Greek and Roman Mythology
Greek and Roman Mythology
Greek and Roman Mythology
DR.
MARTIN KELLOGG.
B.
KELLOGG
MYTHOLOGIE
AND
p.
COPYBIGHT, 1897, BY
Norfooofc
J. S.
PREFACE
In adapting
Griechische
Standing's
and Romische
first,
by a generous supply
in
hand.
Therein
lie
little
book has
to a place
among
but
With
names
in the
way
in
which
clas-
126130
IV
sical dictionaries.
PREFACE
Mere
transliterations of
Greek
epi-
thets,
and the
like,
are, of
but
exists
it
in
form
is
unattainable on
is
As a guide
all
in the text, in
names printed
especially to Pro-
North
his
Carolina,
for
his
many
to Dr.
H. F.
Linscott of the University of North Carolina, for reading part of the proof;
and
to Professor E.
M. Pease,
and
BRIEF BIBLIOGRAPHY
Fiske, J.,
Frazer, J.
Myths and Myth-makers, Boston, 1881. G., The Golden Bough, New York and London,
1894.
Furtwangler, A., Meisterwerke der griechischen Plastik, Leipzig, 1893 sq. English edition by Euge'nie Sellers, London, 1895
sq.
Gruppe, O., Die griechischen Culte u. Mythen in ihrer Beziehungen zu den orientalischen Religionen, Leipzig, 1887 sq. Harrison and Yerrall, Mythology and Monuments of Ancient Athens, London and New York, 1890.
Jacobi, Ed., Handworterbuch der griech. u. rom. Mythologie, Coburg and Leipzig, 1835. "" A., Myth, Ritual, and article on Religion, London, 1887
;
"
Mytv
1
,
ogy
Ernst, Orpheus
altchristlichen
ischen,
Jenseitsdichtung
1895.
Mannhardt, W., Antike Wald- und Feldkulte, Berlin, 1877 Mythologische Forschungen, Strassburg, 1884. Mayer, M., Die Giganten und Titanen in der antiken Sage und
;
sq.
1857-1859.
Miiller,
VI
Miiller,
BRIEF BIBLIG
,PHY
Workshop
;
Science of
7 }-ik,
,s,
Pater,
W., Greek
Studies,
London, Ib
;
4th ed. by Preller, L., Griechische Mythologie, Berlin, 1854 3d ed. C. Robert, 1887 sq. ; Romische Mythologie, Berlin, 1858
;
by H. Jordan, 1881-1883.
Rohde, E., Psyche, Freiburg
i.
B., 1890.
Roscher, H., Studien zur vergleichenden Mythologie der Griechen und Romer, Leipzig, 1873 sq. ; Studien zur griechischen
W.
Mythologie und Kulturgeschichte vom vergleichendem Standpunkte, Leipzig, 1878 sq. ; Ausfuhrliches Lexikon der griechischen und romischen Mythologie, Leipzig, 1884 sn.
Sittl,
of
M tiller's
Hand-
buch
d. klass.
und Totenkult,
Leipzig, 1895.
Anthropology,
"
New
York, 1881.
""862.
Dries',
I.,
discussion of
all
the literature
that appeared on the subject of Greek and Roman mythology during the years 1876-1885 is made by A. Preuner in Bursian's
all works on Greek mythology that apare similarly treated in Vol. 26, by Friedpeared during 1886-1890 rich Back ; and summaries of still later mythological literature
Jahresbericht, Vol. 25
TABLE OF CONTENTS
A.
1.
PAGE
2.
3.
The Soul and the Worship The Divinities of Nature, The Worship of the Gods,
B.
1-9
...
10-14
10
13
15-19
I.
THE
1.
Representatives of the
ThunderHe34 Athena
20-31
;
;
35-42
;
16
gods,
W*
Divinities
Harpies,
43
Wind
44
aes,
3.
45-48
34
49-53; Helios,
57,
54;
Hera,
59,
55,
56;
Artemis,
61,
58;
Hecate,
64
II.
Iris,
60; Selene, 65
62; Stars,
63; Eos,
38
66.
Fire goddess
Hestia,
:
67
;
52
2.
Water
divinities
Poseidon,
77,
3.
78;
Lesser Sea divinities, 68-71 72-75; River gods, 76; Centaurs, 80 Sileni, 79; Nymphs,
81
:
....
83,
52
Divinities of Growth,
Satyrs,
82
Pan,
9463
Viii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
THE
1.
III.
DIVINITIES OF THE
LOWER WORLD.
Hades,
100, 101
:
PAGE
Divinities of
Death
.
75
2.
Divinities
of
Sickness
and Healing
Aesculapius,
77
102, 103
IV. PERSONIFICATIONS,
1.
104
78
The
Divinities of Love, Social Intercourse, Order, and Justice: Aphrodite, 110, 111; 105-109; Eros,
Charites,
112, 113;
Muses,
Themis,
2.
3.
115
The The
Divinities of
War and
:
Strife: Ares,
87
Divinities of Destiny
Moerae,
118
Nemesis,
89
119; Tyche,
120, 121
C.
1.
Thebes
Argolis
Cadmus,
126
;
Antiope,
127
124
Niobe,
93
128
125
2.
3.
4.
5.
Danatis, Perseus, lo, 129-131 Tantalus, 133 132 Bellerophontes, Corinth Sisyphus, 135 Laconia: Dioscuri, 134; Helen,
:
96
. .
103
105
Hercules,
136-149
150-158
.106
117
6.
Theseus,
CYCLES OF MYTHS.
1.
159, 160
122
2. 3.
124 128
4.
134
D.
I.
187
Genii,
Lares,
Manes, Lemures,
145
Larvae,
190
146
TABLE OF CONTENTS
II.
IX
PAGE
191
River gods,
196
192
Nep147
197
tunus,
(2) Janus,
193
194, 195
;
Vesta,
Saturnus, Census, and Ops, 199 Silvanus, Faunus, (3) Divinities of Fruitf ulness 201 200 Fauna, Feronia, Liber, Yertumnus, 202 Diana, 203 Flora, Pales,
:
Volcanus, 198
; ;
149
153
(4) Mars,
III.
204, 205
Quirinus,
206
Juppiter,
157
207-210;
160
Juno,
IV. DIVINITIES OF
211, 212
DEATH
213
165
V. PERSONIFICATIONS,
214
166
215-218
....
167
INDEX
171
or THE
UNIVERSITY
A.
1.
1.
Even
the
human
external surroundings, the instinct of self-love impelled man to investigate the processes that he saw going on
in himself
and in creatures
first to
like himself.
Sickness and
for they
Then dreams
which sometimes, especially when attended by the nightmare, seem exceedingly real suggested the existence of
beings which, though imperceptible to the senses, can
agreeably, and again disagreeThese beings, accordingly, came to be regarded as ably. the authors of certain phenomena, which were apparently
yet affect
human
life,
now
Therefore, supported by inexplicable in any other way. the universal inborn desire for the continuance of personal life after death, there grew up a belief in the existence of the souls (ghosts) of the dead. Closely related
to this
was the
B
a superstition
which even
stages of development, appears to be about the only general form of faith extending beyond mere physical sensations.
Although the Greeks and Romans in historic times had long since passed beyond the earlier stages of de2.
velopment, yet all their ideas with regard to sickness, death, and the continued existence of the soul, were based
entirely upon the views of that early period. Naturally, in process of time, a later series of conceptions, based upon quite different hypotheses, was intermingled with
the more primitive ones; but at all events those seem to be among the most ancient which grew out of the
principal characteristics which the dead had possessed in life. As with most of the other Indo-European
was their earliest form of laying away and the grave itself was regarded as the dwelling place of the departed one, who still enjoyed an existence in bodily form. It was customary to bury food and drink, implements and weapons, with the dead and originally a man's favorite wife and those slaves that during his life he had considered essential to his welfare were compelled to share death and the grave with him.
nations, burial
the dead;
Thus, as late as the Iliad, Achilles at the funeral of Patroclus is represented as killing twelve Trojan youths, probably with the idea that he shall in that way make their souls the slaves of his friend in the next world.
After a while the offering of animals was substituted for that of human beings yet the gladiatorial combats also,
;
which were a customary feature of funeral games at Rome, were evidently a kind of substitution for the sacrifice of slaves or prisoners. There was a belief also that the dead
as well as the living could enjoy such prize contests.
Of course it was necessary to replenish the supply of food and drink occasionally consequently the worship of the dead at the tomb consisted chiefly in the repeated The custom grew offering of the means of subsistence. of doing this on the anniversaries of the birth and up death of the departed one, and during the general celeSuch occasions at Athens brations in honor of the dead. were the Nekysia or Nemeseia on the 5th day of the month Boedromion (September-October), and the Cliytroi on the
;
13th of Anthesterion (February-March) at Home, the Lemur ia on the 9th, llth, and 13th of May, and the dies
;
parentales,
older
Roman
and ending with the Feralia on the 21st. Souls punished and so by the neglect by sending sickness or death Greeks they were called Keres, i.e. destroyers by the Romans, Larvae or Lemures, specters. Therefore, to
; ;
dreaded beings, and to prevent their return into their former dwellings, all such rites were resorted to as were commonly emguard against the
evil influence of these
ployed in the
4.
effort to
evil.
development of the idea souls were believed to retain the form and physical peculiarities of the dead body. It was thought that by an offering of
fresh blood (which
is lacking after the heart ceases to could be temporarily called back to life, and beat) they could answer questions, a supposition out of which were
At
developed necromancy and the oracles of the dead. In connection with these oracles there appeared at a later
period in Greece oneiromancy also (divination by dreams ascribed to the deities of the lower world). For it was
believed that the god or demigod living in the depths of
body
it
the soul departed from the assumed animal form. The serpent especially, a
when
and rapid movements, which often lives in the ground, was commonly regarded as the soul and among other forms attributed to in brute form at least by the Greeks, were those of bats, birds, souls,
creature of noiseless
;
and, later, butterflies. 5. From the observation that a dead body gradually crumbles away, the belief at length became common
that the dead are not body, but spirit; and as people saw that the cessation of life's activity was coinci-
dent with the expiration of the last breath, they came in time to look upon the breath itself as the fundaa fact that is mental principle of life, i.e. as the soul, demonstrated by the double signification of i/or^ anima, "breath/ and similar words. Therefore souls that had but still, on acleft the body were imagined to be airy
7
;
count of an intermixture of the earlier idea, there was So they attributed to them a human or animal form. were conceived of sometimes as shadowy figures (O-KICU,
umbrae), or smoke-like phantoms
gines),
(etSooAa,
simulacra, ima-
form.
in connection with the worship of the In Greece also, dead, the older conceptions endured. where they had ceased to prevail generally about the
6.
At Kome,
beginning of the seventh century B.C., they spread again everywhere at a comparatively late period, under the influence of the Boeotians and Dorians, who had not ad-
vanced beyond the corresponding stage of development. In Homer, on the other hand, such ideas can be recognized only in isolated allusions, since in his time the later doctrine was already accepted among the Achaians and lonians, whose view he represented. Simultaneously among these peoples, from the ordinary characteristics of
every grave, there had grown up the idea of a
common
place of abode for souls, subterranean, naturally, but not accessible to human beings through the medium of
prayers and offerings, an abode separated from the world above by impassable rivers, such as the Styx ('the
hated
),
Acheron
'),
('
river of
woe
'),
Cocy tus
('
river of
lamentation
Lethe
7.
and Pyriphlegethon (< '), forgetfulness ') from which the dead drank forstream of
fire
getfulness.
As soon
as the dead
had been covered with earth, bank of the Styx or the by the boatman Charon.
for this service he received an obolus (a small coin worth 3^ cents), which customarily was laid under
As pay
the tongue of the deceased. Once down in the lower world, the dead, according to Homer's belief, lived a Their previous gloomy, empty, shadowy sort of life.
and occupations were, indeed, unchanged; but was without consciousness and the power to effect any actual results. A few individuals, however, who were especially loved or hated by the gods, retained consciousness and sensation, that they might be rewarded or punished for their deeds done upon earth. From this realm of death there could be no return to this end the three-headed dog Cerberus kept watch at the entrance, which the ancients believed they had discovered in varitastes
their life
6
ous places,
Arcadia, on
at
Charon,
body back over the Styx. (The divinities that rule lower world are discussed in 100-103.)
8.
in the
Upon another conception, of later origin, rests the idea of Elysium, the field of arrival, or of those that have gone over (cf. \r}\vOa), which was supposed to be
in the lower world.
western boundary of the earth, 011 Oceanus, not For, without the necessity of first suffering death, many of the heroes and heroines espeat the
cially dear to the gods, begotten from mortals, or otherwise nearly allied to divine beings, were carried off to
this
abode,
pleasure.
there to enjoy a blessed, godlike life of With the later poets the Isles of the Blessed '
'
take the place of this. But not until after the fifth century B.C., with the growth of a belief in a retributive
justice,
was there developed the idea of a tribunal of the dead. According to this idea an abode either in
Elysium, the home of the blessed, or in Tartarus, the gloomy place of punishment, the deepest abyss of the lower world, is assigned to the dead by Minos, Khadamanthus, and Aeacus, the decision in each case depending
life
lived on earth.
Among
'
dead were commonly designated by the flattering term Manes, i.e. the Pure/ the Good,' or were called, in
'
general, inferi,
Each family
worshiped especially the spirits of its own ancestors, as the del Inferum parentum, or the del parentes or patrii. Very strictly, too, did they preserve a conscientious observance of all the precepts applying to solemn
and even
after cremation
custom, the old usages, which had been based on the idea of interment, were never essentially altered. However,
the conception of a
sleep, the later epitaphs seem to indicate a belief that the dead slumbered forever in the
thor-
simi-
grave, and were free from care, peaceful (Of. Divinities of Death, 213.)
and happy.
Styx
Homer,
II. els
xiv. 271,
Od.
x.
513:
cv6a IAV
Kt6Acur6s 0', 6s
Amat.
i.
635,
ii.
41
Vergil, Geor.
iv.
480
Abhorred Styx, the flood of deadly hate Sad Acheron, of sorrow, black and deep;
;
Cocytus,
named
of lamentations loud
;
Heard on the rueful stream fierce Phlegethon, Whose waves of torrent fire inflame with rage.
Pope, Thebais i. 411 For by the black infernal Styx I swear, (That dreadful oath which binds the thunderer)
:
Ode on
St. Cecilia's
Day
90
Tho' fate had fast bound her With Styx nine times round her.
Shak., Troilus
Acheron
F. Q.
i.
Spenser, F. Q.
i. i.
37.
;
v.
33
:
Cocytus
Thebais
i.
Vergil, 577.
iv.
Aen.
vi.
295
Spenser,
479, Aen.
vi.
297, 323
Pope,
419
Whose
Shak.
,
Expects
ghost yet shivering on Cocytus' sand its passage to the further strand.
ii.
Titus Andronicus
3,
236
37.
Pope, Ode on
St. Cecilia's
v.
:
544
Vergil,
Aen.
vi.
551
Lethe
Ovid, Trist.
iv. 1,
47
Utque soporiferae liberem si pocula Lethes, Temporis adversi sic mini sensus hebet.
Vergil, Aen.
vi.
705, 714;
And
in the long
xliii.
(If
Her wat'ry
Forthwith his former state and being forgets, Forgets both joy and grief, pleasure and pain.
Shak., King Henry IV. pt. Spenser, F. Q. i. iii. 36.
ii.
v. 2, 72,
King Richard
III. iv. 4,
250
Charon
Vergil, Aen.
vi.
298
Pope, Dunciad
iii.
19
an
oar.
Quibbling Elegy on Judge Boat Our Boat is now sail'd to the Stygian ferry, There to supply old Charon's leaky wherry; Charon in him will ferry souls to Hell A trade our Boat has practised here so well.
:
;
iii.
2, 11.
Cerberus
is
there are frequent allusions to the very offspring of Sarama, the bitch of Indra, who conduct to the other world those whom Yama summons. In Vendidad, xiii. 9 of the
old.
of a
Avesta, dogs are represented as sentinels of the other world. In the Funeral hymn, another portion of which is cited below, the dogs appear in one stanza in a hostile attitude, in the others as kind to those whom they conduct. They are mentioned in Rig Veda vii. 55, 2-3, x. 14, 10. Rig Veda x. 14
:
by a
two dogs, offspring of Sarama, four-eyed, brinded, Then go unto the fathers, kindly noticing, who
common
revel.
These dogs which are thine, the guardians, O Yama, four-eyed, guarding the path, men-beholding, to them give over this (man), O king, for well-being and to him extend weal.
11.
Vergil, Geor.
iv.
483
Ovid, Her.
ix.
Tenuitque inhians tria Cerberus ora. Milton, L' Allegro 1 93, Met. iv. 449, ix. 185
;
Hence loathed Melancholy Of Cerberus and blackest Midnight born. Shak., King Henry IV. pt. ii. ii. 4, 182, Troilus and Cressida
37
Spenser, F. Q. i. v. 34. Elysium Hesiod, Works and Days 170 Pindar, 01. Vergil, Geor. i. 38, Aen. vi. 637 sq. ; Shak., Cymbeline v. More sweet than our blessed fields
;
:
ii.
1,
ii.
67 sq.
117
:
4,
Two Gentlemen
:
of
Verona
ii.
7, 38,
iv. 605 VerTartarus Horner, Od. xi. gil, Aen. vi. 577. Minos Homer, II. xiii. 450 Ovid, Met. viii. 6 sq. Her. xv. 347 Vergil, Aen. vi. 432 Hyginus, Fab. xl.-xliv. Aeacus: Homer, II. xxi. 189; Ovid, Met. vii. 471 sq.; Horace,
;
: ;
2, 4.
Od.
ii.
13,
22
:
Hyginus, Fab.
Hi.
following is translated from the tenth book of the Veda. Although the hymn is acknowledged to be much later Rig than other portions of the Rig Veda, yet the stanzas given are undoubtedly of very ancient date. They will be interesting to show the early ancestor-worship among the Indo-European peoples.
Manes The
Yama,
father of
mankind and king of departed souls, waits to kingdom of light. Roth has made an in;
between the Sanskrit Yama and the Avestan so Yima. Yama is called the son of Vivasvant " Gatherer of so Yima in Vendidad ii. 21 of the Avesta peoples" makes a "gathering of men." Yama is the first mortal to reach heaven and gathers the blessed to himself. Rig Veda x. 14
Yima.
Yama
is
The one gone forth over the great heights, the one pointing out the path to many, the son of Vivasvant, the gatherer of peoples, Yama the king, him worship with an oblation. 2. Yama was the first to find a refuge for us: this (heavenly) pasture is not to be taken from us whither our fathers of old have gone,
1.
|
10
7. Go forth, go forth by the ancient paths whither our fathers of old have gone. Both kings exhilarated with the sweet oblation, Yama and heavenly Varuna thou wilt see. 8. Meet with the fathers, with Yama, with the reward (in store for thee) in highest heaven. Leaving what is sinful come back home possessing full life meet a (new) body. 9. Go away (ye mourners), go apart and disperse from here. The fathers have made this place for him, adorned with days, with waters, with nights. Yama gives to him a resting-place.
|
2.
10. The inborn impulse in man to endeavor to comprehend the causal connection of all phenomena observed by him could not long confine itself to the events that
Before long he began to conperson. sider also the world of nature, in which he lives, and whose influence he feels. child attributes the property
concern his
own
of life to the objects surrounding him, as soon as they appear to exert any active influence. So, by one who is as yet but a simple child of nature, everything that
regarded as endowed with life, because activity, in connection with its own peculiar motion and productiveness, appears to him as the chief
exerts
any power
is
characteristic of a living being. Soon, however, he perceives that the apparent activity belonging to things
without
life is
point of presupposing in general for every exercise of power a living being as the author, upon whose particular
to the nature
of the operation of the force in each case. Thus fancy gradually peopled the whole world of nature in which
man
lived
and productive-
11
with a countless number of living which may be called divinities of nature. These, beings, like the beings which the human imagination had in
a similar manner created out of souls, could not be directly perceived by the senses, and so the two kinds
of supersensual beings were easily compared with each other. The natural result was that the peculiarities
of the beings developed
from
souls,
determined, were transferred to the divinities of nature. 11. Now, if the observed exercise of power in any
process of nature is mightier and of longer duration than can come from an ordinary human being or animal, the presupposed author is exalted above the measure of
man
or beast, as regards might and duration of life. Moreover, according as this power appears hostile or
active
or
is
there
is
supposed
to be thus manifested a
and masculine or
feminine gender.
These divinities of nature, whose identity was preserved among the Greeks in the multitudes of river gods, centaurs, nymphs, nereids, satyrs, etc., were essentially different from the gods proper. For, during the of belief in such divinities, an exhibition of a stage given force is not attributed to some being that always
12.
produces similar results in similar objects but, rather, every object of nature exhibiting signs of the activity of life is supposed to be inhabited and preserved by a
;
The transition from belief special divinity of its own. in the minor divinities to belief in gods. always follows
first in
12
and object are not noticed, i.e. in the case of the divinities that work in the heavens and the air. For, in the case of storms, winds, clouds, sun, and moon, it cannot be decided whether the same phenomenon is constantly repeated, or whether various, yet similar, phenomena
follow each other.
13.
With
and states, the divinities that have in a certain sense been independently created by each family can for the
first
time rise to the dignity of gods generally recognized and clearly conceived of as individual beings by
the mass of the people. For, until then, the real identity of various individual conceptions cannot be discovered;
and, on the other hand, it is not until this stage of progress that the spirit of an ancestor of a ruling family can
race.
at length, in the progress of civilization and the superiority of spiritual power over everything culture, physical is recognized, the gods become more and more
When,
are stripped of the sensual characteristics of animals or human beings, they gradually
spiritualized.
