he was contriving a plot to burn the ship Argo, and kill Jason's
-companions.
-
-Jason had done all that the king had required of him and would not
-give up the idea of taking the Fleece, and the king refused to let him
-have it. Then Jason went back to Medea for advice. Her admiration for
-the hero was greater than ever, since she had seen how fearlessly he
-went about his tasks.
-
-She led him to the grove where hung the Golden Fleece, and with her
-magic drugs put the watchful dragon that guarded it to sleep. Jason
-snatched the Fleece and made for the ship, taking Medea, who had
-promised to be his wife, with him. When the old king missed his
-daughter he was very angry, and gave pursuit. But Jason and his
-companions pushed the boat out into the sea, and unfurling the sails,
-they swiftly took their way over the waters toward their own land.
-
-After many wanderings and perils, the Argonauts came to the Greek
-coast, and the Argo entered again the sea of their own beloved
-country. They reached Iolkos, bringing the world-famous Golden Fleece
-with them, and the people received them in triumph. But Pelias still
-refused to give up the throne to Jason, although he gladly took the
-Golden Fleece which the young hero had brought him. So Jason slew him
-and made himself King of Iolkos; and as Medea's father had once
-reigned in Corinth, he added that country to his kingdom.
-
-Jason lived in peace ten happy years in Kolchis, and his kingdom
-prospered; but a great trouble came upon his household. Medea, with
-her black arts of witchery and enchantment and her evil heart, could
-not always please him or hold his affections. He went to Corinth,
-where he met the gentle-hearted Kreusa, and her peaceful, kindly
-disposition won his heart. Now in those days a man was not despised
-and looked upon as a law-breaker if he married more than one wife, for
-the people had a different standard of right and wrong from that of
-the present day. And Jason in an unlucky hour took Kreusa for his
-wife.
-
-Medea was maddened with jealousy when she heard of this, and she
-consulted the evil spirits of her witchcraft to find out how she could
-do away with Kreusa. She took a beautiful dress and a crown, and
-having sprinkled them with an enchanted juice, sent them to Kreusa.
-Her rival accepted the gifts and put them on, but she could never get
-them off again. They clung to her and burned into her flesh, so that
-she died. Then Medea took further revenge by burning Kreusa's home;
-and when she found that Jason was angry with her she slew her children
-and fled from Iolkos in a fiery chariot drawn by winged serpents. Poor
-Jason, beside himself with grief, went to his good ship Argo, which
-was now kept as a sacred place for the worship of the gods, and there
-he died.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-ORPHEUS, THE HERO OF THE LYRE
-
-
-In the same land of Thrace in which Jason's family ruled, Orpheus, the
-greatest musician of Greece, was born. It was said that his mother was
-the Goddess of Song, and such was the power of his voice and his art
-of playing on the lyre that he could move stones and trees. When the
-wild beasts heard his music they left their dens and lay down at his
-feet, the birds in the trees stopped singing, and the fishes came to
-the surface of the sea to listen to him.
-
-Orpheus had a wife, Eurydike, celebrated for her beauty and virtue,
-and he loved her very dearly. One day when Eurydike was gathering
-flowers on the bank of a lake a venomous snake bit her foot and she
-died. Orpheus could not be consoled. He went off into the wildest
-waste that he could find and there he mourned day and night till all
-nature shared in his grief. At last he made up his mind to go down
-into Hades and beg her back of King Pluto, for life was worthless
-without her.
-
-Orpheus took his lyre, and singing as he went, found his way down to
-Hades through a dismal abyss. Grim Cerberus himself held his breath to
-listen to the marvellous music. Not one bark did he give from any of
-his three terrible heads, and when Orpheus passed him he crouched at
-his feet. So Orpheus entered Hades unhindered, and standing before the
-throne of Pluto and his pale queen Persephone, he said: "Oh, king and
-queen, I have not come down into Hades to see the gloomy Tartaros,
-nor in order to carry away the three-headed warder of your kingdom,
-the dreadful Cerberus. I came down to implore you to give me back my
-beloved wife, Eurydike. I cannot bear life without her. To me the
-world is a desert, and life a burden. Why should she die, so young and
-beautiful? Have pity on me! If I may not take her back, then I will
-not again see the light of the sun, but I, too, will remain in the
-gloomy Hades."
-
-Pluto and Persephone listened in silence to the pleadings of Orpheus.
-His pathetic voice and the sweet tones of his melodious lyre held them
-like a charm. The shades of the dead came flocking around him and
-mourned. Tantalos forgot his thirst and listened to the singer's
-complaints. Sisyphos, who was compelled to roll a stone to the top of
-a mountain whence it always dashed back again to the bottom, ceased
-his dreadful labor to listen, and the Furies themselves first shed
-tears.
-
- [Illustration: ORPHEUS LEADING EURYDIKE OUT OF HADES.
- (From the painting by Corot.)]
-
-Persephone and Pluto were pitiless gods. Their hearts were long since
-hardened to the cries of the living who prayed for the restoration of
-their loved ones. But they could not resist the power of the
-enchanting sounds that Orpheus made. They called the spirit of the
-beautiful Eurydike to them and said to the musician: "Take thy wife
-Eurydike and go up again to the light of the sun. Let her gaze on the
-smiling sky and see the fields of the upper world. But beware of one
-thing. Let her follow thee and do not turn around to look at her
-before reaching the world of the living. If thou shouldst turn and
-look upon her she will return at once to her place among the dead."
-
-Orpheus left Hades in great haste and Eurydike followed him. In the
-midst of deepest silence they ascended through dismal rocky places.
-They neared their journey's end. They could almost see the green earth
-when Orpheus was seized with a dreadful doubt. "I hear no sound
-whatever behind me," he said to himself. "Is my beloved Eurydike
-really following me?" He turned his head a little. He saw Eurydike,
-who followed him like a shadow. But suddenly she began to be drawn
-backward. She stretched out her arms toward Orpheus as if imploring
-his help. Orpheus hurried to take her in his arms, but she vanished
-from his sight and Orpheus was alone again.
-
-Yet he did not despair. Again he descended into Hades and reached the
-river which separates this world from that of the dead, but the
-boatman, Charon, refused to ferry him across. Seven days and seven
-nights Orpheus remained there without drink or food, weeping and
-mourning. The decree of the gods was not to be changed. When Orpheus
-found that he could effect nothing he returned to the earth. He
-wandered alone over the mountains and glens of Thrace, which resounded
-with his plaintive songs day and night.
-
-One day as he sat upon a grassy spot and played his lyre a troop of
-wild women who were celebrating a festival rushed upon him and tried
-to make him play for them to dance. Orpheus indignantly refused, and
-they grew angry and handled him so roughly that he died. Where he was
-buried the nightingales sang more sweetly than elsewhere. And his
-lyre, which was thrown into the sea, was caught by the waves, which
-made sweet music upon it as they rose and fell.
-
-Orpheus was honored by the gods, and after his death they brought him
-to the Abode of the Blessed, where he found his beloved Eurydike and
-was reunited to her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-PELOPS, THE HERO OF THE PELOPONNESOS
-
-
-Some of the heroes famed in Greek song and story, and whose
-descendants lived in Greece, had come from foreign countries, many of
-them from Asia Minor. Greece and Asia Minor had always been closely
-connected. Travellers from each were in the habit of visiting the
-other country. Sometimes they traded together and sometimes made war
-on each other.
-
-One of the most powerful kingdoms of Asia Minor was Phrygia, and it
-was ruled by a king of the name of Tantalos, who had at first governed
-wisely and in the fear of the gods. He was made arrogant by
-prosperity, and at length grew so overbearing and cruel even to his
-own son, Pelops, that the gods determined to make an example of him.
-They sent him living to Tartaros, the portion of Hades reserved for
-the very worst offenders, there to endure a terrible punishment
-forever.
-
-He was placed up to his waist in the midst of running water, clear and
-cool, under hanging boughs laden with lovely fruit. Yet he could not
-reach the water or the fruit, and was always faint with hunger and
-thirst. Whenever he bent down to get a drink of water it rapidly
-rushed away from him, and if he lifted up his hand to pluck some of
-the ripe fragrant fruit, a sudden gust of wind tossed the branches
-high up into the air. Poor Tantalos never came nearer than this to
-quenching his thirst or satisfying his hunger.
-
-To make his misery more unbearable, a huge block of rock was poised
-above his head, so lightly that it moved with every breeze, and he was
-in perpetual fear of its falling down on him. Pelops, the son whom he
-had abused in childhood, became a great favorite with the gods, and
-they wished to make up to him for his father's cruelty. They gave him
-a shoulder of ivory to replace the shoulder of which his father had
-deprived him. When he grew up the gods helped him to leave his native
-land, where he had been ill-treated, and they guided him across the
-Ægean Sea, and around the southern point of Greece to Elis, where
-Herakles had cleaned out the stables of Augeias. The capital of Elis
-was the city of Pisa, where a king ruled who had a beautiful daughter
-named Hippodameia. She must have been very fond of sports and
-athletics, for her name means "The Tamer of Horses."
-
-Hippodameia had many suitors, but her father, Œnomaos, had heard that
-he would be dethroned by his daughter's husband, and so he did not
-wish her to marry. He was very warlike, being a son of Ares, the God
-of War, and he determined to kill all the suitors. So he proposed a
-chariot race with each of the wooers, and promised that the one who
-succeeded in winning the race should have his daughter in marriage; on
-the other hand, if the suitor lost the race he should be put to death
-by the king.
-
-Œnomaos was a famous charioteer, and he had steeds which were swifter
-than the wind. The race-course began at Pisa, and stretched as far as
-the Isthmus of Corinth to the altar of Poseidon. Œnomaos believed in
-himself and in his own skill. So great was his self-reliance, and so
-sure was he of the swiftness of his horses, that whenever a suitor
-came along he let him go ahead with his chariot drawn by four horses,
-while he himself first sacrificed a ram to Zeus, and only at the end
-of the ceremony mounted his chariot, having as driver, Myrtilos, and
-being armed with a strong spear. Then he would overtake the suitor and
-kill him. Thus he had already killed a great many.
-
-Pelops, on his arrival at Pisa, saw Hippodameia, and at once had a
-strong desire to make her his wife. When he saw that he could not
-conquer Œnomaos by fair means he planned a trick. He secretly
-approached the king's charioteer, Myrtilos, and said to him:
-"Myrtilos, hear what I have to say to thee. Help me to win the race
-and I will give thee half the kingdom when I become King of Pisa."
-
-Hippodameia, too, who greatly admired the young man, advised the
-charioteer to lend them his aid. Myrtilos accepted the proposal of
-Pelops. On the day of the race Œnomaos again waited to sacrifice a ram
-to Zeus, leaving Pelops to drive on ahead, and only mounted his
-chariot after the offering was over, being sure that he should
-overtake the suitor as he had done with the others.
-
-But suddenly a wheel flew off from the king's chariot, and Œnomaos
-fell to the ground, hurting himself badly. Myrtilos had removed the
-pin which held the wheel on to the axle. Thus Pelops reached the
-Isthmus before the king and won the race.
-
-Œnomaos died of his injuries, and Pelops married Hippodameia, and took
-possession of the kingdom. Then Myrtilos demanded half the kingdom as
-it had been promised him by Pelops. But Pelops carried him to the sea
-and cast him into it. On account of this crime the descendants of
-Pelops, the Pelopides, had to suffer many misfortunes. Crime and craft
-may answer an immediate purpose, but they are followed by divine
-wrath.
-
-Pelops instituted the famous Olympic games, which were celebrated
-every fourth year, and lasted five days. And he did many other things
-which were of great use to his people. In honor of Pelops, the great
-peninsula, south of the Isthmus of Corinth, was called Peloponnesos,
-which means Pelops' Island. The name was not quite correct at the
-time, for the land was not an island but a peninsula. But after all
-these thousands of years it has curiously come to pass that the old
-name is a true one, for it was only a few years ago that the Isthmus
-of Corinth was cut in two, and the Peloponnesos was in truth made an
-island.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-PERSEUS, THE HERO OF ARGOS
-
-
-Less than sixty miles in a straight line to the southwest of Athens
-there is a barren, swampy plain. It is in the Peloponnesos and is
-bounded on all sides by mountains except to the south, where it is
-bounded by the sea. In this plain lies the market-town, Argos, at the
-foot of a lofty hill, its acropolis, Larisa. There is a citadel on
-this acropolis which looks off to a high mountain at the north near
-the Isthmus of Corinth, and the white-streaked hills beyond. And
-nearer to the citadel, on the north, is a higher mountain, the highest
-of the Peloponnesos, where the people used to pray to Zeus and Hera
-for rain. To the southeast the Larisa looks over a great prison on a
-fortified mountain.
-
-We have said that the Peloponnesos was the shape of a man's hand. The
-thumb of this hand is a peninsula pointing toward the east and south.
-In more ancient times this thumb was called the peninsula of Argos.
-The town, Argos, shares its name with the barren plain in which it is
-situated, and in olden times it shared it with the peninsula also. The
-peninsula of Argos was quite separate from a larger district, called
-Argolis, until the Romans conquered Greece. But now it is one with the
-entire district, and Argos the town, and Argos the plain, and Argos
-the peninsula, are all in Argolis.
-
-Hera, wife of Zeus and goddess of the heavens, was the patron deity of
-Argos. It is said that she had a contest with Poseidon to see which
-should name the land, and as she brought the most valuable gift, the
-honor fell to her. The river Inachos flows through Argos the plain.
-The first king of Argos was a son of the river-god, Inachos, and the
-ocean-nymph, Melia, was his mother.
-
-The earliest people of Argos must have worked hard to keep the country
-rightly irrigated. They were called Danaæ, doubtless because their
-work resembled that of the Danaïds, who were said to be punished in
-the lower world by carrying water in pitchers to fill a broken
-cistern. As fast as they poured water in the cistern it ran out
-through the cracks at the bottom. So, too, the Danaæ carried water to
-the sandy soil, but it ran into the earth without doing very much
-good.
-
-The Danaæ came from Egypt and were accustomed to farming in the sand.
-They knew the unsparing pains that must be taken to conquer it, and
-kept at work until the land became fertile enough to repay them. But
-in modern times the plain has lost its fertility because the farmers
-do not take the same trouble in cultivating the soil.
-
-One of the earliest of the Argive kings, Danaos, sent his daughters
-out to search for springs as he would have sent them to bring water
-from the Nile if they had remained in Egypt. Poseidon, seeing how
-fair one of them was, loved her and caused a spring to flow at Lerna,
-and it is called by her own name, Amyone, to the present time. It was
-this spring that created the marsh where the terrible Hydra was slain
-by Herakles.
-
-Danaos had many descendants, one after another succeeding him as king.
-The fifth successor was Akrisios and he had a daughter, Danäe. Some
-oracle had told him that he would be slain by a son of Danäe if she
-ever had one. This worried the king and he determined that she should
-never marry. He built a high tower of brass and shut her up in it so
-that no one could get to her.
-
-Danäe grew very lonely, shut up in the tower, and she used to watch
-from the window to try to catch a glimpse of the people below. No one
-looked up to notice her, but Zeus saw her from his abode in the
-heavens and was struck with her beauty and loneliness. He sent a
-golden shower of sunbeams to console her in her prison, and a little
-babe was born to her, and she called him Perseus, the son of Light.
-
-Akrisios, the king, heard the child's voice and called his daughter to
-a holy sanctuary and bade her tell the truth about the babe. This she
-did, but the king would not believe her. He put her into a box and
-the child with her and cast the box into the sea to sink or float. The
-box did float and the kind waves carried it to the island of Seriphos.
-A good old fisherman caught it in a net and took it to his own little
-hut, and thus Danäe and her babe were saved.
-
-Perseus grew up to be a strong, handsome lad, and was often seen with
-his beautiful mother wandering over the island. As Perseus grew older
-he became his mother's protector and champion and could never do
-enough for her. They continued to live at the cottage of the
-fisherman, who had adopted them as members of his own family.
-
-The fisherman had a brother, Polydektes, who was king of the island,
-and he was as proud and cruel as the fisherman was simple and kind.
-Polydektes saw the beautiful Danäe and resolved to add her to his
-possessions and make her subject to his whims. He feared Perseus,
-however, and studied how to get him out of the way. So he called his
-friends together, among them Perseus, and said that he was looking for
-quaint gifts to send to the wedding of Hippodameia, the daughter of
-Œnomaos.
-
-All the young men came to the court of the king and listened to his
-request, and each one promised to go on some quest and find a present
-worthy of the princess. Perseus wanted to outdo all the others, and
-said he would bring the head of Medusa if the king desired it.
-Polydektes took him at his word and ordered him to go for it at once.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-PERSEUS FINDS THE GORGONS
-
-
-Medusa was the youngest of three sisters known as the Gorgons, who
-lived somewhere in the far west by the ocean. She was the fairest of
-the three and in her youth had been a famous beauty. But having
-insulted Athena in her holy temple, that goddess punished her by
-spoiling her beauty in a most ghastly way. She changed her beautiful
-locks into living snakes. A great horror settled on the face of the
-poor girl, and it became so terrible in its look of agony, with its
-frightful frame of snakes, that no one could bear the sight. Whoever
-looked at her turned to stone.
-
-Perseus set forth to find Medusa with the courage of a youth who has
-never known defeat. The goddess, Athena, who particularly despised
-the Gorgon, lent him her aid. She advised him to go to three aged
-women, who lived in a dark cavern near the entrance to the infernal
-regions. They were old women from their birth, gray-haired, misshapen,
-and had but one eye and a single tooth for the three. These they
-exchanged, each taking a turn at using the tooth and eye, while the
-other two sat toothless and blind.
-
-Perseus approached them quietly, for they were easily alarmed and
-always on the lookout for something to dread. As they were passing the
-eye from one to the other, Perseus seized it, and they pleaded
-piteously for him to restore it. This Perseus refused to do until they
-should tell him the way to the home of the nymphs who took care of the
-invisible helmet of Hades and the winged shoes of Hermes, messenger of
-the gods. The three miserable old women were glad to get back their
-eye and tooth, although they were loath to give Perseus the
-information he wanted. But they told him the way to find the home of
-the nymphs, and he went on with a happier heart.
-
-Perseus received the winged sandals from the nymphs and bound them to
-his own feet. They gave him a mantle, too, which he threw over his
-shoulders. It made him invisible, just as the darkness of night hides
-everything from human eyes. They put the helmet of Hades on his head.
-Whoever wore this helmet could see others, but no one could see him.
-Moreover, Hermes gave him a two-edged sword and Athena gave him a
-shield of brass, which was polished on the inside until it glittered
-like a mirror and reflected the image of everything back of the person
-using it.
-
-Perseus, being thus armed, went flying toward the ocean and found the
-Gorgons lying on the shore. There were three of them and they were
-sisters. Medusa alone was immortal. The other Gorgons, as well as
-Medusa, had snakes on their heads instead of hair, and large teeth
-like wild beasts, and iron hands with golden nails. Athena had taught
-Perseus how to approach them without being the victim of Medusa's
-deadly stare. Instead of facing her, he kept his face turned toward
-his shield and looked at her image only.
-
-In this way, guarded by his cloak and helmet of invisibility, he came
-close to Medusa, and with one blow from his two-edged sword cut off
-the monster's head. As the blood flowed down over the sand, there
-sprang from it a beautiful white-winged horse. Perseus had brought a
-large pouch which the nymphs had given him; a magic pocket that could
-be distended to almost any size. He hurried the head into the pouch
-without looking at it and flew away as fast as his winged sandals
-would carry him; the other Gorgons followed him in vain, for he was
-invisible to them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-PERSEUS RESCUES ANDROMEDA
-
-
-On his way back to the island of Seriphos, Perseus met with many
-adventures. He visited Atlas, expecting the hospitality which the
-Greeks consider due to all strangers. But Atlas did not receive him
-with courtesy, and Perseus in return held up the Gorgon's head for
-Atlas to gaze at. Atlas was turned into a rocky mountain, and there he
-stands and always will stand with the firmament resting on his head.
-
-In his flight Perseus reached Ætheopia, where King Kepheus reigned.
-There he saw an immense rock on the coast and a charming maiden was
-chained to the rock. Perseus approached her in pity and said, "Tell
-me, oh maiden, why thou art bound to this rock! What is thy name and
-which is thy country?" "I am a princess, the daughter of King
-Kepheus," answered the girl, "and my name is Andromeda. My mother
-praised my beauty above that of the daughters of Nereus, displeasing
-the nymphs themselves and offending the god.
-
-"The Nereids complained to Poseidon, and in his wrath he sent a
-sea-monster on shore to destroy the people and their flocks and herds
-and devastate the country. The king, my father, inquired of the Oracle
-how the country might be freed from this calamity. The Oracle made
-reply that the country would be delivered if the king would give up
-his own daughter to be devoured by the monster. When the people of
-Ætheopia heard of the answer of the Oracle they forced my father to
-accede to the terms. They themselves chained me to this rock, and
-every moment I expect the monster to come and tear me to pieces."
-
-No sooner had Andromeda finished her tale than the monster appeared in
-the distance. Her father and mother saw him too and wept in despair.
-Crying out to their beloved child, with extended hands they bewailed
-her fate.
-
-"A truce to tears!" cried Perseus. "The brave man sheds no tears in
-the face of danger! He wastes no words but dares! Shall Perseus, the
-son of Zeus and Danäe, having slain Medusa, quail before a
-sea-serpent? I will save thy daughter, but thou must give her to me to
-be my wife!"
-
-"Thou shalt have our daughter for thy wife and our kingdom as well,"
-cried the king, "if thou wilt save her!"
-
-The waves rose higher and higher around the cliff and the sea-monster
-came roaring and hissing, with open jaws showing his savage teeth, his
-neck outstretched, and his head reared high above the breakers. Over
-the waves rose his tremendous back covered with thick, heavy scales,
-and he lashed the waters to a foam with his coiling tail.
-
-Then Perseus, with the aid of his winged sandals, rose up into the air
-and attacked the monster from above. The beast plunged this way and
-that, leaping up and striking at Perseus with his fangs, diving again
-into the water and springing out, bellowing in a frightful manner.
-
-Time after time Perseus thrust his sword into the monster, until a
-stream of black blood ran from its throat, and it grew motionless and
-died. Perseus quickly flew to Andromeda and took off the chains that
-bound her, and she sprang into her father's arms with a cry of joy.
-The king and queen threw their arms around their beloved daughter and
-covered her with kisses, and they clasped the hand of Perseus with
-gratitude which they could not express.
-
-Then they returned to the grand castle of Kepheus, promising to
-celebrate the nuptials of Perseus and Andromeda. The wedding took
-place amidst great pomp and splendor, but while they were in the midst
-of their festivities the din of arms and battle-cries resounded
-through the hall. Phineus, the brother of the king, had come with a
-crowd of warriors to steal the bride. For Andromeda, before her
-misfortunes, had been promised to him in marriage, but in the hour of
-danger he had left her to her fate, a prey to the sea-monster.
-
-Now that she was safe again and in favor, Phineus had come to claim
-her. He said petulantly to Perseus, "Andromeda belongs to me. I come
-to get her. Neither thy winged sandals nor thy father Zeus shall save
-thee from my wrath. Thou art a robber trying to take my bride from
-me."
-
-Then the king answered him angrily. "Phineus," he said, "thou art a
-boastful coward. In no way does Perseus rob thee of Andromeda. Thou
-hast lost her through thine own fault, for when she was in peril thou
-didst desert her like a coward, and she would have been devoured by
-the sea-monster before now if this noble youth had not saved her. My
-daughter shall wed the man who has saved her from a terrible death."
-
-But Phineus would not yield. Wishing to kill Perseus, he shot an arrow
-at him. At the same time he ordered his band of followers to rush upon
-him. The arrow did not hit Perseus, who fought single-handed against
-them all, but as soon as he struck down one foe a new one sprang up in
-his place. Perseus saw that he could keep on fighting for all time,
-and never conquer this army, which could furnish a new warrior as
-often as one was slain. Having thus fought alone against great numbers
-until he saw it was hopeless, Perseus took the head of Medusa out of
-the pouch where he had kept it and held it up for Phineus and his
-warriors to gaze upon. Instantly everyone of them was changed to
-stone, and Perseus, taking his bride, returned to the island of
-Seriphos.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-PERSEUS BECOMES KING OF TIRYNS
-
-
-When Perseus reached home he did not find the glad welcome to which he
-had looked forward with all the ardor of a youth who has been for the
-first time on an important errand. His mother had taken refuge in a
-temple at the altar of Zeus to escape the persecutions of King
-Polydektes, who had begun to ill-treat her as soon as Perseus had
-departed in search of Medusa. His brother, the fisherman, had tried to
-protect her and had used hot words in warning the king to desist from
-his unmanly purpose. But Polydektes turned his wrath upon his brother
-also, and he, too, could find no refuge save the sacred altars.
-
-Perseus went at once to the king and announced his arrival. The king
-was uneasy, and yet he did not believe that Perseus had been able to
-keep his word. He called all the nobles of his court together to
-listen to what Perseus had to say. Perseus came before them, and
-taking the fearful head from its covering, held it up for them to look
-at. At once they became stone images, a ghastly court of petrified
-men. Even the frogs and beetles and other animals in the castle and
-its grounds were turned to stone.
-
-Then Perseus flew to his mother, who was still a beautiful woman in
-spite of all her sorrows. She had long prayed for her son's return,
-almost without hope, and now that he had really come her joy was
-boundless. Perseus established the fisherman as king of the island in
-his brother's place, and the people rejoiced that they had been freed
-from the tyrant, Polydektes.
-
-Perseus now gave up his winged sandals to Hermes, and asked him to
-carry the helmet and mantle to the nymphs, but the head of Medusa he
-gave to Athena, who wore it on her shield ever after.
-
-Perseus could not remain idle at Seriphos. He set out for Argos to
-visit his grandfather, taking his mother and Andromeda. Akrisios,
-suspecting that he would come, for the words of the Oracle often came
-to his mind, had gone to Thessaly. There at Larissa he had built a
-home and established himself, hoping that his grandson would be
-contented to remain in Argos.
-
-But Perseus went on until he came to Thessaly, and finding some games
-going on he took part in them. He threw a discus which accidentally
-struck his grandfather's foot, giving him a painful wound which could
-not be cured. Thus the Oracle was fulfilled. Learning whom he had
-killed and that Akrisios had died according to an old prophecy, he
-mourned for him and buried him with honors outside of the city.
-
-Perseus then returned to Argos, where he had left his wife and mother,
-and he became king of the country in the place of his grandfather,
-Akrisios. But the thought of sitting on a throne whose rightful king
-he had accidentally killed was distasteful to him, so he exchanged
-kingdoms with Megapenthes of Tiryns.
-
-It is said that the Persian kings claimed to be descendants from
-Perses, a son of Perseus and Andromeda. However this may be, Perseus
-has certainly inspired many a poet and artist and hero to express
-great actions and courage in word and deed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
-TRIPTOLEMOS, THE HERO OF ELEUSIS, AND DEMETER, THE EARTH-MOTHER
-
-
-Twelve miles to the west of Athens is a beautiful hill which ends
-abruptly close to the sea. It is the acropolis or highest point of
-Eleusis and is covered with splendid blocks of marble, the ruins of
-wonderful temples which stood there in ancient times. The greatest of
-these temples was called The Temple of the Mysteries. Demeter, the
-Earth-Mother, was worshipped there.
-
-The principal road leading to the acropolis of Eleusis begins at the
-acropolis at Athens and is called The Sacred Way. Over this road,
-thousands of years ago, went the stately processions of loose-robed
-Greeks, their beautiful garments fluttering in the winds. Their heavy
-chariot-wheels left deep prints in the rocks, and there they are at
-the present time. There are ruins of temples to the gods along The
-Sacred Way, and the little lambs and kids skip playfully about among
-them.
-
-A narrow pass between the hills admits you into a flowery meadow. It
-was here that Persephone played when a child. There are two salt
-lakes in the plain in which only priests were allowed to fish in the
-olden times. There, too, is a well where you stop for a cup of water
-as people have done through the long ages.
-
-The plain of Eleusis is separated from Attica by a range of low hills
-clad with fields of wheat and barley. At the foot of the acropolis is
-the sickly little village of Eleusis, but the Island of Salamis rises
-across the blue waters of the bay like a fairyland shining through a
-delicate atmosphere of violet tint. This was the kingdom of Keleos and
-his son Triptolemos, the Hero of Agriculture, and it was the scene of
-the story of Demeter and Persephone, the story which brings us to the
-Hero of Eleusis.
-
-It is said that Kronos and Rhea were the father and mother of the
-greatest of the gods, Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades or (Pluto) and their
-sister Demeter, the mother of fertility. Though men might plough the
-fields and the rain moisten the swelling seed-grains, it was Demeter
-who gave the vital touch which caused the new life to spring up.
-
-Demeter had one beloved daughter, Persephone, on whom she bestowed all
-the tenderness of her divine mother-heart. One day Persephone went out
-into the blooming meadows to play with her companions. The fields
-were gay with roses, violets, and lilies. The yellow crocus, the
-asphodel, and the purple and pink narcissus made bank and by-path seem
-like a soft carpet and filled the air with sweet fragrance.
-
-Persephone stooped to pluck a flower of unusual beauty, when the earth
-suddenly opened and Hades appeared with a splendid chariot drawn by
-fiery black horses. He seized Persephone, and placing her on his
-chariot, drove away to his kingdom under the earth. Persephone uttered
-piercing cries, praying to the gods and imploring men to come to her
-rescue. But all in vain. Zeus looked on with approval, for he knew
-that his good brother ought not to be condemned to reign alone in the
-dread realms of darkness.
-
-Now there was a goddess of the night, a torch-bearer who lived in a
-dark cave. Her name was Hekate and she knew the secrets of lonely
-forests and cross-roads and the gloomy underground world. She heard
-the shrieks of the maiden when Hades seized her; and Helios, too, the
-sun-god who sees everything, saw him bear her away.
-
-The mother, Demeter, also, heard the cries of her daughter, and an
-unspeakable grief took possession of her. She wandered from place to
-place, taking neither food nor sleep, beseeching everyone to tell her
-where she could find her child. But no one could give her any
-information. She yoked her winged snakes to her car and drove with
-lighted torch through every country. Wherever she went she was
-received gladly by the people, for she stopped to teach them something
-of agriculture and left her blessing with them when she departed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
-DEMETER'S GRIEF
-
-
-On the tenth day of her wanderings she met Hekate, who said: "Lovable
-Demeter, who hath robbed thee of thy daughter and plunged thee into
-sorrow? I heard her cries when she was carried off, but I could not
-see who it was that took her. There is one, however, who sees
-everything, Helios, and he may tell thee where thy daughter is
-concealed."
-
-Demeter gladly took the hint, and with Hekate she set out to find
-Helios, and when they saw his horses and chariot they stationed
-themselves where they could speak to him. The venerable goddess said
-to him: "If ever, oh, Helios, I have pleased thee in word or deed, I
-pray thee look down from the heavens and tell me truly whether it is a
-god or a mortal that hath stolen my daughter."
-
-"Honored Queen," replied Helios, "I willingly tell thee all I know.
-Hades hath taken thy daughter and led her into the gloomy kingdom
-below. But Zeus is the author of this deed, for he gave his permission
-to Hades to make Persephone his wife. Yet thou hast no need to grieve,
-for Hades is a loving husband and hath given thy daughter an honorable
-place as queen of his realm."
-
-When Demeter heard this her grief was unbounded and her anger
-terrible. She left the abode of the gods on Mount Olympos and went
-down to earth, where she assumed the form of a mortal woman. In her
-travels on the earth she reached Eleusis, and sat down on a stone near
-a spring, from which the people drew water.