As they
develop more or less completely into purely spiritual deities, defenders of morals and the moral laws, which
have meanwhile grown up among mankind under divine direction. Such beings as these were the gods of the Greeks and the Romans in the best period in the life
of those peoples.
this light can
Not until the gods are recognized in the independent deification of abstract
ideas begin
but after such recognition it is no longer a necessary requisite for the creation of a personality that there should be an activity perceptible by the It cannot, however, be denied that there is a senses.
;
13
Ate ('infatuDike (' justice '), Theinis '), Apate (' deception '), ('law'), Irene (' peace ), and Nike ('victory'), which are found even in the oldest Greek poets.
ation
3.
15.
Since
man
can conceive of
all
supernatural beings
only as superior personalities made after his own image, he endeavors to influence them in the same manner
them
He
in
shows
humble
He begs posture, with purified body and clean raiment. for their favor, and, if they are displeased, for their indulgence or pardon. He presents them with the best
possesses, in order to insure for himself their good will, to express his thanks for benefits received, or to atone and make expiation for any offence toward them.
of
what he himself
16.
Such
is
purification, prayer, and sacrifice. To express humble reverence and submissiveness one would either
worship,
actually cast himself down upon the ground (irpoo-Kwclv, supplicare), or at least stretch out his upturned palm
toward the abode, or the image, of the divinity. Men sometimes confined themselves with chains or bands, that thus they might surrender themselves entirely helpFor the same reason, at a less into the divine hands.
later period, in the
performance of every holy act they (rati/tat, taeniae, vittae) around their heads, just as they did around the sacrificial animals and other
wound bands
The word religio, inobjects consecrated to the gods. deed, signifies properly that relation of being bound
14
which one sustains toward a divinity, the obligation or which one feels toward him. duty 17. All purification (lustratio, from lud, Ka0ap/xds) relates to the body and water is the chief requisite in originally
;
Purification was, accordingly, considered especially necessary in case of a murder attended with bloodshed, or of touching a dead person, though the
it.
connection with
with
it.
For
this
was not at first associated purpose water from the sea or from
a spring was preferred, because neither of these remains impure. Prayer is properly a simple request, the effect
of which, however, can be heightened by the addition of a promise or a vow (e^x 7?? votum). Prescribed formulas
were employed only because their success seemed to have shown that they, more than other words, were
efficacious in influencing the
expressed.
18.
Anything that
is
may
be,
be offered as a
first,
gift (avdOrj/jLa).
Appropriate
gifts
would
such objects as are used in acts of worship or for the adornment of a temple secondly, such as possess a But the particular value for the person offering them.
;
the gods was the offering of offerings consisted of all the things that please the taste of man himself for originally physical enjoyment was presupposed even in the case' of the
all gifts to
most common of
Such
gods.
At a
later time,
at least, exhaling
made
19.
Finally, as men gave expression to their will by signs or words, the effort was made to discover the will of the gods in omens (re/oara, ostenta), such as lightning,
15
rainbows, eclipses of the sun and moon, and the flight of birds, or to learn it from significant words and sounds
((fry/man,
K/V^SoVe?,
omind).
From
Greece the sign oracles of Zeus in Italy, the oped From auspicia and the whole science of the augurs. the words and sounds arose the oracular responses of
in
The inspection of the liver and other entrails Apollo. of slain sacrificial animals grew up later out of the genrequirement that an animal for sacrifice must be healthy and unblemished.
eral
B.
I.
1.
THUNDERSTORM
20.
in nature,
is
and
the
the
first
attract
the attention of
this can
mankind,
be better compared to a violently raging battle than to any other event occurring on earth, it was first conceived of as a battle in which
thunderstorm.
As
god of thunder and lightning, Athena, the Olympian gods that were friendly toward mankind, and the demigod, Hercules, are all arrayed against the monsters of the thunderZeus, the
(<
Giants
').
The
latter, like
the Cy-
clopes (' Cyclops '), are in the Odyssey imagined to be an earthly race of giants, living in the far west, hurling rocks for missiles, a race which is annihilated by the
but the later tradition, as in some other cases, seems to have preserved the earlier form. Accordingly in the art of the Hellenistic period,
gods for
its
arrogance
particularly, for example, on the frieze of the altar of Pergamum (now in the Berlin museum), they are repre-
serpentine feet (lightning?). Originally the place of burning, was commonly mentioned Phlegra,
16
sented with
17
ground
is
illuminated sky
combat was
Pallene
21.
;
to be understood; later the scene of removed to the peninsula (or the Attic deme)
finally, to
Cumae, in
Italy.
a different point of view, however, the fall thunderstorms, breaking forth after the dry harvest
time, were probably looked upon as a battle between the fructifying thunder god Zeus and his father, the sun god Cronus, who at the height of summer brought
From
on the harvest and caused the luxuriant vegetation of spring to dry up. It is clear that Cronus was the sun god from his epithet, Titan; and as in this contest other gods, according to the poets, were ranged beside Zeus as comrades for the fight, so there appeared on the side of Cronus, under the term Titanes (' Titans '), a series of
names of beings
of light, the
though appreciated in early worship, after a while largely faded away. With the help of the Cyclops ('roundeyed') Arges (' bright lightning'), Brontes ( thunder') and Steropes ('dazzling -eyed'), whose single round eyes are the lightning, they were vanquished and hurled
(
down
22.
into Tartarus, the deepest part of the lower world. To these conflicts of Zeus was added, later, that
Typhon ('the smoking, steaming In him we have an embodiment (perhaps originating in Asia Minor) of the steam and smoke breaking from the earth in connection with earthquakes, and out
one').
against Typhoeus, or
hundred serpent heads darting forth fire, he, like the All this Titans, was cast down by Zeus into Tartarus. is a picture of the apparent conflict between the thunder-
18
storm accompanying every volcanic eruption and those mighty forces of the depths which, at the end of the eruption, seem to sink back through the crater into the
interior of the earth.
23.
The
mighty god
of the thunderstorm, a
toward mankind, who sends down the fructifying rain, is Zeus (Lat. Juppiter). The stem of this name, which in the genitive Ai(f)o's, goes back, like the Indian appears Dyaus, the German Ziu, and the Latin Juppiter (which
is
and pater), to the root i.e. the name of the god of the thunderdiv (' sky ') storm is derived from the sky itself, of which the thunderstorm is a principal phenomenon. Correspond-
composed
;
of Diovis or Jovis
ing to this idea, the chief attribute of Zeus, who is further characterized as the lightning god by the epithets Keraunios and Kataibates, is the lightning itself; and
closely connected with this is the Aegis (' goatskin'), a representation of the thundercloud surrounded by ser-
pentine lightning, which is usually pictured in later times as a shaggy skin with a border of serpents.
24.
The
who held
victory
in his
hand a conception which led Phidias to place the winged Kike on the outstretched hand of his statue of the Olympian Zeus. In his son Ares this side of Zeus's nature was developed into a god of war pure and simple. On account of the rain that
during a thunderstorm, Zeus appears, on the other hand, as a rain dispenser bestowing In this capacity he begot fertility (Hyetios, Ombrios).
falls
from his
sister
Demeter, who
is
19
Persephone (Lat.
Proserpina), the subterranean protectress, and representaThe same idea is expressed in the tive, of the seed corn.
heaven ') In similar manner, according to an to Gaea ('earth'). Zeus was united with Danae under the Argive legend,
('
guise of golden rain, and, according to a Thebaii legend, with Semele, who died in his embrace when, at her request, he approached her as he approaches Hera, i.e. as the god of the thunderstorm.
25.
Zeus
is
As
such,
however, he afterwards has associated with him Hermes, his son born of Maia (Pleias), the goddess of the rain
cloud.
prodigies, birds of omen, and thunder and lightning themselves, and the especially eagle darting down upon its prey like a flash of lightning out of the clouds and so he becomes a most important The oak is sacred to him probably because oracular god. it is an especially tall tree and is therefore frequently
;
To Zeus belong
struck by lightning.
26.
As thunderclouds
settle
so Zeus as AJcraios or Korypliaios makes his dwelling place upon them, his chief abodes being on Olympus on
the borders of Thessaly and Macedonia, and on Lycaeus in Arcadia (which also is often called Olympus). On_
offered to him.
The
legendary founder of this form of worship, Lycaon, was said to have slain here his own son, or grandson, and placed him before Zeus as a repast, i.e. offered him In punishment for this act he was changed into up.
a wolf.
20
27.
From
oped that
his being the mightiest god the idea develZeus was also the highest god (Hypatos,
From his mountain summit, like a king Hypsistos). from his castle, he rules the surrounding country under
the appellation of Zeus Basileus. As a symbol of his ^dominion he bears the scepter; he protects justice and
pious men, and punishes every wrong, especially perand any injury to a guest (Z. Xenios) j ury (Zeus Horkios),
all
or to one seeking protection (Z. Hikesios). It lies in to grant expiation of guilt, and purification his power To him, therefore, as the (Z. Katliarsios) (cf. Apollo).
protector of hearth and home (Z. Herkeios), the father of the family offered sacrifices and to the same god,
;
in his capacity of protector of the family (GenetJilios), the head of the family sacrificed and many ruling families claimed to derive their origin from him as their
;
ancestor.
Side by side with the king of the gods stands their queen Hera, who, like Juno, the goddess associated with
28.
Juppiter (the ruling lightning god of Italy), is probably to be regarded as the moon goddess and queen of the
Argos, where Hera was held in special honor, Hebe (< the bloom of youth ) was considered the fruit of the union of this royal pair. Ares, also, the war god, and Hephaestus, the lightning god, are
night.
In
their children.
As the masculine counterpart of Hebe appears Ganymedes (son of Tros or Laomedon), whom,
on account of his beauty, Zeus caused to be kidnaped by an eagle, and to be made his cupbearer and favorite
;
for, like
Ganymedes, Hebe
name Ganymeda.
21
other goddesses and heroines representing the moon at Dodona with Dione, a name which might, of course, in some old worship have belonged to Hera herself at
;
other places, with Selene, Europa, and Antiope. From the 'dark, beautif ul-haired Leto (Lat. Latona) he begot the sun god Apollo and the moon goddess Artemis; from
'
he approached in the form of a swan, the moon heroine Helena (' Helen ') and the hero of light PolLeda,
Again, Alcumena, whose origin was in the race of the Ferse'ides (' shining ones '), became by him the mother of
lux.
whom
Hercules.
But whether
all
may
30.
be regarded as
into prominence,
moral side of the nature of Zeus, which afterwards came when they designate Metis (' wisdom )
and Themis ('law') as his wives, and represent him as begetting from the latter the Horae, Eunomia ('lawfulness '), Dike (' justice '), and Irene (' peace ), as well as the Moerae (' goddesses of fate '), who order human life. On similar grounds he figures as the father of the Graces and Muses. Finally, the legend of the birth and death of Zeus Here his father is is based on a Cretan local worship. the sun god Cronus, who devours his own children. But Cronus's spouse Rhea (a form of Ma, the mother of the gods, closely related to Cybele and Artemis, who were worshiped in Asia Minor), instead of giving him Zeus, hands him a stone, which was swallowed forthwith. Zeus, however, being suckled by the she-goat Amalthea (who represents the thundercloud, which dispenses nourishing moisture), grows rapidly in a cave of Mount Ida until he
;
is
(See
21.)
22
31.
The great national games were celebrated in his honor. ancients believed that during the work there had been before the mind's eye of the artist the words of the Iliad
(i.
528 sq.):"
He spoke, and awful bends his sable brows, Shakes his ambrosial curls, and gives the nod, The stamp of fate and sanction of the god High heaven with trembling the dread signal took,
:
And
all
Olympus
(Pope's translation.)
But Lysippus (about 338 B.C.) is regarded as the creator of the most common type in the representations of Zeus in the art of later times, a type of which a noble example
appears in the mask of Otricoli. 32. To a much smaller sphere than Zeus
is
lightning god Hephaestus (Lat. Volcanus), confined, who probably was originally peculiar to a different Grecian
tribe
from that in which the worship of Zeus prevailed. born of Hera during a quarrel with Zeus (i.e. in a thunderstorm) but since he was lame (i.e. moved with a short, quick motion, like the lightning), his mother
He was
herself flung him down into the sea (a figurative expression for the descending lightning), where, in a cave, concealed for nine years, he was nursed by the sea, goddesses
Thetis and Eurynome. The latter part of this legend doubtless refers to that part of the year in which the lightning seems to be hidden away somewhere in the
heaven by Dionysus,
cloudy vault of the heavens. He is conducted back to i.e. in the spring; here he cleaves
23
the head of Zeus by a stroke of his axe (lightning) amid loud cries of victory (thunder) the goddess of the evidently thunderstorm, Pallas Athena, springs forth,
;
a tale in which the phenomena occurring at the cleaving of a thundercloud by lightning have been attributed
to the different divinities of the thunderstorm.
regard to the fructifying power of the spring thunderstorms, Charis, the goddess of spring, is
33.
Out
of
represented as being wedded to Hephaestus, according to the Iliad in the Odyssey, however, he is the husband of Aphrodite, the goddess of love and fertility. After the
;
invention of the art of working metal by the aid of fire, the phenomena of the thunderstorm were compared to
the work in a forge, and so Hephaestus became the smith of the gods, with hammer, tongs, cap, and short working
garment,
mortals.
the
who made weapons and ornaments for the imThen when the Greeks became acquainted with burning mountain on Lemnos and the volcanoes of
and the Liparian islands, they transferred the forge of Hephaestus to these mountains, and called the
Sicily
Cyclops his comrades. The story now ran thus because he had sided with his mother Hera in her quarrel with her husband, he was thrown down from Heaven upon the island Lemnos. This forthwith became one of the
:
principal seats of his worship, a worship which blended with that of the oriental Cabiri (' great gods '), who
Another god of lightning and fire, originally, like Hephaestus, is Prometheus ('man of forethought'), who purloined fire from the gods, in order to give life, as well as fire, to the human beings that he had formed out
34.
24
of clay.
Though he had previously been a friend of he was now, in punishment for his deed, chained Zeus, to a rock on Caucasus and tortured by an eagle which fed on his liver. It is Hephaestus who creates Pandora (' endowed by alP), the first woman, through whom,
according to the familiar story of Pandora's box, all evils come upon the race of men created by Prometheus.
35.
With
who
are
principally the embodiments of the lightning flash, are intimately associated a series of female divinities of the
thunderstorm, in whom the appearance of the thundercloud comes into special prominence. Everywhere in Greece and in her colonies, but most of all in Athens,
(Lat. Minerva) was as the goddess that sends down lightning, worshiped She is designated as a goddess of rain, dew, and mist.
for her,
Athena
the lightning by her epithet Pallas, 'the brandisher' of lightning, which is conceived of as a spear therefore in early times her statues, representing her with poised
;
were called Palladia. Like her father Zeus, she wears the Aegis, and with it the Gorgon's head (Gorgospear,
which, according to the Argive myth, she received from Perseus, but, according to the Attic myth, won for
neiori),
(<
Gorgons
'),
who
live in the
far west, especially one of them, the mortal Medusa, - are properly female representatives of the thunder-
clouds
but,
like
the
25
wings carry them through the air. When the head of Medusa was cut off, the monster Chrysaor (' gold-sword/
the golden flash of the lightning) sprang from her body, and also the winged horse Pegasus (the thundercloud), at the stamp of whose hoof (lightning) the spring of
the Muses, Hippocrene (' horse spring '), which inspires After servall poets, gushed forth on Mount Helicon.
ing Bellerophon, Pegasus bears in heaven the lightning of Zeus. Medusa was killed by Athena for the same
reason as that for which the Giants were conquered by Zeus. That is, in the phenomena of the thunder-
storm the element of power that is hostile to mankind, embodied in these monsters, soon disappears but rain
;
and
fertility,
of the storm, endure after the storm has vented its rage. Like Zeus, Athena becomes, on account of this contest
and victory, the goddess of war and victory in general, so that she bears the epithets Promachos (' leader of the
combat ') and Nike (' victory '). 37. In the dry season of the year, the rain, which promotes the growth of vegetation, sometimes pours from the thundercloud; and so Athena was the protectress of the chief sources of the wealth of Attica, namely, fruit culture and agriculture, and consequently of the
Therefore the second principal type of cultivated land. her representation in art exhibits a matronly, enthroned goddess, who is visually called Athena Polias (' goddess of the city '). On the Acropolis of Athens was an ancient
olive tree, which,
to
it
spring
up when
was said, the goddess had caused she strove with Poseidon for the
26
38.
To agriculture especially is to be referred the of the serpent-formed Erichthonius, or Erechtheus. myth These two names at Athens stood originally for the
same person, and really represented the seed corn growing up out of the lap of the earth (their mother Gaea),
under the protection of Athena, the goddess of the thunderstorm, and her maidservants, the dew sisters Aglauros (' the one living in the open air ), Herse The father of both ('dew'), and Pandrosos ('dew'). Erichthonius and Erechtheus is Hephaestus, the god of
?
the thunderstorm, who during the spring storms cleaves the hard crust of the earth and fertilizes it. It was sup-
posed to be in his honor and that of Athena that the very ancient ChalJceia (' forge festival ') had been instituted, at
theus were celebrated.
which the invention of the plow and the birth of ErechErichthonius and Erechtheus The latter was came at length to be distinguished. considered a national god living in a cave on the Acropand,
still
The dew a king of Athens. various names as his daughters. In the Erechtheum he was worshiped as a hero in the
olis,
later, as
sisters
form of a serpent, in connection with the worship of Athena and Poseidon. As the protecting goddess of agriculture Athena was honored also by sacred plowings at
the foot of the Acropolis in the beginning of seedtime, and especially at the old harvest festival of the Panathenaia from the 24th to the 29th of Hecatombaion
(beginning of August), a festival which from the time of Pisistratus was observed every fifth year with special torch race, prize contests for musicians and splendor.
dancers, and races between ships of war were arranged The chief day of the festival was for these occasions.
27
the 28th, the birthday of the goddess, on which they brought her a new robe (Peplus), embroidered by the ladies of the highest rank in Athens. During the fesprocession through the city this was fastened like a sail to a chariot made to imitate the form of a ship.
tal
Priests, old
men,
women and
body of men capable of bearing arms, marched along with it, amid a display of the greatest magnificence, up
the Acropolis to the ancient temple of the goddess. The reliefs on the frieze of the cella of the Parthesplendid
still serve to bring this festal procession before our eyes. 39. This Peplus, moreover, calls attention to another very significant side of the nature of the goddess. The
non
thundercloud, in which the lightnings rush hither and thither, and similarly the mist, which often covers everyveil, were conceived of as a delicately and so the goddess with whom these fabric; phenomena were associated, under the name Athena Ergane (' worker '), came to be considered the inventress of the arts of spinning and weaving. As such she transformed into a spider the skillful Lydian weaver Arachne (' spider'), who dared to engage with her in a trial of skill. After she had once become the inventress of an art in which skill is of great importance
thing as with a
woven
many
So
other similar
she
developed
gradually into the goddess of wisdom in general, and in that connection into the protectress of learning; and, in Hesiod, Metis (' wisdom') appears as her mother.
Of course
be that some additional influence to emphasize this phase of her character was exerted by
it
may
28
the idea of her clear shining glance (suggested in her epithet yAavKWTris, and in the fact that the owl is her
beings indicates a spiritual life, and which properly belongs to Athena on account of the same characteristic in the lightning. Also a further
human
explanation may be sought in the notion of the fiery essence of the soul itself; for it was on this ground
that the formation and animation of the
human
race
were ascribed to Prometheus, god of lightning, and to Hephaestus, god of fire. 40. Athena's ideal figure in art was made by Phidias, who likewise has been generally credited with having created the type of the so-called Athena Promachos in a colossal bronze statue placed upon the Acropolis under the open sky. It was the same sculptor who fashioned in gold and ivory for the Parthenon the Athena Parthenos maiden ), holding on her right hand Mke (< victory '). (' She appears always serious, even austere, but full of composure, and with an expression of high intellectualshe always wears a long robe, and is often distinity
7
;
guished by the Aegis worn over this. 41. The Erinyes (< the angry ones '), black, winged, in the dark clouds, are, like stalking swiftly along the Gorgons described above, the embodiments of the
grim thunderclouds which threaten destruction. Their glance of flame and their fiery breath, like the serpents twining about their heads, represent the darting The same idea is signified by the torch and lightning. the whip which they brandish, the latter of which produces a state of madness and stupefaction in whomsoever they strike. But since the clouds on the horizon seem to rise up out of the earth, imagination removed
THE
>H4
fftX
;
29
thus from
the abode of the Erinyes to the lower world being black divinities of the thunderstorm,
who
bring
death, they became goddesses of death and vengeance. Their wild raging was conceived of as a pursuit or a hunt, On so that they were themselves compared to hounds. the realm of morals they became being transferred to pursuers of those that had committed heinous crimes,
especially of those who, transgressing the laws of family rights, had injured a parent or elder brother; on the
other hand they protect the stranger and the sacredness of an oath. But by offerings and prayers, even the angry
'
dians,
and Argos as Eumenides (' well-disposed ), in Semnai ('the honored'). Near the Gorgons dwell their sisters and guarthe Graeae ('old women'), Pephredo, Enyo, and
7
Demo
tives
('the terrible'). They are probably representaof the gray clouds preceding the thunderstorm
proper, in
which the lightning harmlessly darts from Therefore they one cloud to another (heat lightning). appear as old women, who possess only one eye and only
one tooth between them (in both thes.e figures representing the lightning), who surrender these to each other,
Ovid. Met.
137;
180,
8,
:
319, 357
Keats, Hyperion i. 249 Shall scare that infant thunderer, rebel Jove, And bid old Saturn take his throne again.
;
35;
Vergil,
Aen.
vii.
Milton, Par. L.
i.
510
his
With
30
And
Spenser, F. Q.
Titanes
139
;
Hyginus, Pref.
Cyclopes
Homer, Odys.
;
Euripides, Cyclops
Vergil, Geor.
Quotiens Cyclopum effervere in agros Vidimus undantem ruptis fornacibus Aetnam, Flammarumque globos liquef actaque volvere saxa
Aen.
167
iii.
sq, ;
sq. ;
Ovid, Met.
xiii.
744
sq., xiv.
retires.
Shak., Titus Andronicus iv. 3, 46, Hamlet ii. 2, 511. Typhoeus Hesiod, Theog. 821 Ovid, Met. v. 325 sq.; Spenser,
:
F. Q.
i.
v.
35.
:
Zeus
divine
deification.
The noun stem DIV, DYU, became early a The all-comprehending heavenly spaces suggest the The word PITR ('father') was often joined to presence.
(Juppiter)
this stem.
DYAUS PITA
('sky- father')
:
was worshiped among the ancient Hindus. The references are to all the places in the Rig Veda where the epithet PITR is added Rig Veda i. 71. 5, i. 89. 4, i. 90. 7, i. 164. 33, i. 191. 6, iv. 1. 10, v. 43. In Hindu mythology, however, Indra corresponds in 2, vi. 51. 5. attributes to the Greek Zeus and Roman Juppiter more than any other god in the Indian Pantheon. The following verses from Veda i., describing him as the whirler of the thunderbolt, are Rig representative of many such ascriptions to his might which abound in the Veda. Indra, Rig Veda i. 32
:
1.
the thunderbolt has accomplished. He smote the dragon, he bored after the waters, he cut in sunder the bellies of the (cloud) mountains. 2. He smote the dragon lying on the mountains. Tvastar forged for him the whizzing thunderbolt. As lowing kine, flowing suddenly the water ran down to the confluence. 3. With the lust of a bull he took the Soma, he drank of the extract in the vessels.
| I
31
The generous Indra took the missile, the destructive thunderbolt, he smote the firstborn of dragons. 15. Indra is king of him who goes, of him who rests, and of the tame, of the horned beast, (Indra) possessing the thunderbolt on his arm. That king rules the busy folk. He has surrounded them as a felly
|
the spokes.
Hesiod, Theog. 72
yat'rjs
Homer,
II.
i.
tire
re Kp6vov evpvoira
Zei>s
Ovid, Met. i. 113, Ars Amat. i. 635; Vergil, Aen. vii. 219; Hyginus, Fab. civ. (As the Sky, Horace, Od. i. 22, 20, iii. 10, 8 ;)
;
Pope, Thebais
i.
357
Jove descended in almighty gold of the Lock v. 49 Rape Jove's thunder roars, heaven trembles all around.
;
:
When
Shak., Cymbeline
v. 4,
32
With Mars fall out, with Juno chide The Tempest v. 1, 45, Measure for Measure ii.
56; Spenser, F. Q. et passim.
:
2, 111,
Hamlet
iii.
4,
i.
i.
6, iv.
= 'cover ') was an early deification of Uranus Varuna (root the expanse. hymn in the Atharva Veda praises the god as the all-knowing divine presence. The stars which studded the heavens at night became, in the poetic imagination, the thousand eyes of Varuna looking down upon the world. portion of the hymn is
VR
translated here.
Atharva Veda
iv.
16
1. The great one, lord of these worlds, sees, as if close at hand. Whoever thinks he is acting stealthily, the gods know it all. 2. Whoever stands, and goes, and whoever stoops, whoever hides, whoever withdraws, Whatever two (persons) sitting together devise, Varuna the king knows it (for he is there) as a third. 3. The earth is of Varuna the king and yonder heaven, great, pos|
|
And the two oceans are Varuna's stomach water he is hidden. 4. Who would go far beyond heaven will not escape from Varuna the king. His spies from heaven traverse the world. Thousandeyed they look upon the earth. 5. All this Varuna the king knows, what is between heaven and earth (and) what is beyond. Numbered by him are the winkings of men's eyes. As a gamester knows his dice, he takes note of them.
sessing distant ends.
in this little
|
and
32
:
198
II.
sq.
i.
;
Ars Amat.
nus, Fab.
i.
635, Met.
;
iii.
passim ; Hesiod, Theog. 454 Ovid, passim ; Vergil, Aen. i. passim ; Hygi:
xiii.
Or Neptune's
1,
131,
iv. 15,
34;
Hebe: Homer,
Ovid, Met.
ix.
II.
;
v.
400
Milton,
Comus 290
As smooth as Hebe's
L' Allegro 29.
Ganymedes
756
Vergil, Aen.
:
i.
28.
Dione
Homer,
II. v.
381
6ia Qcdwv.
iii.
3,
Amor.
i.
14, 33.
Hesiod, Theog. 453 Ovid, Fast. iv. 201. Hephaestus (Vulcan): Hesiod, Theog. 927 Homer,
:
Rhea
II.
i.
590
Tjdrj
pi\f/e
yap
/-te
irodbs
Trdv
en
9u/*6s evrjev.
ii.
741
Vergil, Aen.
viii.
740:
And how he
thrown by angry Jove Sheer o'er the crystal battlements from morn To noon he fell, from noon to dewy eve, A summer's day and with the setting sun Dropped from the zenith like a falling star,
fabled,
; ;
On Lemnos
the .ZEgean
isle.
:
Cowper, Translation from Milton vii When Jove had hurled him to the Lemnian coast So Vulcan sorrowed for Olympus lost.
Shak., 1364.
Much Ado
about Nothing
i.
1,
187
33
Aeschylus, Prometheus Theog. 510 42 Hyginus, Fab. cxliv. Cowper, Translation from Milton, Epigram on the Inventor of Guns:
Hesiod,
;
Vinctus
Vergil,
Eel.
vi.
Praise in old time the sage Prometheus won, stole ethereal radiance from the sun But greater he whose bold invention strove To emulate the fiery bolts of Jove.
Who
To
his Father
still
Man's heavenly source, and which retaining Some scintillations of Promethean fire, Bespeaks him animated from above.
Shak., Love's Labour's Lost
iv. 3,
An-
dronicus
ii.
1, 17.
cxlii.;
Milton, Par. L.
iv.
714:
More lovely than Pandora, whom the gods Endow'd with all their gifts.
Pallas
Athena (Minerva)
Aurds
5'
Homer,
II. ii.
passim ; Ovid, Fast. iii. 5 Ipse vides manibus peragi fera bella Minervae Num minus ingenuis artibus ilia vacat ?
157,
i.
625, 745
:
Vergil,
Aen.
v.
704,
ii.
passim ; Horace,
Tu
Minerva.
10
Gorgones Ovid, Met. iv. 618 Vergil, Aen. vi. 289 Comus 447 What was that snaky-headed Gorgon shield
:
Milton,
That wise Minerva wore, unconquer'd virgin, Wherewith she freez'd her foes to congeal'd stone?
Browning, Protus 4
Erechtheus:
Arachne
Graeae: D
Vergil, Geor. iii. 113; Hyginus, Fab. clxvi. Ovid, Met. vi. 5 sq. Hesiod, Theog. 270.
34
Erinyes (Eumenides): Hesiod, Theog. 185; Aeschylus, Eumeni. 241, iv. 490, xi. 14 Vergil, Aen. ii. 337, 573, iv. Pope, Ode on St. Cecilia's Day 69 469, vii. 447 The Furies sink upon their iron beds And snakes uncurl'd hang list'ning round their heads.
ides; Ovid, Met.
;
;
:
Spenser, F. Q.
i.
iii.
36, v. 31.
2.
DIVINITIES OF THE
itself
WIND
its
43.
As the wind
shares
one of
principal
so
characteristics,
swiftness,
the divinities to whose activity was traced the power manifesting itself in the wind resembled the represent-
ways. A middle ground between the two seems to have been occupied by the Harpyiae ('the swift robbers'), Aello (' storm-swift'),
atives of the thundercloud in
many
and Ocypete
('
swift-flying
'),
whose
field of action
was
and head and bust of a woman, and the body of a bird, figures which were intended to suggest their swiftness. They came to be regarded as goddesses of death, swiftly snatching away their victims evidently because it was supposed that souls, being like air or smoke, were, on
;
They are represented as winged with a horse's shape, also as creatures with the
leaving the body, carried away by the storm. 44. Closely allied to the Harpies are the wind gods
proper, who often, as enemies or as lovers, pursue them for in the earliest times the wind gods too were believed
;
have the form of a horse, later that of bearded men, taking long strides, with wings on their shoulders and Sometimes they have faces often also on their feet. looking both ways, forwards and backwards, a conception which probably has reference to the changeableness in the direction of the wind. There were distinguished in
to
35
the earlier times only Boreas (north), Zephyrus (west), Notus (south), and, somewhat later, Eurus (east), who were considered the sons of Astraeus ( starry vault of
(
heaven') and Eos (<dawii ). Like the Harpies, they are of a rapacious nature. Boreas, in particular, kidnaped the beautiful Orithyia, the daughter of Erechtheus, from
the bank of the Ilissus, a story which perhaps typifies the morning rnist being carried off by the wind. The
ruler of the
winds
is
),
who
them confined
45.
in a cave.
According to the
(Lat.
Hermes
but Avith him, as in the case of Apollo, the relation to his native element was almost entirely obscured by that
is concerned purely with human So his fundamental signification can be determined only by the agreement of many of his functions with the attributes of the wind and with those of divinities that can be clearly shown to be wind
which
life
and customs.
He was the messenger of Zeus, because the gods. wind seems to come from heaven and for the same reason he came to be considered the son of the god of the heavens and of Maia, the goddess of the rain clouds, and was said to have been born on Olympus, or in the
;
cave Cyllene (i.e. the cave of the clouds). As messenger he carried the herald's staff (K-qp-vKciov, Lat. caduceus), which had originally the form of a walking stick, or
shepherd's
46.
staff,
branch twisted.
On
36
In worshiped in race courses and wrestling-schools. with the idea that he was god of the wind, harmony he was equipped with wings, which he is usually represented as wearing on his shoes or feet, and on his
traveling-hat (Petasos) or head, but not, at least in the classical period, on his shoulders. Because the wind
and an easy process of reasoning, the also, by And because the wind, without any apparent lyre. reason, arbitrarily changes, Hermes is the god of changing, unstable, fortune and chance, so that his herald's
whistles,
is
Hermes
syrinx, and
assumes the significance of a magic wand, which similarly among the ancient Germans was an attribute of
staff
the wind god Wodan. But as the traveler is dependent on the favor of wind and weather, and in a foreign land can always get his bearings by noticing the direction
of the prevailing wind, so Hermes guide of the wanderer. Sacred to
of
is
or the stone columns that served as waywhich were often adorned with a head of Hermes marks, and called Hermae. 47. The wind gods are robbers and so Hermes too was
stones
looked upon as the one who drives away herds of cattle (clouds), and hence as god of thieves and deceivers.
Boreas kidnaps a beautiful maiden; Hermes plays the impetuous lover with the nymphs. It was also in connection with this idea that he was regarded as the pro-
moter of all sorts of rural fertility in animals and plants. Yet the fact that this attribute of his is brought forward prominently would appear striking, if he were not also, as
the son of the rain goddess Maia, properly to be regarded In ancient as the rain bringer, dispensing fertility.
37
times a manifold fructifying effect was really attributed On this ground Hermes was regarded as to the wind. god of shepherds (Nomios) and bestower of an abundance
and herds (Epimelios) and, at the same time, of prosperity in general, an idea which again is conof flocks
It nected with his significance as a god of fortune. was because of this latter attribute that he was supposed to promote and foster money-making on land
So merchants, whom he protected on their journeys, spread his worship everywhere, and especially carried it to Koine, where as Mercurius (' god of merchandise ') he was held in the highest esteem. 48. As the Harpies were considered goddesses of death,
and
sea.
carrying off human beings, so Hermes Psychopompos into the lower world the souls (' soul-conductor ) guided
?
(*l/vxrj
'
breath
')
of the dead,
He was also as airy, or sometimes as like birds or bats. thought to send visions, which are intimately associated with souls, and so became god of death and of sleep.
of shepherds Hermes was worshiped in the country, particularly in Arcadia as god of commerce, in Athens and other commercial cities. In the former con;
As god
ception he carries, besides the above-mentioned symbols, a ram in the latter, especially in the imperial epoch, a In the older art he is usually represented as purse.
;
a mature
origin
is
man with pointed beard, but in works of Ionic often even then conceived of as a youth. Later
form
;
he
is
chlamys, or is almost entirely nude, as he appears in the splendid statue by Praxiteles found at Olympia. The
child
upon
his
arm
is
carrying to the
nymphs
is
38
Harpyiae: Hesiod, Theog. 267; Vergil, Aen. Hygiuus, Fab. xix. Pope, Im. of Horace Sat. ii. 25 Oldfield with more than Harpy throat endued.
;
212, 245;
Trist.
iii.
10.
14,
11.
8;
i.
93, 370,
Aen.
II. ii.
xii.
365
Shak., Troilus
and Cressida
:
3, 37.
Zephyrus
Ut
Homer,
147
Vergil, Geor.
Soft
is
i.
371
the strain
5.
when Zephyr
gently blows.
Chaucer, Prologue
;
Aeolus: Homer, Od. x. 1 sq. ; Vergil, Aen. Od. iii. 30, 13 Pope, The Rape of the Lock iv.
i.
50-101; Horace,
:
81
wondrous bag with both her hands she binds, Like that where once Ulysses held the winds Thebais i. 488 ;
At once the rushing winds with roaring sound Burst from th' Aeolian caves, and rend the ground.
Shak., King Henry VI.
pt.
ii.
iii.
2, 92.
(Mercury): Homer, II. i. passim, Od. i. passim ; Hesiod, Theog. 938 Ovid, Fast. v. 673 sq. ; Vergil, Aen. iv. 222 sq., 558; Hyginus, Fab. clx., cci. Milton, Par. L. xi. 132
;
Hermes
Shak., Love's Labour's Lost v. 2, 940 The words of Mercury are harsh after the songs of Apollo
King Richard
iv. 15,
III.
ii.
1,
88,
Hamlet
ii.
iii.
4, 58,
;
36, Troilus
and Cressida
2,
45
3.
DIVINITIES OF LIGHT
49. Among the divinities of the sky belong the representatives of the sun, the moon, the stars, and other phenomena of light. Apollo was probably a sun god, whose worship was very common among the Dorians and
39
beautiful and good, and was likewise the chief Aside representative of good morals and civil order.
that
is
Phoebus (' shining '), and Epopsios (' overChrysocomas (' golden-haired '), seeing '), and his worship as guide of the wanderer, and protector of navigation (A. Agyleus, and Delphmios ;
his epithets, Lycius
('
from
bright
'),
cf.
by
warm
season.
On
(May;
June) his birthday was celebrated, especially in Delos for, pursued by the hate of the jealous Hera, his mother Leto, after long wandering, finally found a refuge upon
rocky island, which up to that time had been without a fixed abode, driven about over the waves
this
itself
;
and
there she bore the twins, Apollo and Artemis. In some localities, particularly at Delphi, the next most important place of the worship of Apollo, there was celebrated at
about the same time the festival of his return from the land of the Hyperborei', a mythical realm of eternal light and blessed peace, which in later times was supposed to be in the far north while in other places it was believed
;
that Apollo spent the winter months in Ethiopia or Lycia, i.e. in the southern land of light.
Immediately after his birth he is threatened by of winter and darkness; yet the young god victoriously subdues them. This is the sig50.
nificance of the story of his killing the dragon or Delphyne, the victory which was celebrated
festival of
vegetation in the pastures and cultivated fields depends upon the sun, Apollo becomes the god of pastures
and protector of
cattle breeding
40
feast of the
('
the best god ), the representative of agriculture, cattle raising, and bee For the same reason harvest culture, was called his son.
festivals
and Aristaeus
Delia; in Sparta, the Hyakintliia; in Athens, the TharAt the Spartan festival the vegegelia and Pyanepsia. tation, ripened and killed by the beams of the sun, was
represented under the form of Hyacinthus, the personified spring flower, and the legend was that Apollo, at play, had inadvertently killed this favorite of his by a
rows and a silver bow. The far-shooter' (HeJcatos, HeJcaergos, Hekatebolos) comes to be considered an aid in battle (Boedromios) but, on the other hand, since in the south the heat of the midsummer sun produces the much-dreaded pestilence and other sicknesses, he becomes
'
;
of atone-
the
TJiargelia in
Yet, as he sends sickness, so he can ward it off therefore he is invoked as the defender from evil (Alexikdkos)^ savior (Soter), and healing physician (Paieon, Ulios) ;
and the physician of the gods, Aesculapius, is considered These characteristics, together with his genhis son. eral nature as a god of light, by being transferred from
the realm of the physical to that of the spiritual, cause him to appear as a redeemer from all guilt and the chief
41
representative of purification and expiation (A. KatliarIn this capacity his attribute is the laurel branch sios).
with which one needing pardon is dismissed; (Sd<t>vrj) but the symbol of the wolf, which has been interpreted as an emblem of the fugitive murderer, is probably only the result of a confusion between the words AVKOS (< wolf ') and AVKCIOS (' the bright one').
other phases of Apollo's nature were subordinate to his special character as god of ora52.
all
In later times
prophecy in all Greece was his oracle at Delphi, which is mentioned as early as the Iliad; but he gave oracular responses also
cles.
place
of
Didymoi near Miletus, Claros near Colophon, and Abai in Phocis. At these places a priestess, who by drinking from a sacred spring had brought herself into an inspired state, uttered significant words, which were then interpreted by a priest standing beside her, and thus became a response. At Delphi the priestess, who was called Pythia (< the understanding one/ cf. lirvOonrjv),
at
on a tripod over a fissure in the ground while giving the oracle. Furthermore, since the oracular responses of Apollo were usually composed in verse, Apollo was considered the protector and friend of poetry, song, and its customary accompaniment, namely, So he became leader of the playing on the lyre. Muses, and received as an additional emblem the lyre invented by Hermes. 53. In art Apollo is represented by the ideal form of
sat
a perfectly-developed, slender youth, beardless, except in archaic art, and with long hair falling in ringlets.
nude, or with only a little cloak (clilamys) thrown over his shoulder or his left arm. As his disis
Usually he
42
variety of this type, Apollo at rest, with his arm resting on his head, seems to have originated with Praxiteles. As leader of the Muses he is represented with a long,
Ionian garment (chiton), a lyre, and a laurel wreath, a conception which, at least in the more animated form of its representation, is believed to have been furnished
by Scopas.
ethical side of Apollo's nature was more fully developed, by degrees his significance in the visible world was forgotten, and the active force typified in the
54.
As the
sun god was transferred to Helios, who was probably from a very early period regarded by the inhabitants of
the island of Rhodes as their chief god. For, while his worship in the rest of Greece was relatively insignificant,
there he was so highly honored that a brilliant festival, the Helieia, was celebrated for him. At the same place was erected in his honor, about 280 B.C., at the entrance of the harbor, the celebrated bronze statue (made by
Chares of Lindos) known as the Colossus of Ehodes. On account of the apparent movement of the sun it was
believed that Helios rode along in the heavens in a glitHe himself tering chariot, drawn by four swift horses.
was pictured to the imagination as in the bloom of young manhood, with a sparkling crown upon his head, which was covered with long curling locks. From the sea goddess Clymene he begot Phaethon ('the shining'), who
perished in an attempt to manage the chariot of the sun for a day in his father's place. On the island of Thrinacia
were said to be pastured the milk-white herds of and flocks of sheep belonging to Helios, by which are probably to be understood the bright little clouds
cattle
43
7
which with us also are frequently described as " fleecy/ and among the Germans are called Schdfcihen (' lambkins '). The heliotrope, which always turns toward the sun, was
believed to be his beloved Clytia metamorphosed into a
flower.
The moon among the Greeks and Romans was given a feminine name (o-eA^v^, luna), and the power which people believed they saw exerted by it was as55.
cribed to goddesses,
names.
who in different tribes bore various During nights when the moon shines bright the
more abundantly than
at other times; therefore regarded as dispensers of dew,
dew
the
falls
moon goddesses were and as protectresses of the growth of plants, as well as of the abundance of game depending on vegetation for The relation to human fertility which is promifood.
nent in
life of
all
these goddesses
is
moon appears
upon the
56.
Juno), who was worshiped but especially in Argos. She is the throughout Greece, protectress of wedlock (H. Zygia, Teleia), and the jealous
in the
The representative of lawful wives and their rights. goddess of birth, Ilithyia, was considered to be her
daughter. The festivals in honor of Hera always came on the day of the new moon, and likewise the celebrations of her marriage with Zeus (tepos ya/zos), at Argos in the spring, at Athens in the month of weddings, Gamelion
(January February). Being spouse and sister of Zeus, she was the queen of the gods, and as such Polyclitus represented her (about 420 B.C.) in his statue of gold and
ivory
made
44
between Argos and Mycenae. There she sat upon a throne, fully clothed, a crown upon her head, in her right hand a pomegranate, which on account of its many seeds was an emblem of fruitfulness. In her left hand she held the royal scepter, with a cuckoo, the messenger
of spring, as its crown. Similarly it is as a queen that she appears before us in the excellent colossal bust of the Villa Ludovisi, a work which may belong to about
B.C.
To Artemis
Zeus and
particu-
sister of Apollo,
was attributed
her influence upon childbirth (A. Iltihyia), another one of the various functions of moon goddesses,
namely, a fostering care over the abundant game in field and forest. She then developed into the goddess of hunting (Agroteira), probably because, being a light-goddess, she is, like her brother Apollo, armed with bow and arrows moreover, the swift motion of the moon through
;
At Athens
the festival of Elapliebolia (' stag hunt') was celebrated in her honor, and the hind is represented as her constant
companion.- As a chaste and austere maiden she punished with great severity every violation of chastity. The hunter Actaeon, son of Aristaeus, who had accidentally surprised her and her attendant nymphs bathing, was changed by her into a stag, that his own dogs
might tear him to pieces and on similar grounds she killed the giant hunter Orion, who was then transferred as a constellation to the sky.