-
-As she sat there two beautiful maidens, daughters of Keleos, the King
-of Eleusis, came to the spring to fill their bronze pitchers with
-water. They saw the stately woman in garments of mourning, and,
-approaching her, asked with sympathy whence she came and why she sat
-alone so far from the city instead of coming to the houses, where the
-women would gladly show her every kindness in word and deed.
-
-Demeter replied: "May the Olympian gods bestow all good gifts upon
-you, my daughters. Have pity on me and lead me to the house of some
-chief, where I may be a servant, doing such work as an old woman can
-perform. I can take care of a new-born babe, guard the house, tend the
-beds, and teach serving-women housework."
-
-"Venerable lady," answered one of the daughters, "I thank thee for thy
-good wishes, and I will tell thee the names of the foremost men of the
-city. There are several chiefs of note in Eleusis, but our father is
-the king and he will give thee royal welcome. Let us take thee to our
-mother, Metaneira, and she will not let thee go into a strange house.
-She has a little son, and if thou wilt bring him up well she will give
-thee rich gifts."
-
-Demeter consented to go, and the girls, after filling their jugs,
-hastened home, where they told the queen, their mother, what they had
-seen and heard. The beautiful Metaneira sent them to call in the aged
-woman, and they ran back to the spot where they had left her. They
-took her by the hand and led her to their home, where they presented
-her to their mother.
-
-Metaneira had her baby in her arms and received Demeter kindly.
-"Welcome, my dear woman," she said, "thou hast come in good time. But
-I cannot treat thee as a servant, for thou dost appear like a
-princess.
-
-"The gods often visit us with misfortunes, which we must bear as best
-we can. Let this home be thine and I will trust this babe of mine to
-thee, that thou mayst rear him. We had no hope of his living when he
-was born, but the gods had pity on me and let him live. For this
-reason he is much dearer to me. Care for him most lovingly and I will
-give thee a fitting reward."
-
-"My greeting I give to thee, too, dear lady," answered Demeter. "May
-the gods give thee all thy desires. I will tend thy child with
-affection as if he were my own."
-
-Demeter made herself at home in the large hall of Keleos and undertook
-the bringing up of the boy. She gave him no other food but ambrosia,
-that he might never grow feeble with old age. The child throve
-wonderfully and was a joy to everybody. The father and mother were
-astonished at his rapid growth and handsome face.
-
-But one night Metaneira wished to see how her son was getting along,
-and, going into the room where Demeter was tending him, saw a strange
-sight, for the supposed old woman held him over a fire like a brand.
-Metaneira, terribly frightened, cried out, "Oh, my child, the stranger
-is burning thee!"
-
-But the goddess grew angry, took the child out of the fire, and
-setting it down on the ground, made reply: "Surely mortals are blind
-and incapable of telling good from evil. I vow to thee by the waters
-of the Styx that I have rendered thy beloved son immortal. I put him
-on the fire that it should render his mortal flesh impervious to the
-ills of men. For thee it is an eternal honor that I have lived in thy
-house and let thee sit in my presence."
-
-At that instant Demeter threw off her disguise as an old woman and
-appeared in all her glory as a goddess. Her face shone like the sun,
-and a heavenly odor was shed from her robe, and her golden hair
-glittered as it fell over her shoulders.
-
-"Know that I am the goddess Demeter," she said, "who am honored by
-mortals and immortals. Thou shalt hasten to bid the whole populace of
-Eleusis to build me a great temple above the spring on the mountain."
-
-Metaneira was speechless with astonishment at what she had heard and
-seen. She began to tremble and did not even take heed of her child,
-who sat on the floor looking at them with wonder. She went at once to
-her husband and told him all that had happened. King Keleos called his
-people together in a general assembly and ordered a beautiful temple
-to be built on the acropolis in honor of Demeter.
-
-The people loved their king and believed his words, and they went to
-work at once to build the temple. They set about it with such zeal
-that it was finished in one day, for the goddess gave them divine
-strength and directed the work. Demeter took up her abode in the
-temple and remained away from the other gods, still mourning over the
-loss of her daughter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI
-
-DEMETER'S JOY
-
-
-Persephone did not return, and the angry goddess grew more angry. She
-determined to punish the gods, even though it brought suffering to
-mankind. Indeed there was no other way to punish them. So she forbade
-the earth to bring forth any more fruit, and there was a great
-famine. In vain did the oxen pull the plough through the field. In
-vain did the farmer sow the grain. The land was covered with stubble.
-No flower sprang up on the parched earth; the starving people had no
-sacrifice to offer to the gods, and their altars were left without the
-incense arising from sacred offerings.
-
-Now the gods loved the praises of men, and the incense from their
-altars was most precious to them. They complained to Zeus because they
-were deprived of their incense, and Zeus saw the cause of it. He sent
-the rainbow-winged Iris to call Demeter back to Mount Olympos.
-
-The beautiful messenger flew like a sunbeam through the space between
-heaven and earth, and soon reached Eleusis. She found Demeter in her
-temple and said to her, "Dear Mother, I bring a message to thee from
-the great god Zeus. He commands thee to return to the abode of the
-immortal gods, and his command no one dares to disobey."
-
-But Demeter received the command with scorn, so Zeus sent all the
-gods, one after another, to entreat her to return, and he sent
-promises of beautiful gifts and courtly honors, but Demeter remained
-unmoved. "The earth shall yield no fruits," she said, "nor will I
-return to the company of the gods until I behold with mine own eyes my
-beautiful daughter."
-
-Then Zeus sent Hermes to Hades to persuade him with sweet words to
-give up his wife and send her back to her mother since Demeter's anger
-could not be appeased without her. Hermes went down to the under-world
-to the King of the Dead, and said to him: "Immortal Hades, father Zeus
-has charged me to take thy wife from this dark realm back to the light
-of day that her mother may see her, for the anger of the goddess
-cannot be appeased. In her wrath she is starving men and depriving the
-gods of the honors that mortals bestow on them. She hath left the home
-of the gods and will not abide with them. Neither will she speak to
-them, but lives alone in her temple at Eleusis."
-
-The grim king smiled and said to his wife, "Persephone, my queen, go
-to thy blue-robed mother and appease her wrath. The winter is over and
-thou must see the light of the sun. But first thou shalt eat with me
-of the pomegranate, the apple of love, for thou dost love me and this
-shall keep thee in remembrance of me."
-
-Then Persephone took from the king the pomegranate and ate it, for
-the grim Hades had made her truly a queen and had done honors to her.
-But she was glad to return to her mother and the blessed light of the
-day. She mounted the chariot. Hermes took the reins and the whip, and
-the horses flew over the stony road that led from Hades. On and on
-they went until they reached the Eleusinian plains and the temple of
-Demeter.
-
-There they emerged from the cave close to the temple, and a fig-tree
-burst into budding as they came. Demeter stood with outstretched arms
-at the mouth of the cave to receive her daughter. Hermes helped her
-from the chariot and Persephone sprang into her mother's arms as the
-flowers of May spring forth on the bosom of earth with the early
-showers.
-
-No one can describe Demeter's joy as she beheld once more her beloved
-child, and pressed her to her heart, covering her with kisses. The
-whole earth smiled and burst into verdant growth. The fields were
-covered with grain. The meadows bloomed with gay flowers. The birds
-sang and the people rejoiced.
-
- [Illustration: THE RETURN OF PERSEPHONE.
- (Lord Leighton.)]
-
-Demeter drew her daughter into the holiest sanctuary of her great
-temple and they talked over all that had happened during Persephone's
-long absence. She told her mother how Hades had stolen her away
-from the meadows while she gathered flowers, and how he had treated
-her while she stayed with him in the lower world. She had only words
-of love and honor for the dread King of the Dead.
-
-A whole day mother and daughter passed in an affectionate embrace and
-in exchanging words of love, each pitying the other on account of the
-long separation. Then Zeus sent Rhea to bring Demeter and Persephone
-to Mount Olympos. And he told them that Persephone might remain with
-her mother until the winter months came back again.
-
-To this Demeter seriously objected, for she dreaded the separation and
-the loneliness. But Zeus replied: "If thy daughter hath eaten of the
-pomegranate she is truly wedded to Hades the King of the Dead, and
-must go back to him to stay during the winter. For the pomegranate is
-the apple of love, and having shared it with him, he hath part in her
-affection and can claim her as his wife. But if she hath not eaten of
-the fruit she shall remain with thee and go no more to the gloomy
-realms below."
-
-Demeter was satisfied with these terms and promised that Persephone
-should return to her honored husband during the winter months, for
-Persephone had told her that she had eaten with him of the
-pomegranate and that she loved him in spite of his gloomy
-surroundings. Then Demeter forgave Zeus for his part in allowing the
-abduction of Persephone, and the mother and daughter descended once
-more to Eleusis to bestow blessings upon the inhabitants, and from
-that time on the earth was clad in flowers and foliage as long as
-Persephone stayed with her mother. But it was brown and barren when
-she returned to the regions of the Dead. And the good Hades warmed the
-earth from below by virtue of his divine power, helping it to produce
-more abundantly the precious grains and the fragrant flowers.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII
-
-TRIPTOLEMOS BECOMES A HERO. DEMETER'S GIFT
-
-
-Demeter returned to her home among the gods on Mount Olympos. But
-before she went she called Triptolemos, an older son of King Keleos to
-her and gave him her car which was drawn by winged dragons. There is
-nothing more precious to the gods than open, benevolent hearts and
-generous hospitality. The poorest and meanest man may be god-like in
-generosity, sharing his goods with open hand, as sunshine is poured
-out from the heavens. King Keleos had shown himself a most
-royal-hearted man in his princely generosity toward the goddess when
-she came in the guise of a poor old woman, and Demeter resolved to
-bestow upon him and upon mankind, for his sake, a blessing
-proportionate to her power and rank.
-
-So she gave to Triptolemos something far better than her magic car and
-serpent-steeds. She taught him how to make the plough of iron.
-Heretofore men had ploughed the fields with the crudest of ploughs--a
-pointed stick, or an iron bar. She taught him how to turn a furrow and
-put the seed into it, and cover it up so that the birds should not eat
-it.
-
-And when summer came she showed him how to cut the grain, to bring it
-in wagons to the barn where he was to thrash it, and to store it away,
-keeping each kind separate.
-
-Triptolemos, being carried on his wagon through the air, sowed the
-precious grain all over the inhabited world and turned many a barren
-waste into a cultivated field. He taught the people everywhere, as
-Demeter had taught him, how to cultivate the soil. Thus he became a
-great benefactor to all mankind and induced a better way of living.
-For when people had farms to take care of, they ceased to roam
-aimlessly about the world. They built homes and learned to be
-friendly, and from this sprang up the government which should protect
-the home and make men happy and comfortable.
-
-Triptolemos received the honors of a god, and the people of Eleusis
-built a temple to him close to the acropolis, where some of the stones
-of the temple may still be seen. But his best monument is the
-cultivated fields of barley, rye, and oats, and all the grains which
-from Demeter (Ceres) we call cereals.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII
-
-PROMETHEUS, THE CHAMPION OF MANKIND
-
-
-Heaven and earth were created. The sea rolled its waves against the
-shore and played around the islands. The fishes sported in the waters
-in lively gambols. On the land the birds flew from tree to tree
-singing with sweetest voices; wild beasts were peaceable; flowers
-threw out delicious odors; nature beamed with loveliness.
-
-But mankind could not notice the beauty of nature. Men walked as in a
-dream, for they were not awakened to delicate odors or sweet sounds
-or beautiful forms and colors. They were barbarous and rude; they did
-not know any of the arts of civilization; they were not even able to
-build homes; they lived in caves like wild beasts and fed on nuts and
-fruit.
-
-The cultivation of the soil was unknown. Men made no difference
-between the blooming spring and fruitful summer and the cold winter.
-They did not know how to cut stone. Like the wild creatures they lived
-in constant fear, crawling about miserably.
-
-Prometheus, the son of Japetos, was wise and good. He looked down from
-his comfortable abode and saw with pity how man was stupefied and
-enthralled by ignorance, and he wished to deliver him from his unhappy
-state. At that time Zeus reigned in the heavens; he was the lord of
-thunder and of fire. He stored the fire in the heavens and sent it
-down to earth in the form of lightning to terrify men but not to help
-them.
-
-Without fire upon earth man's condition was hopeless. He needed it for
-making tools, if ever he learned to forge metals, for baking clay with
-which to make bricks and dishes, for cooking his food, and protecting
-himself from the biting frosts of winter. But Zeus does not willingly
-part with his treasures, and he looked upon fire as property solely
-his own. No one could get it from him by open means, and man had not
-even dreamed that he needed it.
-
-Prometheus made it a part of his own duty to teach man the use of fire
-and how to live better by knowing its secrets. So he went to Olympos,
-the home of Zeus himself, and took a few sparks of the heavenly fire,
-which he hid in a hollow reed so that it could not go out. He came
-down to earth, bringing it to men, and they made a great blaze and
-gave thanks to Prometheus from the depths of their hearts when they
-saw what it would do.
-
-When it grew cold they sat around the big fire and warmed themselves.
-They began to cook their food, they melted iron and made spears and
-tools. They baked clay which they had moulded into dishes, and it led
-on to their inventing all those things that are made by the use of
-fire.
-
-When Zeus looked down from the heavens and saw the light of the flames
-on the earth he at once became aware that Prometheus had stolen the
-fire from him and given it to mortals. Zeus was greatly alarmed to
-find his power shared by men, for the lightning had been his sceptre.
-He called Hephæstos to his aid, the Blacksmith of the Gods, and his
-powerful servants, Violence and Force, and bade them lead Prometheus
-far away and chain him to a lofty peak in the Caucasus, a wild
-mountain-range of Scythia.
-
-Hephæstos loved Prometheus, but he could not disobey the command of
-Zeus. When they reached the Caucasus, Violence said to Hephæstos:
-"See! we have reached far off Scythia, a desert where no trace of man
-is ever found. Behold the Caucasus! Now is the time to perform the
-task with which thy father Zeus hath charged thee. Let us chain
-Prometheus to the highest rock with fetters which cannot be broken.
-Thus may he learn the will of Zeus and that he is subject to his rule.
-Thus, too, will he see where his love for wretched men has brought
-him."
-
-But Hephæstos answered: "Force and Violence, do ye execute the order
-of Zeus, for I have not the heart to fetter a god who is of my own
-kin, to this wild mountain. It must be done, because it is the will of
-Zeus, and it is a dangerous thing to disobey him."
-
-Then, turning to Prometheus, he said: "High-minded son of Heaven, it
-is with a sorrowful heart and against my will that I let my servants
-bind thee with never-breaking bonds to this rock. There thou wilt
-never hear a human voice nor see a human form. Here wilt thou stay
-with no power to stir, and the burning sun will scorch thee. There is
-no place where thou canst rest thy weary limbs or thy sleepless head.
-This is thy reward for thy love to mankind. But I would rather bear
-thy punishment than be the tyrant to treat thee so unjustly."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV
-
-PROMETHEUS UNBOUND
-
-
-Prometheus was securely bound with iron fetters and fastened to the
-solid rock. The servants of Hephæstos increased his tortures with
-their bitter speeches. But Prometheus bore his sufferings and their
-taunts with heroic indifference and courage. As long as they were near
-not a sound came from his lips. Only when Hephæstos and his servants
-were gone did he begin to bewail his unjust punishment.
-
-The winds carried the sound of his moans far off to the shore of the
-sea. The sea maidens, daughters of old Ocean, heard them and were
-moved to tearful pity. They hastened on the wings of the salt breeze
-like a swarm of birds to comfort and cheer him. Nay, more, old Ocean
-himself came from afar, and rising up from his watery abode, stationed
-himself near Prometheus to speak to him.
-
-"I am grieved to the heart, dear Prometheus," he said, "for all that
-thou hast to suffer. I am thy kin, and it breaks my heart to see thee
-like this. Even apart from our kinship there is no one whom I honor as
-much as thee. Tell me, is there any way in which I can help thee?"
-
-Prometheus, hearing what Okeanos said, made reply: "What do my eyes
-behold, friend Okeanos? Hast thou come to see me in my misery? I fear
-me I have only bitter words in exchange for thy kindly greeting. See
-in what manner Zeus treats me, his friend, who hath assisted him to
-gain possession of the throne of the world!"
-
-Okeanos felt the truth of his words, but thought it better to try to
-persuade Prometheus to submit to Zeus, and so he answered pleadingly:
-"Curb such overbearing speeches, dear Prometheus, and I will myself
-try to appease the anger of Zeus." But Prometheus quickly replied: "I
-have done no evil that I know of, and I will not bow to tyranny and
-injustice.
-
-"My fault is this: I loved mankind too well to let them lie helpless
-in stupidity and ignorance. I found them in a pitiable plight. They
-had eyes but could not see. They had ears but could not hear. Not one
-thing did they know until I taught them. I told them to observe the
-rising and the setting of the sun, moon, and stars. I taught them how
-to count, and write, and remember.
-
-"I taught them to yoke oxen to their ploughs instead of dragging them
-themselves. And I showed them how to harness horses to the chariots
-likewise. I helped them to make boats with oars for the rivers, and
-ships winged with white sails to traverse the seas. I taught them the
-healing power of plants to relieve them in their sickness. From me
-they learned how to mine for silver and copper, and how to work them.
-Indeed, friend Okeanos, thou mayst well say that all the arts men know
-how to apply they have learned from Prometheus."
-
-Zeus sat uneasily on his throne, angry when he saw that the spirit of
-Prometheus was unbroken. "He still defies me, but I will conquer yet,"
-said the Thunderer; and he sent a cruel vulture to tear and eat his
-vitals every day. At night they grew again and he was healed. But each
-morning the vulture came and renewed his terrible feast.
-
-Two thousand years the large hearted, man-loving Prometheus passed in
-suffering in the Caucasus. At length Herakles came that way in his
-wanderings, when he was trying to find his way to the Garden of the
-Hesperides. He broke the iron bands like egg shells and set Prometheus
-free.
-
-To tell the truth, Prometheus was too wise for Zeus to have him as an
-enemy forever, for he knew one thing which Zeus did not--he knew the
-future. Zeus was aware that there were many important secrets
-concerning the future which he could learn from no one else. It is
-supposed that Zeus may have hoped to force Prometheus to yield up his
-secrets by these punishments, and that on finding out his mistake he
-slyly connived at his victim's liberation because he could not afford
-to be unreconciled to him any longer.
-
-Prometheus has been loved and honored through all the ages. On an
-island belonging to Greece the people built an altar to him at the
-foot of a burning mountain. Once a year they put out all their fires
-and sent a ship to Delos to bring a fresh light. They used this new
-flame for kindling again the fires they had extinguished.
-
-At Athens, Prometheus was held in sacred honor. People held
-torch-light festivals in memory of him. And on frosty nights, as they
-sat by the fire, they praised the great Prometheus, who could endure
-long enough to conquer destiny, the hero who had brought them mental
-balance, "The Gift of Equilibrium."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV
-
-DEUKALION, THE CHAMPION OF A NEW RACE
-
-
-Deukalion was the son of Prometheus, and a just and god-fearing man.
-In the time of Deukalion, Zeus destroyed the human race by means of a
-great flood. People had become wicked and godless; they did not fear
-the gods, and the meaner classes paid no respect to the better, and
-all of them loved every manner of wickedness.
-
-This state of affairs reached the ears of Zeus. But wishing to take
-the evidence of his own eyes and see if the stories that came to him
-were really true, he took the form of a mortal man and went down from
-his Olympian home to the Earth.
-
-One evening after sunset he reached Arcadia and asked for a night's
-shelter in the palace of Lykaon, the king. Lykaon was famous for his
-wickedness. Some of the people seemed to see some signs that Zeus was
-a god and went down on their knees to him, but Lykaon laughed at their
-credulity and said: "Stay till I find out whether he be a god or a
-man!"
-
-Lykaon had a stranger in his palace who had been sent to him as a
-messenger. Lykaon had the stranger killed and served up as food for
-his guest. When the dreadful feast was placed before Zeus, he arose at
-once in anger and left the table, and he shattered the house with a
-thunder-bolt. Lykaon betook himself to flight with all speed. He fled
-to the fields howling like a wild beast.
-
-Lykaon tried to speak, but his human voice had left him. His skin
-turned into a wolf's pelt, his hands into paws. He rushed furiously
-among the herds and began to tear and bite cattle and sheep. He had
-been changed into a wolf.
-
-Zeus, having seen with his own eyes that things were even worse than
-had been told him, returned to Olympos. He called the gods together in
-council and related to them the wicked deeds he had seen. He ended by
-saying: "The whole race of man must surely perish," and the other gods
-consented to his judgment.
-
-At first Zeus thought it best to send thunder-bolts to destroy the
-evil race, but he feared that the flames might reach from earth into
-the heavens and burn the whole firmament. He therefore laid aside his
-thunder-bolts and resolved to drown the earth's inhabitants by means
-of a flood. So he ordered the God of the Winds to shut Boreas and all
-the other winds in his cave, save Notos, only, the wet south wind, who
-was to go free.
-
-Then Notos flew forth with his damp wings. A thick cloud hid his face
-like a veil and darkness hung around his head. Water ran down from his
-brow and his hair. Cloud-bursts broke from the sky and sent cataracts
-of water over the earth, flooding it in every direction. The work of
-the farmers was stopped and their hopes destroyed in an instant.
-
-But Zeus was not satisfied with that. He called Poseidon, Lord of the
-Seas, to his assistance. Poseidon came quickly. He spoke to all the
-rivers in a loud commanding voice. "Leave your beds," he cried, "and
-rush wildly over your banks and flood the world!" The rivers obeyed,
-and Poseidon himself struck the earth with his trident. The earth
-quaked and, bursting open in many places, let forth torrents of water.
-
-The waters rose higher and higher. The valleys became one wide lake,
-and soon the tops of the trees were no longer above the water. Man
-and herds were drowned. The altars of the gods were swept away. When a
-house remained standing it was soon covered with water. The highest
-towers disappeared in the flood. Land and sea were no longer
-separated. The world was all sea--a long, shoreless sea.
-
-Seals gambolled where goats had formerly grazed. Dolphins swam over
-the cities that were buried beneath the waves. Wolves and sheep, lions
-and tigers huddled close together and swam about as long as they could
-keep afloat, when they sank below the waters. The deer could no longer
-find ground for his fleet foot. The birds flew on tired, trembling
-wings searching for a place on which to perch and finally fell into
-the sea with worn-out wings.
-
-The people tried to save themselves in any possible way. Some fled to
-the hills and mountains. Some took refuge in ships and sailed over the
-fields where formerly the plough had moved. By and by the
-mountain-tops were swept by the waves, and the ships were whirled
-about by the terrible currents and wrecked.
-
-Deukalion and his wife, Pyrrha, were the only ones to be saved. He had
-taken the advice of his father, Prometheus, to build himself a
-floating-house in the form of a box and to store in it a great amount
-of food; when the flood came he entered this house with his wife. The
-house was carried about nine days and nine nights by the winds. Only
-the two peaks of Parnassos remained above water. On this mountain the
-floating-house stuck fast.
-
-When Zeus cast his eyes down to earth he saw that everything was
-covered with water, on the surface of which floated trees and grasses
-and thousands of animals and people who had perished in the flood. And
-he saw Deukalion and his wife safely anchored on the heights of
-Parnassos.
-
-Then Zeus gave commands to Boreas to chase away the black clouds. The
-sun shone again and the waters retreated from the earth, which was
-soon dry again. Poseidon laid aside his trident and the rivers ran in
-their old channels. Woods sprang up and the fields bloomed with
-flowers.
-
-Deukalion and Pyrrha looked around them. Everywhere was loneliness and
-silence. It was like the solitude of death. Deukalion wept and said to
-his beloved Pyrrha: "My dear wife, I do not see a living soul far or
-near in any direction. Thou art my only companion. All the friends we
-have known have perished in the flood. We are the only inhabitants of
-the earth. What will life be worth to us, since we must live alone in
-the world with no fellow-men. I should like better to live if we had
-other people whom we might love and help and with whom we could enjoy
-ourselves. But we will give thanks to Zeus for saving us."
-
-They walked along a little way and came to an altar of the Goddess of
-Justice. There they fell on their knees and said: "Oh, divine Justice,
-tell us how we may revive the human race which has perished. Oh, help
-us and restore our lost ones to us." They listened for the goddess to
-answer and soon they heard a soft voice reply: "Veil your faces, oh,
-Deukalion and Pyrrha. Go down the mountain, and as ye go throw
-backward over your shoulders the bones of your mother."
-
-Deukalion and his wife were puzzled at these words and at first they
-could not tell what they meant. But after some meditation Deukalion
-said: "My dear wife, the earth is our mother and her bones are the
-rocks. As we go down the mountain we will cast behind us the stones
-which we find in our pathway."
-
-So they started forth, the founders of a new race, throwing the stones
-and rocks which they met over their shoulders and out of sight. From
-the stones which they cast there sprang up living men and women; the
-stones which Deukalion threw became men and those which Pyrrha cast
-became women.
-
-Deukalion and Pyrrha had many children. One of their sons was called
-Hellen. Hellen's children and grandchildren spread over Greece and
-were called Hellenes, and they gave the name Hellas to Greece.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI
-
-DÆDALOS, A HERO OF INVENTION
-
-
-Dædalos was a native of Athens and descended from one of the most
-ancient kings of Attica. It was he who constructed the labyrinth in
-which King Minos of Crete locked up the monster Minotaur. Dædalos was
-the greatest artist of his time and was master of many useful crafts.
-He produced wonderful pieces of work in a great many places of the
-world.
-
-His statues were so cleverly made that they were taken for living
-beings. It was thought that they could see and walk about. For while
-the artists before him sculptured their statues with closed eyes, with
-their hands crossed over their breasts, and their feet turned
-sidewise, Dædalos made statues with open eyes, outstretched arms, and
-feet pointing forward into space.
-
-Dædalos had Talos for a disciple, a clever and intelligent youth, who,
-though but a mere boy, had invented several tools of great usefulness.
-One day, finding the jaw-bone of a snake he began to cut a piece of
-wood with it. It was hardly sharp enough to answer his purpose, so he
-constructed a saw of iron on the same plan.
-
-Dædalos was so jealous of the boy that he pushed him off from the
-Acropolis and the lad died of the injury. When Dædalos saw what he had
-done he went to Talos, but found him dead, so he hurried to bury him.
-He was surprised in the act and brought before the court which met on
-the hill called Areopagus. He was condemned to death by the court, and
-in order to save himself he fled to Crete.
-
-At that time Minos was king in Crete. He received the famous artist
-very kindly and held him in great honor. There Dædalos did many fine
-works for Minos besides the famous labyrinth for the Minotaur.
-
-After he had stayed some time in Crete he wanted to go away. But Minos
-did not wish to let him go, and when Dædalos concealed himself, the
-king searched for him everywhere and gave the order that no ship
-should take him away from the island.
-
-The ingenious Dædalos then meditated a plan of flight. Suddenly he
-exclaimed, "Minos may watch the sea and the land, but he cannot watch
-the air. That is still free. I will make me wings and fly away."
-
-Dædalos constructed two large wings and fastened them to his body with
-wax. Moving them with his arms and hands he was able to fly like a
-bird. He made another pair of wings for his son Ikaros, fastened them
-to the boy's body and taught him how to move them. Then he instructed
-Ikaros to keep close to him and not to fly too high lest the wax
-should be melted by the heat of the sun, nor to keep too near the
-surface of the sea, as he might dip his wings into the water and
-render them too heavy for flight.
-
-After he had given this advice, he flew up first and his son followed.
-Away they went, cutting through the air like two eagles, and soon the
-high mountains of Crete were left far behind them. Below them the wide
-sea stretched out its great expanse. The sailors looked up from their
-boats and wondered what these strange beings were.
-
- [Illustration: DÆDALOS AND IKAROS.
- (From the painting by Van Dyck.)]
-
-They flew over fields where farmers were ploughing, and the farmers
-gazed up with astonishment. But Dædalos and Ikaros flew on and on,
-heedless of all that was going on below. The fishermen forgot to take
-in their fish and the farmers forgot to urge their oxen on with the
-goad, but kept gazing into the sky until the flying people were out of
-sight.
-
-At first Ikaros kept close in the wake of his father, but when his
-confidence grew stronger he rose up higher. He forgot his father's
-advice and flew very high into the air. Up, up to the sun as nearly as
-he could go. The wax melted. The wings parted and fell to pieces, and
-Ikaros was precipitated like a stone into the sea.
-
-Dædalos missed the boy in a short time and turned back to look for
-him. He could not see him anywhere, so he called: "Ikaros, Ikaros, my
-son, where art thou?" But Ikaros made no answer. Dædalos flew about in
-great agony, and at last he saw the wings of his son floating on the
-surface of the sea.
-
-Then Dædalos knew that his beloved Ikaros was drowned. He descended to
-an island and searched the cliffs, and at length he found the body of
-Ikaros, which the waves had washed ashore. With tears and lamentations
-Dædalos buried his only son, and thus was he punished for the death
-of his disciple, Talos. And the sea in which Ikaros was drowned was
-called the Icarian Sea from that time.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVII
-
-PHAETHON, A HERO OF BAD FORTUNE
-
-
-Helios, the god of the Day, had a famous son whose name was Phaethon.
-Helios drove the chariot of the Sun through the heavens, and Phaethon
-played by the sea-shore where his mother lived. She was a daughter of
-Old Ocean and had many daughters of her own. Phaethon grew to be a
-youth of great promise, but he had one fault, an excessive conceit.
-
-When he had grown to be a young man he left his mother's home and went
-to his father to receive the more manly instructions which belong to
-those of heavenly descent. When he reached the wonderful palace of
-Helios, which was built of gold and precious stones, he sat down and
-rested near the glittering columns, his self-pride growing with the
-thought of being one of the heirs to such an estate.
-
-He rose and entered the silver gates which shone like mirrors. He
-found Helios in the palace surrounded by a flood of light, sitting on
-a throne shaped out of an emerald. To the right and left of Helios
-stood Hemera (the Day), Men (the Month), Etos (the Year), the Æones
-(the Seasons), and at equal distance from one another the Horæ
-(Hours), and Ages unnumbered. There also stood Spring adorned by a
-wreath of flowers, Summer with ears of grain in his hands, Autumn
-laden with juicy fruits, and Winter with his white hair.
-
-Phaethon halted in awe. But Helios, as soon as he perceived him,
-welcomed him to his palace. He took the crown of golden rays from his
-own head lest its dazzling splendor should blind the eyes of Phaethon,
-and then called him to come nearer.
-
-Phaethon approached with fear and trembling, but Helios called him his
-son and reassured him with endearing words. When Phaethon's eyes had
-grown somewhat accustomed to the blinding splendor, Helios said to him
-with fatherly love: "What has brought my dear child into the heavenly
-palace of his father? Surely this is hardly the place for anyone who
-is accustomed to the cool earth."
-
-Phaethon answered: "Oh, my royal father, I am very unhappy. I am the
-subject of much gossip and derision. People taunt me because my
-father lives in the heavens and does not abide in our home on earth.
-They say that I am not thy son at all, and I have come to thee to get
-the proof from thee that I am really thy son."
-
-Now if Helios had lived upon earth everything would have been burned
-up in the light of his glittering rays, but he felt sorry for his son
-and said: "Thou art my dear son, indeed. I would gladly leave this
-palace to come and abide in thy home by the sea. But I must drive the
-chariot of the Day. Even the gods are not exempt from duty."
-
-Then said Phaethon: "If thou art indeed my father, thou wilt grant me
-the boon which I ask of thee." "Ask what thou wilt," replied Helios,
-"and I swear to thee by the waters of the Styx, that I will give it to
-thee."
-
-Then Phaethon made answer: "Let me drive thy chariot for one day and
-all these people who despise me will see that I am thy son."
-
-Helios was dismayed when he heard the audacious and unexpected demand
-of his son.