;
58.
and
field that
she also
45
was called Artemis yet she seems to have been originally, like Ehea and Cybele, only a local, modified type of the great maternal goddess of nature and war, Ma or Ammas (' mother'), who was worshiped by the Indo-
To
the
nymphs
attending Artemis as huntresses correspond the Amazones (' Amazons ) in the service of this Asiatic goddess.
Evidently they were originally like her, and lived, according to the ancient myth, on the southern coast of the
on the Thermodon and Iris in Pontus, Ma herself was in that very The Amazons fought as region, at Comana on the Iris. bold riders against Bellerophon, Hercules, Theseus, and
Black Sea,
i.e.
Achilles.
as powerful, beautiful riders, with short garments and semicircular (or Boeotian) shields, and are frequently
battle-axe.
Amazon fatigued
In Athens, Delos, and Epidaurus, Artemis bore the So it is clear that the epithet tKarrj ('the far-shooter ). of the Titan Perses ('the goddess Hecate, daughter shining one') and Asteria ('naiad of the stars ),
7
although her worship developed quite independently, was by nature very closely related to Artemis. Hecate was
worshiped principally in Caria and the adjacent provinces of Asia Minor, where she seems to have been an ancient goddess of the country. In Greece proper she was really worshiped only on the east coast, where she was particularly honored on the island of Aegina by secret rites or In earlier times she was repremysteries (Hysteria). sented with but one body, fully clothed, in her hands two
46
burning torches, which were attributed to her because of her character as a goddess of light; but Alcamenes (toward the end of the fifth century B.C.) made for the
Acropolis at Athens a figure representing her as having three bodies (T/OITT/OOO-CDTTOS, triformis). These three bodies
were placed back to back so that one of them constantly, moon, looked towards the left, another, like the waning moon, towards the right, while the one standing between them, like the full moon, turned her face towards the beholder. The dish and measure that she carlike the crescent
ries in representations of this
penser of dew.
).
Hecate was a kind of patron goddess of the belief in ghosts and witchcraft, and, as a natural consequence, a
goddess of the lower world. The first of these functions belongs properly to the moon goddess as the mistress of
the dismal nighttime but she came to be considered a witch because she herself, i.e. the moon, has the power of
;
changing her own form, a trick that plays an important Therefore she was regarded as part in all witchcraft.
the mother of the enchantresses Circe and
Medea
('the
association with shrewd/ 'the cunning woman'). the realm of the dead, however, was based on the idea that night and the world below are in general closely related it was also believed that at its setting the moon sank down
;
Her
gloomy was commonly recognized. fikotia) 61. After the activity of these older forms had thus passed over into other spheres, Selene, or Mene, assumed
Hecate (Ckthonia,
the functions of the
moon goddess
47
the place of Apollo. Therefore in worship, which kept in the strictly to the ancient ideas, she stood quite In mythology her husband or lover is background.
probably stands for the sun god who has entered into his cavern (eVSixo), i.e. the sun after it has set, with whom the moon goddess is united on the night of new moon. According to the Elean version of
Endymion.
He
forth fifty daughters begotten by him, the representatives of the fifty months in the cycle but in the Carian myth the of the Olympian games
the
hunter, or herdsman, Endymion, was sleeping in a grotto of Mount Latmus, when Selene approached him by
stealth, to kiss the beautiful sleeper.
62. The heroines Europa, Pasiphae, and Antiope (the mother of Amphion and of Zethus) are to be regarded as representatives of Selene, and may, of course, be considered rivals of Hera. The Cretan-Boeotian Europa
('
the wide-seeing
'
'),
daughter of Phoenix, or
sister of
('
Cad-
mus and daughter of Agenor and Telephassa shining moon goddess), was kidnaped on the
the far-
shores of
Sidon or Tyre by the bull-formed sun god Zeus Asterios (a divinity probably of Phoenician origin) and carried
where she became the mother of Minos and Ehadamanthus. A Cretan also, and perhaps originally like her, is Pasiphae (' the one shining on all '), the daughter of Helios and Perseis ('the glittering'). She became the mother of the Minotaurus, a monster which had the body of a man and the head of a bull. His father was the Cretan bull, i.e. the same bull-formed Zeus Asterios, whose worship was prominent at Gortyna, with whom king Minos also, the husband of Pasiphae, must probably be identified.
off to
Crete,
48
63.
Iii
The morning star, Heosphoros figured in mythology. or Phosphorus (' light-bringer/ Lat. Lucifer}, is represented as a boy carrying a torch the brilliant constellation Orion, as a giant hunter, with club raised aloft. Orion was carried off by Eos and killed by Artemis.
;
His dog is Sirius ('the glittering'), the brightest of all the fixed stars, at whose rising the hottest time of the The Bear looks anxiously year, dog days, commences.
around at Orion, and the rain goddesses, the starry group
of the Pleiades, flee before his snares. Later, after the of the Babylonians, all the individual groups example of clear-shining stars were conceived of as picturesque figures, and by tales of metamorphoses were associated
First
among the
light-divinities of
another sort
stands Eos ('dawn/ Lat. Aurora), sister of Helios and Selene. As dispenser of the morning dew she carries
pitchers in her hands.
The brightness
of
the daily
phenomenon which she represents caused to be attributed to her a saffron-yellow robe, arms and fingers beaming with rosy light, and glittering white wings. On account
of her swiftness she
chariot.
is
her son
As she had carried off Orion, so she stole TIthonus away when he was a beautiful youth, and obtained for him from Zeus the
killed
Memnon was
by Achilles.
grant of immortality, but not of eternal youth. Therefore he withered away beside her, and as an old man,
weakened by
65. The swiftness with which the rainbow bends itself from heaven down to earth caused Iris, its representative,
49
messenger of the gods, so that large wings and a herald's staff (KYJPVKUOV) were attributed to her. In the older parts of the Iliad she appears as the messenger of Zeus afterwards Hermes performs this function, while As the rainbow was considered the she serves Hera.
;
134.)
Apollo
Homer,
II.
i.
9,
14
Arjrovs
/ecu
Aids vibs,
>
Ovid, Her.
viii.
83
Apollinis arcus
Met.
i.
452
sq.,
ii.
24
Vergil, Aen.
iv.
376
Augur
et
Apollo,
iv. 3,
clxi.
QJQ
Milton,
Hymn
on the Nativity 176 Apollo from his shrine Can no more divine, With hollow shriek the steep
:
of Delphos leaving.
Pope, Thebais
i
i.
577
739
But fir'd with rage, from cleft Parnassus' brow Avenging Phoebus bent his deadly bow.
of the
Shak.,
8, 29, 3, 25,
Taming
Shrew
pt.
Ind.
ii.
37,
iv.
iii. ii.
6, 11,
iii.
v.
20,
Hamlet
iv. 1,
289
Leto: Homer,
Fab.
cxl.
;
11.
iv. 9.
;
:
Ovid, Met.
160; Hyginus,
Keats,
Endymion
861
of Latona.
Python
Thebais
i.
i.
438
sq. ;
Hyginus, Fab.
cxl.
Pope,
When by
E
With orbs
a thousand darts the Python slain unroll'd lay cov'riug all the plain.
50
363
sq. ;
Vergil, Geor.
;
Hyacinthus
28
Whilom did slay his dearly-loved mate, Young Hyacinth, born on Eurotas' strand, Young Hyacinth, the pride of Spartan land
But then transformed him to a purple flower, Alack, that so to change thee Winter had no power!
Poem
ii. 34 sq. Hyginus, Fab. clii., ; Suggested by the Hangings in Dublin Castle
:
cliv.
Finding, too late, he can't retire, He proves the real Phaeton, And truly sets the world on fire.
Pope, Weeping 13
The Baby
Shak.,
iii. ii.
in that
sunny sphere
iii.
Two Gentlemen
:
of
Verona
1,
153,
pt.
6, 12.
Artemis (Diana)
Aeternum telorum
Intemerata
Ovid, Saec.
colit.
amorem
Amor.
1
;
Her. iv. 87, Met. iii. 180 sq. ; Horace, Car. Fab. clxxxi. Dryden, The Secular Masque 27 Hyginus, With horns and with hounds I waken the day, And hie to the woodland walks away I tuck up my robe, and am buskined soon, And tie to my forehead a wexing moon.
iii.
2, 31,
Pope,
Summer
And
62
iv. 2,
Love's Labour's Lost pt. i. i. 2, 29 F. Q. i. vii. 5 Chaucer, Knight's Tale 824. Spenser, Actaeon: Ovid, Met. iii. 174 sq. ; Hyginus, Fab. clxxx.; Shak.,
Shak.,
Night's
i.
Midsummer
Dream
1,
1,
89,
39, Titus
Andronicus
;
i.
316,
Titus Andronicus
ii.
3, 63.
Orion: Homer, Od. xi. 572; Ovid, Fast. v. 493 sq. ; Vergil, Aen. i. 535 Hyginus, Fab. cxcv. Cowper, Translation from Milton, To his Father
;
51
iii.
Amazones
Fab.
609
clxiii.
Vergil, Aen.
i.
Hyginus,
iv.
Hecate:
;
Ovid, Fast. i. 141, Met. xiv. 405; Vergil, Aen. Greene, Fr. Bacon and Fr. Bungay ii. 176
:
And
hell
and Hecate
Shak., Hamlet iii. 2. 269, King Lear Europa Ovid, Her. iv. 55
:
1,
112
Spenser, F. Q.
i. i.
43.
deum;
;
Met.
ii.
843
sq. ;
Hyginus, Fab.
clxxviii.
Pope, Thebais
i.
Shak.
v. 4, 45.
ii.
Minotaurus
Aen.
in 21
vi.
24, Met.
xli., xlii.;
Eos (Aurora): The dawn goddess (Sanskrit US AS) is celebrated hymns of the Rig Veda. Praises are addressed to her for all the blessings of the light. So we find the sacredness of the dawn in the literature of Greece and Rome. Homer, II. ii. 48
:
'Hobs
fJitv
pa Oea Trpoae^a-ero
/ma.Kpbi>"0\viJLirov.
Ovid, Met.
iii.
149:
croceis invecta rotis
;
Cum
Her.
iii.
Vergil, Aen.
iv.
585
Geor.
iv.
544, Aen.
iv.
i.
Now when
Weary
xi.
51
Shak.,
:
Midsummer
Night's
Bream
iii.
2, 380.
Tithonus Ovid, Amor. ii. 5, 35, Fast. Iris: Homer, II. ii. passim; Ovid, Met.
803
;
vi.
i.
473.
ix.
Milton,
Comus
These
83
my
Iris'
Shak.,
The Tempest
iv. 1, 70.
52
II.
It was probably at a later date than the developof most of the divinities thus far discussed, who embody forces operating in the sky and the air, that
66.
ment
another series of real divinities grew up, out of the individual beings to whose activity were ascribed the
forces operating on the earth itself in fire, water, and the fruit-bearing soil. The activity of these divinities
was therefore now no longer confined to a particular spot and a single action; but they were believed to exert their power in a similar manner in all phenomena of the same sort.
1.
67.
Among
,
these
Hestia
hearth/
Lat.
Vesta) the representative of the hearth fire, was in worship hardly distinguished at all, as a rule, from the ele-
ment which she represented. To be sure, she took part in all sacrifices at which fire was necessary, but was
seldom actually represented as an individual.
so represented,
it
When
was
as a
garment and
206).
2.
WATER
DIVINITIES
of the water divinities, likewise, remained always very closely associated with their element; only in particular, Poseidon, the ruler certain ones of them,
68.
Most
and Sileni, under the influence of worship, myth, and art, develof the sea,
(<
Centaurs
')
53
Oceanus is a oped into richly-endowed personalities. mere personification of the ocean itself, which flows around the earth like a stream. From him were supposed to proceed not only springs, rivers, and seas, but also all other things, even the gods themselves, in harmony with the conceptions of the physical world adopted by the most ancient philosophers, which were suggested by the island-like situation of Greece. Therefore Oceanus was represented as a fatherly old man. He was said to live with his wife, Tethys (' nurse/ grandmother '), on of the earth, without frequenting the the western border
'
Somewhat
terized,
old
man
of the sea
'),
in a grotto deep down in the sea, and not all the secrets of his element, but, like the
sea gods of the Babylonians and the Germans, possessed But whoever wished to question inscrutable wisdom.
overpower him in a wrestling contest, and, in spite of his faculty for assuming various forms, like the water itself, must compel him to impart his knowledge. From him were derived, differently named at different places, the sea gods Kereus (' flowing'), Proteus ('the
him must
first
and Phorcys, as well as Triton (< the streamOf these the first ing'), and Glaucus ('the glittering'). three were represented in human form Nereus and Proteus possessed the gift of prophecy and of changing their forms while Phorcys and his wife Ceto (' sea monster ') ruled over the sea monsters and other
firstborn
'),
; ;
monsters.
On
and
Glaucus,
the other hand, Halios Geron, Triton, probably by association with Assyrio-
54
Babylonian prototypes of this sort of sea gods, prototypes which had reached Greece through the Phoenicians and
lonians, were, at a later period, still regularly represented as heterogeneous monstrosities in which a fish's belly was
river gods, Centaurs, and Satyrs. 70. By the side of these lower sea divinities stand the
Nereides, i.e. daughters of Nereus, as representatives of the friendly forces operating in the sea, or, conceived of from the standpoint of the senses, as embodiments of
the playful, bewitching waves. They were represented in the form of beautiful maidens, among whom Amphithe one streaming all around ), wife of Poseidon, Thetis, the mother of Achilles, and Galatea ('the milkwhite one 7 ), the shy maiden loved by the Cyclops
trite
('
7
Polyphemus, are especially prominent. Akin to them is Ino-Leucothea, whose aid was invoked in perils on the sea; for the Nereids themselves are called also Leucotheae ( white goddesses ). In another aspect she became a secondary form of Aphrodite-Astarte, who is powerful on the sea, just as her son Melicertes was developed from the sun god and city god Melkart, of Tyre. Like Melkart, Melicertes was worshiped as a protector of Yet he was represented as a child in the arms sailors. of his mother, who, it was said, in a fit of madness had cast herself with him into the sea sometimes, however, he appears standing upon a dolphin. His other name,
( 7
;
wrestler 7 ), refers to his taking part in the He had a sanctuary celebration of the Isthmian games.
Palaemon
(<
had been an
55
The
and whirlpools
destructive power of the threatening rocks in the sea was personified in the imagi-
The former nary sea monsters Scylla and Charybdis. as a maiden, out of whose body grow six dogs' appears heads, which pull the rowers out of ships but Charyb;
dis is described
by Homer
Both were
of these beings
He
the ruler of the sea, and, at the same time, of all waters in general. As a symbol of his power, and as a
val-
leys in the mountains, he carries a trident, really a sort of harpoon which was used by fishermen in spearing
He was
lived chiefly by fishing and sailing the lonians, sea, just as his son Theseus was their national hero. Yet his worship is more ancient than that of The-
who
seus
it
reached
Asia, where the Panidnia were celebrated in his honor on the promontory Mycale as a festival of the united
these corresponded in the fatherland the games established by Sisyphus and Theseus on the isthmus of Corinth, which were originally as
Ionian colonies.
To
purely
Ionian
as
the
old
Amphictyonia
('
sacrificial
Sancleague') of Poseidon at Calaunia near Troezen. tuaries of Poseidon were situated in many places, all
over the Peloponnesus and on other coasts but his dwelling place was said to be, with his wife Amphitrite, in a golden palace in the depths of the sea, near Aegae
;
in Achaia.
56
73.
As
all
is
Poseidon
springs and rivers flow from Oceanus, so the ruler of them all, evidently because it
was supposed that they had a subterranean connection with the sea, which embraces all the land (Gaieochos) and penetrates it. Earthquakes were thought to be caused by these subterranean waters, and Poseidon was
therefore called the earth-shaker (Ennosigaios). So he was worshiped in many inland localities also, where
inland lakes, rapid rivers, or earthquakes, seemed to prove the presence of his power, as was the case in Boeotia, Thessaly, and Arcadia. Yet, since he thus
represented
springs
fructifying moisture emanating from and rivers, he became also the protector of
the
with Demeter.
The animal usually sacrificed to Poseidon, which was likewise his symbol, was the horse and so he rides along over the sea in a chariot drawn by dark horses with golden manes, whenever he commands the waves
74.
;
Hippios) he begot Arion, the battle horse of Adrastus, from an Erinys or Harpy, or by a thrust of his trident caused him to spring forth from a rock, just as in a similar
(P.
and winds.
manner
Athena he
a salt spring on the Acropolis of Athens. 75. Besides the horse, the bull (representing the wild
might of the waves), and, in sharp contrast, the dolphin, which appears chiefly when the sea is quiet, are sacred and dear to Poseidon. In art, Poseidon is represented as
similar to Zeus, only there appears in the features of the former less of the lofty repose than of the powerful might which the nature of his being calls for. Usually
57
and
sailors
in the
is
ancient times he
uncovered. part of his body 76. Like the waves of the sea, rapid rivers, by their
is
ungovernable power, and their roaring, which resembles bellowing, gave rise to the idea that in every such stream a prodigious bull manifested his activity. Therefore in
very ancient times the representations of river gods were formed like bulls, with a human countenance. But as early as the time of Homer, they appear in human form throughout and only rarely does the later art indicate their nature by little bulls' horns, but usually makes them recognizable by the attribute of an urn. The most
;
important of them are Achelous, the opponent of Hercules, and Alpheiis, the lover of the fountain nymph
Arethusa, who fled before his wooing through the sea to the peninsula Ortygia at Syracuse. The most beautiful statue of a river god which can be definitely identified is
that of the Nile,
77.
now
in the Vatican
museum.
The Centaurs and Sileni also were probably river and may originally have come to be considered gods, companions of Dionysus on account of the insatiable of course they are also thirst implied by their nature very closely connected with him on account of the rela;
fruitfulness
of the earth.
The
Aeolic-Thessalian Centaurs, sons of Ixion and Nephele cloud ), were natives of the mountains of Thessaly, (' particularly of Pelion and Ossa, also of Pholoe on the
7
western border of Arcadia, and are probably to be regarded as embodiments of the wild, rushing streams of these mountains. So their origin is the cloud; they
58
rage, devastate tilled lands, carry off women (just as Acheloiis and Alpheiis were ardent suitors), hurl rocks and trees torn up by the roots, and hunt, i.e. surprise,
the wild animals hiding in the dry channels, and carry them along with them. Like the waves of the sea, which
go swiftly raging by, they are represented as having the form of a horse. In the oldest sculptures the hinder
part of a horse's body is simply joined to the back of a complete human body later, the human body near
;
the hips is represented as changing into the forequarters of a horse, producing a formation which reminds one of
the shape of the river gods and Tritons. The Centaurs fought (by inundations ?) in the plains of Thessaly with that mythical-historical people, the Lapithae (' stone-
men
').
as the builders
of the rocky citadels of Thessaly (and closely related to the Phlegyae and Minyae), especially since the inhabitants of most of these localities venerated as their
founders heroes of the Lapithae with names similar to those of the places themselves.
78.
The king
Phlegyas. Centaurs.
of the Lapithae was Ixion, son of Ixion was regarded as the father of the Because he had boasted of the favor of
Hera, Zeus caused him to be punished by being twisted upon a swiftly-turning wheel in the lower world. He
was succeeded by his son Pirithous, the friend of TheIn consequence of their mania for drink, an idea seus. whose origin can be easily explained in the nature of wild torrents, the Centaurs came into conflict with Hercules, as well as with Theseus and Pirithous, and in
such struggles were annihilated by those heroes. Quite unlike the other Centaurs was Chiron ('the handy/
59
probably to be considered as the representative of a brook that did not produce devastation. He dwelt in a cave on Mount Pelion, and was celebrated as a physician and prophet. (Cf. 'the old man of the
skillful
'),
who
is
So he became the friend and tutor of the sea/ 69.) heroes Achilles, Jason, and Aesculapius, just as Silenus, the genius of the fountain, cared for the young Dionysus.
79. The Sileni were Ionian-Phrygian gods of rivers and springs. Their bodies, like those of the Centaurs, were originally half man and half horse. As their
chief representative appears the Silenus Marsyas, the As god of the river rising at Celaenae in Phrygia.
flute
the inventor of the Phrygian art of playing on the he was said to have challenged Apollo, the player
to
of the lyre, to a contest, and, when vanquished by him, have been flayed alive for his presumption. His
skin was said to have been then inflated and hung up near his spring in Celaenae. Yet, as skins served
as vessels for water, perhaps the skin was originally attributed to him, as the urn was to the river gods, only as a symbol of his character and so possibly the story
;
of this contest
to be regarded as a later invention to explain the attribute. In Athens the Sileni accompanyis
ing Dionysus were confused with the Peloponnesian The latter had the form of a goat, and about Satyrs. the time of Pisistratus had been introduced from Corinth as a feature of the festal songs and dances of the
greater Dionysia.
The animating force of water was represented particularly by the Nymphae ('Nymphs'), who, being pictured to the imagination as young maidens or women,
80.
lightly
clad,
freely
giving
fruitfulness
of
all
kinds,
60
lar effect.
appeared in every place where water exhibited a simiThis happened most naturally at the springs
which had served as places for worship since most ancient The Naiades ('Naiads'), who represented such times. springs, were more exactly distinguished by mussel shells or other receptacles for water. But Nymphs were almost as frequent wherever an abundance of water produced luxuriant plant growth; and so the Oreades had their abode in the forests and pastures of the mountains. Moreover, the vital strength of every individual tree was
explained as the activity of a soul-like
nymph living in who was designated as a Dryad it, tree nymph ') or Hamadryad (< the one united with the (' tree ). Accordingly a nymph was supposed to live only
so long as she
was herself
whose
power she represented. If the spring dried up, or This kind of the tree withered, the nymph also died.
vital
intermediate step between the divinities of water, and the special divinities of growth.
nymph marks an
Oceanua
Homer,
II.
xiv.
246
et
v.
81
Tethys
Homer,
II.
xiv. 201
re
Ovid, Met.
ix.
Nereus:
Od.
i.
Ovid,
;
15, 5
Spenser, F. Q. i. iii. 31. ii. 11, 39; Vergil, Aen. Milton, Comus 871 :;
499
Amor.
ii.
419; Horace,
By hoary
Spenser, F. Q.
i. iii.
31.
iv.
Proteus
sq. ;
Homer, Od.
Geor. 129
:
365,
sq. ;
Vergil,
ii.
iv.
429
viii.
;
730
Pope,
Dunciad
61
King Henry VI. pt. iii. iii. 2, 192 Spenser, F. Q. i. ii. 10. Triton Hesiod, Theog. 931 Vergil, Aen. i. 144, x. 209 Ovid,
;
:
Met.
ii.
Milton,
Comus
873
By
:
sq.,
Ibis 555
Milton,
Comus
And
Nereides
xi.
:
Homer,
:
37 sq.
Ovid,
Amor.
ii.
11, 35,
Met.
361.
Amphitrite
Ovid, Met.
i.
14
I
Keats,
Endymion
ii.
108
would
offer
my crystal coffer
;
To Amphitrite.
Thetis
xi.
:
Homer,
II.
i.
Ovid, Met.
i.
221
sq. ;
Hyginus, Fab.
:
Shak., Troilus
and Cressida
3,
Ovid, Met.
ii.
v. 333 Hesiod, Theog. 976 Hyginus, Fab. ii., iv. Melicertes (Palaemon) Ovid, Met. iv. 523 sq. ; Hyginus, Fab.
Ino (Leucothea)
iv.
Homer, Od.
:
488
sq. ;
i.,
Charybdis
xiii.
Scylla
:
Vergil,
xii.
i.
104 sq.
200,
iii.
Ovid, Met.
420;
Milton,
Or when Ulysses on the larboard shunn'd Charybdis, and by the other whirlpool steer'd
ii.
660
Vex'd Scylla bathing in the sea that parts Calabria from the hoarse Trinacrian shore.
Poseidon (Neptunus)
129
;
xviii.
clvii.
;
1,
The Tempest v. 1, 35, Coriolanus iii. 1, 256, King Richard II. 63, Macbeth ii. 2, 60, Antony and Cleopatra ii. 7, 139 Spenser,
;
F. Q.
i.
iii.
62
Acheloiis
:
547
sq.
Alpheus:
694:est
Alpheum fama
Ovid, Met.
v.
hue Elidis
383
amnem
599
sq. ;
Pope, Thebais
i.
Alpheus hides His wand'ring stream, and thro' the briny tides
first
Where
Unmix'd
is
past,
sq. ;
Vergil, Geor.
iv.
344
sq.
Milton, Lycidas 85
O
Met.
Centauri (Centaurs): Hesiod, Shield of Herakles 178 sq. ; Ovid, xii. 210 sq. ; Vergil, Aen. x. 195 sq. ; Hyginus, Fab. xxxiii. Pope, Vertumnus and Pomona 71 Spenser, F. Q. i. xi. 27.
;
xii.
250
sq. ;
Vergil, Geor.
iii.
ii.
457
Hygi-
Fab.
ii.
21-24
Vergil, Geor.
38
Hyginus,
St. Cecilia's
;
Day
i.
67
Rape of the Lock ii. 133 Spenser, Phlegyas: Ovid, Met. v. 87;
Thebais
i.
F. Q.
v. 35.
vi.
Vergil, Aen.
618; Pope,
851
In Phlegyas'
doom thy
Condemn'd
to furies
He views
Marsyas:
clxv.
high.
;
382 350
sq., Fast.
vi.
707
Hyginus, Fab.
Naiades
Endymion
Homer, Od.
690
:
x.
sq. ;
x. 10, Geor.
ii.
,,
Pope, Fable of Dry ope 18 And to the Naiads flowery garlands brought.
Shak.,
The Tempest
iv.
1,
128.
63
DIVINITIES OF
GROWTH
itself in
81.
The
shows
the fruitful-
ness of the ground the ancients could not explain except on the hypothesis that such forces were to be traced to
living beings, whose activity was patterned after the analogy of the reproduction of animals or human beings. Therefore it was assumed that in the ground were effective
divinities.
associated the idea of fructifying moisture; with the latter, that of the reception and absorption of such
moisture and the development of the seed into the For the same reason fructification appears as plant.
an important element in the nature of those gods especially connected with water in the sky and on earth, the rain-bringers Zeus and Hermes, Poseidon, the river gods, and the Centaurs and in the Satyrs, Pan, and Dionysus, this idea has embodied itself quite independently. On the other hand, Demeter, Gaea, and the originally for;
eign goddess, Rhea-Cybele (to whom the Ephesian Artemis and Aphrodite are akin), are goddesses of the receptive The nymphs discussed above fruitfulness of the earth.
(
82.
80) are very closely related to these goddesses. The SatyrI (' Satyrs ? ) are the only individual divini-
more recent times, that originally belonged There the mountain districts were inhabited principally by goatherds, whose imagination embodied the fruitfulness of the earth in the form of the he-goat, because to them this animal naturally appeared
ties found, in
to the Peloponnesus.
to be the one especially adapted to produce fruitfulness. In their transition into human form, the Satyrs retained
from this
the
earlier stage of
little tail as
64
83. Closely allied to the Satyrs is the exclusively Arcadian shepherd god Pan ('the feeder '), whose father was the shepherd god Hermes, and whose mother was a
daughter of Dry ops, i.e. a Dryad. For, like the Satyrs, he is represented in the form of a he-goat, and so
probably be considered merely a type of these fructifying divinities, who was transformed by the im-
may
agination of the Arcadian shepherds into a divine shepherd. First of all he produces fruitfulness and increase
of the flocks.
in the
summer he dwells
mountains, and in the winter descends into the plains. In the heat of midday he rests, at evening he plays
and as accessory employments he carries on hunting, fishing, and war. Yet it is he that inspires in the flocks, and likewise in their masters, sudden fright (' panic '), hurrying them along into unreasoning flight. His love for the moon goddess Selene is probably to be explained by the fact that moonthe shepherd's flute (syrinx)
;
with dew.
His worship spread from Arcadia by the way of Argolis'and Athens to Parnassus and even to Thessaly. In later times, on account of the relation between his nature and that of Dionysus, he came to be looked upon as an attendant of that god, probably by being associated
84.
with the Satyrs. Finally, the theorizing of the philosophers, by changing the signification of his name (making
and by comparing him to the great goat-shaped god of Mendes, in Egypt, transformed him into a great, all-powerful ruler and pervading spirit of the life of nature as a whole, at whose death all this life
TO
'
TTOLV
the universe
'),
65
represented as bearded, with the legs, tail, ears, and horns of a he-goat; often, however, in human 'form, distinguished only by the animal-like expression of his face.
He was
Dionysus (Lat. Bacchus) himself, the most imporof these divinities of fruitfulness, was once reptant
85.
resented in animal form, namely, that of a bull, richly endowed with procreative power, as is seen from certain
of the customs of his worship in Argos and Elis and at a later period the bull and the he-goat were still considered the most acceptable offerings to him. Nevertheless,
;
Zeus-man or Zeus-hero ') had and from there, its origin, properly speaking, in Thrace an emigration of part of the inhabitants toward the by southwest, it reached Phocis and Boeotia, and, later,
the worship of Dionysus
'
('
Attica also.
The Phocians
Phrygians of Asia Minor, among whom he was worshiped, under the name Sdbazius, as son of Ma, the mother of
the gods.
In his native home, and later also in Greece, the worship of the god was celebrated by women, who
86.
in sensual ecstasy, carrying torches, reveled by night through the mountain forests in so-called 'orgies/ a
word that
connected with 6/oyaw (' to swell with fructifying moisture'). These devotees of his became in mythology sometimes his nurses, the nymphs, and sometimes
is
his
attendants, the
('
ades
To
fill
Bacchae (' exulting ones '), Maenones '), and Thyiades (' raging ones '). raving themselves (and typically, at the same time,
the rural districts represented by them) with new procreative power, they tore in pieces young animals (and,
in the
earliest
times,
66
and which, according to the older idea, filled his place. Then they drank the blood, which was regarded as the seat of vital strength,
flesh,
(whom
fancy pictured as a sleeping child in a winnowing fan) to dispense fruitfulness in the year just beginning. The god was called also Bacchus or lacchus from the shouts
uttered by them.
same purpose that in the rural districts of Attica the phallus was carried about during the lesser Dionysia, which came at the same time in the year (Poseideon = December-January). In Athens itself, at
87.
It
was
for the
('
flower festival
),
this
favor of the god was sought by the ceremony of his symIn bolic marriage with a queen representing the soil.
the times of the republic her place was filled by the wife of the ArcJwn Basileus.
88. As the bull and the he-goat, of all the animals, were especially sacred to Dionysus, so in the vegetable kingdom were the evergreen ivy and the vine swelling with juice, on account of their luxuriant growth. The vine
was especially appropriate also for the reason that the enjoyment of wine drinking has the faculty of increasing
the sensual excitement peculiar to this worship to a point of enthusiasm that is like madness (drunkenness). (Of.
i
'
Spirit/
spirits of wine.')
Such an
effect,
moreover, cor-
responded to the nature of Dionysus, who was so generally believed to be taken into oneself in drink that his
relation to wine gradually drove into the background all other phases of his character. As Lyaeus ('freer from
67
he carries for a symbol the vine branch or the In his honor was celebrated at tliyrsus (vine-prop?).
festival of the Oschophoria (' carrying about of vines'), as well as the Lenaea (' feast of the wine press'); while 011 the island of Naxos, which
abounded in wines, and was the center of the worship of Dionysus among the islands having an Ionian popuThis' lation, the ditliyrambus was probably first sung. was originally a simple drinking song in honor of the god, which in Corinth became a chorus rendered by From this was develsingers in the costume of Satyrs. oped the dithyramb of Pindar at the festivals of Dionysus In Athens, however, it became the drama, at in Thebes. first in the form of tragedy (rpayw&a = goat song )
(
'
'
Here, at the spring games of the greater Dionysia, the presentation of the dramas that grew out
or satyr-play. of the dithyramb came at length to constitute the essential part of the festival.
89.
most
When
i.e.
sacrifice of children
the real significance of the above-mentioned was no longer understood, the Orphic
poets,
the representatives of the religious poetry developed by the worship of Dionysus, about the time of Pisistratus, attempted to explain that sacrificial cus-
story that Dionysus himself, when a child, or in animal form, had been torn in pieces by the Titans, and had therefore received the name Zagreus.
There was, however, symbolized in that fable an idea based 011 an actual process of nature for Dionysus really seemed to die in the fall. As the reproductive power of nature vanishes after the harvest time for a season, so its awakening in the spring, which in Athens was cele;
('
flower festival
'),
could be
68
looked upon as a resurrection of the fructifying god, and thus he could easily be regarded as having been temporarily dead. This was the case particularly at
' Delphi, and probably also in the mysteries' of Eleusis. 90. When this Thracian Zeus-hero and representa' '
tive
of productive moisture was introduced into the Grecian system of gods, he came to be regarded as the son of Zeus, the god of thunder and rain; and his
mother Semele (Earth?) was said to be the daughter of Cadmus of Thebes, because that was the chief place
After her premature death, continued the legend, Zeus concealed the yet immature child in his own thigh till the time for it to be born. Then
of his worship.
Hermes carried it to the nymphs of Nysa, or the synonymous Hyades (' raincloud goddesses ') to be nursed.
91.
was raised
Even
Certain other myths relate to the opposition which to the introduction of this foreign worship. in Thrace, the very home of the god, barbarian
opponents of his worship were personified in Lycurgus, who pursued him and his nurses with a battle-ax. In the Minyaii Orchomenus he was resisted by the soberly
industrious daughters of Minyas, similarly in Argos by the daughters of Proetus, and in Thebes by king Pen-
theus
but these
all
perished when the god sent upon which sensual excitement finally
the marriage of
The legend
of
Dionysus with
Ariadne, a Cretan goddess very much like Aphrodite, which was localized on the island of Naxos (Dia) near Crete, is entirely in harmony with the nature of the
fructifying god; and the significance of this wedlock is indicated by the names of their sons, Oenopion (' wine-
69
Staphylus (' grape-cluster '), and Euanthes '), He is, however, associated the richly blooming '). (' the father of Priapus, god of gardens with Aphrodite as and flocks, who was worshiped at Lampsacus on the
Hellespont and was essentially like his father. 93. The oldest symbol of the worship of Dionysus
is
a consecrated post or pillar (the idea of which probably arose from a sacred tree) and from this, by the
;
addition of
mask and
clothing,
The
which he is bearded and fully clothed was the prevalent one till sometime during the fourth century B.C. later he appeared as a child on the arm of Hermes or of a
;
bearded Satyr. After Praxiteles represented him as a youth nearly nude, clothed only with a skin of a fawn, the nude and youthful form came to be universally
accepted.
94. Among the goddesses of the receptive fruitfulness of the earth, a prominent place was occupied by Demeter (cf. fj<r)Tr]p, Lat. Ceres), the protectress of grain, which is the chief means of subsistence. Her parents were sup-
posed to be Cronus, the sun god, who ripens the produce of the fields, and Ehea, whose nature is closely related to her own. Her epithets, Chloe (' green-yellow '), Karpophoros,
Slto,
and lulo
('
that the
95.
were offered to
her.
Her
where, with Core (' girl '), her daughter by Zeus, and with the youthful lacchus, i.e. Dionysus-Bacchus-Sabazius
70
originally at Athens), she was worshiped in public and 7 in secret ceremonies ('Mysteries ). Dionysus was here
considered sometimes the son of Demeter, and again of Core and the Zeus of the lower world, i.e. Hades.
The two goddesses were together termed honorable/ In the month Boedromion (Septemberor mistresses.'
'
'
October) of each year the people of Athens marched along the sacred road to Eleusis in a festal procession, in which sheaves of grain were carried in token of
thanks that the promise of the harvest was fulfilled. Here, in the darkness of the night, a torchlight procession took place, which probably stood originally for the renewal of the light in spring, but was at a later
period explained by the idea that Demeter had searched The sacred symfor her stolen daughter by torchlight.
bols of
the
;
goddess were
exhibited
to
the
initiated
and to remind them of the beneficence (Mystae) shown by her toward men in distributing grain, there was offered them after long fasting a drink, or pap, of water and meal seasoned with pennyroyal, the form
in which, at least in the
earliest
times, the
gifts
of
had been enjoyed. (Cf. the puls of the Romans.) Finally water was poured out (as a charm
Demeter
for rain), while, with eyes looking toward the heavens,
they cried,
Kvt
('
vt ('rain!'); and,
!
conceive
').
As a preliminary
Mysteries were celebrated in Athens itself in the flowering month Anthesterion (February-March), an occasion on which those that were to be received as members of the religious community in the fall had a provisional
initiation.
71
Demeter, of the beautiful ringlets/ who is the wife of Zeus, and is worshiped in the Thessalian Pyrasus ('land of wheat '), is only the goddess of
too,
In Homer,
'
the cultivation of grain, so that she seems to dwell not on Olympus, but in the grainfield itself. The sacred containing her legendary history, a hymn composed in Attica before the time of Solon, represents her in the same way Core, her daughter by Zeus, is
hymn
'
gathering flowers together with the Oceaninae, i.e. the daughters of Oceanus, in a meadow situated, according to the later version, near Enna in Sicily. When, among
other flowers, she plucks the flower of death, the narcissus, suddenly the ground opens (c/. the German
SMusselblume, Himmelsschliissel), and Hades, the lord of the world below, rises up out of it, and carries her away from the circle of her playmates. Without tasting food, her mother, torches in hand, searches for her for nine days, until from Hecate or Helios she learns who has kidnaped the girl. When Zeus denies her request for the restoration of her child, Demeter hides herself
in Eleusis, and in anger prevents the growth of all grain. Not until Zeus, in consequence of this action on her part, has at length decided that Core shall remain but a third
part of each year in the lower world does the goddess return to Olympus and again give fruitf ulness to the grain. The refusal of a complete restoration is confirmed by the
fact that Core has taken
the seed of a pomegranate (a symbol of fructification)/ 97. This legend plainly typifies the development of
the seed
itself, for
ing to Hesiod, grain was mostly that it was in the ground four
from the ground eight months. Moreover, among all the Indo-European races there is found an intimate connection between the concepts child and grain/ between human fructification and the fruitfulness of the grainfield; hence the effort was made to express the latter idea by symbolic actions, and by forms of speech properly referring to the former, which were apparently
< '
'
Thus, according to the Cretan myth, lasion from Demeter, on a thrice-plowed cornfield, begets It is, however, a Plutus, i.e. abundance of fruit, wealth. in which Demophoon, the little, sickly charming legend son of Celeus, king of Eleusis, under the nourishment of
indecent.
the goddess, flourishes like the germinating seed. Very closely related to him stands another of her Eleusinian
7 proteges, the hero Triptolemus ('the one plowing thrice ), who was worshiped as the first propagator of agriculture
and the founder of the Eleusinian cult. Demeter sends him abroad, furnished with seed corn and agricultural implements, on her own chariot drawn by serpents, to teach men agriculture and the milder civilization and
order following in the wake of agriculture. Therefore Demeter herself was revered as Tliesmophoros
political
law-giver '), particularly at the festival of the Thesmophoria celebrated in the month of seedtime.
('
In Arcadia Demeter was associated with Poseidon Hippios or Pkytalmias, and her daughter was there called The latter, as wife of Hades, Despoina (' mistress '). became also Persephone ('the ravaging destroyer'), i.e. the dread goddess of death and the mistress of the lower world, while, in harmony with her mythical character,
98.
78
she seems to have been worshiped in the Mysteries as a consoling example of one who experienced a resurrection
and a happy
after-life in the
lower world.
In the older art no fixed form was developed for Demewas always represented as motherly
As
and the poppy, a scepter or a torch. Her daughter is distinguished from her only by her youthful, maidenly figure and the two are often seen
ears of corn
;
side
by
The nourishing earth in its totality is represented by Gaea or Ge (Lat. Tellus or Terra Mater). She is the
99.
all,
animals, and plants, and hence was worshiped in Athens But because she as Kurotroplios (' nurse of children').
also receives back into her
bosom
all
is like-
wise goddess of death. She knows the secrets of the realm of death, which lies in the earth, and so she was
consulted as an oracular goddess, especially at chasms in the ground, which seemed to lead down to that realm,
The real belief probparticularly at Aegae in Achaia. ably was that she sent up the dead themselves to be
Kurotroplios she is represented sitting and holding children and fruits in her lap at her feet cattle and sheep are feeding. Far more frequently, however,
consulted.
;
As
represented as a gigantic woman, with only the upper part of her body in view, rising up out of the ground more rarely, with only the head appearing. In
she
is
;
.is usually handing over her son Erichthonius to Athena to be brought up. In later times she is reclining on the ground, holding a cornucopia; and this conception is the one followed in the personifica-
74
tions of various countries, islands, and cities, the last of which are frequently more definitely denoted by a
mural crown.
Ovid, Fast. iii. 737 sq., Ars Amat. iii. 157 Vergil, Spenser, F. Q. i. vi. 18. Pan Homer, Hymn xix. Ovid, Met. i. 699 sq. ; Hyginus, Fab. cxcvi.; Milton, Par. L. iv. 266:
Satyri
:
Eel. v. 73
While universal Pan Knit with the Graces and the Hours in dance Led on th' eternal Spring.
Pope,
Summer
50
song.
Endymion
Where
i.
78
Wordsworth, Sonnet v. Great Pan himself low whispering through the reeds.
Dionysus (Bacchus, lacchus, Lyaeus) Ovid, Ars Amat. i. 232 Purpureus Bacchi cornua pressit Amor
: ;
Met.
iii.
317,
iv.
2 sq.
Vergil, Aen.
i.
734:
Hyginus, Fab. clxxix.; Shak., Antony and Cleopatra Come, thou monarch of the vine, Plumpy Bacchus with pink eyne
!
ii.
7,
121:-
In thy fats our cares be drown'd, With thy grapes our hairs be crown'd!
II. xiv. 323 Ovid, Met. iii. 260 sq., Fast. vi. Fab. clxxix. Hyginus, Hyades Ovid, Fast. iv. 678, v. 164 Vergil, Aen. i. 744 Hyginus, Fab. cxcii. Pentheus Ovid, Met. iii. 513 sq. ; Vergil, Aen. iv. 469 Hyginus, Fab. clxxxiv. Ariadne Catullus, Ixiv. 251 sq. ; Ovid, Fast. iii. 473 Hyginus, Fab. xlii., xliii.; Keats, Endymion ii. 442:
:
Semele
;
Homer,
485
Never,
Since Ariadne
aver,
80.
was a
vintager.
ii.
Shak.,
Midsummer
Night's
Dream
1,
75
vii.
415
sq.
Vergil, Eel.
v.
33; Shak.,
iii.
Demeter
(Ceres)
Homer, Od.
125
Ovid,
Amor.
;
10,
in agris
7,
393
sg.,
:
Met. x. 431
Vergil, Geor.
i.