-
-"What words hast thou spoken, my dear Phaethon!" he said. "Thou dost
-ask for thine own destruction. Thou dost request a thing that no one
-of the gods would dare to undertake, not even Zeus himself. No one
-but myself is able to drive my chariot."
-
-But Phaethon would not be persuaded. "Thou dost not love me, my
-father," he said with tears. "I see that thou dost not love me. If
-thou didst thou wouldst let me have thy chariot in order that the
-whole world might see that I am indeed thy son."
-
-"Foolish boy," responded Helios, "just because I love thee shall I let
-thee destroy thyself? Ask any other boon but this."
-
-"Nay, I want the chariot and nothing else," replied Phaethon.
-
-Helios was stricken with grief, but he had bound himself by the Great
-Oath of the Gods, which cannot be broken. He took Phaethon by the hand
-and led him to his chariot and placed him in it.
-
-The chariot was a wonderful piece of workmanship done by Hephæstos.
-The seat and axle were made of gold. Golden also were the tires of the
-wheels and the spokes were of silver.
-
-While Phaethon was yet gazing with wonder at the glittering chariot of
-his father, the rosy-fingered Dawn opened the dazzling gates of the
-East, the stars, one after another, set--last of all the Morning Star,
-and the light of the Moon died out.
-
-Helios ordered the Hours to harness up his immortal steeds, which
-were always fed on nectar and ambrosia. The Hours brought the horses
-up from the stables and yoked them to the chariot. While this was done
-Helios anointed the face of his son with heavenly oil, lest he might
-be scorched by the fiery rays. Then he placed his radiant crown upon
-Phaethon's head, and sighing bitterly, gave his son this parting
-advice:
-
-"My son, do not touch the horses with the whip, but hold on to the
-reins with all thy might. The horses are impetuous and thou wilt find
-it hard to hold them. Keep them well in hand when making the ascent as
-well as in the descent. First thy course is steeply upward, and on the
-other side it descends rapidly.
-
-"Do not go near the earth lest thou burn it, and do not rise too high
-or thou wilt set fire to the heavens. The twilight is waning. Go, my
-son, for mortals are looking for the light of Helios. At the last
-moment I pray thee to change thy mind and hand the reins to me."
-
-But the son, exulting with joy, gathered up the reins, and taking
-leave of his disconsolate father, boldly drove off.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII
-
-THE DEATH OF PHAETHON
-
-
-The horses darted forward to their long race, and their first few
-leaps brought them above the highest mountains. Before the eyes of the
-youth the whole extent of land and sea lay outstretched.
-
-The deer already had left their shelters and gone up on the heights.
-All nature seemed to awake. The quiet woods resounded with the songs
-of the birds, which seemed to greet the rising sun. Glittering
-dewdrops hung on the leaves and flowers and shone like diamonds with
-the light of Helios. Hares and rabbits left their hiding-places and
-came forth for food. Bees flew humming from flower to flower,
-gathering their precious sweets. The shepherd led forth his bleating
-flocks into the green pastures, the farmer plodded off into the fields
-with his rural tools. Smoke began to rise from the cottage chimneys.
-
-Only the owls and other night-birds, unable to bear the light of the
-sun, flew back to their lonely hiding-places, and a few timid flowers
-closed their petals, but the sun-flowers turned their faces with joy
-toward the rising sun. Phaethon was entranced by the sight of the
-glorious beauty of awakening nature.
-
-The horses soon perceived that they were not held by the powerful
-hands of Helios; they also felt that they were not drawing their
-accustomed burden, and as a ship that does not carry the necessary
-ballast is tossed about by the waves, so the chariot was jolted
-through the air, rising and falling as if it were empty.
-
-The horses strayed from their path. Phaethon tried to rein them in. He
-did not know the way and was not strong enough to curb the restive
-steeds. They ran this way and that, to right and left, under the
-uncertain guidance of their new driver.
-
-On they flew. They were near the middle of the sky where the road was
-steepest. Phaethon looked down from the tremendous height upon the
-earth. He became dizzy; his hands trembled and his knees knocked
-together. He let the reins go loose; the horses darted forward like
-arrows. He pulled them back, and they plunged and stood on their hind
-feet. He wanted to speak to them, but he did not know their names.
-
-Overcome at last by fear, he threw the reins down on the backs of the
-horses and clung to the chariot. Having no guidance whatever the
-horses now started on a wild race. They approached the earth and
-turned everything into a desert; woods and meadows, cities and
-villages were burnt to ashes. The rivers were dried up and the sea was
-boiling.
-
-Again the chariot was borne up to an immeasurable height and the earth
-was relieved of the terrible heat. But now the firmament was in danger
-of being destroyed by fire. Curses and prayers rose to heaven from the
-suffering people on earth, and cries of fright resounded through
-Olympos.
-
-Zeus heard the sighs and wailings and cries, and to save the world
-from destruction he hurled his thunder-bolt at the unfortunate
-Phaethon, who fell from the dizzy heights to earth. With tears and
-lamentations his mother searched for the body of her wayward son. She
-found him near the mouth of a great river which had been burned dry.
-
-There she buried him, and the sisters of the unfortunate youth shed
-bitter tears over his grave. They could not bear to go away from the
-tomb and leave him lying there alone, so they remained kneeling and
-motionless until Zeus took pity on them and changed them into weeping
-willows. Even then they kept on weeping, but their tears were dried
-by the sun and carried away by the streams into the great sea, where
-they became jewels of amber.
-
-Kyknos, too, a friend of Phaethon's, mourned his loss and could not be
-comforted; so Zeus, in kindness, changed him into a swan. Helios, in
-his fatherly grief, refused to drive the chariot of the Sun any
-longer, and the earth was left in darkness for a whole day. But the
-gods entreated him to take the reins again and men prayed for light,
-and from that time on the Sun has kept its true course through the
-heavens, under his wise guidance.
-
-
-
-
-VOCABULARY
-
-
- Ad mē' tos.
- Æ gē' us.
- Æ thra (ē' thra).
- A kris' i os.
- Alk mē' ne.
- An tæ os (an tē' os).
- A res (ā' rēs).
- A ri ad' ne.
- As klep' i os, or Æs cu la' pi us.
- Ath' a mas.
- Au gei as, or Au ge as (au gī' as, or au gē' as).
- Bœ o' ti a.
- Ca' cus, or Ka' kos.
- Cer' be rus, or Ker' be ros.
- Da' nä e (dă).
- Da' na æ.
- Da na' i des, or Da' na ids.
- Da´ na os.
- Dæ' da los.
- De' los.
- De me' ter.
- Deu ka' li on.
- Di o me' des.
- E leu' sis.
- Eu rys theus (ū rys' thuse).
- Glau' ke.
- Hĕ´ ka te.
- Hē' li os.
- He phæs tos (hĕ fēs' tos), or Vulcan.
- Her' a kles or Her' cu les.
- He si o ne (hĕ see' o ne).
- Hip po da mei a (hip po da mī' a).
- Hip pol' y te.
- Hy met' tos.
- Hy per bo rē' ans.
- I bē' ri a.
- I´ ka ros, or Ic' a rus.
- I o la os (ē ō' la os).
- I ol kos (ē ol' kos).
- Jap e tos, or I ap e tus (yap' e tos, or ē ap' e tus).
- Kē´ le os.
- Ke pheus (kē' fuse).
- Kre ū' sa.
- Krom' my on.
- La ri' sa.
- Li nos (lē' nos).
- Lo cri (lo' crē).
- Ly ka' on.
- Me de a (mĕ dē' a).
- Mĕ' ga ris.
- Me le a gros (mĕ le ah' gros).
- Met a nei ra (met a nī ra).
- My ke´ næ, or My cē' næ.
- Myr' til os.
- Ne me' an.
- Ne reus (nē' ruse).
- Œ no' ma os.
- O ke' a nos.
- Or pheus (or' fuse).
- Pe leus (pē' luse).
- Pe li as (pē' li as).
- Pe lop' i des.
- Pe lop on nes' os, or Pe lop on nes' us.
- Per i phe' tes or Kor y ne' tes.
- Per seph' o ne, or Pro serp' i ne.
- Pha ë thon (fā' e thon).
- Phin' e us.
- Pit' theus.
- Po sei don (po sī' don).
- Se' ri phos (sĕ).
- Stym phā´ los.
- Sym ple gä' des (sym ple gah' des).
- Ta' los.
- The seus (the´ suse).
- Trip tol e mos (trip tol' a mos).
- Trœ ze ne (tre zē´ ne).
- Vale of Tem pe (tem' pe).
- Zeus (zuse).
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note
-
-Variant spelling is preserved as printed.
-
-Minor punctuation errors have been repaired. Hyphenation has been made
-consistent.
-
-The following amendment has been made:
-
- Page vii--xiii amended to xi--Introduction xi
-
-The frontispiece illustration has been moved to follow the title page.
-Other illustrations have been moved where necessary so that they are
-not in the middle of a paragraph.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Herakles, the Hero of Thebes, and
-Other Heroes of the Myth, by Mary E. Burt and Zenaïde A. Ragozin
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Herakles, the Hero of Thebes, and Other
-Heroes of the Myth, by Mary E. Burt and Zenade A. Ragozin
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Herakles, the Hero of Thebes, and Other Heroes of the Myth
- Adapted from the Second Book of the Primary Schools of Athens, Greece
-
-Author: Mary E. Burt
- Zenade A. Ragozin
-
-Release Date: November 28, 2015 [EBook #50569]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HERAKLES, HERO OF THEBES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Shaun Pinder, Sam W. and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 456px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="456" height="700"
-alt="Front cover of the book" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="titlep">
-<h1><span class="lrgfont">HERAKLES</span><br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE HERO OF THEBES</span><br />
-
-<span class="vsmlfont">AND OTHER HEROES OF THE MYTH</span></h1>
-
-
-<p class="subt">Adapted from the Second Book of the Primary Schools of
-Athens, Greece</p>
-
-
-<p class="author"><span class="smlfont">BY</span><br />
-
-<span class="vlrgfont">MARY E. BURT</span><br />
-
-<i>Author of &ldquo;Literary Landmarks,&rdquo; &ldquo;Stories from Plato,&rdquo;<br />
-&ldquo;Story of the German Iliad,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Child-Life Reading Study&rdquo;;<br />
-Editor of &ldquo;The Cable Story Book,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Eugene Field Book&rdquo;;<br />
-Teacher in the John A. Browning School, New York City</i><br />
-<br />
-<span class="smlfont">AND</span><br />
-
-<span class="vlrgfont">ZENA&Iuml;DE A. RAGOZIN</span><br />
-
-<i>Author of &ldquo;The Story of Chaldea,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Story of Assyria,&rdquo;<br />
-Etc.; Member of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain<br />
-and Ireland, of the American Oriental Society, of the<br />
-Soci&eacute;t&eacute; Ethnologique of Paris, etc.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="publish">NEW YORK<br />
-CHARLES SCRIBNER&rsquo;S SONS<br />
-1900</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="fmatter">
-<p class="fmcenter"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1900, by</span><br />
-<span class="lrgfont">CHARLES SCRIBNER&rsquo;S SONS</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="fmcenter"><span class="smlfont">TROW DIRECTORY<br />
-PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPANY<br />
-NEW YORK</span></p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="bookshead">SCRIBNER&rsquo;S SERIES OF SCHOOL
-READING.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><b>In Uniform Binding; each 12mo, <i>net</i>, 60 Cents.</b></p>
-
-
-<div class="bookblock">
-<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Lobo, Rag and Vixen.</span> From &ldquo;Wild Animals I Have
-Known.&rdquo; By Ernest Seton-Thompson. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">The Howells Story Book.</span> Edited by Mary E. Burt
-and Mildred Howells. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">The Cable Story Book.</span> Selections for School Reading,
-with the Story of the Author&rsquo;s Life. Edited by Mary
-E. Burt and Lucy Leffingwell Cable. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">The Eugene Field Book.</span> Verses, Stories, and Letters for
-School Reading. Edited by Mary E. Burt and Mary B.
-Cable. Introduction by George W. Cable. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Fanciful Tales.</span> By Frank R. Stockton. Edited by
-Julia E. Langworthy. Introduction by Mary E. Burt.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">The Hoosier School-Boy.</span> By Edward Eggleston. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Children&rsquo;s Stories in American Literature, 1660-1860.</span>
-By Henrietta C. Wright.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Children&rsquo;s Stories in American Literature, 1860-1896.</span>
-By Henrietta C. Wright.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Odysseus, the Hero of Ithaca.</span> By Mary E. Burt. A
-Translation of the Story of Odysseus as used in the Schools
-of Athens and Berlin. Fully Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Poems of American Patriotism.</span> Chosen by Brander
-Matthews. 285 pages.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Twelve Naval Captains.</span> By Molly Elliot Seawell. 233
-pages. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Herakles, the Hero of Thebes.</span> By Mary E. Burt.
-A Translation of the Story of Herakles and other Greek
-Heroes, as used in the Schools of Athens. Illustrated.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 537px;">
-<a name="herakles" id="herakles"></a>
-<img src="images/hht01.jpg" width="537" height="700"
-alt="" />
-<p class="caption">HERAKLES SLAYING A CENTAUR.<br />
-(Giovanni Bologna.)</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="dedication">
-<p class="center">
-To<br />
-SEVEN<br />
-LITTLE GENTLEMEN<br />
-WILLIE <span class="dedspace1">&nbsp;</span> MACY<br />
-REGGIE <span class="dedspace2">&nbsp;</span> CHARLES<br />
-LOUIS <span class="dedspace3">&nbsp;</span> OLIVER<br />
-GRISWOLD</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>v]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="preface" id="preface"></a>PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> child&rsquo;s heart goes out to the man of action,
-the man who makes short work of things
-and gets directly at a result. He responds to
-life, to energy, quick wit, the blow that hits the
-nail on the head at the first stroke.</p>
-
-<p>The rapidity of action in the stories of Herakles,
-Jason, and other Heroes of the Myth, the
-prowess and courage and untiring endurance
-of the men, render the characters worthy subjects
-of thought to young minds, and have
-secured the stories a permanent place in educational
-literature. It is not elegant literature
-alone that boys need, but inspiring ideals
-which will impel them to stand fearlessly to
-their guns, to do the hard thing with untiring
-perseverance, to reach the result with unerring
-insight.</p>
-
-<p>It is exactly this unbending courage in Herakles
-and his comrade heroes, that has made
-them the backbone of literature for ages,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>vi]</a></span>
-holding their own in spite of the sapless literary
-fungus crowding our book-shelves.</p>
-
-<p>While travelling in Greece I found the children
-of the primary schools reading these
-stories in the lower grades, the book being the
-one used next above the primer. The interest
-was enthusiastic, and I brought home a copy
-of the book, which, with Madame Ragozin&rsquo;s
-collaboration, I have arranged as a first or
-second book of reading for our own schools.</p>
-
-<p class="sig">Mary E. Burt.</p>
-
-<p class="address"><span class="smcap">The John A. Browning School</span>,<br />
-<span class="smcap">New York</span>, March 15, 1900.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>vii]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="contents" id="contents"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="centered">
-<table border="0" summary="Table of contents">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlt">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><small>PAGE</small></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlsc" colspan="2">Introduction</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#introduction">xi</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt"><small>CHAPTER</small></td>
- <td class="tdlt">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdrb">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">I.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Babe Herakles</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap01">1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">II.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Herakles is Doomed to Serve Eurystheus</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap02">4</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">III.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The First Labor&mdash;The Nemean Lion</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap03">6</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">IV.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Second Labor&mdash;Herakles Kills the Water-Snake of Lake Lerna</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap04">9</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">V.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Third Labor&mdash;The Golden-Horned Hind</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap05">12</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VI.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Fourth Labor&mdash;The Erymanthian Boar</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap06">15</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VII.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Fifth Labor&mdash;Herakles Cleans the Augeian Stables</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap07">19</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VIII.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Sixth Labor&mdash;The Birds of Stymphalos</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap08">22</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">IX.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Seventh Labor&mdash;Herakles Catches the Mad Bull of Crete</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap09">24</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>viii]</a></span>X.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Eighth Labor&mdash;The Horses of Diomedes</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap10">25</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XI.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Ninth Labor&mdash;The Girdle of Hippolyte</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap11">27</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XII.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Tenth Labor&mdash;The Cattle of Geryon</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap12">30</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIII.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Eleventh Labor&mdash;The Golden Apples of Hesperides</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap13">35</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIV.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Twelfth Labor&mdash;Herakles Fetches Cerberus Out of Hades</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap14">40</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XV.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Theseus, the Hero of Athens</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap15">43</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVI.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The First Exploits of Theseus. He Finds His Father</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap16">47</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVII.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Adventures of Theseus</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap17">51</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVIII.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Adventures of Theseus</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap18">56</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIX.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Jason, the Hero of Thessaly</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap19">60</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XX.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Jason Claims His Throne</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap20">63</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXI.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Expedition</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap21">69</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXII.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Jason Finds the Golden Fleece</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap22">74</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXIII.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Orpheus, the Hero of the Lyre</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap23">78</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXIV.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Pelops, the Hero of the Peloponnesos</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap24">83</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>ix]</a></span>XXV.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Perseus, the Hero of Argos</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap25">87</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXVI.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Perseus Finds the Gorgons</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap26">92</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXVII.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Perseus Rescues Andromeda</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap27">95</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXVIII.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Perseus Becomes King of Tiryns</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap28">100</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXIX.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Triptolemos, the Hero of Eleusis, and Demeter, the Earth-Mother</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap29">103</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXX.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Demeter&rsquo;s Grief</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap30">106</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXXI.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Demeter&rsquo;s Joy</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap31">111</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXXII.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Triptolemos Becomes a Hero. Demeter&rsquo;s Gift</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap32">116</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXXIII.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Prometheus, the Champion of Mankind</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap33">118</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXXIV.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Prometheus Unbound</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap34">122</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXXV.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Deukalion, the Champion of a New Race</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap35">126</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXXVI.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">D&aelig;dalos, a Hero of Invention</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap36">132</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXXVII.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">Phaethon, a Hero of Bad Fortune</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap37">136</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXXVIII.</td>
- <td class="tdlt">The Death of Phaethon</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#chap38">141</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>x]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="illustrations" id="illustrations"></a>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="centered">
-<table border="0" summary="List of illustrations">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlsc">Herakles Slaying a Centaur</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#herakles"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlsc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><small>FACING&nbsp;PAGE</small></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlsc">The Priestess of Apollo at Delphi</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#priestess">6</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlsc">The Temple to Theseus at the Foot of the Acropolis in Athens</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#temple">60</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlsc">Orpheus Leading Eurydike Out of Hades</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#orpheus">80</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlsc">The Return of Persephone</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#return">114</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlsc">D&aelig;dalos and Ikaros</td>
- <td class="tdrb"><a href="#daedalos">134</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>xi]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="introduction" id="introduction"></a>INTRODUCTION<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE LAND OF THE HEROES</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">One</span> look at the map of Greece will show us
-that it is the smallest of European countries.
-For many hundreds of years it was inhabited
-by the handsomest, bravest, and most intelligent
-people in the world. But these people,
-the Greeks, or Hellenes, as they called themselves,
-had not always lived in the country.</p>
-
-<p>Thousands of years before the Hellenes came
-to Greece it was a perfect wilderness of mountains,
-narrow valleys, torrents, and tangled forests.
-It was a land of wild beasts, and they
-were so numerous and fierce that there was
-almost no room for men.</p>
-
-<p>Yet men did live there, but we know nothing
-about them or what they were like, except that
-they hid in caves and had hardly got beyond
-the art of making fire, trapping and killing the
-less dangerous animals with sticks or little arrows
-pointed with stones, and using their meat
-for food and hides for clothing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>xii]</a></span>
-Then the new people, the Greeks, began to
-come into the country. They came in boats
-from across the sea and on foot from the north,
-through numberless mountain-passes. They
-did not come all at once, but in small detachments,
-in single tribes, so that it took them
-many years to spread over the country.</p>
-
-<p>The new race was nobler than the old, more
-advanced in knowledge and in the arts of civilized
-life. It was not a race to be content with
-caves and forest-dens, but each tribe, after it
-had chosen a district and taken possession of
-it, selected some high hill, built rude dwellings
-upon it and temples to its patron gods, a public
-treasure-house also, and enclosed the hill with
-strong walls. It had become a fortress, and
-was called Acropolis, in their language.</p>
-
-<p>Each tribe, of course, had its leaders, usually
-belonging to some family which had earned the
-gratitude and loyalty of the people by brave
-and affectionate service, and the leadership descended
-from father to son. These were the
-kings and they resided within the Acropolis.</p>
-
-<p>Around it and under the protection of its
-walls the people built their own huts and began
-to clear the land. They sowed various crops,
-planted the vine and the olive, and raised herds
-of sheep and goats. There was room enough
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>xiii]</a></span>
-within the walls for all the families, with their
-herds, to find shelter in the Acropolis in times
-of danger, from the attacks of the wild natives
-or of the still wilder beasts of the forests and
-fields.</p>
-
-<p>Now these latter were by far the most dangerous
-enemies of the new settlers, who soon
-found that they could venture but a few miles
-from their small home-farms without encountering
-huge and ferocious animals which the
-increased herds attracted and which their miserable
-weapons were utterly insufficient to slay
-or even put to flight.</p>
-
-<p>Each small district had its particular terror,
-just as many districts of India now have a man-eating
-tiger, which makes miles and miles of
-country around unsafe for man or beast.</p>
-
-<p>It became a question which of the two, the
-men or the wild animals, would remain in possession.
-Then young and courageous men,
-sons of the ruling families, athletes in strength,
-practised in the arts of war, commanding
-through their greater wealth the use of better
-weapons, felt it their duty to their people to do
-for them what the poor herdsmen and laborers
-had neither the strength nor the skill to do for
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>From all the central royal cities they started
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>xiv]</a></span>
-singly or in small troops, a bevy of young
-heroes, as eager for the delights of adventure
-as for the public good. Year after year they
-wandered across country seeking the most impassable
-wildernesses, directed by the stories
-they heard on their way to the dens of the
-cruel monsters, which they usually overcame
-by force or cunning.</p>
-
-<p>Then they would return to their homes triumphant,
-bearing the proof of their incredible
-prowess, the hides, or horns, or heads of the
-monsters they had slain. Thus they put new
-heart into their people. Their trophies seemed
-to say: &ldquo;You see these creatures were not so
-terrible as they might have been; what we
-have done others can do.&rdquo; So they did a
-double good&mdash;one immediate by the destruction
-of the dreaded foes and by the opening of the
-land to the planters and the tillers; the other
-even more far-reaching and more beneficent
-in its results by raising men&rsquo;s spirits, inspiring
-them with confidence and with the ambition to
-show that they were not mere helpless boors,
-cowed and dependent on their betters.</p>
-
-<p>The Greek nation in years to come proved
-itself a nation of heroes and was so called by
-fame. But who can tell how much these heroes
-were indebted for this honorable distinction
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>xv]</a></span>
-which has remained by them to this day, to the
-early vigorous education which those doughty
-champions of old imparted to them, not by
-preaching or advice, but by their own dauntless
-example.</p>
-
-<p>Can we wonder if their people&rsquo;s passionate
-gratitude and unselfish admiration survived
-those glorious men through ages? Can we
-wonder if after centuries had come and gone
-the memory of their deeds and persons appeared
-to later generations through a halo of
-wonder and awe?</p>
-
-<p>Deeds of a remote past always assume gigantic
-proportions. &ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; men would say,
-&ldquo;surely, those heroes were more than ordinary
-mortals! They had more than human strength,
-endurance, wisdom. Neither iron fang nor
-claw of steel could harm them. They died, indeed,
-but of their nature they must have been
-half divine; their mothers were human, but
-surely the gods themselves were their fathers.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>And thus it was settled, and for many, many
-hundreds of years the Greeks continued to
-honor their ancient heroes as half-divine men,
-or demi-gods, and to erect altars to them and
-come to them with prayers and offerings. The
-Greek had to grow in mind and soul high
-enough to grasp the truth that there can be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>xvi]</a></span>
-only one God, and that no man, high as he may
-tower above his kind, can be more than human.</p>
-
-<p>But it was a beautiful and ennobling belief,
-and at first sight it seems a pity that it was
-ever lost, yet in reality it was a great gain, for
-men may think they have an excuse for not
-putting forth their bravest efforts if they believe
-that the gods only can achieve deeds of
-courage. There is no reason why men may
-not aspire to any height of bravery which has
-been gained by other men.</p>
-
-<p>The undying energy embodied in the characters
-of these old heroes is the inheritance of
-every child. The children of America are not
-born the sons of ruling houses. But they are
-destined to be the guardians and rulers of their
-native land. And if the children take into their
-future lives the heroism they first realize in ancient
-story, they will find themselves, when the
-time comes, armed with the same courage, endurance,
-and love of human beings which have
-made the heroes of all lands and ages.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>1]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="reptitle">HERAKLES<br />
-<span class="vsmlfont">AND OTHER HEROES OF THE MYTH</span></p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><a name="chap01" id="chap01"></a>CHAPTER I<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE BABE HERAKLES</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Far</span> away in the land of Argos there once
-lived a beautiful maiden, the daughter of a
-brave king. She was tall and fair and her
-name was Alkmene. Her father was rich in
-the possession of many oxen.</p>
-
-<p>Her husband also owned great herds of
-oxen. He had so many that he could not tell
-them from those of the king. So he quarrelled
-with the king and slew him. Then he took
-Alkmene and fled from his native land. They
-came to Thebes and made it their home.</p>
-
-<p>Here Herakles was born, the babe who was
-stronger than the strongest of men. The goddess,
-Hera, hated Herakles. She was the wife
-of Zeus, the Lord of Thunder and King of
-Heaven. Hera was angry because Zeus loved
-him, and she was jealous because Zeus had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>2]</a></span>
-foretold that Herakles would become the
-greatest of men. More than that Zeus had
-deceived Hera and sent the infant Herakles to
-her to be nursed that he might be made strong
-and god-like by tasting divine milk.</p>
-
-<p>So Hera sent two large snakes to devour the
-babe when she found out what child it was
-that she had fed. Herakles lay asleep in the
-great brazen shield which his father carried in
-battle, for he had no other cradle. The fearful
-serpents crept up with open mouths into
-the shield with the sleeping babe.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Alkmene saw them she was terribly
-frightened and called in a loud voice for
-help. His father, hearing the outcry of Alkmene,
-ran into the house with his sword drawn
-and a great many warriors came with weapons
-in their hands.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles was only eight months old, but before
-his father could reach him he sat up in his
-bed and seized the serpents by their necks
-with his little hands. He squeezed and choked
-them with such force that they died.</p>
-
-<p>When Alkmene saw that the two snakes
-were dead and that Herakles was safe, she rejoiced
-greatly. But Hera&rsquo;s heart was filled
-with wrath and she began to plan more mischief
-against the child.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>3]</a></span>
-Herakles had his free will as long as he was
-a boy. His teachers were celebrated heroes
-who taught him boxing, wrestling, riding, and
-all kinds of games. He learned to read and
-write and to hurl the spear and shoot with
-bows and arrows. Linos taught him music.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles had a violent temper, and one day
-as Linos was teaching him to play the lute,
-the good teacher had reason to punish him.
-Herakles flew into a rage at this and struck
-Linos and killed him. Then his father sent
-him to the hills and left him to the care of
-herdsmen.</p>
-
-<p>The boy grew to be very large and strong.
-While he was yet a youth he slew a lion of
-great size that had killed many of his father&rsquo;s
-cattle. He went home wearing the lion&rsquo;s
-skin as a sign of his victory.</p>
-
-<p>Because he was so brave the King of
-Thebes gave his daughter to him in marriage
-and he lived happily with her for many years.
-But a sudden insanity came upon him during
-which he mistook his wife and children for
-wild beasts and shot them down with his bow
-and arrows. When Herakles recovered from
-his insanity and saw what he had done his
-grief was boundless.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>4]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap02" id="chap02"></a>CHAPTER II<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">HERAKLES IS DOOMED TO SERVE EURYSTHEUS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> wrath of Hera followed Herakles.
-When Zeus saw that Hera&rsquo;s heart was filled
-with anger toward Herakles, he mused within
-his own mind how he might best appease her
-resentment and protect the young man.</p>
-
-<p>So he called the gods together in council and
-they advised that Herakles be placed in bondage
-to his uncle Eurystheus, to serve him as a
-slave, and they ordained that he should perform
-twelve hard tasks, after which he would
-be numbered among the gods.</p>
-
-<p>Eurystheus was a mean fellow, stupid and
-cowardly. He was glad enough to have a
-chance to bully a man wiser and stronger than
-himself. He was born in Tiryns, a great fortress
-with many castles, built upon a large rock,
-but he had been made King of Argos and lived
-in the capital, Myken&aelig;, and he resolved to keep
-Herakles as far away from the kingdom as possible,
-for in his heart he was afraid of him.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles was grieved at being compelled to
-serve a man so much below him in strength
-and character, so he consulted the oracle at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>5]</a></span>
-Delphi to see if there was any escape, but he
-did not murmur, for he was willing to obey the
-law of the gods.</p>
-
-<p>The oracle of Delphi was a mysterious influence,
-a divine spirit which expressed itself
-through a priestess living in a sacred temple.
-It was supposed to be the voice of the god
-Apollo using this human agency for making
-known his will to men. The priestess became
-inspired to utter Apollo&rsquo;s holy laws by sitting
-on a golden tripod (or stool with three legs)
-over a chasm in the rock, from whence arose a
-sacred, sulphurous vapor which she breathed
-in as the breath of the god, and which caused
-her to breathe out his commands in wonderful
-sayings.</p>
-
-<p>The chasm from which the vapor issued was
-called The Chasm of the Oracle, and was in a
-large apartment or room in the temple. This
-celebrated temple had many columns of marble
-and splendid rooms made beautiful with thousands
-of marble statues. It stood on the side
-of Mount Parnassos, whose snow-covered head
-reaches into the clouds and looks down into
-the blue Gulf of Corinth below it to the
-south.</p>
-
-<p>It was here that Apollo killed the great
-dragon, Pytho, which had been the scourge of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>6]</a></span>
-the land for many years, and the grateful people
-built the temple in his honor. The oracle
-bade Herakles go forth to be the slave of Eurystheus
-and so atone for all his sins, but it gave
-him as a compensation a dear friend, Iolaos,
-who was also his young nephew. Wherever
-Herakles went Iolaos went with him and
-helped him.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap03" id="chap03"></a>CHAPTER III<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE FIRST LABOR&mdash;THE NEMEAN LION</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> happened that a fearful lion lived in Nemea,
-a wild district in upper Argolis, and it
-devastated all the land and was the terror of
-the inhabitants. Eurystheus ordered Herakles
-to bring him the skin of this lion. So Herakles
-took his bow, his quiver, and heavy club and
-started out in search of the beast.</p>
-
-<p>When he had reached a little town which is
-in the neighborhood of Nemea he was kindly
-received by a good countryman, who promised
-to put him on the track of the lion if he would
-sacrifice the animal to Zeus.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 449px;">
-<a name="priestess" id="priestess"></a>
-<img src="images/hht02.jpg" width="449" height="700"
-alt="" />
-<p class="caption">THE PRIESTESS OF APOLLO AT DELPHI.<br />
-(Michael Angelo.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Herakles promised, and the countryman went
-with him to show him the way. When they
-reached the place where traces of the lion were
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>7]</a></span>
-seen, Herakles said to his guide: &ldquo;Remain
-here thirty days. If I return safely from the
-lion-hunt you must sacrifice a sheep to Zeus,
-for he is the god who will have saved me. But
-if I am slain by the lion you must sacrifice the
-sheep to me, for after my death I shall be honored
-as a hero.&rdquo; Having said this, Herakles
-went his way.</p>
-
-<p>He reached the wilderness of Nemea, where
-he spent several days in looking for the lion,
-but without success. Not a trace of him could
-be found, nor did he fall in with any human
-being, for there was no one bold enough to
-wander around in that wilderness. Finally he
-spied the lion as he was about to crawl into
-his den.</p>
-
-<p>The lion was indeed worthy of his terrible
-fame. His size was prodigious, his eyes shot
-forth flames of fire, and his tongue licked his
-bloody chops. When he roared, the whole desert
-resounded.</p>
-
-<p>But Herakles stood fearlessly near a grove
-from whence he might approach the lion, and
-suddenly shot at him with his bow and arrow,
-hitting him squarely in the breast. The arrow
-glanced aside, and slipping around the lion&rsquo;s
-neck, fell on a rock behind him. When Herakles
-saw this he knew that the lion was proof
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>8]</a></span>
-against arrows and must be killed in some other
-way, and seizing his club, he gave chase to him.</p>
-
-<p>The lion made for a cave which had two
-mouths. Herakles closed up one of the entrances
-with heavy rocks and entered the other.