96
Pope, Wind-
sor Forest 39
Here Ceres'
Shak.,
gifts in
The Tempest iv. 1, 60. Narcissus Ovid, Met. iii. 346 sq. ; Shak., Rape of Lucrece 38. Plutus Shak., All's Well That Ends Well v. 3, 101. Triptolemus Hyginus, Fab. cxlvii. Persephone (Proserpina): Homer, Hymn to Ceres; Ovid,
: : :
Met. Fab.
v.
385
;
sq.,
Fast.
iv.
cxlvi.
Keats,
Lamia
i.
485; 63
Vergil, Geor.
iv.
487; Hyginus,
As Proserpine
Milton, Par. L.
iv.
still
Sicilian air.
269
.Where Proserpin gathering flow'rs Herself a fairer flower by gloomy Dis Was gather'd, which cost Ceres all that pain To seek her through the world.
Shak., Troilus
and Cressida
ii.
1,
37
Spenser, F. Q.
;
i. i,
37
11
Queen
of Hell.
III.
DIVINITIES OF THE
1.
LOWER WORLD
DEATH
DIVINITIES OF
the divinities of the upper world were patterned entirely after living human beings, so the god to
100.
As
whom
attributed a power (corresponding to that of Zeus) over the lower world and its inhabitants was formed in harmony with those ideas
in the time of
Homer was
(See
76
2
sg.)
Like his subjects, he is invisible, and hence is called Ai'doneus, Aides, or Hades, the invisible/ or the one rendering invisible' (d privative + tS-etv). This peculiarity is ascribed to the power of a helmet which he is accustomed to wear. A similar helmet is used by Sieg' '
was con;
sidered
the
brother
of
Zeus
the
and Poseidon
subterranean
indeed,
he was
himself
called
is
(Chtlionios)
him
her,
Hades
is
Persephoneia or Persephone, and like both ruler of the depths of the earth and
protector of the grain as long as it rests in the bosom of the earth. Eegarded in this aspect he carried the horn of
the
7
names Pluto
('
nus ('the illustrious ), and Eabuleus ('the benevolent ); while as the death god proper, Hades, he enjoyed worship
When
especially at Pylus ('gate' of the lower world) in Elis. praying to him it was customary to strike on the
ground with the hands, that the god might hear; and black sacrificial animals were offered to him, as to the dead themselves. The dark-hued cypress, which was
planted on graves and otherwise much employed in the worship of the dead, and the quickly withering narcissus
god of
realm.
see
sleep,
who
is
(Concerning his
wound
hand
of Hercules
143.)
(Pluto): Homer, II. passim; Vergil, Geor. Horace, Od. ii. 14, 7 Milton, II Penseroso 107
;
Hades
passim
;
iv.
:
467, et
77
Pope, Song by a Person of Quality v. Gloomy Pluto, King of terrors, Arm'd in adamantine chains.
Shak., King Henry IV. pt. ii. ii. 4, 169; 1224, et passim; Spenser, F. Q. i. iv. 11.
Hypnos
riam
Ixvii.
Daniel,
Delia,
Sonnet
Ii.
Tennyson, In Memo-
2.
DIVINITIES OF SICKNESS
AND HEALING
102. Since the death divinities possess power over life and death, when propitiated they may become health To those divinities, who ward off sickness and death. who seek help and healing they make known their will and counsel mostly by oracular dreams, just as the dead themselves are wont to appear to their friends in dreams. So Aesculapius (Grk. Asklepios)^ the most important of them, was an oracular god, closely related to Hades,
probably at first indigenous to the vicinity of the Thessalian town Tricca at the foot of Mount Pindus. He was
believed to dwell in the depths of the earth, and therefore, like the dead, was represented in the form of a
serpent.
His
priests,
piadae, practiced the actual art of healing as an occult science, so that the remedies which were apparently
prescribed by the god had the desired effect. They transplanted into Boeotia the worship of Aesculapius
god of healing, where it was combined with the similar worship of Trophonius at Lebadia. Afterwards they carried it also into Phocis and Epidaurus in Argolis.
as the
From
103.
there
it
reached
Rome
In Homer, on the other hand, Aesculapius has already reached the lower level of a mere me'dical hero
;
78
he
is
the son of Apollo, the god of healing, but is instructed in the healing art by the wise Centaur, Chiron. Since by his art he even calls back the dead to life, the
god of the lower world complains of him to Zeus, and the latter thereupon slays him with a stroke of lightning. His children are the physicians Machaon and Podalirius, and the personifications of health and healing, Hygea
health'), laso (' healing'), Panacea ('cure-all/ remedy for everything'), and Aegle ('the shining one/ 'the wonderful '). Aesculapius is usually represented as a kindly,
'
('
wise-looking man, standing, and with all the upper part He of his body bare, except the left arm and shoulder.
symbol a large staff, entwined with a pent, and often wears a headband.
carries as a
ser-
Aesculapius: Homer,
Pericles
iii.
II. iv.
,
Shak.,
2, 111
v. 41.
II. ii.
Machaon
Aegle
Shak.,
:
Homer,
732
:
Ovid,
Ex
Pont.
i.
3, 5.
Vergil, Eel.
vi.
21
Aegle,
Naiadum pulcherrima.
Midsummer
Night's
Dream
ii.
1, 79.
IV.
PERSONIFICATIONS
of the gods gradually becomes spiritualized, such forces as are not directly perceptible through the senses, but are rather of a purely spiritual
104.
As men's conception
nature,
whose
life,
public
divinities.
manifest as well in private as in are attributed to the activity of independent Thus that which we "know as a mere abstract
effect is
So are developed
(1)
the
79
justice; (2) the hostile divinities of war and strife (3) the divinities of fate, who determine all that happens to man.
Closely related to the genuine personifications of these spiritual forces are those attributes of older divinities of
nature which have been developed into independent figures (e.g. Athena-Kike). And in the case of some of these
(e.g. Aphrodite and Ares), even in their reception into the circle of the foreign lands before Greek gods, purely spiritual functions came so prominently
into the foreground as almost entirely to supplant their older signification in the natural world. It was not until
a comparatively late period that a similar result followed with such indigenous divinities as the Charites and Horae.
1.
In Greece Aphrodite (Lat. Venus) was preemithe goddess of love and of the beauty that inspires nently love. When in Homer she is derided by her sister Athena
105.
on account of her unwarlike nature, Zeus himself, smiling gently, comes to her defense with the explanation,
Not upon thee were bestowed, dear daughter, the deeds
Order thou rather, as ever, the delightful
of
war
affairs of marriage.
So Eros, love's longing personified, is regarded as her constant companion, and according to the later idea, as her son. In their train are found Peitho ( persuasion 7 )
(
to
whom
Aphrodite
while according to the Odyssey Aphrodite herself occupies Her parents were Zeus and Dione while this position.
;
80
daughter of Zeus and Hera. In Thebes Aphrodite was considered the wife of Ares, god of war and death, with whom she is associated in Homer. Their children were
Harmonia (' harmony ') who resembles Aphrodite herself when the latter is called Pandemos (' common to all/ and therefore unifying ) and the companions of the war god, Deimos (' terror ') and Phobos (< fright ').
'
7
106.
rodite appears to take the place of other goddesses (see also 117) indicate that she is not indigenous to Greece.
frequently called 'the Cyprian (Kypris), and as the cities where her worship appears to have been first carried on, Paphos, Amanthus, and Idalium, were situated in Cyprus, probably her original home was
is
As she
in
Homer
on
this island.
From
have reached Cythera and Sparta, Corinth, Elis, and Athens, and, in the other direction, Mount Eryx in Even in Cyprus, however, she was probably only Sicily. a local form of the Assyrio-Phoenician goddess of fruiteasily
fulness, Istar or Astarte (Ashtoreth Aphrodet ?). Their identity appears especially in their relation to the Se-
mitic representative of the vegetation of the springtime, Adonis ('lord'), who was worshiped principally in the
Syrian town Byblus and in Cyprus. Fancy pictured him as a handsome youth, beloved of Aphrodite, wounded in the chase in midsummer by a wild boar (the sun). He
till
dies immediately, and is then compelled to pass the time spring in the lower world with Persephone, who
is
his
107.
also the
myth
of
81
The latter of his names was him only because representations of him probably given were usually in the form of Hermae. Through a mistaken
explanation of this name, he was afterwards supposed to be a son of Hermes and Aphrodite (cf, Priapus). The
legend of Aphrodite's union with Anchises, king of Dardanus in Troas, whom she approached on Mount Ida and
to
she afterwards bore Aeneas, is likewise of oriental origin. Possibly Anchises and the son of Priam,
whom
the handsome Paris, who awards her the prize for beauty, may be as nearly identical as are Aphrodite and the beautiful
Helen,
whom
decision.
108.
worship, Urania ('the heavenly'), seems to have been borrowed from Astarte. For the idea that Aphrodite was
first
invented in
explanation of that appellation, and was based upon a false explanation of her epithet 'foam-born.' Similarly,
her relation to the sea cannot be explained from her significance in Greece, nor can her worship as Euploia ('bestower of a prosperous voyage'), Pontia ('sea goddess '), and the like, in which capacity the dolphin and the swan are her symbolic attributes. 109. In earlier times Aphrodite, like all the other
goddesses, was represented clothed but after the fourth century B.C. she appears also half-nude, or entirely so,
;
was conceived of as bathing, or as Anadyomene ('emerging from the sea'). The most beautiful example of a semi-nude Aphrodite is the famous Aphrodite of
since she
Praxiteles represented her as entirely undressed in the statue made for her sanctuary in Cnidus. As
Melos.
82
ancient times, probably even by the prehellenic population of Thespiae in Boeotia, Parion on the Hellespont, and Leuctra in Laconia. At Thespiae he was worshiped
under the very ancient symbol of a rough stone but he was there considered the son of Hermes, the dispenser of fruitfulness, and of the Artemis of the lower world (a goddess of earth's fruitfulness, much like Derneter and Persephone). In the Homeric poems, however, he does not yet 'appear as a divinity and Hesiod, though certainly acquainted with his actual worship, regards him
;
only as a world-engendering primitive force. 111. Himeros (Lat. Cupido), the longing of impetuous love, and Pothos, love's ardent desire, were after a while
distinguished from Eros but they were not recognized as actual divinities. Thus there was gradually developed
;
a plurality of Erotes not easily distinguished from each After the beginning of the fifth century B.C. Eros other.
was represented in
art as a
ten-
der years, with a flower and a lyre, a fillet (taenid) and a garland in his hands, often in company with Aphrodite,
as his mother.
and
he received as attributes a bow and arrow, for love's smart which he inflicted was Still later, through a misunderregarded as a wound.
also a torch
;
standing, the torch was supposed to symbolize the light of life, and Eros, like Aphrodite, was associated also with death and the lower world. The torch in his hand was re-
83
and just sinking down to sleep thus lie became practically identical with Thanatos, the god of death.
Finally, the Platonic conception, that love both blesses and curses and torments the human soul, was expressed by representing Eros as now flatteringly embracing, and again
cruelly torturing Psyche (' soul '), who was pictured as a butterfly ( 4), or as a maiden with a butterfly's wings. 112. The Charites (Lat. Gratiae, Eng. 'Graces'), the
goddesses of charming grace, were adored in the Boeotian city, Orchomenus, under the symbol of three rough
symbol which, like the stone of Eros in Thespiae, may have had its origin in the times preceding the In other localities, even in dominion of the Minyae. very ancient times, they were represented as three maidens, clothed in long robes, standing in single file, with instruments of music, or with flowers, fruits, and fillets, In this type they cannot be distinguished in their hands. from Muses or Nymphs. In Athens, after the fifth century B.C., they were usually united in a group, clasping each other's hands but not until the third century were they represented as entirely nude and embracing each other. 113. In the Iliad the individual divinity Charis is the but Homer is acquainted with a wife of Hephaestus whole family of Charites. Usually Zeus was considered their father, and. Eurynome (' the wide-ruling one '), a daughter of Oceanus, as their mother. Their names are
stones, a
;
usually Euphrosyne
life,'
('
cheerfulness
'),
Thalia ('bloom of
these
and Aglai'a ('brightness'). By names they are shown to have been goddesses of cheerful sociability, though they may have originally embodied particularly the glad charm of spring, and
'festal banquet'),
84
114.
predilection
its
dance and
Musae
of Zeus and Mnemosyne They were and were worshiped (especially on Olym(' memory ),
inventors/ Eng.
'
Muses').
pus in the district of Pieria, and on Helicon in Boeotia) at sacred springs, such as Aganippe and Hippocrene on Helicon, and Castalia on Parnassus, in cdnnection with
the
Orpheus, the representative of the Dionysiac poetry. In the Iliad and the older parts of the Odyssey their number is not yet fixed but in a more recent part of
;
the latter poem, and in Hesiod, they are, as is usual in It was not, however, until literature, nine in number. later times that their individual functions were more speCalliope (' the beautifulvoiced'), as the muse of heroic (epic) poetry, carries Clio (' she that praises ') writing tablets and a style
cifically
:
determined as follows
scroll;
Euterpe
the charmer'), lyric poetry, a double flute; Thalia ('joy of life'), comedy, a comic mask; Melpomene ('the
'),
;
tragedy, a tragic mask, and sometimes a sword Terpsichore ('joyful in the dance'), dancing, a lyre
singer
Urania (' the heavenly '), astronomy, a celestial globe Erato (' the beloved '), love songs, a cithara finally,
;
;
Polymnia
('rich in hymns') attends to the songs of divine worship, and therefore appears veiled and with garments drawn closely about her.
or
Polyhymnia
115.
The Horae,
as their
;
name
and
three seasons were distinguished, there were three corresponding Horae, represented as maidens in the bloom
85
In Attica they were named Thallo ( the one '), Carpo (' the fruit-bringer '), and, perblooming In Homer they open and haps, Auxo ('the increase! ').
1
shut the gates of heaven, i.e. they gather and disperse the clouds. Afterwards, also, they were considered the
dispensers of rain and dew. In art the regularity of the recurrence of the seasons was expressed by repre-
This, too,
made them appear as protectresses of order and so they were named also Eunomia ('good order'), Dike (< jusand Irene (' peace'). Irene was extensively worshiped in Athens as an individual divinity rising above the market place stood a bronze statue of her, made by Cephisodotus. She was represented holding on
tice
7
),
('
riches
'),
There
is
work
in
law '), (' who often bore the epithet Soteira ('savior'). She had sanctuaries at Athens, Delphi, Thebes, Olympia, and Troezen. She was represented as an austere, grave-looking woman, holding the cornucopia of blessing, and a balance as a symbol of justice, which weighs with exactness.
of these
171
Munich.
The mother
Aphrodite (Venus) Homer, II. iii., et passim; Ovid, Met. sq., Amor. i. 8, 42 Vergil, Aen. i. passim ; Horace, Od. i. 4,
:
iv.
Hyginus, Fab.
cxcvii.
i.
2,
93,
9,
Knight's Tale 244. Adonis Ovid, Met. x. 532 Caelo praefertur Adonis.
Vergil, Eel. x. 18
;
Hyginus, Fab.
ccxlviii.
Pope,
Summer
;
61
86
Him
i.
Henry VI.
:
:
pt.
i.
i.
6, 6,
Ovid, Met.
II. v.
UTT'
iv.
ii.
247,
AtVefas, rbv
ii.
Lff ^Kyx' H r ^ K 8?
A<f>podlTr).
i., et passim ; Hyginus, Fab. xciv. passim ; Vergil, Aen. i., et passim ; Ovid, Met. xiii. 665; Shak., The Tempest ii. 1, 79, Midsummer Night's Dream i. 1, 173, King Henry VI. pt. ii. v. 2, 62, Julius Caesar i. 2, 112, Antony and Cleopatra iv. 14, 53. Eros (Cupid): Ovid, Amor. i. 1, et passim ; Vergil, Aen. i. 658, 695 Byron, Childe Harold i. 9
;
299
Vergil, Aen.
II. ii.
Aeneas
Homer,
And where
Pope,
fire.
Summer
13
ye
coo]ing stteams>
The Tempest
ii.
;
:
Venice
2,
6, 38,
i.
4, 4,
Merchant
ii.
i.
1,
169,
1,
161,
103
Musae
ts
ovd
n
Homere
sq. ;
;
ii.
279
Ipse licet
Amor.
iii.
Vergil, Geor.
;
ii.
475
Milton, Par. L.
Descend from Heaven, Urania, by that name If rightly thou art called, whose voice divine Following, above th' Olympian hill I soar, Above the flight of Pegasean wing.
87
And And
Pope, Spring 11
sage Mnemosyne.
:
O let my Muse
Shak., Sonnet xxxviii.
of Daniel
;
Spenser, F. Q.
I see,
Pr. 2
Jackson
There's nine,
Who
1.
would refuse
first
to die a
rung, Clio, celebrate my name; 2. Euterp, in tragic numbers do the same. 3. This rung, I see, Terpsichore's thy flute. 4. Erato, sing me to the gods ah, do't; 5. Thalia, don't make me a comedy 6. Urania, raise me towards the starry sky 7. Calliope, to ballad strains descend, 8. And Polyhymnia, tune them for your friend. 9. So shall Melpomene mourn my fatal end.
;
; ;
Thou
Orpheus: Vergil, Geor. iv. 454 Ovid, Met. x. 3 sg., xi. 22 Hygimis, Fab. xiv. Pope, Summer 81 But would you sing and rival Orpheus' strain, The wond'ring forests soon should dance again; The moving mountains hear the pow'rful call, And headlong streams hang list'ning in their fall
;
; :
sq. ;
Ode on
St. Cecilia's
Day
in
113
Yet ev'n
death Eurydice he sung, Eurydice still trembled on his tongue, Eurydice the woods, Eurydice the floods, Eurydice the rocks, and hollow mountains rung
83
;
Temple
of
Fame
ii.
4,
;
51
feet
Two Gentlemen of Verona iii. 2, 78, Merchant King Henry VIII. iii. 1, 3, Rape of Lucrece 79.
2.
of
Venice
v. 1, 79,
THE
DIVINITIES OF
WAR
AND STRIFE
stirred
116.
88
a god of death dwelling in the depths of the earth, like the Zeus of the lower world (Hades-Pluto), and therefore also closely related to the earth's fruitfulness. Perhe was a real heavenly Zeus in Thrace, haps, however,
to
son-
own special characteristic. At any rate, as might have been expected from
the
early worshipers, he was developed into a wildly raging war god, and it was exclusively as such that he found entrance into Greece. Out of his ancient epithet, Enyalios, which seems to have referred to the wild war cry, was developed the idea that he had
character of his
companion a destroying war goddess, Enyo (Lat. There were also associated with him Deimos Bellona). terror ), and Phobos ('fright'), Eris the goddess of (' strife (Lat. Discordia), and the Keres, who were repreas a
7
'
sented as dark-visaged women in bloody robes. The Keres were believed to cause death in battle, and are
probably to be regarded as having been originally souls of the dead. Ares, however, represented only rude,
violent warfare, so that he was constantly forced to give way before Athena and whoever chanced to be
her proteges
Iliad). 117.
(e.g.
In Greece Ares was looked upon as the son of Zeus and Hera, and in Thebes, the most important seat The epic of his worship, Aphrodite was called his wife. harmonized two myths by making Aphpoets, however, rodite the wife of Hephaestus and at the same time the In Athens, where he was honored mistress of Ares.
?rayos
89
and of the tribunal that decided cases and death, her place was taken by the involving dew nymph Aglauros. In art Ares was represented as a young and powerful man, in early times bearded and with full armor; later, beardless and usually clothed only with a helmet and a chlamys. His symbol was the In worship he had as a further attribute an inspear. cendiary's torch, which was probably a symbol of the devastation produced by war.
Ares (Mars)
Met.
iv.
Homer,
II.
iii.
3,
27
iv.
346:;
passim ; Horace, Od. i. Dryden, Secular Masque 53 Mars has look'd the sky
:
6,
13
Hyginus, Fab.
clix.
to red
And
is fled.
Shak., King Henry IV. pt. i. iv. 1, 116, King Henry V. Chorus i. 6, Antony and Cleopatra i. 1, 4, Hamlet iii. 4, 57 Chaucer, Knight's
;
Tale 117,
et
passim / Spenser, F. Q.
:
i.
xi. 7.
Enyo
viii.
(Bellona)
Ovid, Met.
v. 155,
Vergil, Aen.
703.
3.
THE
in
DIVINITIES OF DESTINY
order and justice,
118.
When
human government
as opposed to the arbitrary will of the sovereign, gradually attained a commanding influence, it came to pass
that, side
were
rulers
side with the gods of earlier times, who represented entirely after the manner of human
by
of
order and
justice gained an independent importance by being personified in the divinities of destiny. In Homer, as in
still
90
vague one. The appointed lot, the Moera (more rarely found in the plural form, Moerae), or Aisa, is sometimes considered an expression of the will of Zeus; in
other parts of the Homeric poems
it
and he then,
like
the other gods, becomes merely the executor of its (or Therefore in Hesiod the Moerae are called their) decrees.
sometimes daughters of night, at other times daughters and Themis. They decide the fate of every man at his birth; and all the important events of his
of Zeus
especially marriage and death, follow their decrees. From the time of Hesiod three Moerae were distinlife,
Clotho (' spinner '), who spins the thread of guished life Lachesis (' allotter '), the bestower of life's lot
: ;
Atropos ('the inevitable/ 'the unrelenting'), who sends death. Accordingly in art they carry as symbols a and lots, sometimes also a scroll and a balance, spindle
as their
identified
119.
mother Themis does. By the Romans they were with their Fates (Parcae or Fata).
personified first in the idea of the part measHesiod, represented originally ured out (cf. ve'/W). She guards the preservation of the
Nemesis, also,
who appears
just measure; so her attributes are balance. Since she censures and
punishes
(ve/Aeoraa>,
violation of proper moderation, espeve/xeo-ioju,ai) every cially such as is occasioned by excessive self-confidence,
she becomes also the angry requiter and, as the one who subdues arrogance, she carries a bridle, yoke, and whip.
;
But by the dropping of spittle into her bosom and the loosening of her garment it is especially indicated that she is the goddess who warns against presumptuousness for to endeavor to shield oneself from the it was customary
;
91
consequences of such presumption by these signs of As the goddess who will requite in the self-abasement. world to come she was adored at Athens at the feast of the Nemeseia; but she enjoyed real worship only at
Rhamnus
Leda
see
120.
in Attica.
135.) latest of those personifications which gradually destroyed the old belief in the gods was Tyche Lat. Fortuna). She was indeed ( the lucky accident/
The
already personified by the earlier lyric poets, but did not enjoy any general adoration as a divine being until
faith in the
to wane.
In
of
penser of fruitfulness and wealth, as well as the disposer human destiny, and the rescuer from the dangers Then in many cases she came to be of sea and war.
regarded also as the protecting divinity of cities. As attributes she had the cornucopia and rudder, also a
rolling wheel or a ball, to indicate fortune.
121.
the mutability of
of such a goddess of chance, however, signifies properly nothing further than the denial of all actual divine power. So, after the destruction of
The worship
the
old
positive faith in
consciously
and benignly guiding the world and human destiny, the Grecian world was preparing itself for the reception of the new doctrine of salvation emanating from Palestine. For though philosophy for a while tried to revivify the old dead forms by filling them with ethical ideas, it
never could afford a really comforting, steadfast belief in a continued life after death, and in a justice that compensates for the defects of this earthly existence.
92
Parcae: Homer,
Verse
:
xx. 127;
Old
Hyginus, Fab.
clxxi.
life.
7; Vergil,
Aen.
viii.
334;
C.
called
of the early ages were but their worship as demigods (17/00*9) does not surely date back beyond the ninth, or perhaps the eighth, century B.C., when it was recognized among the
122.
'
Aeolian tribes, particularly by the Boeotians, with whom also the worship of ancestors, a custom of very ancient
In almost every case the origin, was always kept up. hero's grave, the customary place of sacrifice, was the central point of his worship. In art they usually appear as warrior champions, often 011 horseback, or sitting on a throne, or reclining on a couch in their grave and feasting (if this is the funeral meal reliefs '), correct interpretation of the Therefore besides their surrounded by their adorers. armor and horse, and the serpent which has been shown above ( 5) to be the representative of the soul, a cup became their usual attribute.
'
1.
THEBAN LEGENDS
Cadmus, the founder of Cadmea, to which he himeponymous hero owes his name, was the legendary ancestor of the noble tribe which settled on the site of the citadel of Thebes. At a neighboring spring dwelt a dragon descended from Ares. This Cadmus slew, and
123.
self as its
93
94
the brazen Sparti (' sown men ), i.e. the indigenous inAfter most of these had killed habitants of Thebes.
each other in the fratricidal war cunningly incited by Cadmus, he founded Cadmea with the help of the five
survivors,
i.e.
the
of
Thebes.
harmony
'),
who
of the Boeotian national god Ares and a myth that probably refers to the be-
organization.
Of
their
children,
At
last
Cadmus and
other heroes,
assumed the
form of serpents, but both were removed by Zeus to A later legend, emanating especially from Elysium. Delphi, transfers the home of Cadmus to Phoenicia, and makes him a son of Agenor, king of Tyre. According
to this version,
with his brothers, the national heroes, Phoenix, Cilix, and Thasus, to search for his sister Europa, who had and in his wandering he been carried off by Zeus and founded Thebes. reached Boeotia 124. Antiope ('the one looking toward you') was a
;
Boeotian-Corinthian, perhaps closely akin to Selene. On the mountain Cithaeron she bore the Zeus-begotten twins Amphion and Zethus, who are probably, like the Laco-
nian Dioscuri, to be regarded as divinities of light. When afterwards, being cruelly tormented by Dirce, the jealous wife of her uncle Lycus, she fled to Cithaeron, she met her sons, who had been reared by a shepherd. They did not recognize her. But on the occasion of a Dionysus-festival she was again caught by Dirce and in punish-
ment
was about
to be
dragged to death,
95
bound to the horns of a bull. Just then the sons learned from their foster father the secret of their origin, rescued their mother, and visited the cruel punishment with which she had been menaced upon Dirce herself, who after her death was changed into a spring near Thebes. The fastening of Dirce to the bull was represented in the second century B.C. by Apollonius and Tauriscus of Tralles in the marble group commonly known as "the Farnese bull," which is now in Naples.
in Thebes,
seven gates. The stones dragged along by the powerful Zethus piled themselves up in layers regularly of them-
by the magic of Amphion's playing on the lyre, a legend that was probably intended to glorify the regulating power of music, in which the same symmetry
selves
prevails as in architecture.
125.
who had
she had borne six sons and six daughters, she boasted that she was richer than Leto, who had but two children.
Mount Sipylus
self to death.
in
A representation of the killing of the children of Niobe was executed by Scopas or Praxiteles, probably for the This group was later brought city of Seleucia in Cilicia. to Rome. We are acquainted with most of its figures through Eoman copies (the most complete group of which
is
in Florence).
96
iii.
vi.
Pope, Thebais
And Cadmus
How with
:
searching round the spacious seas ? the serpent's teeth he sow'd the soil.
Hyginus, Fab.
:
clxxviii.
Amphion
Ovid, Met. Fame 85
vi.
:
271
of
Amphion
Strikes,
Thebais
i.
:
12.
Dirce
Fab.
Hyginus, Fab.
:
Niobe
Homer,
II.
xxiv. 602
Ovid, Met.
vi.
148 sq.
Hyginus,
LEGENDS OF ARGOS, MYCENAE, AND TIRYNS 126. As has been learned from excavations, the district of Argos had intimate relations with Egypt and Asia even
2.
as early as the flourishing period of the city Mycenae, a period which perhaps extended from 1450 to 1250 B.C.
The same relations appear also in the myths of this region; the story of lo and Danatis suggests an alliance with Egypt that of Perseus and the Pelopidae, one with Asia.
16,
the daughter of the river god Inachus, was beloved by Zeus; therefore the jealous Hera transformed her into a heifer, and caused her to be guarded by the many-eyed,
(Panoptos) Argus in the vicinity of Mycenae, at the command of Zeus, he was put to sleep and until, killed by Hermes, who perhaps thus won the epithet
all-seeing
( J
Argeiphontes ('Argus-slayer'?). Upon this lo was pursued over sea and land by a gadfly sent by Hera; but
Egypt she regained her human form, and bore Epaphus, the father of Danatis and Aegyptus.
finally in
Euboea
or
97
and became king of Argos. The fifty sons of Aegyptus followed them and courted them, but, with the exception of Lynceus, whom his wife Hypermnestra spared, were all murdered by them on their wedding night at the com-
mand of Danatis,
Argos (sons of the
Aegyptus stream) becoming quite dry in summer through the drying up of the springs (Danaides). In punishment for this murder the Danaides were compelled in the lower world to draw water in a perforated vessel, an idea that is closely connected with their significance as fountain
128.
nymphs.
Argos.
killed
descendant of Lynceus was Acrisius, king of Through an oracle he learned that he was to be
by a grandson. Therefore he concealed his daughter Danae in a brazen tower and kept her strictly guarded. Zeus, however, penetrated to her in the form of golden Acrisius rain, and she became the mother of Perseus. then shut both mother and child up in a chest and threw them into the sea. Simonides of Ceos, with delicate
poetic appreciation of their fearful peril, describes the situation as follows
:
When, in the carven chest, The winds that blew and waves
in wild unrest
Smote her with fear, she, not with cheeks unwet, Her arms of love round Perseus set, And said child, what grief is mine But thou dost slumber, and thy baby breast Is sunk in rest, Here in the cheerless brass-bound bark, Tossed amid starless night and pitchy dark.
: !
98
But if this dread were dreadful too to thee, Then wouldst thou lend thy listening ear to me Therefore I cry, Sleep, babe, and sea be still, And slumber our unmeasured ill Oh, may some change of fate, sire Zeus, from thee Descend, our woes to end But if this prayer, too overbold, offend
;
! !
Thy
justice,
yet be merciful to
me
(Translated by J. A. Symonds.)
Finally they reached the island of Seriphus, where they were brought to land by the fisherman Dictys.
Perseus had grown up, Polydectes, the ruler of the island, who was a suitor of Danae, and found the
son in his way, inveigled the young man into a promise to go and bring the head of the Gorgon Medusa.
When
Hermes and Athena, Perseus sue* ceeded in cutting off the head of the monster while she was asleep, that head the very sight of which but he escaped petrified every one who gazed upon it
By
the assistance of
from the pursuing sisters of Medusa only by borrowing the helmet of Hades, which rendered him invisible. In Ethiopia (Rhodes?) he rescued the daughter of Cepheus, Andromeda, who had been bound fast to a rock on the shore as a propitiatory offering to a sea monster which had been sent by Poseidon. Then after changstone by showing them the Gorgon head, and after fulfilling the oracle by killing his grandfather inadvertently by a throw of the discus,
ing
all
his enemies
into
99
he ruled in Tiryns with his wife Andromeda, and from there built Mycenae. 129. A more recent family, yet one that even before
the Dorian migration was powerful in Argos and a large part of the surrounding Peloponnesus, was that of Tantalus,
a mythological figure similar to Atlas, the mountain god, who bears up the heavens and To him, as the his name, too, seems to mean " bearer."
in Asia Minor.
is
;
He
son of Zeus, the gods vouchsafed their confidential intercourse, but by his gross covetousness and his presump-
Therefore he was cast and there stood, tormented by hunger and thirst, in the midst of water, under a tree loaded with fruits for water and tree alike receded as often as he stretched out his hand toward them. Acto another legend a rock hung over his head cording
tion he forfeited their favor.
down
constantly threatening to fall upon him. 130. The children of Tantalus were Niobe and Pelops, after whom the Peloponnesus (' island of Pelops ') is said
have been named. Pelops sued for the hand of Hippodamia (' tamer of horses ), the daughter of king Oenomaiis of Elis, and won her as a wager in a chariot race with her father, who lost the race, and perished, through the
to
J
treachery of his charioteer Myrtilus. The preparations for this contest were represented in the eastern pediment of the temple of Zeus at Olympia.
Atreus, the son of Pelops, was ruler of Mycenae after the death of Eurystheus. According to the older legend, which is followed in the Iliad, his brother Thyestes
inherited the
in a lawful manner.
On
the other hand, the later epic poets and the tragic
100
of terrible crimes.
writers entangle the descendants of Tantalus in a series According to them Thyestes robbed
his brother Atreus of his sovereignty and his wife, and brought about the death of his son. Atreus, however, after regaining the royal power, revenged himself by
slaying the sons of Thyestes and setting their flesh as food before their unwitting father. For this, Atreus, in turn, was afterwards murdered by a son of Thyestes,
Aegisthus,
131.
whom
and brought up
as such.
Agamemnon and
sons
of
Atreus, in due time dispossessed Aegisthus of the kingdom. The former became king of Mycenae, and the
the handsome son of with Helen, the wife of (' Troy '), eloped In order to avenge this outrage, the two Menelaus. Atridae ('sons of Atreus') collected a mighty Grecian army, whose leadership Agamemnon assumed. When the
latter
of
Lacedaemon.
Paris,
Priam
of Troia
hosts
at Aulis, contrary winds prevented their setting sail, because their leader had offended the goddess Artemis. According to the decision of the seer
had assembled
Agamemnon's daughter,
Iphigenia.
There-
upon the king sent a messenger to his wife Clytaemnestra at Mycenae, to tell her that she must send her daughter to the camp to be wedded to Achilles. When, however,
in response to this deceptive summons, Iphigenia arrived, and was dragged to the altar to be offered, Artemis inter-
posed and carried her off to Tauris (the Crimean peninsula), and a hind was found standing at the altar in place of the maiden. Agamemnon, now, with many other
heroes, proceeded against Troy.
Meanwhile Aegisthus
101
seduced Clytaemnestra, who was angry at her husband on account of the attempted sacrifice of Iphigenia and the guilty pair finally murdered the king when he returned
;
In Laconia,
Chaeronea, and Clazomenae, however, Agamemnon was worshiped in later times as a Zeus of the lower world,
under the name of Zeus Agamemnon (cf. Z. Basileus), in the form of a scepter, the symbol of dominion.
At the murder
Agamemnon,
Electra,
rescued
her
youthful
brother
Orestes, and took him to Strophius, king of Phocis, with whose son Py lades he formed a close friendship. When grown up to young manhood he hastened back to Mycenae to take vengeance on his father's two murderers. In the Electra of Sophocles, and still more in Euripides's play of the same name, Electra, whom her mother has so wronged, herself goads her brother on to the dreadful murder, when he hesitates at the sight of his mother.
Clytaemnestra falls first, pierced by her son's sword; But Orestes has scarcely afterwards, Aegisthus also. shed his mother's blood before the Erinyes start in his Eestless and miserable, he wanders about until pursuit. at the bidding of the Delphic oracle he goes to Tauris,
for the purpose of taking the image of Artemis which to Greece. Being caught in the attempt to carry this off, he is about to be slain as an offering to the
was there
goddess.
But there he
;
genia as a priestess
carrying with him his sister and the image of the goddess. Pylades, who has accompanied him everywhere, now marries Electra, while Orestes himself weds the beautiful Hermione, the daughter of Menelaus and Helen.
102
4,
19:
Centum f route
624
sq.,
ii.
oculos,
533
Tarn nuper pictis caeso pavonibus Argo. Vergil, Aen. vii. 791; Pope, Thebais i. 355: And there deluded Argus slept, and bled.
Spenser, F. Q.
i.
iv. 17.
Ovid, Met. i. 748; Hyginus, Fab. cxlix., cl. Danaiis Ovid, Her. viii. 24 Hyginus, Fab. elxviii., clxx. Danae: Ovid, Met. iv. 611; Vergil, Aen. vii. 410; Hyginus, Fab. Ixiii. Tennyson, The Princess vii. 167
Epaphus:
:
Now lies
And
the Earth all Danae to the stars all thy heart lies open unto me.
Perseus: Homer,
"Sappho"
Phaon 41
of
:
35;
xiv.
iv.
;
610
sq., v.
16
sg.,
Pope,
Sappho to
An
Inspired
Ethiopian
dame
;
Temple
Fame
:
80
And Perseus
Ovid, Met. iv. 737, v. 12 sq. ; Hyginus, Fab. Ixiv. Andromeda Ovid, Met. iv. 757 sq. ; Hyginus, Fab. Ixiv. Tantalus Homer, Od. xl. 582 Hyginus, Fab. Ixxxii. Pope,
Cepheus
Thebais
i.
345
The
18:
;
Hercule supposito sidera f ulsit Atlans 632 sq., Fast. v. 180 Vergil, Aen. iv. 481
;
Axem humero
Milton, Par. L.
ii.
torquet
stellis
ardentibus aptum.
306
With Atlantean shoulders fit to bear The weight of mightiest monarchies. Cowper, Translation from Milton, To his Father:
And
Pope, Thebais
i.
138
Affrighted Atlas, on the distant shore, Trembled, and shook the heav'ns and gods he bore. Shak., King Henry VI. pt. iii. v. 1, 36.
103
vi. 403 sq. ; Vergil, Geor. iii. 7; Hyginus, Ixxxvi.-lxxxviii. Ixxxiii., Hippodamia (Daughter of Oenomatis) Ovid, Her. viii. 70 ; Hyginus, Fab. Ixxxiv.
Fab.
Oenomaus
Thyestes:
Ixxxviii.
;
i.
Hyginus, Fab. Ixxxvii. passim ; Aeschylus, Agamemnon Agamemnon Homer, Sophocles, Electra Euripides, Orestes Ovid, Met. xv. 855 Horace, Od. iv. 9, 25 Hyginus, Fab. xcvii. Menelaiis Homer, II. passim ; Ovid, Ars Amat. ii. 359 Aen. vi. 525 Hyginus, Fab. cxviii. Shak., King Henry VI. Vergil,
Aegisthus
Rem. Amor.
II.
161
pt.
iii. ii.
2,
147
Paris: Homer, II. passim; Ovid, Epis. v., xv., xvi. Vergil, Eel. ii. 61, Aen. i. 27 Hyginus, Fab. xci., xcii. Helen: Homer, II. passim, Od. iv. passim; Euripides, Helen Vergil, Aen. vii. 364 Hyginus, Fab. Ixxix Shak., King Henry VI.
; ;
pt.
iii.
ii.
2, 146,
:
9.
;
Iphigenia
Ovid, Met.
xii. 31,
:
Ex
Pont.
iii.
ii.
62
;
Hyginus, Fab.
xcviii.,
cxx.
;
Orestes
Ovid,
Aeschylus, Choephori Euripides, Orestes, Iphigenia Her. viii. Hyginus, Fab. cxix. iv. 14 ; Ovid, Her. viii.
;
3.
CORINTHIAN LEGENDS
were intimate between Argos and
132.
The
relations
Corinth, which, in consequence of its situation, developed very early into an important commercial town, and was
As early as the especially influenced by Phoenicia. Iliad we find mention of the crafty, covetous Sisyphus,
ruler of Ephyra, i.e. the Acrocorinth, who later sank down to the level of a mere arithmetician and intriguer,
the type and copy of the average Corinthian merchant. Because he had offended Zeus he was condemned in the
lower world to keep eternally rolling a rock up a steep hillside, though it always rolled down again as soon
104
as
it
phus ishment may be considered a symbol of the waves of the sea ceaselessly rolling the stones to and fro on the
shore.
also characterized as
His grandson Bellerophontes (or, in a shortened form, Bellerophon) possessed the winged horse Pegasus. With the help of this horse, having been sent to Lycia, he killed the frightful Chimaera ('goat'), a monster composed of a fire-breathing she-goat, a lion, and a serpent. Originally this was an imaginative representation
133.
of the thundercloud sending forth the ragged, roaring, and serpentine lightning but later it probably symbolized also the volcanic phenomena of Lycia. Bellerophon
;
fought successfully with the mountainous race of the Solymi, the neighbors of the Ethiopians and Lycians of the inhabitants of the land of light), and also (i.e. with the Amazons. At last he attempted on his thunderhorse to enter heaven
to earth.
In
Corinth, as well as in Lycia, he received adoration as a divine being. Bellerophon, as is evidenced by his relation to Pegasus, the embodiment of the thundercloud, and by his killing the monster of the thunderstorm, was a
figure closely related to the lightning hero Perseus, was indigenous to the neighboring Argos.
who
Sisyphus
iv.
Homer,
175
; :
II.
xi. Ix.
593
;
sq. ;
Ovid, Met.
Pope,
Ode on
St.
Thy
Spenser, F. Q.
i.
stone,
Sisyphus, stands
still.
v. 35.
105
Ivii.
;
Spenser,
in partibus
288
Hyginus, Fab.
Ivii.
4.
LACONIAN LEGENDS
134.
place in Laconia was Amyclae, situated south of Sparta, and one of the chief seats of the worship of Apollo. Here, or in Sparta, ruled Tyndaretis and his wife Leda.
became by Zeus, who was enthroned upon the neighboring mountain Taygetus, the mother of the Dioscuri ('sons of Zeus'), Pollux (G-k. Polydeukes) and Castor. Afterwards, when Zeus in the form of a swan had approached her, she bore Helen also. To Tyndaretis she bore Clytaemnestra and in the later version Castor also, who was a mortal, was regarded as his son. 135. The Dioscuri, who were perhaps ancient divinities of light, had their chief abode in Laconia, Messenia, and Argos, but after a while their worship spread over the whole Grecian world, so that they were everywhere
The
latter
(AnaSome-
times their sister Helen was worshiped as a protecting She may be considered a moon goddess with them.
goddess, and was in later times called the daughter of avenging Nemesis only on account of her fatal signifi-
cance for Troy and the Greek people. Both Dioscuri were believed to ride upon white horses and, besides being a master of horsemanship, Pollux was regarded as
;
106
a powerful boxer. After the death, of Castor, who was slain by the Messenian hero Idas, Pollux obtained from
Zeus permission for himself and his brother to spend the time together forever, by living one day in the lower world and the next on Olympus.
art the Dioscuri appear usually as youthful riders, clad only in the chlamys, and armed with the lance.
In
As
was
their attribute
two
Leda: Homer, Od. xi. 298; Ovid, Her. xvi. 55, Met. Hyginus, Fab. Ixxvii. Keats, Endymion i. 157 Wild thyme, and valley lilies whiter still Than Leda's love, and cresses from the rill.
;
:
vi.
109;
iii.
2,
54:
Pollucem pugiles, Castora placet eques Fast. v. 709 sq.; Hyginus, Fab. Ixxx. Macaulay, Battle of Lake
;
Regillus
2.
:
Idas
Homer,
II. ix.
558
sq.
5.
HERCULES
Hercules (Gk. Herdkles) was the son of Zeus and the wife of king Amphitryon of (' strength '), Thebes, and thus was a descendant of Perseus. His
136.