-He seized the lion by the throat and then came
-a terrible struggle, but Herakles squeezed him
-in his mighty arms until he gasped for breath,
-and at last lay dead.</p>
-
-<p>Then Herakles took up the huge body and,
-throwing it easily over his shoulder, returned
-to the place where he had left the countryman.
-It was on the last of the thirty appointed days,
-and the rustic, supposing that Herakles had
-come to his death through the lion, was about
-to offer up a sheep as a sacrifice in his honor.</p>
-
-<p>He rejoiced greatly when he saw Herakles
-alive and victorious, and the sheep was offered
-up to Zeus. Herakles left the little town and
-went to Myken&aelig; to the house of his uncle and
-showed him the dead body of the terrible lion.
-Eurystheus was so greatly frightened at the
-sight that he hid himself within a tower whose
-walls were built of solid brass.</p>
-
-<p>And he ordered Herakles not to enter the
-city again, but to stay outside of its gates until
-he had performed the other labors.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles stripped the skin from the lion with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>9]</a></span>
-his fingers, although it was so tough, and knowing
-it to be arrow-proof, took it for a cloak and
-wore it as long as he lived.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap04" id="chap04"></a>CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE SECOND LABOR&mdash;HERAKLES KILLS THE
-WATER-SNAKE OF LAKE LERNA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Not</span> far from Myken&aelig; is a small lake called
-Lerna. It is formed from a large spring at the
-foot of a hill. In this lake there lived a water-snake
-called the Hydra. It was a snake of uncommon
-size, with nine heads. Eight of the
-heads were mortal, but the one in the middle
-was immortal.</p>
-
-<p>The Hydra frequently came out of the water
-and swallowed up herds of cattle, laying waste
-the surrounding country. Eurystheus ordered
-Herakles to kill the snake, so he put on his
-lion&rsquo;s skin, and taking his club, started out. He
-mounted his chariot and took his faithful friend
-Iolaos, who acted as charioteer.</p>
-
-<p>Every warrior had to have a charioteer to
-drive the horses, leaving him free to use both
-of his hands. But driving was by no means the
-charioteer&rsquo;s only duty; he had also to look out
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>10]</a></span>
-for danger and protect the warrior with his
-shield as well as to supply him with arrows
-from the quiver suspended at the side of every
-chariot, and with reserve spears when his own
-was broken in the fray.</p>
-
-<p>It is clear, therefore, that the warrior&rsquo;s life
-was entirely in the hands of his charioteer, so it
-is no wonder that only the hero&rsquo;s dearest and
-most trusted friends were allowed to serve him
-in this way.</p>
-
-<p>After driving along for a while through
-groves of olive-trees and past pleasant vineyards,
-they came to wild places and saw Lake
-Lerna gleaming through the trees. Having
-reached the lake, Herakles descended from the
-chariot, left the horses in care of Iolaos, and
-went to hunt for the snake.</p>
-
-<p>He found it in a swampy place where it was
-hiding. Herakles shot some burning arrows
-at the Hydra and forced it to come out. It
-darted furiously at him, but he met it fearlessly,
-put his foot upon its tail, and with his club began
-to strike off its heads. He could not accomplish
-anything in this way, for as fast as he
-knocked off one head two others grew in its
-place.</p>
-
-<p>The snake coiled itself so firmly around one
-of Herakles&rsquo; legs that he was no longer able to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>11]</a></span>
-stir from the place. Added to all this there
-came a huge crab to the assistance of the snake.
-It crept up to Herakles&rsquo; foot, and seizing it
-with its sharp claws, inflicted painful wounds.
-Herakles killed the crab with his club and
-called Iolaos to help him.</p>
-
-<p>Under Herakles&rsquo; directions Iolaos produced
-a fire-brand which he applied to the neck as
-fast as Herakles cut off one of the snake&rsquo;s
-heads, in this way preventing them from growing
-again. Finally it came the turn of the head
-which could not die. Cutting it off Herakles
-buried it in the ground, placing a heavy stone
-over it.</p>
-
-<p>Then he dipped some arrows into the Hydra&rsquo;s
-blood, which was poisonous, so that whoever
-was wounded by one of them could not
-be healed. The least scratch inflicted by such
-an arrow was incurable.</p>
-
-<p>Eurystheus, of course, had no word of praise
-for his great bondsman, but the people, knowing
-that the place was now safe, flocked to the
-land in great numbers and drained the lake,
-which was really not much more than a big
-marshy pond, and in their new homes they
-blessed the hero&rsquo;s name forever. That was the
-prize for which Herakles cared the most.</p>
-
-<p>If you should go to-day to that old battle-field
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>12]</a></span>
-of Herakles you would still find the spring
-flowing from the rocks, but Lake Lerna exists
-only in story.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap05" id="chap05"></a>CHAPTER V<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE THIRD LABOR&mdash;THE GOLDEN-HORNED HIND</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> lower part of Greece is a most peculiar-looking
-bit of country. You would think it had
-been torn off from the bulk of the land but kept
-hanging on to it by a small narrow strip. Then,
-too, its shape is so queer that it has been compared
-to all sorts of things; sometimes to a
-mulberry leaf, sometimes to an open hand.</p>
-
-<p>If we keep to the latter comparison, we will
-find that the part which answers to the palm of
-the hand is a large and intricate knot of high
-wooded mountains which shoot out spurs in all
-directions. These spurs with the land attached
-to them stretch out into the sea as so many
-small peninsulas and not badly represent the
-fingers of the hand. The central knot of mountains
-is even now different from the country all
-around.</p>
-
-<p>The people there are wilder, very much given
-to robbery and violence and very slow to accept
-new ways of life or improvements of any kind.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>13]</a></span>
-In the old heroic times of several thousand years
-ago that country was simply an impassable wilderness.</p>
-
-<p>It was overcrowded with wild beasts, among
-which the bear must have been the most plentiful
-since the land was named after him, Arcadia&mdash;the
-land of Bears. Wolves were known also
-to abound.</p>
-
-<p>The men who had their villages in the narrow
-valleys by the mountain-streams were fierce and
-lawless. There was nothing for them to do but
-to keep goats and hunt all day long. Arcadia
-was truly the paradise of hunters and therefore
-held as specially sacred to the beautiful huntress,
-the goddess, Artemis&mdash;the Lady of the Chase.
-She roamed over hills and valleys and through
-woods and groves by moonlight to protect the
-herds and flocks, this beautiful daughter of
-Zeus.</p>
-
-<p>In these same mountains of Arcadia there
-roamed a lovely Hind sacred to Queen Artemis,
-who gave her golden horns so that she might
-be known from other deer by the huntsmen.
-Thus they might be saved from the crime of
-slaying what was sacred to the gods. Eurystheus
-ordered Herakles to bring him the Hind
-alive, for he did not dare to have her killed.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles spent a whole year seeking her from
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>14]</a></span>
-the mountain-tops down to the valleys, through
-tangles of brush, over streams and in forests,
-but he was not able to catch her. After a long
-chase he forced her at last to take refuge on the
-side of a mountain and from that place to go
-down to a river to drink.</p>
-
-<p>In order that he might prevent the deer from
-crossing the water, Herakles was obliged slightly
-to wound one of her legs. Not till then was
-he able to secure his game and carry it to
-Eurystheus.</p>
-
-<p>On his way to Myken&aelig; Herakles was met by
-Artemis, who upbraided him for having captured
-the Hind belonging to her. Herakles made
-answer: &ldquo;Great Goddess, if I have chased and
-caught thy deer, I did it out of necessity, not
-impiety; for thou well knowest that the gods
-ordered me to be a servant to Eurystheus and
-he commanded me to catch the Hind.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>With these words he soothed the anger of the
-goddess and brought the golden-horned Hind
-to Myken&aelig;.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>15]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap06" id="chap06"></a>CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE FOURTH LABOR&mdash;THE ERYMANTHIAN BOAR</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Elis</span> is a beautiful plain lying to the north
-and west of Arcadia. Here once in five years
-there was a great festival in honor of Zeus,
-when all the men and boys ran races, wrestled,
-boxed and played all sorts of games. Between
-Arcadia and Elis there is a high mountain-range,
-called Erymanthos. There a terrible
-Boar had its lair.</p>
-
-<p>The Boar frequently left its den and came
-down into the plains and killed cattle, destroyed
-fields of grain and attacked people.
-Eurystheus, having heard of this Boar, made
-up his mind that he wanted the beast alive, and
-so ordered Herakles to bring it to him.</p>
-
-<p>The hero put on his lion skin once more and
-started for the mountain. On his way he
-stopped at a little town where the Centaurs had
-their home. These strange people were half
-man and half horse. We have heard that they
-were really men, but such good riders that they
-seemed to be one with their mountain ponies.</p>
-
-<p>Their home was just on the edge of a high
-plain, covered with oak-trees and looking down
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>16]</a></span>
-across a wild valley, through which flowed the
-Erymanthos River. There were many forests
-and little streams and dreadful gorges in the
-valley, where these horsemen used to hunt
-and fish.</p>
-
-<p>The Centaur Chief, Pholos, received Herakles
-as a guest and gave him cooked meat to
-eat, while he ate it raw himself, after the Centaurs&rsquo;
-custom.</p>
-
-<p>When Herakles had eaten his fill, he said to
-Pholos: &ldquo;Thy food is indeed good and tasteful.
-But I should enjoy it still more if I could
-have a sip of wine, for I am very thirsty.&rdquo; To
-which Pholos replied: &ldquo;My dear guest, we
-have very fine and fragrant wine in this mountain,
-and I should like nothing better than to
-give thee some of it. But I am afraid to do so,
-because it has a strong aroma, and the other
-Centaurs, if they smelt it, might come to my
-cave and want some. They are very fierce and
-lawless, and might do thee great harm.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let not that trouble thee,&rdquo; said Herakles.
-&ldquo;I am not afraid of the Centaurs.&rdquo; So the
-wine was placed before him and he drank of it.
-In a little while a great noise was heard outside
-of the cave, a shouting of many wild
-voices and a stamping of many horses&rsquo; feet.
-What Pholos feared had come to pass.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>17]</a></span>
-The Centaurs had smelt the fragrance of the
-wine and in full armor had made for the cave
-of Pholos. Then began a terrible fight. The
-Centaurs fell upon Herakles with pine-branches,
-rocks, axes, and fire-brands, and the clouds,
-their mothers, poured a flood of water on him.
-But Herakles was too clever for them. He put
-two to flight, prevented others from entering
-the cave, and shot the rest down with his arrows.</p>
-
-<p>Pholos was a kind-hearted chief, and hearing
-one of the Centaurs crying for help outside of
-his cave, went out to him and tried to pull the
-arrow from his wound, wondering at the same
-time that so slight a weapon could cause his
-death. But the arrow slipped out of his hand
-and struck his own foot. It made only a
-scratch, but it could not be healed, for the
-arrow was one of those which Herakles had
-dipped in the blood of the Hydra, and poor
-Pholos breathed his last.</p>
-
-<p>The death of his kind host was a great sorrow
-to Herakles, for in those times, when there
-was so little safety in travelling, the bond of
-kindness and gratitude between host and guest
-was one of the closest and most sacred, often
-more so than that between members of the
-same family. In all their later lives, host and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>18]</a></span>
-guest could never meet as enemies, and if the
-chances of war brought them face to face as
-foes, they were not expected to fight. They
-exchanged greetings and gifts and drove off in
-different directions.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles therefore sincerely mourned his
-friend, performed over him the proper funeral
-rites, and buried him with all due honors in the
-side of the mountain. There he left him, sore
-at heart, but comforted by knowing that he
-had done all he could do to reconcile the shade
-of Pholos, and that his soul would bear him no
-grudge in Spirit Land.</p>
-
-<p>Then Herakles went on his way in search of
-the Boar. He soon spied him in a dense
-thicket and chased him to the very top of the
-mountain. The mountain-top was covered with
-deep snow, which prevented the Boar from
-running fast enough to escape. So Herakles
-ran up to him, caught him in a net, threw him
-over his shoulder and carried him off alive to
-Myken&aelig;.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that Eurystheus hid himself in a
-large brazen bowl when he heard Herakles
-approaching the city, and that Herakles threw
-the Boar into the same brazen bowl as the
-safest place in which to keep him. How astonished
-Eurystheus must have been to find
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>19]</a></span>
-himself in such terrible company! And we
-can fancy that he scrambled out with all possible
-haste.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap07" id="chap07"></a>CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE FIFTH LABOR&mdash;HERAKLES CLEANS THE
-AUGEIAN STABLES</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have already read about Elis, a plain in the
-southwestern part of Greece, where all the people
-used to worship Zeus and where they built
-a wonderful temple in his honor. They built a
-temple to Hera, his wife, also, and many other
-temples which were filled with statues. What
-a fine time you would have if you could only
-go and see this beautiful land. Perhaps you
-will some time.</p>
-
-<p>The temples are in ruins now, and they cover
-enough ground for a small town. The huge
-blocks of marble lie on the ground just as they
-fell, and there are the marble floors as people
-used to see them two thousand years ago.
-There is a high hill close to the ruins. It is
-called the mountain of Kronos, &ldquo;Old Father
-Time.&rdquo; Kronos is said to have been one of
-the early kings of Elis and he was the father of
-Zeus. He swallowed up his children when
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>20]</a></span>
-they were babes, if we care to believe what is
-said of him, and the story could easily be true,
-for Time swallows everything if he is only
-long enough about it.</p>
-
-<p>The strong men and the boys used to come
-to Elis to have athletic games in honor of Zeus.
-They ran races, they boxed, they shot arrows
-and did all sorts of things to show how strong
-they were. There are two rivers at the foot
-of Mount Kronos, and beyond the rivers are
-many low hills where people used to sit and
-watch the games.</p>
-
-<p>There was at one time a king of Elis, Augeias,
-who was so rich in cattle that he hardly knew
-what to do with them and consequently he built
-a stable miles long and drove his cows into it.
-He did this year after year and the herds kept
-growing larger. He could not get men enough
-to take care of his stables and the cows could
-hardly get into them on account of the filth;
-or if they did get in they were never sure of
-getting out again because the dirt was piled so
-high.</p>
-
-<p>Eurystheus thought he had found a disagreeable
-and impossible task for Herakles, and so
-he ordered him to clean out the stables in one
-day. Herakles told Augeias that he must clean
-the barns and promised to do it in one day if
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>21]</a></span>
-he would give him one-tenth of all his cows.
-The king thought Herakles would never be
-able to do it in one day and readily promised
-him in the presence of his son one-tenth of
-the cows.</p>
-
-<p>The king&rsquo;s stables were close to the two
-rivers, near Mount Kronos. Herakles cut
-channels and sent the rivers running into the
-stables. They rushed along and carried the
-dirt out so quickly that the king was astonished.
-He did not intend to pay the promised
-reward and pretended that he never made any
-such promise.</p>
-
-<p>And he said he would have the matter come
-before a court and the judges should decide it.
-Then Herakles called the little prince as a
-witness before the judges, and the boy told the
-truth about it, which caused the king to fall
-into such a rage that he sent both his son and
-Herakles out of the country. Herakles left
-the land of Elis and went back to Myken&aelig;.
-But his heart was filled with contempt for the
-faithless king.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>22]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap08" id="chap08"></a>CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE SIXTH LABOR&mdash;THE BIRDS OF STYMPHALOS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">On</span> the northern limit of Arcadia is a huge
-cliff, over which pours a black ribbon of water.
-At the bottom of the cliff it is lost among
-piles of rocks. The water itself is not black,
-but it appears so because the rock is covered
-with black moss, and so the stream is called
-the Styx or Black Water.</p>
-
-<p>The Styx is icy cold and it runs along under
-the ground so that it seems to belong to the
-dead, and is called the River of Death. When
-the gods used to make a promise which they
-did not dare to break they said, &ldquo;I promise by
-the Styx.&rdquo; This promise was called &ldquo;the Great
-Oath of the Gods.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Farther on in the land of Arcadia there is a
-vale called Stymphalos. It lies among the
-mountains and is open to the storms of winter
-and the floods of spring. And there are a lake
-and a city both called Stymphalos. The people
-of Athens hope to carry the water of this
-lake to Athens by means of an underground
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>23]</a></span>
-channel. All about the lake are hills covered
-with firs and plane-trees.</p>
-
-<p>Lake Stymphalos was the home of a countless
-number of birds which held noisy meetings
-in the woods. They had iron claws and their
-feathers were sharper than arrows. They
-were so strong and fierce that they dared attack
-men, and would tear them to pieces that
-they might feast upon human flesh. They
-bore a striking resemblance to the Harpies, and
-were the terror of all the people who lived
-near Stymphalos.</p>
-
-<p>Eurystheus ordered Herakles to drive the
-birds away. So Herakles took his bow and
-quiver and went to the lake. But the forests
-were so dense that he could not see the birds,
-and he sat down to think of the best way to
-drive them out. Suddenly the goddess of wisdom
-came to him to help him.</p>
-
-<p>The goddess gave him a huge rattle and told
-him how to use it. Herakles went up on to the
-highest mountain that lies near the lake and
-shook the rattle with a will. The birds were
-so frightened by the noise that they came out
-of the thick wood where their nests were and
-flew high up into the air.</p>
-
-<p>Their heavy feathers fell like flakes in a driving
-snow-storm. Herakles shot at the birds
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>24]</a></span>
-with his arrows. He killed a great many of
-them and the rest were so scared that they
-flew away and were never seen again at Stymphalos.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap09" id="chap09"></a>CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE SEVENTH LABOR&mdash;HERAKLES CATCHES
-THE MAD BULL OF CRETE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> is an island south of Greece which is
-so large that it would take you from early morning
-until late at night to sail past it. There are
-high mountains all along the shore and they
-look as if they were covered with snow. There
-is a cave in one of the mountains where Zeus
-was hidden when he was a babe so that his
-father, Kronos, should not swallow him. The
-nymphs fed him on honey and a famous goat
-gave him milk.</p>
-
-<p>The name of this island was Crete, and Minos
-ruled there as king. It was his duty to sacrifice
-to Poseidon, the God of the Sea, whatever came
-up out of the water.</p>
-
-<p>Minos was rich and greedy. He loved his
-cattle better than the will of the gods. It came
-to pass that a wonderful Bull rose from the sea
-while Minos was king. When Minos saw him
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>25]</a></span>
-he admired the beauty of the animal so much
-that he resolved to keep him. He drove the
-Bull into his barn and sacrificed another to the
-God of the Sea.</p>
-
-<p>Poseidon grew angry with him and caused
-the Bull to become mad so that no one dared to
-approach him. Eurystheus ordered Herakles
-to catch him and bring him to Myken&aelig;.</p>
-
-<p>So Herakles went to Crete and begged Minos
-to give him the Bull. The king told him that
-he was entirely welcome to the Bull if he could
-catch him. Herakles seized him by the horns
-and bound his feet together and carried him off
-to Myken&aelig;.</p>
-
-<p>There he showed the mad animal to Eurystheus
-and then set him free. The Bull wandered
-off to Sparta and over the hills of
-Arcadia and crossing the Isthmus, he reached
-Marathon, where he left the land and swam off
-into the sea.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap10" id="chap10"></a>CHAPTER X<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE EIGHTH LABOR&mdash;THE HORSES OF DIOMEDES</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Greece</span> was bounded on the north by a wild
-and mountainous land, called Thrace. The
-natives were not of Greek stock and remained
-fierce, lawless, and cruel for a long time after
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>26]</a></span>
-Greece had become the most civilized of countries.
-They were so quarrelsome and such
-desperate fighters that their country was supposed
-to be the favorite residence of the war
-god, Ares.</p>
-
-<p>The king who reigned in Thrace at the time
-of Herakles was so much worse than the rest of
-the people that he was said to be Ares&rsquo; own son,
-and he was called the storm king. He was very
-fond of horses and kept a breed of them after
-his own heart. They were man-eating horses,
-which he fed on the flesh of any strangers who
-came to that country or that were wrecked on
-the shore, thus breaking the most sacred laws
-and making himself hated by men and gods.
-The horses were blood-thirsty and so furious
-that they had to be chained to their stalls.</p>
-
-<p>Eurystheus commanded Herakles to bring
-these horses to his stables in Myken&aelig;. This
-time Herakles took several friends with him,
-who helped him catch the horses and lead them
-to the shore. Diomedes, having heard of the
-robbery, started in pursuit with many armed
-men.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles and his friends went by sea. They
-attacked the guards and led the horses down to
-the ship. A terrible battle followed, in which the
-wicked king was slain by Herakles, who threw
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>27]</a></span>
-him as food to the horses. The warriors who
-helped Diomedes were put to flight and some
-of Herakles&rsquo; best men were also killed. With
-the rest he drove the horses into his ship and
-brought them safely to Myken&aelig;.</p>
-
-<p>Eurystheus, of course, had no intention of
-keeping them in his stables and had them set
-loose. They ran off into the forests of Arcadia
-and were never seen again. It was thought
-that they were devoured by the mountain
-wolves.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap11" id="chap11"></a>CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE NINTH LABOR&mdash;THE GIRDLE OF
-HIPPOLYTE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Eurystheus</span>, as we have seen, sent Herakles
-a little farther every time in hopes of never
-seeing him again. It would take you a whole
-day going on the best steamer to get to Crete
-from Athens, and in those days, when steamers
-had not been thought of, the sailing must have
-been slow indeed. Eurystheus now sent the
-hero yet farther off to the Black Sea, on the
-southern shore of which there lived the Amazons,
-a nation of warlike women.</p>
-
-<p>The Amazons were brought up like men.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>28]</a></span>
-Their main occupation was war, and they were
-excellent horsewomen. They were sharpshooters
-with the bow and arrow. Hippolyte,
-the queen of the Amazons, was a brave and
-handsome woman. She wore a celebrated
-girdle, the gift of Ares, as a sign of her queenly
-rank.</p>
-
-<p>Eurystheus had a daughter who had heard
-of the beauty of the famous girdle which was
-worn by the Amazon queen. She begged her
-father to send Herakles to bring it to her.
-Then Eurystheus ordered Herakles to fetch the
-girdle, and he manned a ship and sailed away,
-taking several companions with him.</p>
-
-<p>After many wanderings they reached the
-Black Sea and sailed to the Amazon country.
-Queen Hippolyte was at once informed that
-some strangers had arrived from a far-off land,
-and she came down to the shore to learn why
-they had come. Herakles told her that a princess
-had sent him to get the girdle given her
-by Ares. Hippolyte admired the bold hero for
-his frankness and promised that she would give
-it to him.</p>
-
-<p>But Hera changed herself into an Amazon
-and rushing into the midst of an army of them
-cried out, &ldquo;The strangers are carrying off our
-queen!&rdquo; Then all the Amazons snatched up
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>29]</a></span>
-their arms and rushed on horseback to the ship.
-When Herakles saw them coming armed to attack
-his men, he thought Hippolyte had betrayed
-him and he slew her and took her girdle.</p>
-
-<p>Then he attacked the rest of the Amazons
-and put them to flight. When the battle was
-over, Herakles and his companions went on
-board the ship and sailed for home.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after they had started on their way to
-Myken&aelig; they found Hesione, the daughter of
-La&ouml;medon, on the shore chained to a rock.
-La&ouml;medon was at that time king of Troy, and
-Herakles and his companions stopped to find
-out why the daughter of a great king had to
-suffer such a terrible punishment. She told
-Herakles that Apollo, the sun god, and Poseidon,
-the god of the sea, once took on the form
-of man and began to build walls around the
-city of Troy. Her father promised to aid
-them but neglected to keep his promise. This
-conduct made the gods indignant and Apollo
-sent a pestilence to rage in the city while
-Poseidon sent a sea-monster which came up
-out of the ocean and devoured the people.</p>
-
-<p>La&ouml;medon asked the priest of Apollo how he
-might appease the wrath of the gods. The
-priest answered that the city would be freed
-from the double plague if La&ouml;medon would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>30]</a></span>
-chain his daughter to the rock on the shore
-where the monster might devour her.</p>
-
-<p>La&ouml;medon obeyed the oracle and had her
-chained to the cliff near the sea. Just then
-Herakles arrived and stopped near the shore,
-when La&ouml;medon with hot tears entreated him
-to save his daughter. Herakles promised to do
-it under the condition that La&ouml;medon should
-give him as a reward a famous horse in his
-possession.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles killed the sea-monster, but La&ouml;medon
-again did not keep his promise and Herakles
-left Troy, his heart filled with scorn for
-the faithless king. On his return to Myken&aelig;
-he gave the girdle of the Amazon queen to his
-cousin, the daughter of Eurystheus.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap12" id="chap12"></a>CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE TENTH LABOR&mdash;THE CATTLE OF GERYON</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Iberia</span>, now called Spain, lies at the farthest
-end of Europe, and beyond it, in the Atlantic, is
-an island which was once the home of Geryon,
-a famous giant. His body was as large around
-as three other men&rsquo;s bodies put together. He
-had three heads and three pairs of legs and six
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>31]</a></span>
-arms. He had huge wings also and carried
-dangerous weapons.</p>
-
-<p>Geryon was the lord of many herds of cattle.
-He had one herd of red oxen, as red as
-the sky at the setting of the sun, and they were
-guarded by a trusty herdsman and a fierce two-headed
-dog. Eurystheus ordered Herakles to
-bring the cattle to Myken&aelig;.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles having overcome numberless difficulties,
-wandering through wild deserts and
-unknown lands, finally reached the open ocean,
-the end of all. There he erected as a monument
-two pillars opposite each other, one on
-the African shore, and one in Europe. These
-were called the Pillars of Herakles in those
-days, but now they are known as the Rocks of
-Ceuta and Gibraltar.</p>
-
-<p>Helios, the Sun, admiring the bravery of
-Herakles, lent him his golden skiff, shaped like
-a cup. Helios always sailed round the world
-every night from west to east in this cup, and
-Herakles, although he feared a storm, took his
-place in the strange boat and started for the
-island where Geryon tended his red cattle.
-The world, as the Greeks saw it, was in the
-form of a great plate, and the ocean was a river
-surrounding it as the rim surrounds the plate.</p>
-
-<p>When the two-headed dog saw Herakles he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>32]</a></span>
-rushed at him with fury, and the herdsman also
-attacked him at the same time. Herakles slew
-them both with his club, took the cattle and
-fled toward the boat. Then Geryon sprang
-upon him and forced him to fight for his life.
-They had a dreadful battle, in which Herakles
-drew his bow and shot at the giant with one of
-his deadly arrows and Geryon died.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles at once drove the oxen down to
-the boat, and after a safe voyage landed them
-in Iberia. Then he started for home on foot,
-driving his cattle northward over the Pyrenees
-into Gaul or France. Here he was attacked
-by hundreds of people who wanted to rob him
-of his cattle.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles shot at them with his arrows and
-killed great numbers, and they stoned him
-in return with large stones. Herakles would
-have lost the battle but Zeus sent down a
-shower of rocks of vast size, and Herakles
-hurled them at his foes, driving them away
-like frightened sheep. These enormous rocks
-are still to be seen in the south of France.</p>
-
-<p>After this adventure Herakles drove his cattle
-over the Alps and down into Italy across
-the Tiber, and they came to the Seven Hills of
-Rome. In one of these hills there was a cave,
-the home of a lawless giant named Cacus.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>33]</a></span>
-He was a creature of iron strength, and was
-hideously ugly. He breathed out fire and
-smoke, often killing people in this way, and
-everybody in all the country about feared him.
-Cacus saw Herakles coming with his cattle
-over the river and among the hills, and he determined
-to steal the cattle and hide them in
-his den.</p>
-
-<p>So when Herakles was asleep and the cattle
-were grazing quietly, Cacus slipped out of his
-cave and, seizing great numbers of them by the
-tails, dragged them backward into the cavern
-that their tracks might point away from the
-cave and not toward it. When Herakles awoke
-he missed his cattle and began to look for
-them. He found their tracks and went in the
-direction they seemed to point out, getting
-farther and farther from their place of hiding.
-The oxen bellowed, and their noises were muffled
-by the rocks of the cavern, but Herakles
-heard them and returned to the Seven Hills.
-Listening intently he traced them to the right
-hill, but Cacus had braced a stone slab against
-the opening and it could not be moved from
-the outside.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles went around to the other side of
-the hill and, tearing the stones away, forced a
-new entrance. He sprang into the cave and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>34]</a></span>
-seized the terrible monster by the throat. Cacus
-blew flames into the hero&rsquo;s face and tried
-to burn him to death, but Herakles held on and
-strangled the giant to death. A volume of
-black smoke came from his mouth and a stream
-of melted lead as he fell back dead. Herakles
-tore the slab from the door of the cave and
-threw the body of Cacus out on the hill, and
-all the people came to see it and rejoice that
-their foe was slain. And they built an altar to
-Herakles and instituted games to be held every
-year in his honor.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles left the Seven Hills and drove his
-cattle southward. Being tired, he lay down
-to rest on a mountain near Locri, and the grasshoppers
-came around him singing in such shrill
-tones that he could not sleep. He prayed to
-the gods to drive them away, and the gods
-swept them out of that region so that they
-never came back.</p>
-
-<p>One of the wild oxen ran away to the southwest
-and escaped to an island. Herakles followed,
-driving the whole herd over to the island.
-The cattle swam across, and Herakles,
-sitting on the back of one of the oxen and holding
-on by its horns, was safely taken over. He
-captured the runaway and wandered for a long
-time through the island, enjoying the fresh
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>35]</a></span>
-water of the springs and the kindness of the
-people. Then he drove his cattle back to Italy
-and passed up the shores of the Ionian Sea.</p>
-
-<p>But Hera sent gadflies to make the cattle
-wilder than they were before, and they scattered
-over the mountain-heights as clouds are
-scattered by a hot wind. They fled far to the
-east, until they came to Thrace. There Herakles
-gathered together as many as he could
-and brought them to Myken&aelig;, where Eurystheus
-sacrificed them to Hera.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap13" id="chap13"></a>CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE ELEVENTH LABOR&mdash;THE GOLDEN APPLES
-OF HESPERIDES</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> the wedding between Zeus and Hera
-was celebrated all the gods brought presents.
-Mother Earth brought some apple-trees as her
-gift. These trees bore precious golden apples,
-and Zeus and Hera were so pleased with their
-wonderful wedding-present that they appointed
-four maidens, called the Daughters of the
-West, to guard the apples, and also they placed
-a dragon there with a hundred heads, who
-never slept.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>36]</a></span>
-The fruit was so inviting that even the maidens
-would have been tempted to eat it if the
-terrible dragon had not kept close to the tree.
-A roar like thunder came out of each of his
-hundred mouths and frightened everything
-away that dared approach the trees, and lightning
-darted from his eyes to strike down intruders.</p>
-
-<p>The trees grew more and more beautiful
-from year to year, and the apples were so
-heavy that the boughs bent beneath the golden
-load. They grew in the Garden of the Hesperides,
-in islands way off to the west, and
-were watered by springs of nectar which had
-their rise near the throne of Zeus.</p>
-
-<p>Eurystheus had heard of the apples and he
-ordered Herakles to bring them to him. For
-a long time Herakles wandered about in various
-lands until he came to the river Rhone,
-where the water-goddesses or nymphs advised
-him to ask counsel from the ancient lord of the
-deep sea, who knew all the secrets of the ocean
-depths and whose wisdom was beyond that of
-the gods. He is called by many names, but
-his gentlest name is Nereus, and he does not
-like to be questioned unless he can take any
-shape he pleases.</p>
-
-<p>He usually escapes intruders, but to those
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>37]</a></span>
-who are not afraid and who manage to grasp
-and to hold him, he freely opens the store of
-his wisdom. This was what Herakles did.
-Nereus took on the form of a lion, a serpent,
-a fish, a stream of water, and at last, of an old
-man, but Herakles held him close and learned
-from him the road to the Garden of the Hesperides.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving Nereus, Herakles travelled south into
-Africa, where he met Ant&aelig;os, a huge giant who
-lived in the desert. Ant&aelig;os was a son of Earth
-and Ocean, and he was as strong as the terrible
-sand-storms. He was cruel to all travellers
-who crossed his domains and slew them, but
-he loved and protected the tiny Pygmies that
-lived all around him. No one had ever been
-able to vanquish him in battle, for Mother
-Earth gave him new strength and vigor every
-time he lay down or touched the ground.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles wrestled with him and threw him
-down many times, but Ant&aelig;os sprang up
-stronger than ever. At last Herakles caught
-him up with one hand, and holding him high in
-the air where he could not receive help from
-Mother Earth, squeezed him to death.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles was tired out with this tremendous
-exertion and lay down in the desert to
-rest. But he did not sleep long, for a whole
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>38]</a></span>
-army of the little people, seeing their beloved
-giant lying dead, came with their weapons to
-attack Herakles. He found himself covered
-with them from head to foot. He sprang up, and
-quickly gathering up his lion&rsquo;s skin, crushed a
-multitude of the Pygmies and killed them.</p>
-
-<p>Then he hurried away toward the east,
-going through many countries until he came
-to India, and finding himself travelling in the
-wrong direction, turned to the north and west
-and came to the Caucasus Mountains. Here
-he found Prometheus chained to the rocks of a
-high mountain-peak. Prometheus had taught
-mankind the use of fire and how to build
-houses and had otherwise interfered with the
-work of the gods, thereby bringing this punishment
-upon himself. Herakles took pity on
-him and set him free. In return for this kindly
-act Prometheus told him the most direct
-way to the Garden of the Hesperides, which
-was through Scythia and the region of the
-Hyperboreans at the back of the North Wind.</p>
-
-<p>On his way Herakles stopped to visit Atlas,
-who as a punishment for once having rebelled
-against the gods was obliged to carry the
-heavens on his shoulders. &ldquo;Let me relieve
-thee for awhile, friend Atlas,&rdquo; said Herakles,
-after greeting him in a most cordial manner.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>39]</a></span>
-&ldquo;Let me take the heavens on my shoulders and
-I will let thee do me a great service in return.
-I must have the Golden Apples that grow in
-the Garden of the Hesperides to take to Eurystheus,
-and thou canst bring them to me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Atlas gladly placed the heavy firmament on
-Herakles&rsquo; shoulders and took his way to the
-Garden. There he contrived to put the many-headed
-dragon to sleep and then slay him.
-Taking possession of the Golden Apples, he
-returned with them to Herakles.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I thank thee very much, friend Atlas,&rdquo;
-said Herakles. &ldquo;Take thy place again and
-give me the apples.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nay, I have borne the weight of the
-heavens for a long time,&rdquo; answered Atlas.
-&ldquo;Thou hadst better keep my place and I will
-carry the Golden Apples to Eurystheus.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Herakles was taken aback at this reply and
-began to consider how he might escape from
-this unexpected dilemma. At last he spoke.
-&ldquo;Very well, I will willingly remain in thy
-place, friend Atlas,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;One thing only
-I must first ask of thee. Take the heavens
-back just for a moment while I get a pad to
-put on my head so that the weight may not
-hurt it. Otherwise the heavens will fall and
-crush us both.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>40]</a></span>
-Poor, simple old Atlas agreed to this, and
-putting the Golden Apples on the ground he
-again took the firmament on his shoulders.
-Herakles picked up the apples and went off
-saying, &ldquo;We must not bear malice toward
-each other, friend Atlas. Good-by.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>With this he departed and hastened back to
-Myken&aelig;.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap14" id="chap14"></a>CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE TWELFTH LABOR&mdash;HERAKLES FETCHES
-CERBERUS OUT OF HADES</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">According</span> to the terms of the doom that
-was laid upon Herakles, the performance of
-the last task was to free him from Eurystheus.
-Eleven were now fulfilled and the tyrant&rsquo;s heart
-failed him when he thought of what he might
-expect at the hands of the hero he had used so
-ill when once he was free from his power.</p>
-
-<p>Cowards always fear those whom they have
-ill-treated, so he determined to send Herakles
-on an errand from which he thought he could
-not possibly return. He had come back unharmed
-from every known and unknown country
-on the face of the earth, but who was ever
-known to return alive from the land of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>41]</a></span>
-dead? So Eurystheus as a last task ordered
-him to go down to Hades and bring out alive
-Cerberus, the three-headed dog that guards the
-entrance to the lower world, feeling sure that
-Herakles would remain forever in Hades.</p>
-
-<p>Cerberus was a terrible monster. Besides
-having three heads, he had a tail which ended
-in a serpent&rsquo;s head, and all along his spine he
-had serpents&rsquo; heads instead of hair. His duty
-was to see that no dead should escape from
-Hades after once entering its gates.</p>
-
-<p>There was a long dark cave leading down to
-Hades and the river Styx flowed across it. A
-white-haired old ferryman, Charon by name,
-waited with his boat on the shore to carry
-the spirits of all who died. There they were
-met by Minos, the great judge, who told them
-whether they could go into the fields of the
-Blessed or whether they were doomed to the
-region of the Unhappy. Charon&rsquo;s boat was
-but a delicate skiff and adapted only to carrying
-souls without bodies, so Herakles was not
-a welcome passenger.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles found his way into Hades in spite
-of all the difficulties, and presenting himself to
-Pluto, the King of the Dead, begged him to
-give him the Dog.</p>
-
-<p>Pluto replied: &ldquo;Take him and lead him out
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>42]</a></span>
-into the world and thou shalt have him. But
-thou must not use any weapon.&rdquo; Herakles
-answered, &ldquo;I will use no weapon but my hands,
-and with them alone I will conquer him.&rdquo;
-Wearing his breastplate and clad in the lion&rsquo;s
-skin he approached Cerberus, who stood on
-guard at the gates. He threw his arms around
-the Dog&rsquo;s three heads and pressed them with
-all his might. The Dog fought with great fury,
-and bit him with the snake&rsquo;s mouth which he
-had at the end of his tail. Herakles threw his
-lion&rsquo;s skin over the head of the Dog and
-dragged him out by another gate into the daylight.
-Cerberus had never seen the light of
-the sun and was frightened beyond measure.
-He foamed at the mouth, and wherever the
-foam fell upon the ground it caused a poisonous
-plant to grow.</p>
-
-<p>Herakles took Cerberus to Eurystheus, who
-was not pleased to see the Dog or the Hero.
-Then he carried him back to Hades and restored
-him to Pluto, and so were the twelve
-great labors ended.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>43]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap15" id="chap15"></a>CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THESEUS, THE HERO OF ATHENS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> land of Attica is very different from
-Arcadia. It was cleared at a much earlier time
-than the southern part of Greece, which could
-be done the more easily as the soil being
-naturally rather barren was not covered with
-the thick, bristling forests which there sheltered
-so many dangerous animals, and made it
-such hard work for the peasants to clear the
-smallest patch of farm.</p>
-
-<p>Then, although the land offers but scanty
-pasture for cattle and bears but few kinds of
-trees and crops, it happens that those which it
-does bear are the very ones that were the
-greatest favorites with Greek farmers&mdash;the
-olive and the vine. Besides which, being a
-peninsula, and therefore almost entirely surrounded
-by the sea, fish and other sea-food
-was very plentiful, and trade with more or less
-distant neighbors very easy.</p>
-
-<p>Attica has no very high mountains, but those
-that there are supply the country with beautiful
-marbles, both white and colored. The people,
-having such lovely material within reach,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>44]</a></span>
-became from the earliest times the most skilful
-of builders. Their Acropolis, for which nature
-itself supplied them with a beautiful, tall
-rock, of bright-colored stone, soon became
-their greatest pride. It was the envy of their
-neighbors, because of the splendid marble
-palaces and temples which they could raise
-there at so little cost.</p>
-
-<p>The city which grew up at the foot of the
-Acropolis was named Athens, after the goddess
-of wisdom and cunning craft, Athena, the
-favorite daughter of Zeus. It is clear from this
-that the Athenians considered themselves more
-civilized and in every way superior to the other
-Greeks. Indeed, they were all that, and even
-as far back as the heroic times their city began
-to be famous above others.</p>
-
-<p>In this favored land of Attica, at the same
-time that Herakles astonished the world with
-his miraculous deeds, there reigned a king,
-&AElig;geus, who, having no child to succeed him
-on the throne, was grieved at heart. So &AElig;geus
-went to Delphi to consult the Oracle, and the
-priestess told him that he should go to Tr&oelig;zene,
-where he would find a beautiful and gentle
-wife, the Princess &AElig;thra, daughter of Pittheus,
-the King of Tr&oelig;zene. And the Oracle
-promised that his wife should bear him a son
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>45]</a></span>
-whose name would become famous over all the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>So &AElig;geus took his way to Tr&oelig;zene, where
-he found Pittheus, the wise old king, who received
-him hospitably and gave him his daughter,
-&AElig;thra, in marriage. &AElig;geus grew very
-fond of his wife, but after awhile he had to
-think of returning to his own kingdom, which
-he could not leave to itself forever. &AElig;thra&rsquo;s
-father was old and feeble, and she did not like
-to leave him to the care of slaves; so &AElig;geus
-agreed to let her stay with him.</p>
-
-<p>But before &AElig;geus departed he took &AElig;thra
-to an out-of-the-way place and dug a pit in
-which he hid his sword and sandals. Then he
-rolled a large stone over the pit and said to his
-wife: &ldquo;Listen, &AElig;thra; take good care of the
-son which the gods are about to send us, but
-do not tell him who his father is. When he
-has grown to be a youth, bring him to this
-spot, and if he is able to lift the stone, let him
-take the sword and the sandals and come to
-me with them.&rdquo; After saying these words,
-&AElig;geus kissed his wife, and bidding her an affectionate
-farewell, returned to Athens.</p>
-
-<p>When Theseus was born, &AElig;thra rejoiced
-greatly, and brought him up with great care,
-as she had promised &AElig;geus she would do.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>46]</a></span>
-He was the pride of his grandfather&rsquo;s court,
-and the good old king had him trained in all
-kinds of games and athletic exercises and in
-the use of the lyre. When he had grown up,
-&AElig;thra led him to the rock, and after having
-told him the name of his father, she said to
-him: &ldquo;My son, lift up this heavy stone. You
-will find under it what your father left for you.
-Take his gift and go to Athens with it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Theseus, without any difficulty, raised the
-stone with his strong arms, and &AElig;thra hung his
-father&rsquo;s sword over his shoulder and tied the
-sandals to his feet. Then Theseus was ready to
-set out for Athens. &AElig;thra advised him to go
-by sea. It was the quickest and safest way.
-The woods by land were everywhere full of
-dangers from wild beasts and wicked men.</p>
-
-<p>But Theseus, having heard of the great deeds
-of Herakles and envying the fame of the hero,
-said: &ldquo;Herakles was set the task to destroy the
-wicked and to cleanse the land and sea from
-evil-doers; and so I will not shirk tasks which
-lie under my very feet and I will not shame my
-father, fleeing ingloriously over the sea, where I
-can perform no noble deeds by which I might
-prove myself a worthy son to him, and do honor
-to my mother&rsquo;s wisdom in bringing me up in
-the way she has done.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>47]</a></span>
-Theseus kissed his mother and grandfather
-and started on his journey by land. The worst
-part of his road lay across the Isthmus of
-Corinth, which was so narrow that it gave little
-chance for escape.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap16" id="chap16"></a>CHAPTER XVI<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE FIRST EXPLOITS OF THESEUS. HE FINDS
-HIS FATHER</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">To</span> the northwest of Tr&oelig;zene is a tongue of
-land projecting into the &AElig;gean Sea. In ancient
-times the town of Epidauros was situated upon
-it, and the temple, where Asklepios, the God of
-Healing, was worshipped, stood near by. It
-was a wild country whose hills were covered
-with trees and shrubs&mdash;the hiding-place of lawless
-robbers, the boldest of whom was named
-Periphetes. He was also called Korynetes,
-and he used an iron crown for a weapon, and
-with it he smashed the heads of travellers.</p>
-
-<p>Periphetes put himself in Theseus&rsquo; way and
-would not let him go on. But the youth grappled
-with him, and taking his iron crown from
-him, crushed him to death with it. Theseus
-carried the crown as his own particular weapon,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>48]</a></span>
-just as Herakles wore the skin of the Nemean
-lion.</p>
-
-<p>The most cruel of all the robbers lived a few
-miles farther to the north, on the Isthmus of
-Corinth, and his name was Sinis. He was called
-the Tree-bender, because he used to bend together
-two young pines. Then he would tie a
-man by a leg and arm to each tree and let the
-trees spring back, tearing the poor wretch to
-pieces. Theseus punished this malefactor by
-giving him the same treatment that he gave to
-others, and the people of the Isthmus were so
-grateful that they started a festival, called the
-Isthmian Games, to be held in honor of the hero
-every year.</p>
-
-<p>On to the north went Theseus. He slew a
-man-eating boar at Krommyon, which had long
-terrified the people of that district. Coming
-among the wild cliffs near the sea in Megaris,
-he heard of the cruel giant Skiron, who used
-to lie in wait for travellers. This evil-doer compelled
-those who fell into his power to wash his
-feet. This task performed, he flung the unlucky
-traveller into the sea.</p>
-
-<p>When Theseus passed his den Skiron ordered
-him to wash his feet, and Theseus answered:
-&ldquo;To tell the truth, friend Skiron, thy demand
-is too small. I would willingly do more for thee.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>49]</a></span>
-Not only are thy feet in need of a bath but so
-is thy whole body. The sea is near and I will
-give thee a thorough washing.&rdquo; And he seized
-Skiron around the body and flung him over the
-rocks into the breakers. From that time until
-to-day the rocks are called the Skironian Cliffs.</p>
-
-<p>A little farther on Theseus came upon another
-famous robber known far and near as the
-Stretcher, Korydallon, or Prokrustes. This
-robber used to force the wayfarer to lie down
-on a bed which was always too long or too
-short for him. If the traveller proved too tall
-for the bed, Prokrustes would cut off his feet
-and legs to make him short enough to fit it.
-But if the traveller were too short for the
-bed, he would have him stretched until his feet
-touched the foot-board. Prokrustes invited
-Theseus to try the bed, but Theseus answered
-him: &ldquo;Thou shalt try it first, friend Prokrustes,
-and I will try it after thee.&rdquo; Then Prokrustes
-was compelled to lie down in the bed,
-which was much too short for him, and Theseus
-cut off his head and his feet to make him fit the
-bed, as the cruel Stretcher had done to so
-many hapless strangers. Theseus exterminated
-a great many more cruel robbers who had
-made the roads to Athens unsafe, and the glory
-of his deeds went on before him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>50]</a></span>
-Theseus, having performed these brave deeds,
-reached Athens; but the rougher class, seeing a
-stranger who wore a garb of a different fashion
-from their own, scoffed at him, as is the custom
-of vulgar people. His hair was long and his
-form slender, so they called him a girl and told
-him that he ought to take his nurse with him to
-protect him. As he walked along among these
-coarse people he came to a wagon heavily laden.
-He took up the wagon with its load and tossed
-it high in the air as easily as he would toss a ball,
-much to the astonishment of his tormentors.</p>
-
-<p>Theseus having come to the king&rsquo;s palace
-in Athens, at once presented himself before
-&AElig;geus. But he did not immediately make
-himself known as his son. When he was called
-to the table as a guest he drew his sword as if
-he wanted to eat the meat with it, and &AElig;geus
-recognized him as his son and received him
-with joy and affection. Calling together the
-citizens he proclaimed Theseus his son and
-successor.</p>
-
-<p>The citizens had heard of his heroic exploits,
-and acknowledged him heir to the throne amid
-general rejoicings. Only the nephews of &AElig;geus
-were sorry that Theseus had appeared in their
-midst. They had hoped to inherit the kingdom
-after their uncle&rsquo;s death, believing that he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>51]</a></span>
-had no children. But now that Theseus came
-among them as a successor to the throne, they
-rebelled.</p>
-
-<p>Theseus was brave and strong enough to
-defend his father and himself. He fought the
-rebels one after another and killed them. These
-victories increased his glory greatly and won
-him the hearts of the people of Athens.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap17" id="chap17"></a>CHAPTER XVII<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE ADVENTURES OF THESEUS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3><i>I. The Marathonian Bull</i></h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theseus</span> was too active to love an idle life
-and began to look around him to find ways of
-helping his father&rsquo;s people. He wanted to be
-worthy of the throne. &ldquo;It is not enough,&rdquo; he
-said, &ldquo;that I am of royal descent. I should also
-have a royal heart and be of real service to mankind.
-I must be a leader in deeds as well as in
-words.&rdquo; He soon found an opportunity to show
-his prowess.</p>
-
-<p>To the northeast of Athens is a beautiful
-mountain-ridge with a white marble band
-across it. This is the famous Pentelikon, and
-the purple mountain of Hymettos is separated
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>52]</a></span>
-from it by a narrow pass. Beyond these mountains
-is the plain of Marathon sloping down to
-the blue sea. In the plain of Marathon the
-terrible Bull which Herakles had brought from
-Crete to Eurystheus still roamed, but the tyrant
-had turned it loose. This Bull did great
-havoc among the inhabitants of the surrounding
-country.</p>
-
-<p>Theseus heard of their distress and promised
-to free them from the fearful beast. He armed
-himself with a tough shield and a long spear
-and went to Marathon. When he found out the
-Bull&rsquo;s hiding-place he chased and overtook him.
-He grappled him by the horns with his powerful
-hands and dragged him back to Athens.
-The people of Athens and all the country about
-came to meet Theseus. They rejoiced because
-he had rid them of such a pest and they admired
-his strength, but they did not dare to
-help him, and stood ready to run for their lives
-in case the Bull should slip away from him.
-Theseus went through the midst of the city
-holding on to the Bull, which he took to the
-temple of Apollo and offered up as a sacrifice
-to that god. Old &AElig;geus shed tears of joy
-when he saw how the gods honored him in the
-possession of such a son.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>53]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><i>II. Theseus Sails to Crete</i></h3>
-
-<p>But there was a greater adventure with
-greater glory awaiting Theseus, for Athens
-had a more terrible enemy than the mad Bull of
-Marathon. It had happened years before that
-a son of Minos, the wise and powerful King of
-Crete, had come to Athens to take part in the
-yearly festival held in honor of the goddess
-Athena. He took part in all their public games
-and came off victor every time. The athletes
-of Athens were very angry that a man from
-another country should show more skill and
-carry off all the prizes, so with &AElig;geus&rsquo; consent
-they killed him.</p>
-
-<p>Then Minos made war on the Athenians and
-killed a great number of them, and the gods
-also punished them for this treacherous murder
-by letting the land bear no crops and by sending
-on them a deadly fever.</p>
-
-<p>The Athenians were compelled to surrender
-to Minos, and they had to agree to the most
-humiliating terms. They promised to send
-seven youths and seven maidens every year
-to Crete.</p>
-
-<p>Now Minos had a park laid out by the most
-cunning man of his times. There were walks
-and paths so many and so winding that no one
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>54]</a></span>
-who got into it could get out again, but had to
-wander on and on, getting more and more confused.
-This park was called the Labyrinth, and
-in the centre of it was a cave in which just at
-that time King Minos kept a dangerous monster
-which had the body and limbs of a man but the
-head of a bull.</p>
-
-<p>The creature was called the Minotaur and it
-was fierce and cruel. There was only one way
-to prevent him from roaming the fields and endangering
-the lives of the people. He had to
-be kept in a good humor, and this could be done
-only by feeding him now and then on human
-flesh. So Minos bethought him of using the
-Athenian captives for that purpose.</p>
-
-<p>When the time of the third tribute arrived,
-the citizens of Athens began to urge &AElig;geus to
-do something to prevent the dreadful sacrifice.
-They accused him of being the sole cause of
-the trouble. They told him that it was shameful
-that he had no share in the punishment.
-These complaints wounded the ambitious Theseus
-to the quick.</p>
-
-<p>His sense of justice told him that it would
-be only right for him to share the troubles of
-the citizens, and therefore he insisted on going
-to Crete with the seven youths and the seven
-maidens.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>55]</a></span>
-The citizens felt sorry for Theseus, and
-&AElig;geus prayed his son to remain at home with
-him, but Theseus answered: &ldquo;My dear father,
-how can I be happy when the whole nation
-suffers? How can I abide in safety when our
-subjects are sacrificed? Do not try to dissuade
-me, for honor calls.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The vessel which was to take them to Crete
-was ready to start. It carried a black sail, a
-sign of its direful errand. Theseus tried to console
-his father by telling him that he was going
-to kill the Minotaur. &AElig;geus was quick to believe
-in the valor of his son and gave another
-sail, a white one, to the pilot, telling him to hoist
-it if they returned happily, but to leave the
-black one up if Theseus failed to win the victory.
-The ship sailed away and the parents and
-relatives of the youths and maidens wept bitter
-tears, but all the citizens called aloud to the
-gods to give Theseus success in his generous
-undertaking.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>56]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap18" id="chap18"></a>CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE ADVENTURES OF THESEUS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3><i>III. Theseus Kills the Minotaur</i></h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> ship reached Crete and Minos ordered
-the weeping youths and maidens to be thrown
-into the den of the Minotaur and Theseus
-with them. By a lucky chance Ariadne, the
-daughter of the king, saw Theseus and was
-moved with pity and a wish to save him. She
-slyly gave him a ball of yarn and told him to
-fasten one end of it to the inside entrance to
-the Labyrinth and then wind it off as he
-walked along that he might find his way back
-again.</p>
-
-<p>Theseus took the ball and went with his
-companions into the Labyrinth. He fastened
-one end of the thread firmly to the inside of
-the entrance, and as he walked along the thread
-caught and held on to the bushes. They could
-hear the bellowing of the Minotaur as they
-approached the cave, and the companions of
-Theseus hid themselves in the bushes, trembling
-with fright. But Theseus approached
-fearlessly, and rushing upon the Minotaur,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>57]</a></span>
-thrust his sword through him and the monster
-fell dead.</p>
-
-<p>The youths and maidens came out from their
-hiding-places, and surrounding Theseus, kissed
-his hands and called him their preserver.
-Theseus, guided by the thread which Ariadne
-had given him, led his companions safely to
-the entrance of the Labyrinth. And when
-they were free from its entanglements, Theseus
-gratefully raised up his hands to heaven and
-offered a prayer of thanks to the gods for their
-escape.</p>
-
-<p>Theseus and the companions whom he had
-saved reached the sea-shore unhindered, hurried
-their vessel into the water, unfurled the
-sail, and rowed with all their might in order
-to escape as quickly as possible from Crete
-and return to their own beloved country. The
-wind was favorable and the vessel cut through
-the sea like a swan. They passed through the
-midst of the islands of the sea and first landed
-at Delos, the home of the god, Apollo. This
-beautiful land was like a floating star and was
-said to be surrounded by a wall of pure gold.</p>
-
-<p>Theseus offered a sacrifice to Apollo and
-danced with the youths and maidens a dance
-in which they represented the winding passages
-of the Labyrinth. But in their great joy
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>58]</a></span>
-neither he nor the pilot thought of unfurling
-the white sail. Old &AElig;geus came every day to
-the sea-shore to watch for the return of the
-ship. There he sat on a high cliff and gazed
-over the wide waters; he hoped to see the
-boat coming with the white sail hoisted, and
-was in great agony of mind for fear he should
-see it coming with the black sail up.</p>
-
-<p>At last he espied, one day, a ship coming
-from afar. The nearer it came the greater
-grew the old king&rsquo;s anxiety. Soon he recognized
-the boat. It was the one which had
-borne away his beloved Theseus. But alas!
-the ship still carried the black sail, the sign of
-sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My son is dead!&rdquo; exclaimed the unhappy
-king. &ldquo;My only son is dead! My beloved
-Theseus!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The grief of &AElig;geus was beyond bounds and
-his reason left him. In despair he threw himself
-from the cliff into the sea and was drowned,
-and from that time all that water has been
-called the &AElig;gean Sea.</p>
-
-<p>The ship entered the port near Athens and
-Theseus brought the thanksgiving offerings
-which he had promised the gods when he left
-the port, and he sent a herald into the city to
-announce their safe return.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>59]</a></span>
-The Athenians, as soon as they learned that
-Theseus and the seven youths and seven maidens
-had returned safely, hastened to the palace,
-men, women, and children, and received him
-with joy and honors. But Theseus&rsquo; pleasure
-changed to grief when he learned that his
-father had died on account of his great love
-for his son.</p>
-
-<p>The Athenians led him forth, however,
-amidst the greatest demonstrations of enthusiasm
-and proclaimed him their king. Thus
-Theseus became King of Athens not only because
-he was of royal descent but because
-he was manly and loved his country better
-than himself. The court of Theseus became
-celebrated for its splendor and he ruled with
-prudence. The villages of the plain of Attica
-had formerly been at war with each other.
-Now they united under one government, with
-Athens as the chief city. Theseus founded
-festivals and encouraged education, and was in
-every way a good and wise leader.</p>
-
-<p>Long after his death there was a beautiful
-temple erected in his honor, and it stands in
-Athens to this day. The stories of his great
-deeds are carved in its stones, which are much
-worn by time. There you can see the hero
-slaying Prokrustes, Skiron, the Minotaur, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>60]</a></span>
-Periphetes. And you can see the capture of
-the wild Bull of Marathon. There, too, are the
-stories of Herakles, in stone, as he slew the
-lion and hydra and performed other valiant
-deeds.</p>
-
-<p>We speak of these heroes as if they had once
-lived in the flesh and died like mortals, but no
-one can tell whether or not they are purely
-Heroes of the Myth.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap19" id="chap19"></a>CHAPTER XIX<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">JASON, THE HERO OF THESSALY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3><i>Phrixos and Helle</i></h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">B&oelig;otia</span> is a district northwest of Athens
-and quite different from the Attic plain. The
-name means The Land of Cattle, because it
-abounds in fat pasture-lands, is moist and fertile,
-and its beautiful green meadows slope up
-to the wooded mountains and lead down to
-well-watered valleys. B&oelig;otia was always the
-paradise of farmers, who from the conditions of
-their life became famous for their stupidity.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<a name="temple" id="temple"></a>
-<img src="images/hht03.jpg" width="700" height="452"
-alt="" />
-<p class="caption">THE TEMPLE TO THESEUS AT THE FOOT OF THE ACROPOLIS IN ATHENS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Thebes was the capital of B&oelig;otia, but each
-district had its own smaller city and its own ruling
-family, whose sons called themselves kings.
-One of these petty kings, Athamas, had a son
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>61]</a></span>
-and daughter named Phrixos and Helle, and
-when their mother died he took another wife,
-the fair Ino, but she was not as good as she was
-fair, for she was jealous of her step-children.
-So she contrived a plot for getting rid of them
-which was well carried out. Ino persuaded all
-the women of the country to use the seed grain
-or hide it so that none of it could be used for
-the next year&rsquo;s crop.</p>
-
-<p>The women followed the queen&rsquo;s advice and
-the next year there was a great famine in the
-land. The women did not dare to tell their
-secret, although their families were beginning
-to starve. Then Athamas sent to the Oracle at
-Delphi in order to find out the cause of the
-trouble, and how he might deliver the country
-from the distress.</p>
-
-<p>But Ino secretly persuaded the messenger to
-say that the Oracle had given the following
-answer: &ldquo;The famine will cease when Athamas
-has sacrificed Phrixos to Zeus.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The king was almost stunned with grief
-when he received this message. How was it
-possible for him to sacrifice his own beloved
-son? But the wicked Ino published the false
-Oracle among the starving people, who, driven
-by hunger, clamored loudly for the death of
-Phrixos. The king being compelled by his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>62]</a></span>
-people, allowed Phrixos to be led to the altar
-to be sacrificed.</p>
-
-<p>But the spirit of the child&rsquo;s own mother
-came down in the form of a cloud to save him.
-She brought a large ram whose fleece was of
-shining gold, and said to the two children:
-&ldquo;My dear unfortunate little ones, come and sit
-on this golden sheep and he will fly away with
-you and carry you safely into a far country,
-where the wicked Ino will no longer have the
-power of injuring you.&rdquo; Then she helped
-Phrixos to mount to the back of the ram and
-she placed his little sister Helle behind him
-with both her arms around him, and disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>The ram flew up into the air like a bird and
-soared away over mountains and valleys and
-rivers and plains. Away, away they went
-through the blue sky until they reached the
-straits which separate Europe from Asia.
-There Helle lost her balance and fell into the
-sea. In vain did Phrixos try to save his sister,
-who cried and stretched out her arms to him.
-The poor child was swallowed by the waves
-and devoured by sea-monsters. From that
-time the sea in that place has been called the
-Hellespont.</p>
-
-<p>Phrixos sailed on alone, on the back of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>63]</a></span>
-ram, which took him to the farthest shore of the
-Black Sea and landed him at Kolchis. There
-the king received Phrixos kindly. Phrixos
-sacrificed the ram to Zeus and hung up the
-golden fleece in a grove which was sacred to
-Ares, the God of War. The golden fleece was
-priceless in value and was guarded by a terrible
-sleepless dragon.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap20" id="chap20"></a>CHAPTER XX<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">JASON CLAIMS HIS THRONE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">More</span> than a hundred miles northwest of
-Athens is Thessaly, the most northern country
-of Greece. The greater part of it consists of
-mountains, the highest and steepest of all
-Greece. Among these the loftiest is Mount
-Olympos, whose summit, with its three snowy
-peaks standing out like glittering marble
-against the blue sky, rises high above the surrounding
-ridges. So glorious and so pure and
-so high did it appear to the ancient Greeks,
-that they imagined it to be the dwelling-place
-of the gods. It seemed the very end of the
-world as it rose up and shut off this horizon;
-and they believed the throne of Zeus, himself,
-to be on its summit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>64]</a></span>
-When the shining crest was obscured by
-clouds, pious people from many countries
-around turned to it in awe and said that the
-Lord of Heaven had hid his face, and waited
-for him to hurl his lightnings and speak in
-thunder. And the people of Thessaly loved to
-walk in the Vale of Tempe, where the wild fig-tree
-and wild grape, the willow, and ivy clung
-with tough roots to the rugged rocks at the
-foot of the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>The most mountainous portion of Thessaly
-was, of course, wild and inhospitable. The
-Centaurs were said to dwell in its gorges and
-caves, and it was claimed that they were wiser
-and gentler than the Centaurs of Arcadia.
-They were said to have gathered much lore
-of herbs and forest things, and to have been
-excellent surgeons. The same was told by
-fame of the Thessalian mountain-women, who,
-while as rugged and fierce as the men, were
-said to be extremely handsome and great mistresses
-in the art of making ointments and
-magic waters and juices for the casting of
-spells; in short, they were famous all over
-Greece as the most knowing and dangerous
-witches.</p>
-
-<p>The land changed wonderfully where it
-sloped down to the sea. The narrow valleys
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>65]</a></span>
-spread out into broad plains. The moisture,
-gathered and treasured by the forests and protected
-by their shade, filtered through the soil,
-keeping the grass green for the large herds
-which at that time were the greatest wealth,
-both of farmer and king; while the thousand
-rivulets and streamlets that hurried down the
-mountain-side in brooks and torrents ran together
-and formed handsome rivers which
-scarcely ever became dry or even shallow, as
-did the small and stony streams of Attica.
-Many of the rivers of Attica are so small that
-they never reach the sea at all, but run into the
-sand and waste themselves, while the Thessalian
-rivers all carry their waters to the sea.</p>
-
-<p>The largest of them, that which flows through
-the richest and most fertile country, is the Peneus,
-famed in song and story. In this beautiful
-land of Thessaly lived a king, Pelias. He
-really had no right to the throne, for he had an
-older brother. But that brother, being of a
-peaceful nature, allowed Pelias to take the
-crown from him, while he himself retired to
-some land he had in the mountains. His son,
-Jason, a handsome youth of great promise, he
-sent for his education to the wise Centaur,
-Chiron, who made his home in the deepest
-mountain-caves.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>66]</a></span>
-When Jason was twenty years old and his
-education in manly sports and in the art of
-war, in song and in music, was such as to do
-honor to his master, Chiron, he was directed
-by an Oracle to go straight to his uncle Pelias
-and boldly claim his father&rsquo;s kingdom. This
-was an undertaking after his own heart.
-Shortly after this Pelias celebrated the yearly
-festival of Poseidon, the God of the Sea, by
-solemn sacrifices offered on the shore. This
-was a grand national occasion, so he invited
-everyone around and did not dare to leave
-Jason out.</p>
-
-<p>Jason accepted the invitation. He donned
-the skin of a panther which he had killed himself,
-and taking two long spears, started on his
-way. Now Pelias had learned from an Oracle
-that he should lose his kingdom, and he was
-always in fear. The Oracle had said that a
-descendant of &OElig;olus would take his crown
-and throne from him, and that this person
-would come to him with only one sandal on.
-Pelias, therefore, was always on the lookout
-for the man with one sandal.</p>
-
-<p>As Jason came along he saw an old woman
-sitting on the bank of a river which he had to
-cross. She begged him to take her over. The
-young Greeks were taught that their first duty
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>67]</a></span>
-was to be helpful and respectful to old people.
-Jason willingly took the old woman in his arms
-and carried her over as if she had been a child.
-She thanked him and wished him good luck.</p>
-
-<p>The current of the river was strong and
-rapid and it swept away one of Jason&rsquo;s sandals.
-He set the old woman down on the shore after
-crossing and then stood in doubt as to whether
-he had better go back to look for his sandal.
-The old woman, however, advised him to proceed
-on his way. Then she disappeared. This
-meeting turned out to be of much greater importance
-to the young man than he could have
-imagined, for it was the goddess Hera, the
-Queen of Heaven, herself, who had taken the
-shape of an old woman to test his kindness and
-good-breeding. Being pleased with both, she
-remained his friend and protector.</p>
-
-<p>The public square was full of people when
-Jason arrived. His face was comely, his figure
-heroic, and his long hair hung down to the
-panther&rsquo;s skin on his shoulders. He carried
-two long spears and walked like a king. Everybody
-turned in wonder to gaze at him, and
-some of them said to one another, &ldquo;This stranger
-is no mortal man&mdash;he must be Apollo in
-disguise.&rdquo; Others said, &ldquo;No, it is the God of
-War. Look at his powerful, athletic frame.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>68]</a></span>
-Just at this moment Pelias came driving by
-on his chariot drawn by two fleet-footed mules.
-His eyes were also attracted by the beauty of
-the youthful stranger, but when he noticed that
-he wore only one sandal he trembled with fear.
-Pelias, being old and crafty, concealed his
-anxiety and received his young kinsman with
-cordial friendliness seemingly. Jason at once
-announced his right to the king&rsquo;s throne, and
-Pelias admitted his claim.</p>
-
-<p>But Pelias told him that he was too young
-to take such a responsible place, and suggested
-that so stalwart a youth ought to do some valiant
-deed to win the respect and admiration of
-his people before coming into power. &ldquo;The
-people would not care for thee,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;if
-thou shouldst take the crown as a birthright
-and not because of thy prowess.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then King Pelias proposed, as a suitable and
-honorable test of Jason&rsquo;s qualities as hero and
-leader, that he should cross the Black Sea
-and bring from Kolchis the golden fleece of
-Phrixos&rsquo; ram. The wily old man had judged
-Jason at a glance and knew that no words or
-offer of his could appeal more powerfully to the
-young hero&rsquo;s generous instincts; he also knew
-that the danger of such an undertaking would
-be attractive to his youthful imagination. But
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>69]</a></span>
-he smiled wickedly under his beard when Jason
-delightedly agreed to his proposal. Pelias
-thought to himself, &ldquo;No sane man would ever
-go on such an expedition, and not the bravest
-man could return alive. He will never come
-back, and I shall remain the King of Iolkos.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap21" id="chap21"></a>CHAPTER XXI<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE EXPEDITION</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Jason</span> cared little about the motives of the
-king in sending him after the Golden Fleece.
-His courage ran high and the anticipation of
-seeing other countries and doing valiant deeds
-filled his mind. He set about building a large
-ship, the finest the world had ever seen, and to
-do this he employed Argos, a famous shipbuilder.
-No expense or labor was spared, and
-when the ship was finished it was named the
-Argo in honor of the builder. It was the largest
-ship that had ever sailed from Greece.</p>
-
-<p>When the ship was ready Jason assembled
-the noblest heroes of all Hellas, Herakles,
-Kastor and Pollux, Meleagros, Peleus, Admetos,
-Theseus, Orpheus and two sons of
-Boreas, and many others of great renown.
-Jason invited them to go with him on this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>70]</a></span>
-expedition, and they gladly accepted the invitation.
-They praised the ship; it was such a
-remarkable piece of work, and said that Athena
-must have advised and helped Argos, for no
-human being could make such a good boat.
-Jason was to be the captain, and all those who
-embarked on it with him would receive the
-name Argonauts, which means those who sail
-in the Argo.</p>
-
-<p>Before sailing, the heroes gathered around
-the altar of Zeus, and Jason offered up a sacrifice
-and prayed for a sign of good luck, if the
-God looked favorably on their undertaking.
-Zeus answered with a peal of thunder and a
-flash of lightning, which pleased Jason and
-gave the heroes courage. At first the voyage
-went so smoothly that it seemed like a grand
-holiday trip. As they sailed out from the
-olive-clad plains surrounding Iolkos, Orpheus
-with his god-like voice and magic lyre quieted
-the wild waves of the sea, and inspired the men
-on the Argo with love for battle.</p>
-
-<p>In this way they sailed along until they came
-to the island of Lemnos, where they were received
-in kindly fashion and remained a long
-time enjoying the new scenes and the festivals.
-Then they set sail again and came to a small
-island where they stayed a short time. Herakles
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>71]</a></span>
-had broken his oar and he wanted to replace
-it. He left the ship, taking with him a
-beautiful youth, Hylas, and they went into the
-woods to cut down a tree to make a new oar.</p>
-
-<p>But the wood-nymphs saw Hylas and said to
-each other, &ldquo;We will keep this beautiful youth
-to ramble with us in the forest, for he is gentle
-and kind and would be an agreeable companion.
-He is strong and will protect us against
-the rude creatures that cause us alarm.&rdquo; So
-they carried Hylas away and hid him, and
-Herakles would not leave the island without
-him. Then the Argo sailed on toward Kolchis,
-and the heroes mourned the loss of their two
-comrades.</p>
-
-<p>They landed again soon on another island,
-where lived a king who was known to fame as
-a great boxer. He was cruel to travellers.
-He challenged them to boxing matches and
-killed them in the sport. The Argonauts asked
-him to give them a supply of fresh water for
-their ship, and in return he asked them to box
-with him. Pollux accepted the challenge, and
-gave him such a beating that his bones were
-broken. Then they took all the fresh water
-they needed and went back to the ship. After
-this, Pollux, instead of the cruel and boastful
-king, was known as the great boxer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>72]</a></span>
-The Argo sailed on across the &AElig;gean Sea
-and through the Hellespont, where the unfortunate
-Helle was drowned, and reached the
-straits of the Bosporus. There were the immense
-Symplegades, two high cliffs that were
-not solidly rooted in the ground, but clashed
-together under the power of the winds, making
-the passage through the sea dangerous. It
-seemed impossible for the Argo to pass them
-without being crushed.</p>
-
-<p>But they were saved from this peril by the
-advice of Phineus, the blind old king of the
-district, who was also a soothsayer. Phineus
-had long suffered a terrible penalty, which the
-gods had sent on him for some unkindness, and
-he had been punished quite enough. Whenever
-he sat down to a meal the Harpies pounced
-upon his food, devouring the most of it and polluting
-the rest of it so that it was unspeakably
-filthy. When the Argonauts asked him to direct
-them past the Symplegades, he promised
-to do so if they would free him from the Harpies.
-This the Argonauts promised to do.</p>
-
-<p>They set a table before him laden with food,
-and the Harpies rushed down with great cries,
-perching on the table, eating greedily and
-snatching the food with their brazen claws.</p>
-
-<p>Then the winged sons of Boreas, who were
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>73]</a></span>
-with Jason, rose into the air and pursued the
-Harpies with swords. The feathers of the
-Harpies flew like dirt in a windstorm as they
-rushed screaming this way and that. They fled
-from that region, and so Phineus was rescued.</p>
-
-<p>Phineus showed the Argonauts how to steer
-their ship. He advised them to let a pigeon
-fly across the Symplegades, and if the bird
-passed unhurt they should quickly follow.
-When the Argonauts had come near the rocks
-they let a pigeon loose from the prow of their
-ship. It flew through between the cliffs, and
-the clashing together of the rocks caught only
-the end of its tail. Watching for the moment
-when the rocks should open and swing away
-from each other, the Argonauts sailed between
-them, rowing with all their might.</p>
-
-<p>They called on Hera for assistance, and the
-goddess bade the rocks move slowly. The
-cliffs did not have time to close together upon
-the ship, and she got through safely, except
-that a small portion of the rudder was broken
-off. From that time on the Symplegades became
-one rock and remained firm. After this
-the Argonauts sailed along the whole coast of
-the Black Sea toward the east, and finally
-reached Kolchis.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>74]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap22" id="chap22"></a>CHAPTER XXII<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">JASON FINDS THE GOLDEN FLEECE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> the Argonauts had drawn their ship
-up on the beach, Jason presented himself before
-the king and said: &ldquo;Oh, king, we have come
-to ask thee for the Golden Fleece, which belongs
-to the Greeks at Iolkos. The ram which
-it covered was given to Phrixos and he dedicated
-it to Zeus; but the Fleece he hung up
-in the garden sacred to Ares. Moreover, the
-King of Iolkos has sent me to bring it back to
-Hellas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The king answered: &ldquo;Oh, stranger, thou art
-welcome to the Fleece. Take it back to Hellas,
-I pray thee. But first thou must yoke two
-wild bulls, which no one has ever yet been
-able to manage, to a plough, and turn up furrows
-in a field and sow it with dragons&rsquo; teeth. The
-bulls snort fire with every breath and have
-brass hoofs. Beware lest they turn upon thee
-and burn thee to death with the fire of their
-nostrils, and trample thee into the earth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jason did not know how to tame the terrible
-bulls, and began to ponder. But Medea, the
-daughter of the king, saw Jason and pitied
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>75]</a></span>
-him. Medea was very much of a witch and
-could make all sorts of charms and mixtures of
-enchantment. She gave a magic ointment to
-Jason and said: &ldquo;Stranger, I would gladly
-help thee to tame the wild bulls. Take this
-box of magic ointment and anoint thyself, also
-the end of thy spear and thy shield. It will
-make thee proof against fire and steel for one
-day, so that they cannot harm thee.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And thou shouldst know that out of the
-dragons&rsquo; teeth which thou art to sow, men will
-spring up all clad in armor. Hide thyself
-where these men cannot see thee, and when
-they stand close together throw stones among
-them.&rdquo; Jason took the drug and did as he was
-told. He anointed himself and his spear and
-shield, and went in search of the fiery bulls.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as he found them he went boldly up
-and hitched them to a plough. They breathed
-fire at him and tried to strike him with their
-brazen hoofs. But he ploughed the field, turning
-back furrow after furrow. Then he went
-back to sow the field with dragons&rsquo; teeth and
-hid himself nearby. Soon armed giants arose
-out of the ground. Jason threw a large stone
-into the midst of them, which made them think
-that some one of their own company was attacking
-the others. They began fighting among
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>76]</a></span>
-themselves, and became so furious with one
-another that they did not see Jason approach.
-He took his sword and slew them all. Then
-he returned to the king to receive the Golden
-Fleece.</p>
-
-<p>But the king was surprised, for he had no intention
-of keeping his promise. He expected
-that Jason would be slain and never come back.
-And he was contriving a plot to burn the ship
-Argo, and kill Jason&rsquo;s companions.</p>
-
-<p>Jason had done all that the king had required
-of him and would not give up the idea of taking
-the Fleece, and the king refused to let him have
-it. Then Jason went back to Medea for advice.
-Her admiration for the hero was greater than
-ever, since she had seen how fearlessly he went
-about his tasks.</p>
-
-<p>She led him to the grove where hung the
-Golden Fleece, and with her magic drugs put
-the watchful dragon that guarded it to sleep.
-Jason snatched the Fleece and made for the
-ship, taking Medea, who had promised to be
-his wife, with him. When the old king missed
-his daughter he was very angry, and gave pursuit.
-But Jason and his companions pushed
-the boat out into the sea, and unfurling the
-sails, they swiftly took their way over the
-waters toward their own land.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>77]</a></span>
-After many wanderings and perils, the Argonauts
-came to the Greek coast, and the Argo
-entered again the sea of their own beloved
-country. They reached Iolkos, bringing the
-world-famous Golden Fleece with them, and
-the people received them in triumph. But
-Pelias still refused to give up the throne to
-Jason, although he gladly took the Golden
-Fleece which the young hero had brought
-him. So Jason slew him and made himself
-King of Iolkos; and as Medea&rsquo;s father had
-once reigned in Corinth, he added that country
-to his kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>Jason lived in peace ten happy years in Kolchis,
-and his kingdom prospered; but a great
-trouble came upon his household. Medea,
-with her black arts of witchery and enchantment
-and her evil heart, could not always
-please him or hold his affections. He went to
-Corinth, where he met the gentle-hearted
-Kreusa, and her peaceful, kindly disposition
-won his heart. Now in those days a man was
-not despised and looked upon as a law-breaker
-if he married more than one wife, for the people
-had a different standard of right and
-wrong from that of the present day. And
-Jason in an unlucky hour took Kreusa for his
-wife.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>78]</a></span>
-Medea was maddened with jealousy when
-she heard of this, and she consulted the evil
-spirits of her witchcraft to find out how she
-could do away with Kreusa. She took a beautiful
-dress and a crown, and having sprinkled
-them with an enchanted juice, sent them to
-Kreusa. Her rival accepted the gifts and put
-them on, but she could never get them off
-again. They clung to her and burned into her
-flesh, so that she died. Then Medea took further
-revenge by burning Kreusa&rsquo;s home; and
-when she found that Jason was angry with her
-she slew her children and fled from Iolkos in a
-fiery chariot drawn by winged serpents. Poor
-Jason, beside himself with grief, went to his
-good ship Argo, which was now kept as a
-sacred place for the worship of the gods, and
-there he died.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap23" id="chap23"></a>CHAPTER XXIII<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">ORPHEUS, THE HERO OF THE LYRE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the same land of Thrace in which Jason&rsquo;s
-family ruled, Orpheus, the greatest musician
-of Greece, was born. It was said that his
-mother was the Goddess of Song, and such was
-the power of his voice and his art of playing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>79]</a></span>
-on the lyre that he could move stones and
-trees. When the wild beasts heard his music
-they left their dens and lay down at his feet,
-the birds in the trees stopped singing, and the
-fishes came to the surface of the sea to listen
-to him.</p>
-
-<p>Orpheus had a wife, Eurydike, celebrated
-for her beauty and virtue, and he loved her very
-dearly. One day when Eurydike was gathering
-flowers on the bank of a lake a venomous
-snake bit her foot and she died. Orpheus
-could not be consoled. He went off into the
-wildest waste that he could find and there he
-mourned day and night till all nature shared
-in his grief. At last he made up his mind to
-go down into Hades and beg her back of King
-Pluto, for life was worthless without her.</p>
-
-<p>Orpheus took his lyre, and singing as he went,
-found his way down to Hades through a dismal
-abyss. Grim Cerberus himself held his
-breath to listen to the marvellous music. Not
-one bark did he give from any of his three terrible
-heads, and when Orpheus passed him
-he crouched at his feet. So Orpheus entered
-Hades unhindered, and standing before the
-throne of Pluto and his pale queen Persephone,
-he said: &ldquo;Oh, king and queen, I have not come
-down into Hades to see the gloomy Tartaros,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>80]</a></span>
-nor in order to carry away the three-headed
-warder of your kingdom, the dreadful Cerberus.
-I came down to implore you to give
-me back my beloved wife, Eurydike. I cannot
-bear life without her. To me the world is
-a desert, and life a burden. Why should she
-die, so young and beautiful? Have pity on
-me! If I may not take her back, then I will
-not again see the light of the sun, but I, too,
-will remain in the gloomy Hades.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pluto and Persephone listened in silence to
-the pleadings of Orpheus. His pathetic voice
-and the sweet tones of his melodious lyre held
-them like a charm. The shades of the dead
-came flocking around him and mourned. Tantalos
-forgot his thirst and listened to the singer&rsquo;s
-complaints. Sisyphos, who was compelled
-to roll a stone to the top of a mountain whence
-it always dashed back again to the bottom,
-ceased his dreadful labor to listen, and the
-Furies themselves first shed tears.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<a name="orpheus" id="orpheus"></a>
-<img src="images/hht04.jpg" width="700" height="520"
-alt="" />
-<p class="caption">ORPHEUS LEADING EURYDIKE OUT OF HADES.<br />
-(From the painting by Corot.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Persephone and Pluto were pitiless gods.
-Their hearts were long since hardened to the
-cries of the living who prayed for the restoration
-of their loved ones. But they could not
-resist the power of the enchanting sounds that
-Orpheus made. They called the spirit of the
-beautiful Eurydike to them and said to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>81]</a></span>
-musician: &ldquo;Take thy wife Eurydike and go
-up again to the light of the sun. Let her gaze
-on the smiling sky and see the fields of the
-upper world. But beware of one thing. Let
-her follow thee and do not turn around to look
-at her before reaching the world of the living.
-If thou shouldst turn and look upon her she
-will return at once to her place among the
-dead.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Orpheus left Hades in great haste and Eurydike
-followed him. In the midst of deepest
-silence they ascended through dismal rocky
-places. They neared their journey&rsquo;s end.
-They could almost see the green earth when
-Orpheus was seized with a dreadful doubt.
-&ldquo;I hear no sound whatever behind me,&rdquo; he
-said to himself. &ldquo;Is my beloved Eurydike
-really following me?&rdquo; He turned his head a
-little. He saw Eurydike, who followed him
-like a shadow. But suddenly she began to be
-drawn backward. She stretched out her arms
-toward Orpheus as if imploring his help.
-Orpheus hurried to take her in his arms,
-but she vanished from his sight and Orpheus
-was alone again.</p>
-
-<p>Yet he did not despair. Again he descended
-into Hades and reached the river which
-separates this world from that of the dead, but
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>82]</a></span>
-the boatman, Charon, refused to ferry him
-across. Seven days and seven nights Orpheus
-remained there without drink or food, weeping
-and mourning. The decree of the gods was
-not to be changed. When Orpheus found that
-he could effect nothing he returned to the
-earth. He wandered alone over the mountains
-and glens of Thrace, which resounded
-with his plaintive songs day and night.</p>
-
-<p>One day as he sat upon a grassy spot and
-played his lyre a troop of wild women who
-were celebrating a festival rushed upon him
-and tried to make him play for them to dance.
-Orpheus indignantly refused, and they grew
-angry and handled him so roughly that he
-died. Where he was buried the nightingales
-sang more sweetly than elsewhere. And his
-lyre, which was thrown into the sea, was
-caught by the waves, which made sweet music
-upon it as they rose and fell.</p>
-
-<p>Orpheus was honored by the gods, and after
-his death they brought him to the Abode of
-the Blessed, where he found his beloved Eurydike
-and was reunited to her.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>83]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap24" id="chap24"></a>CHAPTER XXIV<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">PELOPS, THE HERO OF THE PELOPONNESOS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Some</span> of the heroes famed in Greek song and
-story, and whose descendants lived in Greece,
-had come from foreign countries, many of them
-from Asia Minor. Greece and Asia Minor had
-always been closely connected. Travellers
-from each were in the habit of visiting the
-other country. Sometimes they traded together
-and sometimes made war on each other.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most powerful kingdoms of Asia
-Minor was Phrygia, and it was ruled by a king
-of the name of Tantalos, who had at first governed
-wisely and in the fear of the gods. He
-was made arrogant by prosperity, and at length
-grew so overbearing and cruel even to his own
-son, Pelops, that the gods determined to make
-an example of him. They sent him living to
-Tartaros, the portion of Hades reserved for the
-very worst offenders, there to endure a terrible
-punishment forever.</p>
-
-<p>He was placed up to his waist in the midst
-of running water, clear and cool, under hanging
-boughs laden with lovely fruit. Yet he
-could not reach the water or the fruit, and was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>84]</a></span>
-always faint with hunger and thirst. Whenever
-he bent down to get a drink of water it
-rapidly rushed away from him, and if he lifted
-up his hand to pluck some of the ripe fragrant
-fruit, a sudden gust of wind tossed the branches
-high up into the air. Poor Tantalos never
-came nearer than this to quenching his thirst
-or satisfying his hunger.</p>
-
-<p>To make his misery more unbearable, a huge
-block of rock was poised above his head, so
-lightly that it moved with every breeze, and he
-was in perpetual fear of its falling down on him.
-Pelops, the son whom he had abused in childhood,
-became a great favorite with the gods,
-and they wished to make up to him for his
-father&rsquo;s cruelty. They gave him a shoulder of
-ivory to replace the shoulder of which his father
-had deprived him. When he grew up the gods
-helped him to leave his native land, where he
-had been ill-treated, and they guided him across
-the &AElig;gean Sea, and around the southern point
-of Greece to Elis, where Herakles had cleaned
-out the stables of Augeias. The capital of Elis
-was the city of Pisa, where a king ruled who
-had a beautiful daughter named Hippodameia.
-She must have been very fond of sports and
-athletics, for her name means &ldquo;The Tamer of
-Horses.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>85]</a></span>
-Hippodameia had many suitors, but her
-father, &OElig;nomaos, had heard that he would be
-dethroned by his daughter&rsquo;s husband, and so
-he did not wish her to marry. He was very
-warlike, being a son of Ares, the God of War,
-and he determined to kill all the suitors. So
-he proposed a chariot race with each of the
-wooers, and promised that the one who succeeded
-in winning the race should have his
-daughter in marriage; on the other hand, if the
-suitor lost the race he should be put to death
-by the king.</p>
-
-<p>&OElig;nomaos was a famous charioteer, and he
-had steeds which were swifter than the wind.
-The race-course began at Pisa, and stretched as
-far as the Isthmus of Corinth to the altar of
-Poseidon. &OElig;nomaos believed in himself and
-in his own skill. So great was his self-reliance,
-and so sure was he of the swiftness of his horses,
-that whenever a suitor came along he let him
-go ahead with his chariot drawn by four horses,
-while he himself first sacrificed a ram to Zeus,
-and only at the end of the ceremony mounted
-his chariot, having as driver, Myrtilos, and being
-armed with a strong spear. Then he would
-overtake the suitor and kill him. Thus he had
-already killed a great many.</p>
-
-<p>Pelops, on his arrival at Pisa, saw
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>86]</a></span>
-Hippodameia, and at once had a strong desire to make
-her his wife. When he saw that he could not
-conquer &OElig;nomaos by fair means he planned a
-trick. He secretly approached the king&rsquo;s charioteer,
-Myrtilos, and said to him: &ldquo;Myrtilos,
-hear what I have to say to thee. Help me to
-win the race and I will give thee half the kingdom
-when I become King of Pisa.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Hippodameia, too, who greatly admired the
-young man, advised the charioteer to lend them
-his aid. Myrtilos accepted the proposal of
-Pelops. On the day of the race &OElig;nomaos
-again waited to sacrifice a ram to Zeus, leaving
-Pelops to drive on ahead, and only mounted
-his chariot after the offering was over, being
-sure that he should overtake the suitor as he
-had done with the others.</p>
-
-<p>But suddenly a wheel flew off from the king&rsquo;s
-chariot, and &OElig;nomaos fell to the ground, hurting
-himself badly. Myrtilos had removed the
-pin which held the wheel on to the axle. Thus
-Pelops reached the Isthmus before the king
-and won the race.</p>
-
-<p>&OElig;nomaos died of his injuries, and Pelops
-married Hippodameia, and took possession of
-the kingdom. Then Myrtilos demanded half
-the kingdom as it had been promised him by
-Pelops. But Pelops carried him to the sea and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>87]</a></span>
-cast him into it. On account of this crime the
-descendants of Pelops, the Pelopides, had to
-suffer many misfortunes. Crime and craft may
-answer an immediate purpose, but they are followed
-by divine wrath.</p>
-
-<p>Pelops instituted the famous Olympic games,
-which were celebrated every fourth year, and
-lasted five days. And he did many other things
-which were of great use to his people. In
-honor of Pelops, the great peninsula, south of
-the Isthmus of Corinth, was called Peloponnesos,
-which means Pelops&rsquo; Island. The name
-was not quite correct at the time, for the land
-was not an island but a peninsula. But after
-all these thousands of years it has curiously
-come to pass that the old name is a true one,
-for it was only a few years ago that the Isthmus
-of Corinth was cut in two, and the Peloponnesos
-was in truth made an island.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap25" id="chap25"></a>CHAPTER XXV<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">PERSEUS, THE HERO OF ARGOS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Less</span> than sixty miles in a straight line to the
-southwest of Athens there is a barren, swampy
-plain. It is in the Peloponnesos and is bounded
-on all sides by mountains except to the south,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>88]</a></span>
-where it is bounded by the sea. In this plain
-lies the market-town, Argos, at the foot of a lofty
-hill, its acropolis, Larisa. There is a citadel on
-this acropolis which looks off to a high mountain
-at the north near the Isthmus of Corinth,
-and the white-streaked hills beyond. And
-nearer to the citadel, on the north, is a higher
-mountain, the highest of the Peloponnesos,
-where the people used to pray to Zeus and Hera
-for rain. To the southeast the Larisa looks
-over a great prison on a fortified mountain.</p>
-
-<p>We have said that the Peloponnesos was the
-shape of a man&rsquo;s hand. The thumb of this hand
-is a peninsula pointing toward the east and
-south. In more ancient times this thumb was
-called the peninsula of Argos. The town, Argos,
-shares its name with the barren plain in which
-it is situated, and in olden times it shared it with
-the peninsula also. The peninsula of Argos
-was quite separate from a larger district, called
-Argolis, until the Romans conquered Greece.
-But now it is one with the entire district, and
-Argos the town, and Argos the plain, and
-Argos the peninsula, are all in Argolis.</p>
-
-<p>Hera, wife of Zeus and goddess of the
-heavens, was the patron deity of Argos. It is
-said that she had a contest with Poseidon to see
-which should name the land, and as she brought
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>89]</a></span>
-the most valuable gift, the honor fell to her. The
-river Inachos flows through Argos the plain.
-The first king of Argos was a son of the river-god,
-Inachos, and the ocean-nymph, Melia, was
-his mother.</p>
-
-<p>The earliest people of Argos must have
-worked hard to keep the country rightly irrigated.
-They were called Dana&aelig;, doubtless
-because their work resembled that of the
-Dana&iuml;ds, who were said to be punished in the
-lower world by carrying water in pitchers to
-fill a broken cistern. As fast as they poured
-water in the cistern it ran out through the
-cracks at the bottom. So, too, the Dana&aelig; carried
-water to the sandy soil, but it ran into the
-earth without doing very much good.</p>
-
-<p>The Dana&aelig; came from Egypt and were accustomed
-to farming in the sand. They knew
-the unsparing pains that must be taken to conquer
-it, and kept at work until the land became
-fertile enough to repay them. But in modern
-times the plain has lost its fertility because the
-farmers do not take the same trouble in cultivating
-the soil.</p>
-
-<p>One of the earliest of the Argive kings,
-Danaos, sent his daughters out to search for
-springs as he would have sent them to bring
-water from the Nile if they had remained in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>90]</a></span>
-Egypt. Poseidon, seeing how fair one of them
-was, loved her and caused a spring to flow at
-Lerna, and it is called by her own name, Amyone,
-to the present time. It was this spring that
-created the marsh where the terrible Hydra
-was slain by Herakles.</p>
-
-<p>Danaos had many descendants, one after
-another succeeding him as king. The fifth successor
-was Akrisios and he had a daughter,
-Dan&auml;e. Some oracle had told him that he
-would be slain by a son of Dan&auml;e if she ever
-had one. This worried the king and he determined
-that she should never marry. He built
-a high tower of brass and shut her up in it so
-that no one could get to her.</p>
-
-<p>Dan&auml;e grew very lonely, shut up in the tower,
-and she used to watch from the window to try
-to catch a glimpse of the people below. No one
-looked up to notice her, but Zeus saw her from
-his abode in the heavens and was struck with
-her beauty and loneliness. He sent a golden
-shower of sunbeams to console her in her prison,
-and a little babe was born to her, and she called
-him Perseus, the son of Light.</p>
-
-<p>Akrisios, the king, heard the child&rsquo;s voice
-and called his daughter to a holy sanctuary and
-bade her tell the truth about the babe. This
-she did, but the king would not believe her.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>91]</a></span>
-He put her into a box and the child with her
-and cast the box into the sea to sink or float.
-The box did float and the kind waves carried it
-to the island of Seriphos. A good old fisherman
-caught it in a net and took it to his own
-little hut, and thus Dan&auml;e and her babe were
-saved.</p>
-
-<p>Perseus grew up to be a strong, handsome lad,
-and was often seen with his beautiful mother
-wandering over the island. As Perseus grew
-older he became his mother&rsquo;s protector and
-champion and could never do enough for her.
-They continued to live at the cottage of the
-fisherman, who had adopted them as members
-of his own family.</p>
-
-<p>The fisherman had a brother, Polydektes,
-who was king of the island, and he was as
-proud and cruel as the fisherman was simple
-and kind. Polydektes saw the beautiful Dan&auml;e
-and resolved to add her to his possessions and
-make her subject to his whims. He feared
-Perseus, however, and studied how to get him
-out of the way. So he called his friends together,
-among them Perseus, and said that he
-was looking for quaint gifts to send to the wedding
-of Hippodameia, the daughter of &OElig;nomaos.</p>
-
-<p>All the young men came to the court of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>92]</a></span>
-king and listened to his request, and each one
-promised to go on some quest and find a present
-worthy of the princess. Perseus wanted
-to outdo all the others, and said he would
-bring the head of Medusa if the king desired
-it. Polydektes took him at his word and
-ordered him to go for it at once.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap26" id="chap26"></a>CHAPTER XXVI<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">PERSEUS FINDS THE GORGONS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Medusa</span> was the youngest of three sisters
-known as the Gorgons, who lived somewhere
-in the far west by the ocean. She was the fairest
-of the three and in her youth had been a
-famous beauty. But having insulted Athena
-in her holy temple, that goddess punished her
-by spoiling her beauty in a most ghastly way.
-She changed her beautiful locks into living
-snakes. A great horror settled on the face of
-the poor girl, and it became so terrible in its
-look of agony, with its frightful frame of
-snakes, that no one could bear the sight. Whoever
-looked at her turned to stone.</p>
-
-<p>Perseus set forth to find Medusa with the
-courage of a youth who has never known defeat.
-The goddess, Athena, who particularly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>93]</a></span>
-despised the Gorgon, lent him her aid. She
-advised him to go to three aged women, who
-lived in a dark cavern near the entrance to the
-infernal regions. They were old women from
-their birth, gray-haired, misshapen, and had
-but one eye and a single tooth for the three.
-These they exchanged, each taking a turn at
-using the tooth and eye, while the other two
-sat toothless and blind.</p>
-
-<p>Perseus approached them quietly, for they
-were easily alarmed and always on the lookout
-for something to dread. As they were passing
-the eye from one to the other, Perseus seized
-it, and they pleaded piteously for him to restore
-it. This Perseus refused to do until they
-should tell him the way to the home of the
-nymphs who took care of the invisible helmet
-of Hades and the winged shoes of Hermes,
-messenger of the gods. The three miserable
-old women were glad to get back their eye and
-tooth, although they were loath to give Perseus
-the information he wanted. But they told him
-the way to find the home of the nymphs, and
-he went on with a happier heart.</p>
-
-<p>Perseus received the winged sandals from
-the nymphs and bound them to his own feet.
-They gave him a mantle, too, which he threw
-over his shoulders. It made him invisible, just
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>94]</a></span>
-as the darkness of night hides everything from
-human eyes. They put the helmet of Hades
-on his head. Whoever wore this helmet could
-see others, but no one could see him. Moreover,
-Hermes gave him a two-edged sword
-and Athena gave him a shield of brass, which
-was polished on the inside until it glittered like
-a mirror and reflected the image of everything
-back of the person using it.</p>
-
-<p>Perseus, being thus armed, went flying toward
-the ocean and found the Gorgons lying on
-the shore. There were three of them and they
-were sisters. Medusa alone was immortal. The
-other Gorgons, as well as Medusa, had snakes
-on their heads instead of hair, and large teeth
-like wild beasts, and iron hands with golden
-nails. Athena had taught Perseus how to approach
-them without being the victim of Medusa&rsquo;s
-deadly stare. Instead of facing her, he
-kept his face turned toward his shield and
-looked at her image only.</p>
-
-<p>In this way, guarded by his cloak and helmet
-of invisibility, he came close to Medusa, and
-with one blow from his two-edged sword cut
-off the monster&rsquo;s head. As the blood flowed
-down over the sand, there sprang from it a
-beautiful white-winged horse. Perseus had
-brought a large pouch which the nymphs had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>95]</a></span>
-given him; a magic pocket that could be distended
-to almost any size. He hurried the
-head into the pouch without looking at it and
-flew away as fast as his winged sandals would
-carry him; the other Gorgons followed him in
-vain, for he was invisible to them.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap27" id="chap27"></a>CHAPTER XXVII<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">PERSEUS RESCUES ANDROMEDA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">On</span> his way back to the island of Seriphos,
-Perseus met with many adventures. He visited
-Atlas, expecting the hospitality which the
-Greeks consider due to all strangers. But
-Atlas did not receive him with courtesy, and
-Perseus in return held up the Gorgon&rsquo;s head
-for Atlas to gaze at. Atlas was turned into a
-rocky mountain, and there he stands and always
-will stand with the firmament resting on his
-head.</p>
-
-<p>In his flight Perseus reached &AElig;theopia, where
-King Kepheus reigned. There he saw an immense
-rock on the coast and a charming maiden
-was chained to the rock. Perseus approached
-her in pity and said, &ldquo;Tell me, oh maiden, why
-thou art bound to this rock! What is thy name
-and which is thy country?&rdquo; &ldquo;I am a princess,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>96]</a></span>
-the daughter of King Kepheus,&rdquo; answered the
-girl, &ldquo;and my name is Andromeda. My mother
-praised my beauty above that of the daughters
-of Nereus, displeasing the nymphs themselves
-and offending the god.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The Nereids complained to Poseidon, and
-in his wrath he sent a sea-monster on shore to
-destroy the people and their flocks and herds
-and devastate the country. The king, my
-father, inquired of the Oracle how the country
-might be freed from this calamity. The Oracle
-made reply that the country would be delivered
-if the king would give up his own
-daughter to be devoured by the monster.
-When the people of &AElig;theopia heard of the
-answer of the Oracle they forced my father to
-accede to the terms. They themselves chained
-me to this rock, and every moment I expect the
-monster to come and tear me to pieces.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>No sooner had Andromeda finished her tale
-than the monster appeared in the distance.
-Her father and mother saw him too and wept
-in despair. Crying out to their beloved child,
-with extended hands they bewailed her fate.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A truce to tears!&rdquo; cried Perseus. &ldquo;The
-brave man sheds no tears in the face of danger!
-He wastes no words but dares! Shall Perseus,
-the son of Zeus and Dan&auml;e, having slain
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>97]</a></span>
-Medusa, quail before a sea-serpent? I will save
-thy daughter, but thou must give her to me to
-be my wife!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thou shalt have our daughter for thy wife
-and our kingdom as well,&rdquo; cried the king, &ldquo;if
-thou wilt save her!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The waves rose higher and higher around
-the cliff and the sea-monster came roaring and
-hissing, with open jaws showing his savage
-teeth, his neck outstretched, and his head reared
-high above the breakers. Over the waves rose
-his tremendous back covered with thick, heavy
-scales, and he lashed the waters to a foam with
-his coiling tail.</p>
-
-<p>Then Perseus, with the aid of his winged
-sandals, rose up into the air and attacked the
-monster from above. The beast plunged this
-way and that, leaping up and striking at Perseus
-with his fangs, diving again into the water
-and springing out, bellowing in a frightful
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>Time after time Perseus thrust his sword
-into the monster, until a stream of black blood
-ran from its throat, and it grew motionless and
-died. Perseus quickly flew to Andromeda and
-took off the chains that bound her, and she
-sprang into her father&rsquo;s arms with a cry of joy.
-The king and queen threw their arms around
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>98]</a></span>
-their beloved daughter and covered her with
-kisses, and they clasped the hand of Perseus
-with gratitude which they could not express.</p>
-
-<p>Then they returned to the grand castle of
-Kepheus, promising to celebrate the nuptials of
-Perseus and Andromeda. The wedding took
-place amidst great pomp and splendor, but
-while they were in the midst of their festivities
-the din of arms and battle-cries resounded
-through the hall. Phineus, the brother of the
-king, had come with a crowd of warriors to
-steal the bride. For Andromeda, before her
-misfortunes, had been promised to him in marriage,
-but in the hour of danger he had left her
-to her fate, a prey to the sea-monster.</p>
-
-<p>Now that she was safe again and in favor,
-Phineus had come to claim her. He said petulantly
-to Perseus, &ldquo;Andromeda belongs to me.
-I come to get her. Neither thy winged sandals
-nor thy father Zeus shall save thee from my
-wrath. Thou art a robber trying to take my
-bride from me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then the king answered him angrily. &ldquo;Phineus,&rdquo;
-he said, &ldquo;thou art a boastful coward.
-In no way does Perseus rob thee of Andromeda.
-Thou hast lost her through thine own
-fault, for when she was in peril thou didst
-desert her like a coward, and she would have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>99]</a></span>
-been devoured by the sea-monster before now
-if this noble youth had not saved her. My
-daughter shall wed the man who has saved her
-from a terrible death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But Phineus would not yield. Wishing to
-kill Perseus, he shot an arrow at him. At the
-same time he ordered his band of followers to
-rush upon him. The arrow did not hit Perseus,
-who fought single-handed against them all, but
-as soon as he struck down one foe a new one
-sprang up in his place. Perseus saw that he
-could keep on fighting for all time, and never
-conquer this army, which could furnish a new
-warrior as often as one was slain. Having
-thus fought alone against great numbers until
-he saw it was hopeless, Perseus took the head
-of Medusa out of the pouch where he had kept
-it and held it up for Phineus and his warriors
-to gaze upon. Instantly everyone of them
-was changed to stone, and Perseus, taking his
-bride, returned to the island of Seriphos.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>100]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap28" id="chap28"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">PERSEUS BECOMES KING OF TIRYNS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> Perseus reached home he did not find
-the glad welcome to which he had looked forward
-with all the ardor of a youth who has
-been for the first time on an important errand.
-His mother had taken refuge in a temple at
-the altar of Zeus to escape the persecutions of
-King Polydektes, who had begun to ill-treat her
-as soon as Perseus had departed in search of
-Medusa. His brother, the fisherman, had tried
-to protect her and had used hot words in
-warning the king to desist from his unmanly
-purpose. But Polydektes turned his wrath
-upon his brother also, and he, too, could find no
-refuge save the sacred altars.</p>
-
-<p>Perseus went at once to the king and announced
-his arrival. The king was uneasy,
-and yet he did not believe that Perseus had
-been able to keep his word. He called all the
-nobles of his court together to listen to what
-Perseus had to say. Perseus came before
-them, and taking the fearful head from its covering,
-held it up for them to look at. At once
-they became stone images, a ghastly court of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>101]</a></span>
-petrified men. Even the frogs and beetles and
-other animals in the castle and its grounds
-were turned to stone.</p>
-
-<p>Then Perseus flew to his mother, who was
-still a beautiful woman in spite of all her sorrows.
-She had long prayed for her son&rsquo;s return,
-almost without hope, and now that he
-had really come her joy was boundless. Perseus
-established the fisherman as king of the
-island in his brother&rsquo;s place, and the people
-rejoiced that they had been freed from the
-tyrant, Polydektes.</p>
-
-<p>Perseus now gave up his winged sandals to
-Hermes, and asked him to carry the helmet
-and mantle to the nymphs, but the head of
-Medusa he gave to Athena, who wore it on
-her shield ever after.</p>
-
-<p>Perseus could not remain idle at Seriphos.
-He set out for Argos to visit his grandfather,
-taking his mother and Andromeda. Akrisios,
-suspecting that he would come, for the words
-of the Oracle often came to his mind, had gone
-to Thessaly. There at Larissa he had built a
-home and established himself, hoping that his
-grandson would be contented to remain in
-Argos.</p>
-
-<p>But Perseus went on until he came to Thessaly,
-and finding some games going on he took
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>102]</a></span>
-part in them. He threw a discus which accidentally
-struck his grandfather&rsquo;s foot, giving
-him a painful wound which could not be cured.
-Thus the Oracle was fulfilled. Learning whom
-he had killed and that Akrisios had died according
-to an old prophecy, he mourned for him
-and buried him with honors outside of the city.</p>
-
-<p>Perseus then returned to Argos, where he had
-left his wife and mother, and he became king
-of the country in the place of his grandfather,
-Akrisios. But the thought of sitting on a
-throne whose rightful king he had accidentally
-killed was distasteful to him, so he exchanged
-kingdoms with Megapenthes of Tiryns.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that the Persian kings claimed to
-be descendants from Perses, a son of Perseus
-and Andromeda. However this may be, Perseus
-has certainly inspired many a poet and
-artist and hero to express great actions and
-courage in word and deed.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>103]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap29" id="chap29"></a>CHAPTER XXIX<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">TRIPTOLEMOS, THE HERO OF ELEUSIS, AND
-DEMETER, THE EARTH-MOTHER</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Twelve</span> miles to the west of Athens is a
-beautiful hill which ends abruptly close to the
-sea. It is the acropolis or highest point of
-Eleusis and is covered with splendid blocks of
-marble, the ruins of wonderful temples which
-stood there in ancient times. The greatest of
-these temples was called The Temple of the
-Mysteries. Demeter, the Earth-Mother, was
-worshipped there.</p>
-
-<p>The principal road leading to the acropolis
-of Eleusis begins at the acropolis at Athens
-and is called The Sacred Way. Over this
-road, thousands of years ago, went the stately
-processions of loose-robed Greeks, their beautiful
-garments fluttering in the winds. Their
-heavy chariot-wheels left deep prints in the
-rocks, and there they are at the present time.
-There are ruins of temples to the gods along
-The Sacred Way, and the little lambs and kids
-skip playfully about among them.</p>
-
-<p>A narrow pass between the hills admits you
-into a flowery meadow. It was here that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>104]</a></span>
-Persephone played when a child. There are two
-salt lakes in the plain in which only priests
-were allowed to fish in the olden times. There,
-too, is a well where you stop for a cup of water
-as people have done through the long ages.</p>
-
-<p>The plain of Eleusis is separated from Attica
-by a range of low hills clad with fields of wheat
-and barley. At the foot of the acropolis is the
-sickly little village of Eleusis, but the Island
-of Salamis rises across the blue waters of the
-bay like a fairyland shining through a delicate
-atmosphere of violet tint. This was the kingdom
-of Keleos and his son Triptolemos, the
-Hero of Agriculture, and it was the scene of
-the story of Demeter and Persephone, the
-story which brings us to the Hero of Eleusis.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that Kronos and Rhea were the
-father and mother of the greatest of the gods,
-Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades or (Pluto) and their
-sister Demeter, the mother of fertility. Though
-men might plough the fields and the rain moisten
-the swelling seed-grains, it was Demeter
-who gave the vital touch which caused the
-new life to spring up.</p>
-
-<p>Demeter had one beloved daughter, Persephone,
-on whom she bestowed all the tenderness
-of her divine mother-heart. One day
-Persephone went out into the blooming meadows
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>105]</a></span>
-to play with her companions. The fields
-were gay with roses, violets, and lilies. The
-yellow crocus, the asphodel, and the purple and
-pink narcissus made bank and by-path seem
-like a soft carpet and filled the air with sweet
-fragrance.</p>
-
-<p>Persephone stooped to pluck a flower of unusual
-beauty, when the earth suddenly opened
-and Hades appeared with a splendid chariot
-drawn by fiery black horses. He seized Persephone,
-and placing her on his chariot, drove
-away to his kingdom under the earth. Persephone
-uttered piercing cries, praying to the
-gods and imploring men to come to her rescue.
-But all in vain. Zeus looked on with approval,
-for he knew that his good brother ought not
-to be condemned to reign alone in the dread
-realms of darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Now there was a goddess of the night, a
-torch-bearer who lived in a dark cave. Her
-name was Hekate and she knew the secrets of
-lonely forests and cross-roads and the gloomy
-underground world. She heard the shrieks of
-the maiden when Hades seized her; and Helios,
-too, the sun-god who sees everything, saw
-him bear her away.</p>
-
-<p>The mother, Demeter, also, heard the cries
-of her daughter, and an unspeakable grief
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>106]</a></span>
-took possession of her. She wandered from
-place to place, taking neither food nor sleep,
-beseeching everyone to tell her where she
-could find her child. But no one could give
-her any information. She yoked her winged
-snakes to her car and drove with lighted torch
-through every country. Wherever she went
-she was received gladly by the people, for she
-stopped to teach them something of agriculture
-and left her blessing with them when she
-departed.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap30" id="chap30"></a>CHAPTER XXX<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">DEMETER&rsquo;S GRIEF</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">On</span> the tenth day of her wanderings she met
-Hekate, who said: &ldquo;Lovable Demeter, who
-hath robbed thee of thy daughter and plunged
-thee into sorrow? I heard her cries when she
-was carried off, but I could not see who it was
-that took her. There is one, however, who
-sees everything, Helios, and he may tell thee
-where thy daughter is concealed.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Demeter gladly took the hint, and with Hekate
-she set out to find Helios, and when they
-saw his horses and chariot they stationed themselves
-where they could speak to him. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>107]</a></span>
-venerable goddess said to him: &ldquo;If ever, oh,
-Helios, I have pleased thee in word or deed, I
-pray thee look down from the heavens and tell
-me truly whether it is a god or a mortal that
-hath stolen my daughter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Honored Queen,&rdquo; replied Helios, &ldquo;I willingly
-tell thee all I know. Hades hath taken
-thy daughter and led her into the gloomy
-kingdom below. But Zeus is the author of
-this deed, for he gave his permission to Hades
-to make Persephone his wife. Yet thou hast
-no need to grieve, for Hades is a loving husband
-and hath given thy daughter an honorable
-place as queen of his realm.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>When Demeter heard this her grief was
-unbounded and her anger terrible. She left
-the abode of the gods on Mount Olympos and
-went down to earth, where she assumed the
-form of a mortal woman. In her travels on the
-earth she reached Eleusis, and sat down on a
-stone near a spring, from which the people
-drew water.</p>
-
-<p>As she sat there two beautiful maidens,
-daughters of Keleos, the King of Eleusis, came
-to the spring to fill their bronze pitchers with
-water. They saw the stately woman in garments
-of mourning, and, approaching her, asked
-with sympathy whence she came and why she
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>108]</a></span>
-sat alone so far from the city instead of coming
-to the houses, where the women would gladly
-show her every kindness in word and deed.</p>
-
-<p>Demeter replied: &ldquo;May the Olympian gods
-bestow all good gifts upon you, my daughters.
-Have pity on me and lead me to the house of
-some chief, where I may be a servant, doing
-such work as an old woman can perform. I can
-take care of a new-born babe, guard the house,
-tend the beds, and teach serving-women housework.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Venerable lady,&rdquo; answered one of the
-daughters, &ldquo;I thank thee for thy good wishes,
-and I will tell thee the names of the foremost
-men of the city. There are several chiefs of
-note in Eleusis, but our father is the king and
-he will give thee royal welcome. Let us take
-thee to our mother, Metaneira, and she will
-not let thee go into a strange house. She has
-a little son, and if thou wilt bring him up well
-she will give thee rich gifts.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Demeter consented to go, and the girls, after
-filling their jugs, hastened home, where they
-told the queen, their mother, what they had
-seen and heard. The beautiful Metaneira sent
-them to call in the aged woman, and they ran
-back to the spot where they had left her.
-They took her by the hand and led her to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>109]</a></span>
-their home, where they presented her to their
-mother.</p>
-
-<p>Metaneira had her baby in her arms and
-received Demeter kindly. &ldquo;Welcome, my
-dear woman,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;thou hast come in
-good time. But I cannot treat thee as a servant,
-for thou dost appear like a princess.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The gods often visit us with misfortunes,
-which we must bear as best we can. Let this
-home be thine and I will trust this babe of mine
-to thee, that thou mayst rear him. We had no
-hope of his living when he was born, but the
-gods had pity on me and let him live. For
-this reason he is much dearer to me. Care for
-him most lovingly and I will give thee a fitting
-reward.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My greeting I give to thee, too, dear lady,&rdquo;
-answered Demeter. &ldquo;May the gods give thee
-all thy desires. I will tend thy child with affection
-as if he were my own.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Demeter made herself at home in the large
-hall of Keleos and undertook the bringing up
-of the boy. She gave him no other food but
-ambrosia, that he might never grow feeble
-with old age. The child throve wonderfully
-and was a joy to everybody. The father and
-mother were astonished at his rapid growth
-and handsome face.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>110]</a></span>
-But one night Metaneira wished to see how
-her son was getting along, and, going into the
-room where Demeter was tending him, saw a
-strange sight, for the supposed old woman held
-him over a fire like a brand. Metaneira, terribly
-frightened, cried out, &ldquo;Oh, my child, the
-stranger is burning thee!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But the goddess grew angry, took the child
-out of the fire, and setting it down on the
-ground, made reply: &ldquo;Surely mortals are blind
-and incapable of telling good from evil. I vow
-to thee by the waters of the Styx that I have
-rendered thy beloved son immortal. I put him
-on the fire that it should render his mortal flesh
-impervious to the ills of men. For thee it is an
-eternal honor that I have lived in thy house
-and let thee sit in my presence.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>At that instant Demeter threw off her disguise
-as an old woman and appeared in all her
-glory as a goddess. Her face shone like the
-sun, and a heavenly odor was shed from her
-robe, and her golden hair glittered as it fell
-over her shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Know that I am the goddess Demeter,&rdquo; she
-said, &ldquo;who am honored by mortals and immortals.
-Thou shalt hasten to bid the whole
-populace of Eleusis to build me a great temple
-above the spring on the mountain.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>111]</a></span>
-Metaneira was speechless with astonishment
-at what she had heard and seen. She began to
-tremble and did not even take heed of her
-child, who sat on the floor looking at them with
-wonder. She went at once to her husband and
-told him all that had happened. King Keleos
-called his people together in a general assembly
-and ordered a beautiful temple to be built on
-the acropolis in honor of Demeter.</p>
-
-<p>The people loved their king and believed his
-words, and they went to work at once to build
-the temple. They set about it with such zeal
-that it was finished in one day, for the goddess
-gave them divine strength and directed the
-work. Demeter took up her abode in the
-temple and remained away from the other gods,
-still mourning over the loss of her daughter.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap31" id="chap31"></a>CHAPTER XXXI<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">DEMETER&rsquo;S JOY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Persephone</span> did not return, and the angry
-goddess grew more angry. She determined to
-punish the gods, even though it brought suffering
-to mankind. Indeed there was no other
-way to punish them. So she forbade the earth
-to bring forth any more fruit, and there was a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>112]</a></span>
-great famine. In vain did the oxen pull the
-plough through the field. In vain did the
-farmer sow the grain. The land was covered
-with stubble. No flower sprang up on the
-parched earth; the starving people had no sacrifice
-to offer to the gods, and their altars were
-left without the incense arising from sacred
-offerings.</p>
-
-<p>Now the gods loved the praises of men, and
-the incense from their altars was most precious
-to them. They complained to Zeus because
-they were deprived of their incense, and Zeus
-saw the cause of it. He sent the rainbow-winged
-Iris to call Demeter back to Mount
-Olympos.</p>
-
-<p>The beautiful messenger flew like a sunbeam
-through the space between heaven and earth,
-and soon reached Eleusis. She found Demeter
-in her temple and said to her, &ldquo;Dear Mother, I
-bring a message to thee from the great god
-Zeus. He commands thee to return to the
-abode of the immortal gods, and his command
-no one dares to disobey.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But Demeter received the command with
-scorn, so Zeus sent all the gods, one after another,
-to entreat her to return, and he sent
-promises of beautiful gifts and courtly honors,
-but Demeter remained unmoved. &ldquo;The earth
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>113]</a></span>
-shall yield no fruits,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;nor will I return
-to the company of the gods until I behold
-with mine own eyes my beautiful daughter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then Zeus sent Hermes to Hades to persuade
-him with sweet words to give up his wife
-and send her back to her mother since Demeter&rsquo;s
-anger could not be appeased without her.
-Hermes went down to the under-world to the
-King of the Dead, and said to him: &ldquo;Immortal
-Hades, father Zeus has charged me to take thy
-wife from this dark realm back to the light of
-day that her mother may see her, for the anger
-of the goddess cannot be appeased. In her
-wrath she is starving men and depriving the
-gods of the honors that mortals bestow on
-them. She hath left the home of the gods and
-will not abide with them. Neither will she
-speak to them, but lives alone in her temple at
-Eleusis.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The grim king smiled and said to his wife,
-&ldquo;Persephone, my queen, go to thy blue-robed
-mother and appease her wrath. The winter is
-over and thou must see the light of the sun.
-But first thou shalt eat with me of the pomegranate,
-the apple of love, for thou dost love
-me and this shall keep thee in remembrance of
-me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then Persephone took from the king the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>114]</a></span>
-pomegranate and ate it, for the grim Hades had
-made her truly a queen and had done honors to
-her. But she was glad to return to her mother
-and the blessed light of the day. She mounted
-the chariot. Hermes took the reins and the
-whip, and the horses flew over the stony road
-that led from Hades. On and on they went
-until they reached the Eleusinian plains and the
-temple of Demeter.</p>
-
-<p>There they emerged from the cave close to
-the temple, and a fig-tree burst into budding as
-they came. Demeter stood with outstretched
-arms at the mouth of the cave to receive her
-daughter. Hermes helped her from the chariot
-and Persephone sprang into her mother&rsquo;s arms
-as the flowers of May spring forth on the bosom
-of earth with the early showers.</p>
-
-<p>No one can describe Demeter&rsquo;s joy as she
-beheld once more her beloved child, and pressed
-her to her heart, covering her with kisses. The
-whole earth smiled and burst into verdant
-growth. The fields were covered with grain.
-The meadows bloomed with gay flowers. The
-birds sang and the people rejoiced.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 532px;">
-<a name="return" id="return"></a>
-<img src="images/hht05.jpg" width="532" height="700"
-alt="" />
-<p class="caption">THE RETURN OF PERSEPHONE.<br />
-(Lord Leighton.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Demeter drew her daughter into the holiest
-sanctuary of her great temple and they talked
-over all that had happened during Persephone&rsquo;s
-long absence. She told her mother how Hades
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>115]</a></span>
-had stolen her away from the meadows while
-she gathered flowers, and how he had treated
-her while she stayed with him in the lower
-world. She had only words of love and honor
-for the dread King of the Dead.</p>
-
-<p>A whole day mother and daughter passed
-in an affectionate embrace and in exchanging
-words of love, each pitying the other on account
-of the long separation. Then Zeus sent Rhea
-to bring Demeter and Persephone to Mount
-Olympos. And he told them that Persephone
-might remain with her mother until the winter
-months came back again.</p>
-
-<p>To this Demeter seriously objected, for she
-dreaded the separation and the loneliness. But
-Zeus replied: &ldquo;If thy daughter hath eaten of
-the pomegranate she is truly wedded to Hades
-the King of the Dead, and must go back to him
-to stay during the winter. For the pomegranate
-is the apple of love, and having shared it with
-him, he hath part in her affection and can claim
-her as his wife. But if she hath not eaten of
-the fruit she shall remain with thee and go no
-more to the gloomy realms below.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Demeter was satisfied with these terms and
-promised that Persephone should return to her
-honored husband during the winter months, for
-Persephone had told her that she had eaten
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>116]</a></span>
-with him of the pomegranate and that she loved
-him in spite of his gloomy surroundings. Then
-Demeter forgave Zeus for his part in allowing
-the abduction of Persephone, and the mother
-and daughter descended once more to Eleusis
-to bestow blessings upon the inhabitants, and
-from that time on the earth was clad in flowers
-and foliage as long as Persephone stayed with
-her mother. But it was brown and barren
-when she returned to the regions of the Dead.
-And the good Hades warmed the earth from
-below by virtue of his divine power, helping
-it to produce more abundantly the precious
-grains and the fragrant flowers.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap32" id="chap32"></a>CHAPTER XXXII<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">TRIPTOLEMOS BECOMES A HERO. DEMETER&rsquo;S
-GIFT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Demeter</span> returned to her home among the
-gods on Mount Olympos. But before she went
-she called Triptolemos, an older son of King
-Keleos to her and gave him her car which was
-drawn by winged dragons. There is nothing
-more precious to the gods than open, benevolent
-hearts and generous hospitality. The
-poorest and meanest man may be god-like in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>117]</a></span>
-generosity, sharing his goods with open hand,
-as sunshine is poured out from the heavens.
-King Keleos had shown himself a most royal-hearted
-man in his princely generosity toward
-the goddess when she came in the guise of a
-poor old woman, and Demeter resolved to bestow
-upon him and upon mankind, for his sake,
-a blessing proportionate to her power and rank.</p>
-
-<p>So she gave to Triptolemos something far
-better than her magic car and serpent-steeds.
-She taught him how to make the plough of
-iron. Heretofore men had ploughed the fields
-with the crudest of ploughs&mdash;a pointed stick,
-or an iron bar. She taught him how to turn a
-furrow and put the seed into it, and cover it up
-so that the birds should not eat it.</p>
-
-<p>And when summer came she showed him how
-to cut the grain, to bring it in wagons to the
-barn where he was to thrash it, and to store it
-away, keeping each kind separate.</p>
-
-<p>Triptolemos, being carried on his wagon
-through the air, sowed the precious grain all
-over the inhabited world and turned many a
-barren waste into a cultivated field. He taught
-the people everywhere, as Demeter had taught
-him, how to cultivate the soil. Thus he became
-a great benefactor to all mankind and induced
-a better way of living. For when people
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>118]</a></span>
-had farms to take care of, they ceased to roam
-aimlessly about the world. They built homes
-and learned to be friendly, and from this sprang
-up the government which should protect the
-home and make men happy and comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>Triptolemos received the honors of a god,
-and the people of Eleusis built a temple to him
-close to the acropolis, where some of the stones
-of the temple may still be seen. But his best
-monument is the cultivated fields of barley,
-rye, and oats, and all the grains which from
-Demeter (Ceres) we call cereals.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap33" id="chap33"></a>CHAPTER XXXIII<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">PROMETHEUS, THE CHAMPION OF MANKIND</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Heaven</span> and earth were created. The sea
-rolled its waves against the shore and played
-around the islands. The fishes sported in the
-waters in lively gambols. On the land the
-birds flew from tree to tree singing with sweetest
-voices; wild beasts were peaceable; flowers
-threw out delicious odors; nature beamed with
-loveliness.</p>
-
-<p>But mankind could not notice the beauty of
-nature. Men walked as in a dream, for they
-were not awakened to delicate odors or sweet
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>119]</a></span>
-sounds or beautiful forms and colors. They
-were barbarous and rude; they did not know
-any of the arts of civilization; they were not
-even able to build homes; they lived in caves
-like wild beasts and fed on nuts and fruit.</p>
-
-<p>The cultivation of the soil was unknown.
-Men made no difference between the blooming
-spring and fruitful summer and the cold winter.
-They did not know how to cut stone. Like the
-wild creatures they lived in constant fear,
-crawling about miserably.</p>
-
-<p>Prometheus, the son of Japetos, was wise and
-good. He looked down from his comfortable
-abode and saw with pity how man was stupefied
-and enthralled by ignorance, and he wished
-to deliver him from his unhappy state. At
-that time Zeus reigned in the heavens; he was
-the lord of thunder and of fire. He stored the
-fire in the heavens and sent it down to earth in
-the form of lightning to terrify men but not to
-help them.</p>
-
-<p>Without fire upon earth man&rsquo;s condition was
-hopeless. He needed it for making tools, if
-ever he learned to forge metals, for baking clay
-with which to make bricks and dishes, for cooking
-his food, and protecting himself from the
-biting frosts of winter. But Zeus does not
-willingly part with his treasures, and he looked
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>120]</a></span>
-upon fire as property solely his own. No one
-could get it from him by open means, and man
-had not even dreamed that he needed it.</p>
-
-<p>Prometheus made it a part of his own duty
-to teach man the use of fire and how to live
-better by knowing its secrets. So he went to
-Olympos, the home of Zeus himself, and took a
-few sparks of the heavenly fire, which he hid in
-a hollow reed so that it could not go out. He
-came down to earth, bringing it to men, and
-they made a great blaze and gave thanks to
-Prometheus from the depths of their hearts
-when they saw what it would do.</p>
-
-<p>When it grew cold they sat around the big
-fire and warmed themselves. They began to
-cook their food, they melted iron and made
-spears and tools. They baked clay which they
-had moulded into dishes, and it led on to their
-inventing all those things that are made by the
-use of fire.</p>
-
-<p>When Zeus looked down from the heavens
-and saw the light of the flames on the earth he
-at once became aware that Prometheus had
-stolen the fire from him and given it to mortals.
-Zeus was greatly alarmed to find his power
-shared by men, for the lightning had been his
-sceptre. He called Heph&aelig;stos to his aid, the
-Blacksmith of the Gods, and his powerful
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>121]</a></span>
-servants, Violence and Force, and bade them lead
-Prometheus far away and chain him to a lofty
-peak in the Caucasus, a wild mountain-range of
-Scythia.</p>
-
-<p>Heph&aelig;stos loved Prometheus, but he could
-not disobey the command of Zeus. When
-they reached the Caucasus, Violence said to
-Heph&aelig;stos: &ldquo;See! we have reached far off
-Scythia, a desert where no trace of man is ever
-found. Behold the Caucasus! Now is the time
-to perform the task with which thy father Zeus
-hath charged thee. Let us chain Prometheus
-to the highest rock with fetters which cannot
-be broken. Thus may he learn the will of Zeus
-and that he is subject to his rule. Thus, too,
-will he see where his love for wretched men
-has brought him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But Heph&aelig;stos answered: &ldquo;Force and Violence,
-do ye execute the order of Zeus, for I
-have not the heart to fetter a god who is of my
-own kin, to this wild mountain. It must be
-done, because it is the will of Zeus, and it is a
-dangerous thing to disobey him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then, turning to Prometheus, he said:
-&ldquo;High-minded son of Heaven, it is with a sorrowful
-heart and against my will that I let my
-servants bind thee with never-breaking bonds
-to this rock. There thou wilt never hear a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>122]</a></span>
-human voice nor see a human form. Here
-wilt thou stay with no power to stir, and the
-burning sun will scorch thee. There is no
-place where thou canst rest thy weary limbs
-or thy sleepless head. This is thy reward for
-thy love to mankind. But I would rather bear
-thy punishment than be the tyrant to treat thee
-so unjustly.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap34" id="chap34"></a>CHAPTER XXXIV<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">PROMETHEUS UNBOUND</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Prometheus</span> was securely bound with iron
-fetters and fastened to the solid rock. The
-servants of Heph&aelig;stos increased his tortures
-with their bitter speeches. But Prometheus
-bore his sufferings and their taunts with heroic
-indifference and courage. As long as they
-were near not a sound came from his lips.
-Only when Heph&aelig;stos and his servants were
-gone did he begin to bewail his unjust punishment.</p>
-
-<p>The winds carried the sound of his moans
-far off to the shore of the sea. The sea maidens,
-daughters of old Ocean, heard them and
-were moved to tearful pity. They hastened on
-the wings of the salt breeze like a swarm of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>123]</a></span>
-birds to comfort and cheer him. Nay, more,
-old Ocean himself came from afar, and rising
-up from his watery abode, stationed himself
-near Prometheus to speak to him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am grieved to the heart, dear Prometheus,&rdquo;
-he said, &ldquo;for all that thou hast to suffer.
-I am thy kin, and it breaks my heart to see thee
-like this. Even apart from our kinship there
-is no one whom I honor as much as thee. Tell
-me, is there any way in which I can help thee?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Prometheus, hearing what Okeanos said,
-made reply: &ldquo;What do my eyes behold, friend
-Okeanos? Hast thou come to see me in my
-misery? I fear me I have only bitter words in
-exchange for thy kindly greeting. See in
-what manner Zeus treats me, his friend, who
-hath assisted him to gain possession of the
-throne of the world!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Okeanos felt the truth of his words, but
-thought it better to try to persuade Prometheus
-to submit to Zeus, and so he answered
-pleadingly: &ldquo;Curb such overbearing speeches,
-dear Prometheus, and I will myself try to appease
-the anger of Zeus.&rdquo; But Prometheus
-quickly replied: &ldquo;I have done no evil that I
-know of, and I will not bow to tyranny and injustice.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My fault is this: I loved mankind too well
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>124]</a></span>
-to let them lie helpless in stupidity and ignorance.
-I found them in a pitiable plight. They
-had eyes but could not see. They had ears but
-could not hear. Not one thing did they know
-until I taught them. I told them to observe
-the rising and the setting of the sun, moon, and
-stars. I taught them how to count, and write,
-and remember.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I taught them to yoke oxen to their ploughs
-instead of dragging them themselves. And I
-showed them how to harness horses to the
-chariots likewise. I helped them to make boats
-with oars for the rivers, and ships winged with
-white sails to traverse the seas. I taught them
-the healing power of plants to relieve them in
-their sickness. From me they learned how to
-mine for silver and copper, and how to work
-them. Indeed, friend Okeanos, thou mayst
-well say that all the arts men know how to apply
-they have learned from Prometheus.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Zeus sat uneasily on his throne, angry when
-he saw that the spirit of Prometheus was unbroken.
-&ldquo;He still defies me, but I will conquer
-yet,&rdquo; said the Thunderer; and he sent a cruel
-vulture to tear and eat his vitals every day.
-At night they grew again and he was healed.
-But each morning the vulture came and renewed
-his terrible feast.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>125]</a></span>
-Two thousand years the large hearted, man-loving
-Prometheus passed in suffering in the
-Caucasus. At length Herakles came that way
-in his wanderings, when he was trying to find
-his way to the Garden of the Hesperides. He
-broke the iron bands like egg shells and set
-Prometheus free.</p>
-
-<p>To tell the truth, Prometheus was too wise
-for Zeus to have him as an enemy forever, for
-he knew one thing which Zeus did not&mdash;he
-knew the future. Zeus was aware that there
-were many important secrets concerning the
-future which he could learn from no one else. It
-is supposed that Zeus may have hoped to force
-Prometheus to yield up his secrets by these
-punishments, and that on finding out his mistake
-he slyly connived at his victim&rsquo;s liberation
-because he could not afford to be unreconciled
-to him any longer.</p>
-
-<p>Prometheus has been loved and honored
-through all the ages. On an island belonging
-to Greece the people built an altar to him at
-the foot of a burning mountain. Once a year
-they put out all their fires and sent a ship to
-Delos to bring a fresh light. They used this
-new flame for kindling again the fires they had
-extinguished.</p>
-
-<p>At Athens, Prometheus was held in sacred
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>126]</a></span>
-honor. People held torch-light festivals in
-memory of him. And on frosty nights, as they
-sat by the fire, they praised the great Prometheus,
-who could endure long enough to conquer
-destiny, the hero who had brought them
-mental balance, &ldquo;The Gift of Equilibrium.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap35" id="chap35"></a>CHAPTER XXXV<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">DEUKALION, THE CHAMPION OF A NEW RACE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Deukalion</span> was the son of Prometheus, and
-a just and god-fearing man. In the time of Deukalion,
-Zeus destroyed the human race by means
-of a great flood. People had become wicked and
-godless; they did not fear the gods, and the
-meaner classes paid no respect to the better, and
-all of them loved every manner of wickedness.</p>
-
-<p>This state of affairs reached the ears of Zeus.
-But wishing to take the evidence of his own
-eyes and see if the stories that came to him
-were really true, he took the form of a mortal
-man and went down from his Olympian home
-to the Earth.</p>
-
-<p>One evening after sunset he reached Arcadia
-and asked for a night&rsquo;s shelter in the palace of
-Lykaon, the king. Lykaon was famous for his
-wickedness. Some of the people seemed to see
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>127]</a></span>
-some signs that Zeus was a god and went down
-on their knees to him, but Lykaon laughed at
-their credulity and said: &ldquo;Stay till I find out
-whether he be a god or a man!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lykaon had a stranger in his palace who had
-been sent to him as a messenger. Lykaon had
-the stranger killed and served up as food for
-his guest. When the dreadful feast was placed
-before Zeus, he arose at once in anger and left
-the table, and he shattered the house with a
-thunder-bolt. Lykaon betook himself to flight
-with all speed. He fled to the fields howling
-like a wild beast.</p>
-
-<p>Lykaon tried to speak, but his human voice
-had left him. His skin turned into a wolf&rsquo;s
-pelt, his hands into paws. He rushed furiously
-among the herds and began to tear and bite
-cattle and sheep. He had been changed into a
-wolf.</p>
-
-<p>Zeus, having seen with his own eyes that
-things were even worse than had been told him,
-returned to Olympos. He called the gods together
-in council and related to them the wicked
-deeds he had seen. He ended by saying: &ldquo;The
-whole race of man must surely perish,&rdquo; and the
-other gods consented to his judgment.</p>
-
-<p>At first Zeus thought it best to send thunder-bolts
-to destroy the evil race, but he feared that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>128]</a></span>
-the flames might reach from earth into the
-heavens and burn the whole firmament. He
-therefore laid aside his thunder-bolts and resolved
-to drown the earth&rsquo;s inhabitants by
-means of a flood. So he ordered the God of the
-Winds to shut Boreas and all the other winds in
-his cave, save Notos, only, the wet south wind,
-who was to go free.</p>
-
-<p>Then Notos flew forth with his damp wings.
-A thick cloud hid his face like a veil and darkness
-hung around his head. Water ran down
-from his brow and his hair. Cloud-bursts broke
-from the sky and sent cataracts of water over
-the earth, flooding it in every direction. The
-work of the farmers was stopped and their
-hopes destroyed in an instant.</p>
-
-<p>But Zeus was not satisfied with that. He
-called Poseidon, Lord of the Seas, to his assistance.
-Poseidon came quickly. He spoke to
-all the rivers in a loud commanding voice.
-&ldquo;Leave your beds,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;and rush wildly
-over your banks and flood the world!&rdquo; The
-rivers obeyed, and Poseidon himself struck the
-earth with his trident. The earth quaked and,
-bursting open in many places, let forth torrents
-of water.</p>
-
-<p>The waters rose higher and higher. The
-valleys became one wide lake, and soon the tops
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>129]</a></span>
-of the trees were no longer above the water.
-Man and herds were drowned. The altars of
-the gods were swept away. When a house
-remained standing it was soon covered with
-water. The highest towers disappeared in the
-flood. Land and sea were no longer separated.
-The world was all sea&mdash;a long, shoreless sea.</p>
-
-<p>Seals gambolled where goats had formerly
-grazed. Dolphins swam over the cities that
-were buried beneath the waves. Wolves and
-sheep, lions and tigers huddled close together
-and swam about as long as they could keep
-afloat, when they sank below the waters. The
-deer could no longer find ground for his fleet
-foot. The birds flew on tired, trembling wings
-searching for a place on which to perch and
-finally fell into the sea with worn-out wings.</p>
-
-<p>The people tried to save themselves in any
-possible way. Some fled to the hills and
-mountains. Some took refuge in ships and
-sailed over the fields where formerly the plough
-had moved. By and by the mountain-tops
-were swept by the waves, and the ships were
-whirled about by the terrible currents and
-wrecked.</p>
-
-<p>Deukalion and his wife, Pyrrha, were the
-only ones to be saved. He had taken the advice
-of his father, Prometheus, to build himself
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>130]</a></span>
-a floating-house in the form of a box and to
-store in it a great amount of food; when the
-flood came he entered this house with his wife.
-The house was carried about nine days and
-nine nights by the winds. Only the two peaks
-of Parnassos remained above water. On this
-mountain the floating-house stuck fast.</p>
-
-<p>When Zeus cast his eyes down to earth he
-saw that everything was covered with water,
-on the surface of which floated trees and
-grasses and thousands of animals and people
-who had perished in the flood. And he saw
-Deukalion and his wife safely anchored on the
-heights of Parnassos.</p>
-
-<p>Then Zeus gave commands to Boreas to
-chase away the black clouds. The sun shone
-again and the waters retreated from the earth,
-which was soon dry again. Poseidon laid
-aside his trident and the rivers ran in their old
-channels. Woods sprang up and the fields
-bloomed with flowers.</p>
-
-<p>Deukalion and Pyrrha looked around them.
-Everywhere was loneliness and silence. It
-was like the solitude of death. Deukalion
-wept and said to his beloved Pyrrha: &ldquo;My
-dear wife, I do not see a living soul far or near
-in any direction. Thou art my only companion.
-All the friends we have known have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>131]</a></span>
-perished in the flood. We are the only inhabitants
-of the earth. What will life be worth to us,
-since we must live alone in the world with no
-fellow-men. I should like better to live if we
-had other people whom we might love and help
-and with whom we could enjoy ourselves. But
-we will give thanks to Zeus for saving us.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They walked along a little way and came to
-an altar of the Goddess of Justice. There they
-fell on their knees and said: &ldquo;Oh, divine Justice,
-tell us how we may revive the human race
-which has perished. Oh, help us and restore
-our lost ones to us.&rdquo; They listened for the
-goddess to answer and soon they heard a soft
-voice reply: &ldquo;Veil your faces, oh, Deukalion
-and Pyrrha. Go down the mountain, and as
-ye go throw backward over your shoulders
-the bones of your mother.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Deukalion and his wife were puzzled at
-these words and at first they could not tell
-what they meant. But after some meditation
-Deukalion said: &ldquo;My dear wife, the earth is
-our mother and her bones are the rocks. As
-we go down the mountain we will cast behind
-us the stones which we find in our pathway.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>So they started forth, the founders of a new
-race, throwing the stones and rocks which
-they met over their shoulders and out of sight.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>132]</a></span>
-From the stones which they cast there sprang
-up living men and women; the stones which
-Deukalion threw became men and those which
-Pyrrha cast became women.</p>
-
-<p>Deukalion and Pyrrha had many children.
-One of their sons was called Hellen. Hellen&rsquo;s
-children and grandchildren spread over Greece
-and were called Hellenes, and they gave the
-name Hellas to Greece.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap36" id="chap36"></a>CHAPTER XXXVI<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">D&AElig;DALOS, A HERO OF INVENTION</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">D&aelig;dalos</span> was a native of Athens and descended
-from one of the most ancient kings of
-Attica. It was he who constructed the labyrinth
-in which King Minos of Crete locked up
-the monster Minotaur. D&aelig;dalos was the greatest
-artist of his time and was master of many
-useful crafts. He produced wonderful pieces
-of work in a great many places of the world.</p>
-
-<p>His statues were so cleverly made that they
-were taken for living beings. It was thought
-that they could see and walk about. For while
-the artists before him sculptured their statues
-with closed eyes, with their hands crossed over
-their breasts, and their feet turned sidewise,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>133]</a></span>
-D&aelig;dalos made statues with open eyes, outstretched
-arms, and feet pointing forward into
-space.</p>
-
-<p>D&aelig;dalos had Talos for a disciple, a clever
-and intelligent youth, who, though but a mere
-boy, had invented several tools of great usefulness.
-One day, finding the jaw-bone of a snake
-he began to cut a piece of wood with it. It
-was hardly sharp enough to answer his purpose,
-so he constructed a saw of iron on the
-same plan.</p>
-
-<p>D&aelig;dalos was so jealous of the boy that he
-pushed him off from the Acropolis and the lad
-died of the injury. When D&aelig;dalos saw what
-he had done he went to Talos, but found him
-dead, so he hurried to bury him. He was surprised
-in the act and brought before the court
-which met on the hill called Areopagus. He
-was condemned to death by the court, and in
-order to save himself he fled to Crete.</p>
-
-<p>At that time Minos was king in Crete. He
-received the famous artist very kindly and
-held him in great honor. There D&aelig;dalos did
-many fine works for Minos besides the famous
-labyrinth for the Minotaur.</p>
-
-<p>After he had stayed some time in Crete he
-wanted to go away. But Minos did not wish
-to let him go, and when D&aelig;dalos concealed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>134]</a></span>
-himself, the king searched for him everywhere
-and gave the order that no ship should take
-him away from the island.</p>
-
-<p>The ingenious D&aelig;dalos then meditated a
-plan of flight. Suddenly he exclaimed, &ldquo;Minos
-may watch the sea and the land, but he cannot
-watch the air. That is still free. I will make
-me wings and fly away.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>D&aelig;dalos constructed two large wings and
-fastened them to his body with wax. Moving
-them with his arms and hands he was able to
-fly like a bird. He made another pair of wings
-for his son Ikaros, fastened them to the boy&rsquo;s
-body and taught him how to move them. Then
-he instructed Ikaros to keep close to him and
-not to fly too high lest the wax should be
-melted by the heat of the sun, nor to keep too
-near the surface of the sea, as he might dip his
-wings into the water and render them too
-heavy for flight.</p>
-
-<p>After he had given this advice, he flew up
-first and his son followed. Away they went,
-cutting through the air like two eagles, and soon
-the high mountains of Crete were left far behind
-them. Below them the wide sea stretched out
-its great expanse. The sailors looked up from
-their boats and wondered what these strange
-beings were.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 530px;">
-<a name="daedalos" id="daedalos"></a>
-<img src="images/hht06.jpg" width="530" height="700"
-alt="" />
-<p class="caption">D&AElig;DALOS AND IKAROS.<br />
-(From the painting by Van Dyck.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>135]</a></span>
-They flew over fields where farmers were
-ploughing, and the farmers gazed up with
-astonishment. But D&aelig;dalos and Ikaros flew
-on and on, heedless of all that was going on
-below. The fishermen forgot to take in their
-fish and the farmers forgot to urge their oxen
-on with the goad, but kept gazing into the sky
-until the flying people were out of sight.</p>
-
-<p>At first Ikaros kept close in the wake of his
-father, but when his confidence grew stronger
-he rose up higher. He forgot his father&rsquo;s advice
-and flew very high into the air. Up, up
-to the sun as nearly as he could go. The wax
-melted. The wings parted and fell to pieces,
-and Ikaros was precipitated like a stone into
-the sea.</p>
-
-<p>D&aelig;dalos missed the boy in a short time and
-turned back to look for him. He could not
-see him anywhere, so he called: &ldquo;Ikaros,
-Ikaros, my son, where art thou?&rdquo; But Ikaros
-made no answer. D&aelig;dalos flew about in great
-agony, and at last he saw the wings of his son
-floating on the surface of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Then D&aelig;dalos knew that his beloved Ikaros
-was drowned. He descended to an island and
-searched the cliffs, and at length he found the
-body of Ikaros, which the waves had washed
-ashore. With tears and lamentations D&aelig;dalos
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>136]</a></span>
-buried his only son, and thus was he punished
-for the death of his disciple, Talos. And the
-sea in which Ikaros was drowned was called
-the Icarian Sea from that time.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="chap37" id="chap37"></a>CHAPTER XXXVII<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">PHAETHON, A HERO OF BAD FORTUNE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Helios</span>, the god of the Day, had a famous
-son whose name was Phaethon. Helios drove
-the chariot of the Sun through the heavens,
-and Phaethon played by the sea-shore where
-his mother lived. She was a daughter of Old
-Ocean and had many daughters of her own.
-Phaethon grew to be a youth of great promise,
-but he had one fault, an excessive conceit.</p>
-
-<p>When he had grown to be a young man he
-left his mother&rsquo;s home and went to his father
-to receive the more manly instructions which
-belong to those of heavenly descent. When
-he reached the wonderful palace of Helios,
-which was built of gold and precious stones, he
-sat down and rested near the glittering columns,
-his self-pride growing with the thought
-of being one of the heirs to such an estate.</p>
-
-<p>He rose and entered the silver gates which
-shone like mirrors. He found Helios in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>137]</a></span>
-palace surrounded by a flood of light, sitting
-on a throne shaped out of an emerald. To the
-right and left of Helios stood Hemera (the
-Day), Men (the Month), Etos (the Year), the
-&AElig;ones (the Seasons), and at equal distance
-from one another the Hor&aelig; (Hours), and Ages
-unnumbered. There also stood Spring adorned
-by a wreath of flowers, Summer with ears of
-grain in his hands, Autumn laden with juicy
-fruits, and Winter with his white hair.</p>
-
-<p>Phaethon halted in awe. But Helios, as
-soon as he perceived him, welcomed him to
-his palace. He took the crown of golden rays
-from his own head lest its dazzling splendor
-should blind the eyes of Phaethon, and then
-called him to come nearer.</p>
-
-<p>Phaethon approached with fear and trembling,
-but Helios called him his son and reassured
-him with endearing words. When
-Phaethon&rsquo;s eyes had grown somewhat accustomed
-to the blinding splendor, Helios said to
-him with fatherly love: &ldquo;What has brought
-my dear child into the heavenly palace of his
-father? Surely this is hardly the place for anyone
-who is accustomed to the cool earth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Phaethon answered: &ldquo;Oh, my royal father,
-I am very unhappy. I am the subject of much
-gossip and derision. People taunt me because
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>138]</a></span>
-my father lives in the heavens and does not
-abide in our home on earth. They say that I
-am not thy son at all, and I have come to thee
-to get the proof from thee that I am really thy
-son.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Now if Helios had lived upon earth everything
-would have been burned up in the light
-of his glittering rays, but he felt sorry for his
-son and said: &ldquo;Thou art my dear son, indeed.
-I would gladly leave this palace to come and
-abide in thy home by the sea. But I must
-drive the chariot of the Day. Even the gods
-are not exempt from duty.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then said Phaethon: &ldquo;If thou art indeed my
-father, thou wilt grant me the boon which I ask
-of thee.&rdquo; &ldquo;Ask what thou wilt,&rdquo; replied Helios,
-&ldquo;and I swear to thee by the waters of the Styx,
-that I will give it to thee.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then Phaethon made answer: &ldquo;Let me
-drive thy chariot for one day and all these
-people who despise me will see that I am thy
-son.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Helios was dismayed when he heard the audacious
-and unexpected demand of his son.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What words hast thou spoken, my dear
-Phaethon!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Thou dost ask for thine
-own destruction. Thou dost request a thing
-that no one of the gods would dare to undertake,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>139]</a></span>
-not even Zeus himself. No one but myself
-is able to drive my chariot.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But Phaethon would not be persuaded.
-&ldquo;Thou dost not love me, my father,&rdquo; he said
-with tears. &ldquo;I see that thou dost not love me.
-If thou didst thou wouldst let me have thy
-chariot in order that the whole world might
-see that I am indeed thy son.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Foolish boy,&rdquo; responded Helios, &ldquo;just because
-I love thee shall I let thee destroy thyself?
-Ask any other boon but this.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nay, I want the chariot and nothing else,&rdquo;
-replied Phaethon.</p>
-
-<p>Helios was stricken with grief, but he had
-bound himself by the Great Oath of the Gods,
-which cannot be broken. He took Phaethon
-by the hand and led him to his chariot and
-placed him in it.</p>
-
-<p>The chariot was a wonderful piece of workmanship
-done by Heph&aelig;stos. The seat and
-axle were made of gold. Golden also were the
-tires of the wheels and the spokes were of silver.</p>
-
-<p>While Phaethon was yet gazing with wonder
-at the glittering chariot of his father, the rosy-fingered
-Dawn opened the dazzling gates of
-the East, the stars, one after another, set&mdash;last
-of all the Morning Star, and the light of the
-Moon died out.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>140]</a></span>
-Helios ordered the Hours to harness up his
-immortal steeds, which were always fed on
-nectar and ambrosia. The Hours brought the
-horses up from the stables and yoked them
-to the chariot. While this was done Helios
-anointed the face of his son with heavenly oil,
-lest he might be scorched by the fiery rays.
-Then he placed his radiant crown upon Phaethon&rsquo;s
-head, and sighing bitterly, gave his son
-this parting advice:</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My son, do not touch the horses with the
-whip, but hold on to the reins with all thy
-might. The horses are impetuous and thou
-wilt find it hard to hold them. Keep them well
-in hand when making the ascent as well as in
-the descent. First thy course is steeply upward,
-and on the other side it descends rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Do not go near the earth lest thou burn it,
-and do not rise too high or thou wilt set fire to
-the heavens. The twilight is waning. Go,
-my son, for mortals are looking for the light of
-Helios. At the last moment I pray thee to
-change thy mind and hand the reins to me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But the son, exulting with joy, gathered up
-the reins, and taking leave of his disconsolate
-father, boldly drove off.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>141]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap38" id="chap38"></a>CHAPTER XXXVIII<br />
-
-<span class="smlfont">THE DEATH OF PHAETHON</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> horses darted forward to their long race,
-and their first few leaps brought them above
-the highest mountains. Before the eyes of the
-youth the whole extent of land and sea lay outstretched.</p>
-
-<p>The deer already had left their shelters and
-gone up on the heights. All nature seemed to
-awake. The quiet woods resounded with the
-songs of the birds, which seemed to greet the
-rising sun. Glittering dewdrops hung on the
-leaves and flowers and shone like diamonds
-with the light of Helios. Hares and rabbits
-left their hiding-places and came forth for food.
-Bees flew humming from flower to flower,
-gathering their precious sweets. The shepherd
-led forth his bleating flocks into the green
-pastures, the farmer plodded off into the fields
-with his rural tools. Smoke began to rise
-from the cottage chimneys.</p>
-
-<p>Only the owls and other night-birds, unable
-to bear the light of the sun, flew back to their
-lonely hiding-places, and a few timid flowers
-closed their petals, but the sun-flowers turned
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>142]</a></span>
-their faces with joy toward the rising sun.
-Phaethon was entranced by the sight of the
-glorious beauty of awakening nature.</p>
-
-<p>The horses soon perceived that they were
-not held by the powerful hands of Helios; they
-also felt that they were not drawing their accustomed
-burden, and as a ship that does not
-carry the necessary ballast is tossed about by
-the waves, so the chariot was jolted through
-the air, rising and falling as if it were empty.</p>
-
-<p>The horses strayed from their path. Phaethon
-tried to rein them in. He did not know
-the way and was not strong enough to curb the
-restive steeds. They ran this way and that, to
-right and left, under the uncertain guidance of
-their new driver.</p>
-
-<p>On they flew. They were near the middle of
-the sky where the road was steepest. Phaethon
-looked down from the tremendous height
-upon the earth. He became dizzy; his hands
-trembled and his knees knocked together. He
-let the reins go loose; the horses darted forward
-like arrows. He pulled them back, and
-they plunged and stood on their hind feet. He
-wanted to speak to them, but he did not know
-their names.</p>
-
-<p>Overcome at last by fear, he threw the reins
-down on the backs of the horses and clung to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>143]</a></span>
-the chariot. Having no guidance whatever the
-horses now started on a wild race. They approached
-the earth and turned everything into
-a desert; woods and meadows, cities and villages
-were burnt to ashes. The rivers were
-dried up and the sea was boiling.</p>
-
-<p>Again the chariot was borne up to an immeasurable
-height and the earth was relieved
-of the terrible heat. But now the firmament
-was in danger of being destroyed by fire.
-Curses and prayers rose to heaven from the
-suffering people on earth, and cries of fright
-resounded through Olympos.</p>
-
-<p>Zeus heard the sighs and wailings and cries,
-and to save the world from destruction he
-hurled his thunder-bolt at the unfortunate
-Phaethon, who fell from the dizzy heights to
-earth. With tears and lamentations his mother
-searched for the body of her wayward son.
-She found him near the mouth of a great river
-which had been burned dry.</p>
-
-<p>There she buried him, and the sisters of the
-unfortunate youth shed bitter tears over his
-grave. They could not bear to go away from
-the tomb and leave him lying there alone, so
-they remained kneeling and motionless until
-Zeus took pity on them and changed them into
-weeping willows. Even then they kept on
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>144]</a></span>
-weeping, but their tears were dried by the sun
-and carried away by the streams into the great
-sea, where they became jewels of amber.</p>
-
-<p>Kyknos, too, a friend of Phaethon&rsquo;s, mourned
-his loss and could not be comforted; so Zeus,
-in kindness, changed him into a swan. Helios,
-in his fatherly grief, refused to drive the chariot
-of the Sun any longer, and the earth was
-left in darkness for a whole day. But the gods
-entreated him to take the reins again and men
-prayed for light, and from that time on the Sun
-has kept its true course through the heavens,
-under his wise guidance.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>145]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="vocabulary" id="vocabulary"></a>VOCABULARY</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>
-Ad m&#275;' tos.<br />
-&AElig; g&#275;' us.<br />
-&AElig; thra (&#275;' thra).<br />
-A kris' i os.<br />
-Alk m&#275;' ne.<br />
-An t&aelig; os (an t&#275;' os).<br />
-A res (&#257;' r&#275;s).<br />
-A ri ad' ne.<br />
-As klep' i os, or &AElig;s cu la' pi us.<br />
-Ath' a mas.<br />
-Au gei as, or Au ge as (au g&#299;' as, or au g&#275;' as).<br />
-B&oelig; o' ti a.<br />
-Ca' cus, or Ka' kos.<br />
-Cer' be rus, or Ker' be ros.<br />
-Da' n&auml; e (d&#259;).<br />
-Da' na &aelig;.<br />
-Da na' i des, or Da' na ids.<br />
-Da&acute; na os.<br />
-D&aelig;' da los.<br />
-De' los.<br />
-De me' ter.<br />
-Deu ka' li on.<br />
-Di o me' des.<br />
-E leu' sis.<br />
-Eu rys theus (&#363; rys' thuse).<br />
-Glau' ke.<br />
-H&#277;&acute; ka te.<br />
-H&#275;' li os.<br />
-He ph&aelig;s tos (h&#277; f&#275;s' tos), or Vulcan.<br />
-Her' a kles or Her' cu les.<br />
-He si o ne (h&#277; see' o ne).<br />
-Hip po da mei a (hip po da m&#299;' a).<br />
-Hip pol' y te.<br />
-Hy met' tos.<br />
-Hy per bo r&#275;' ans.<br />
-I b&#275;' ri a.<br />
-I&acute; ka ros, or Ic' a rus.<br />
-I o la os (&#275; &#333;' la os).<br />
-I ol kos (&#275; ol' kos).<br />
-Jap e tos, or I ap e tus (yap' e tos, or &#275; ap' e tus).<br />
-K&#275;&acute; le os.<br />
-Ke pheus (k&#275;' fuse).<br />
-Kre &#363;' sa.<br />
-Krom' my on.<br />
-La ri' sa.<br />
-Li nos (l&#275;' nos).<br />
-Lo cri (lo' cr&#275;).<br />
-Ly ka' on.<br />
-Me de a (m&#277; d&#275;' a).<br />
-M&#277;' ga ris.<br />
-Me le a gros (m&#277; le ah' gros).<br />
-Met a nei ra (met a n&#299; ra).<br />
-My ke&acute; n&aelig;, or My c&#275;' n&aelig;.<br />
-Myr' til os.<br />
-Ne me' an.<br />
-Ne reus (n&#275;' ruse).<br />
-&OElig; no' ma os.<br />
-O ke' a nos.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>146]</a></span>
-Or pheus (or' fuse).<br />
-Pe leus (p&#275;' luse).<br />
-Pe li as (p&#275;' li as).<br />
-Pe lop' i des.<br />
-Pe lop on nes' os, or Pe lop on nes' us.<br />
-Per i phe' tes or Kor y ne' tes.<br />
-Per seph' o ne, or Pro serp' i ne.<br />
-Pha &euml; thon (f&#257;' e thon).<br />
-Phin' e us.<br />
-Pit' theus.<br />
-Po sei don (po s&#299;' don).<br />
-Se' ri phos (s&#277;).<br />
-Stym ph&#257;&acute; los.<br />
-Sym ple g&auml;' des (sym ple gah' des).<br />
-Ta' los.<br />
-The seus (the&acute; suse).<br />
-Trip tol e mos (trip tol' a mos).<br />
-Tr&oelig; ze ne (tre z&#275;&acute; ne).<br />
-Vale of Tem pe (tem' pe).<br />
-Zeus (zuse).<br />
-</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="bbox">
-<p><b>Transcriber&rsquo;s Note</b></p>
-
-<p>Variant spelling is preserved as printed.</p>
-
-<p>Minor punctuation errors have been repaired. Hyphenation has been
-made consistent.</p>
-
-<p>The following amendment has been made:</p>
-
-<div class="amends">
-<p>Page <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a>&mdash;xiii amended to xi&mdash;<span class="smcap">Introduction</span> xi</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The frontispiece illustration has been moved to follow the title page.
-Other illustrations have been moved where necessary so that they are not
-in the middle of a paragraph.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Herakles, the Hero of Thebes, and
-Other Heroes of the Myth, by Mary E. Burt and Zenade A. Ragozin
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