Alcmene
names
In his youth, i.e. in Thebes, where the story of his youth is laid, he was called also Alcaeus (' the strong '), from which is derived His principal name, which is probahis epithet Alcides. of Argive origin, it has not yet been possible to exbly
are as various as his functions.
plain with
The second part, cules (/cX^s), certainty. like the fuller form /cXetros, to /cAeo? ('fame'); belongs, but whether or not the first part is connected with Hera,
,
who imposed
107
upon him his labors, cannot be positively decided. While he was worshiped especially by the Boeotians, Dorians, and Thessalians (as, indeed, it was with the
hero worship in its full development appeared first), yet from the earliest times in Athens, Marathon, and Leontini, he enjoyed divine honors as Alexikakos (' defender from evil '), and Kallinlkos (' gloBoeotians that
all
rious victor
').
representative of the wrestling art and therefore also as the founder of the Olympian games and his statue ap;
peared everywhere in the gymnasiums and adjacent baths, so that he became by such association the god of all warm
baths and other healing waters or springs. On account of his clearing the highways of enemies, he appears also He is as the god that escorts travelers (Hegemonies).
often attended
by his protectress Athena, more rarely also by Hermes and Apollo. 137. He was hated by Hera, just as were all the sons of Zeus begotten from other wives. Therefore, since Zeus had decreed the dominion over Argos to the next descendant of Perseus who should be born, Hera delayed the birth of Hercules until his cousin Eurystheus had seen the light of day in Mycenae, and had thus become ruler of Argos, and liege lord of Hercules. Evidently, however, Tiryns was regarded as the birthplace of Hercules for the dis;
tant Thebes, though spoken of in the Iliad as his home, never can have stood in such a dependent relation to My-
cenae as would be implied by the legend just mentioned. While yet in his cradle Hercules strangled two serpents
After he had
chastised
who had
upon Mount
108
Cithaeron, where he killed a powerful lion. When his father had fallen in battle against the Orchomenians,
Creon, the last of the Sparti, became king of Thebes, and to Hercules was given his daughter Megara as a wife.
of madness, which Hera decreed upon him, he killed his three children with bow and arrows. On his
In a
fit
recovery he was compelled in expiation of his crime to enter the service of Eurystheus, who laid upon him a
of difficult labors, the order of which varies in different versions of the myth. The collection of legends
series
describing these labors forms the connecting link between the Theban-Boeotian and the Argive-Dorian Hercules
to
myths. The latter of these two series of myths seems embrace the labors in their oldest form.
138.
in Tiryns, south of Mycenae, to which, indeed, the story of his birth points. (1) He fought at Tiryns, as he had
done on Cithaeron, with a powerful lion, which lived on Mount Apesas, between Nemea and Mycenae. After this he wore the skin of this lion, flung over the upper
part of his body, as a characteristic dress. (2) Accomhis friend and charioteer, lolaus, he went panied by
against the Hydra, a nine-headed water serpent in the marshy springs of Lerna, south of Argos. In place of every one of the monster's heads that was struck off
two new ones grew, until lolaus set the neighboring woods on fire and burned out the wounds (i.e. dried up the springs). The last immortal head Hercules covered with a block of stone. Then he moistened the tips of
venom of the monster. 139. (3) From Mount Ery man thus in Arcadia, from whose snow-covered summit a wild mountain stream of
his arrows with the
109
stream) was laying waste the fields of Psophis. Hercules pursued him up into the glaciers, and brought him in
chains to Eurystheus,
who
is
On
near Erymanthus, he lodged with the Centaur Fholus, who was named after the mountain and was a counterpart of Chiron, who dwelt on the
As Hercules was being there regaled with the wine which belonged to all the Centaurs in common, he fell into a quarrel with them, and finally Pholus and Chikilled most of them with his arrows.
Thessalian Pelion.
ron perished also by carelessly wounding themselves with some of the arrows. Then, after Hercules, still
nea and
011
operating in Arcadia, had (4) caught the hind of Cery(5) driven out the storm birds whose nests were
the lake of Stymphalus, birds that shot out their
the following expeditions were farther away. (6) Upon an Elean local legend rests the of the cleansing of the stables of king Augeas (< the story
scenes
of
The
beaming one ), of Elis. Though three thousand cattle had been kept there, the cleansing must be completed in
according to the tradition, Hercuaccomplished by conducting the river Menios (' moon river ') through the place. But upon a metope of the
a single day.
feat,
This
les
temple of Olympian Zeus, the only extant representation in art of this adventure, he is represented as using a
long broom. Augeas promised Hercules for his labor a tenth part of his herds, but did not keep his word
;
wherefore he and
slain
all
his
by Hercules
110
141.
last
in the series) of the robbery of the cattle of the giant Geryones (' roarer '), who likewise ruled in the far west
on the island Erythea ( red land '). In order to ride over Oceanus, Hercules compelled Helios to lend him his sun skiff then he killed the three-bodied giant with his arrows. When returning, he overpowered the firebreathing giant Cacus on the site of the future city of Rome, who had stolen from him and hidden in a cave a part of the cattle of Geryones which he had carried off. In Sicily, moreover, he defeated Eryx, a mighty boxer and wrestler, the representative of the mountain of the
(
;
same name.
(7)
bull,
of the Cretan
the ninth, the fight with the Amazons, the whose queen, Hippolyte, he is said to have demanded on a commission of Eurystheus, are perhaps borrowed from the legends of Theseus, who accomgirdle of
plished similar acts; but since Hercules's battle with the Amazons appeared in works of art somewhat earlier
than that of Theseus, the reverse process, namely that of a transfer from Hercules to Theseus, is not imposreceived the sible. (8) As his eighth task, Hercules command to fetch the horses of the Thracian king
Diomedes dwelt in the far north, and his were fed on human flesh. This task was accomhorses
Diomedes.
plished after throwing the cruel king before his
horses.
142. His last two adventures are closely connected with each other, both representing how Hercules, at the end of his life, laboriously obtained immortality by his
own
111
journeys into the lower world and into the garden of the These ideas, to be smre, were afterwards, with the gods.
union of the Argive and the Thessalian-Oetaean legends, supplanted by the myth that he destroyed himself by
the garden of the Hesperides the golden apples of rejuveand dwelt where the edge of the western sky is nation, gilded by the setting sun, he throttled the giant Anfire.
taeus, lifting
him up from the Earth, his mother, who was constantly supplying him with new strength. Then
he slew king Buslris in Egypt, who cruelly sacrificed all In the strangers cas*t upon the coast of his country.
name
Osiris. Finally, after liberating Prometheus, who had been chained on Caucasus by Zeus, he came to Atlas, who bore the heavens upon his shoulders (as every mountain apparently does). Hercules begged him to pluck three apples from the tree of the Hesperides. Meanwhile he himself took Atlas's place in bearing up
the heavens, or, in his own person went into the garden of the gods and slew the dragon that guarded the tree.
143. (12) The bringing up of the hellhound Cerberus from the lower world was put last, on the ground of its being the most difficult labor. Evidently it had been forgotten that the fetching of the apples that bestow eternal youth out of the land imagined to be in the extreme west
properly signified the reception of Hercules among the This latter thought was certainly represented in gods. the later idea (which likewise probably belongs to the
Argive legend) of the marriage of Hercules with Hebe ('bloom of youth ). She was the daughter and counterpart of Hera (who by this time had been appeased), while the
7
112
Italian legend unites its Hercules with. Juno herself. Hercules went down into the lower world at the promon-
tory Taenarum, freed Theseus from his imprisonment, chained Cerberus, and came up with them at Troezen
or
Hermione.
Another, perhaps an older, form of the same legend apparently to be seen in the story, mentioned as early
is
as the Iliad, of the expedition of Hercules against Pylus ('gate' of the lower world), during which he wounded with three-pointed arrows his inveterate enemy Hera, and
also Hades, the rider of the lower world. After the completion of the labors imposed upon him by Eurystheus,
not
to
480
is
B.C.
The third principal group of the Hercules myths formed by the expeditions located in Thessaly and on Oeta. To this group originally belonged also his sacking Hercules sued Oechalia, and his servitude to Omphale. for the hand of lole, the daughter of the mighty archer Eurytus, who ruled in Thessaliaii Oechalia. But though he defeated her father in an archery contest, she was refused him. A short time thereafter, in revenge, he hurled her brother Iphitus down from a precipice, although he was staying as the friend and guest of Herand later he also took the city, and carried lole cules To be absolved from this bloodwith, him as a captive. guiltiness, he went to Delphi; but Apollo delayed his
144.
;
answer.
it
Then Hercules
;
away
113
was now told by the oracle that he could be ransomed from his guilt only by a three years' servitude. 145. Hermes therefore sold him to Omphale, who was
commonly regarded as queen of the Lydians and as ancestress of the Lydian kings probably, however, she is only the eponymous heroine of a city Omphalium,
in later times
;
believed to have existed in early times on the between Thessaly and Epirus. For in her service border he scourged the Itonians, i.e., of course, the inhabitants of the Thessalian Itonus, where he also fought with the
which
is
mighty Cycnus. He punished likewise the sly thieves, whose home was near Thermopylae, the Cercopes, and But Lamios (or Laalso Syleus (< robber') on Pelion. the son of Hercules and Omphale, is merely the mus),
eponym
Trachis.
of
the city Lamia, situated not far north of Perhaps it was not till after the home of the
to the story
legend was transferred to Lydia that the poetic addition was made that Hercules clothed himself as a
maidservant and worked with the distaff, while Omphale adorned herself with his lion's skin and his club. 146. Directly connected with these legends, and, as
their field of action is in the neighboring Aetolia, probably allied in origin, is Hercules's wooing of Deianira
('
husband-destroyer
').
She was
.the
daughter of king
vines, where,
to gain possession of her, Hercules (probably as the representative of civilization) was forced to fight with the wild
river
god Achelotis.
The
latter appears
sometimes as a
natural river, again as a bull, and still again as a man with a bull's head. Not until Hercules breaks off one
of his horns does he acknowledge himself conquered, and offers, in order to recover it, to give in exchange the horn of
114
the she-goat Amalthea, i.e. the horn of plenty, from which issues a stream of nourishment and blessing. Yet this
horn properly belongs to Hercules himself as the dispenser of fruitfulness, in which capacity he was much
worshiped, especially in the country. A counterpart of the battle with the river god is furnished by the wrestling
man
of the sea, who afterwards is called Nereus or Triton. 147. On his journey back to Trachis Hercules killed the Centaur Nessus (this being a counterpart of his
battle with the Centaurs
to
offer violence
at-
while carrying tempted her on his back across the ford of the river Evenus.
De'ianira
upon a garment and sent it by Lichas to her husband on his way home. Hercules had scarcely put it on before the poison of Nessus pierced through his body. In fury
at his torment
sea,
but could
pure desperation; but Hercules charged his son Hyllus to marry lole, mounted a funeral pyre erected on the
summit
of
Mount
Oeta,
and by the
gift of his
bow and
arrows persuaded Poeas, the father of Philoctetes, or, according to another account, Philoctetes himself, to apply the torch. Amid thunder and lightning he as-
fire,
and became
115
one of the gods. According to a passage in the Iliad there existed in some places the belief that Hercules, in obedience to a decree of fate, and in consequence
of the wrath of Hera, actually died and was staying in the lower world. The same view really prevails in the Odyssey also but in the latter poem the idea of a later
;
striving to reconcile the myths, caused only the ghost of Hercules to appear. 148. Taking him all in all, Hercules in the later period was the ideal type of a valiant, noble Dorian man and
elaborator,
;
who was
parts of these legends he may be the exact representative of the Dorian race (which reverenced him
in
many
especially) in its migrations and battles. Yet since many other features of his mythical history cause him to be
recognized as an old sun god, we may perhaps assume that, like the gods of the Iliad, he first appeared in battle
fighting for his worshipers,
from the protecting deity, the representative of the race, and at the same time the type of the Dorian warrior. 149. The oldest image with the form of which we are well acquainted connected with the worship of Hercules is that of Erythrae, where he, like other heroes, acted as a god of healing by means of oracular dreams. According to coins upon which this image is imitated, Hercules was there represented as standing upon a boat,
without the
was raised
lion's skin, a club in his right hand, which in his left, a spear (or stick In other very ?). old representations also he is nude; later he appears
;
wearing complete armor and a short tight-fitting cloak. At length, somewhere about 600 B.C., the type with the lion's skin, beginning in Cyprus and Rhodes, came to predominate, probably under the influence of Phoenician
116
Hercules was later identified in many His hair and beard are usually closely cut; it
whom
very rare that he appears without a beard in works of the older period. After the beginning of the fourth century B.C. he is again regularly represented entirely nude
;
he carries the
right hand.
skin on his left arm, his club in his Praxiteles gives him a deeply sorrowful exlion's
Lysippus, the attitude of motion, especially at To the latter sculptor is doubtless to be traced
;
the general type of the weary Hercules resting the form of this, however, preserved in the so-called special
Tarnese Hercules' in Naples, was of later origin. In the representations of his deeds, Hercules usually in earlier works, as in the story of the Iliad, carries a bow
as his
weapon; more
rarely,
in
works of Ionian
in those originating in
the Peloponnesus, the sword, which, according to the Odyssey, he carried in addition to his bow.
Hercules Homer, Od. xi. 601 sq. ; Sophocles, Trachiniae Euripides, Herakles Ovid, Met. ix. 256 sq., Her. ix. Vergil, Aen. vi. 801 sq. ; Horace, Ep. xvii. 31; Hygimis, Fab. xxx., xxxvi., clxii.; Shak., Midsummer Night's Dream iv. 1, 117, Love's Labour's Lost i. 2, 69, v. 2, 592 Pope, The Temple of Fame 81 :
There great Alcides, stooping with his toil, Rests on his club and holds th' Hesperian spoil.
Milton, Par. L.
:
ii.
:
542.
Her.
xi.
ix.
44
;
269
Sophocles, Antigone
;
Chaucer,
Knight's Tale 80 sq. Hydra: Ovid, Met. ix. 69 sq. Od. iv. 4, 61 Hyginus, Fab. xxx.
;
Aen. vi. 287; Horace, Thebais i. 502 Pope, The foaming Lerna swells above its bounds,
Vergil,
;
:
And
spreads
its
117
ix. 92 Vergil, Aen. vii. 662, viii. 202. Diodor. Sic. iv. 16 Vergil, Apollod. ii. 6, 9 Hippolyte Aen. xi. 661 Chaucer, Knight's Tale 10. Hesperides Ovid, Met. iv. 637 sq. ; Vergil, Aen. iv. 483 sq. ; Milton, Par. L. iv. 249
Ovid, Her.
Others whose fruit burnisht with golden rind Hung amiable, Hesperian fables true.
Ovid, Met. ix. 183 Hyginus, Fab. xxxi. Ovid, Fast. ii. 305 sq. ; Hyginus, Fab. xxxii. Philoctetes Ovid, Met. xiii. 329 Sophocles, Philoctetes
:
Antaeus
Omphale
Hyginus, Fab.
cii.
6.
THESEUS
150.
The
who worshiped
Poseidon, had their principal homes in Euboea, the eastern coast of Attica, and Argolis, and on the islands that formed the connecting link with the Ionian colonies on
the coast of Asia Minor.
They forced
their
way
into
Athens from the east and south; therefore Ion, their mythological ancestor, is really foreign to Athens, and
only through his mother, Creusa, daughter of Erechtheus, is connected with the native ruling family of Cecrops.
this
unworshiped
an Ionian, was developed, like Hercules among the Dorians, into the ideal Ionian hero. His home, properly, was Troezen in Argolis, a city which must probably
be regarded as a very ancient center of the unification of the Ionian race for the temple of Poseidon that served
;
league (sacrificial
Calauria,
151.
which is off the coast of Troezen. Sometimes Poseidon himself, and sometimes king
is
118
springing was regarded as (c/. atyes the father of Theseus. His mother was Aethra ('the
'
'
happy one ), daughter of Pittheus, king of Troezen. Before Aegeus left her on his return to Athens, he hid his sword and sandals under a heavy stone, with the charge that his son should be sent to him as soon as he
bright,
young manhood, Theseus, taking the sword and sandals for a countersign, so to speak, passed over the isthmus in search of his father.
several robbers the club-brandishing the fir-bender, Sinis Sciron, who dwelt on a Periphetes steep pass by the sea; the wrestler Cercyon; and the giant Damastes, who tortured strangers on a bed, and was there:
could
lift it.
When grown
to
On
the
way he slew
;
fore called
('stretcher').
overcame the wild sow of Cromyon. 152. Meanwhile Aegeus had married the enchantress Medea. When Theseus arrived in Athens, she wanted to poison him but he was spared, his father recognizing him by the sword that he had brought. He now smote the gigantic Pallas and his mighty sons, who rose against Aegeus then he bound the Cretan bull, which had been released by Hercules and had ranged from Mycenae to This adventure, however, is really only a Marathon. later and secondary form of his contest with the bullheaded monster called the Minotaur, the story of which
also
; ;
He
usually told as follows 153. Androgeos, a son of king Minos of Crete, had been To atone for this murder they slain by the Athenians. were compelled to send to Gnosus, every year for nine
is
:
and seven girls to be devoured by the Minotaur, who was shut up in a labyrinth. Theseus vol-
119
his
arrival
On
in
Crete, Minos's daughter Ariadne fell in love with him and gave him a ball of yarn, with the advice to fasten the end of it at the entrance of the labyrinth when he went in, that by following the thread he might retrace
his
way
was successful
out of the countless interlacing paths. The plan and after slaying the Minotaur he sailed
;
away with his companions, whom he had rescued. With them he secretly took Ariadne herself, and landed with them all either on the neighboring island of Dia, or on. Naxos. Here Ariadne was left behind, and according to one form of the legend, probably the older one, was killed by Artemis, because she had been already previously united in wedlock with Dionysus, and had preferred a
mortal to him.
later, it
was here that, after Theseus had secretly abandoned her, she was wedded to Dionysus, whose worship was prominent on Naxos. 154. On his departure from Athens Theseus had promised his father that in case the undertaking against the Minotaur was successful he would substitute for the
black mourning sail of his vessel a white one. But he forgot his promise, and Aegeus on the approach of the
ship cast himself down either from a cliff of the Acropolis, or into the sea, which derived its name Aegean
'
7
from him.
as a hero.
In
later times
Theseus, to commemorate his prosperous return, established the autumn festival of Pyanepsia (' bean festival '),
and that of the grape gathering, Oschophoria ('carrying around of vine branches'). As ruler he consolidated twelve individual communities into the united state of
120
Athens
southern base of the ancient Acropolis, an event that lived on in the memory of the people through
l
uniting of habita-
and probably gave him his name Theseus ='the (Of. Orfa-uv and rifleVai.) 155. Like Bellerophon, Hercules, and Achilles, Theseus also fought against the Amazons, either as a comrade of Hercules, or on the occasion of an invasion made by the Amazons into Attica. At the same time he won the love of Antiope or Hippolyte, who had been conquered by him and Penthesilea), married her, and begot (cf. Achilles
founder.'
Hippolytus ('unyoker of horses'), a hero worshiped in Troezen and Sparta, who probably was originally a sun Afterwards Phaedra (' the shining one/ a moon god. goddess related to Aphrodite), whom Theseus had married after the death of the Amazon, became enamored of
her chaste stepson Hippolytus, and, when her passion was not reciprocated by him, brought about his death
by
him
of
tetrapolis ('four states') of Attica and was the scene of his struggle with the bull, Theseus met the Thessalian
Pirithous ('daring attempter'), king of the Lapithae, and formed a close friendship with him. Then, as we
read in the Iliad (though the passage is much disputed), on the occasion of his friend's marriage to Hippodamia, or Deidamia, Theseus fought beside him against the wild
Centaurs of
Mount
Pelion., as in their
appears in the art of the first half of the fifth century B.C., notably in the metopes of the Parthenon, and in the group
GREEK HEROES
121
designed by Alcamenes in the western pediment of the Temple of Zeus at Olympia. But in the earlier works, from the seventh century B.C. on, Hercules is the regular Together with Pirithotis, opponent of the Centaurs.
Theseus then carried off the youthful Helen from Sparta, and brought her to the mountain stronghold Aphidnae in northern Attica, from which she was afterwards released by her brothers, the Dioscuri. Meanwhile Theseus (probably, according to the older idea, at Hermione) went down into the lower world with his friend to steal Per-
sephone for him. Both of them grew fast to a rock at the entrance, but Theseus was afterwards released by
Hercules.
During the absence of Theseus, Menestheus, who is leader of the Athenians, had usurped the power at Athens. Theseus was therefore compelled, soon after his return from the lower world, to leave the city again. He went to the island Scyros, and was there treacherously cast into the sea by king Lycomedes. Later, however, Demophoon and Acamas, sons of Phaedra, gained the dominion in Athens. The bones of Theseus, which, it was claimed, had been miraculously discovered, were brought to Athens from Scyros in the year 468 B.C., and interred in a newly erected sanctuary between the His gymnasium of Ptolemaeus and the Anakeion. at Athens began after the opening of real worship the fifth century B.C., when the Ionian democracy came
157.
in the Iliad
as
early as the eighth or the seventh century B.C. in battle with the Minotaur, or standing near Ariadne. In works
of the sixth century the contests with the bull
and the
122
Amazons
None of appear, as well as the rape of Helen. the other adventures is to be found until the fifth century B.C. In the oldest representations his weapon is the sword, and in dress and bodily frame he is still undistinguished from other heroes. Later, in imitation of
the Hercules type, he usually carries a club and often a but he is distinguished by the headdress beast's skin
;
of youth
to
the Boeotian-Argive-Thessalian (Dorian) Hercules but his form has been perfected to correspond to the Ionian ideal of a hero. Like Hercules, he has many char-
an old sun god it being especially common that such divinities, as in this case, were considered the founders of communities of a race or a city.
acteristics of
;
Hyginus, Fab. xlviii. 404 sg., East. iii. 473 Hyginus, Fab. xxxviii., xlii., xliii. Chaucer, Knight's Tale 2, et passim. Aethra Ovid, Her. x. 131 Hyginus, Fab. xxxvii. Medea Euripides, Medea; Ovid, Met. vii. 11 sq., Her. xii., xvi. 229 Hyginus, Fab. xxv., xxvi., xxvii. Shak., Merchant of Venice v. 1, 13 King Henry VI. pt. ii. v. 2, 59 Chaucer, Knight's Tale 1086. Hippolytus Euripides, Hippolytus Ovid, Fast. iii. 265 VerSpenser, F. Q. i. v. 39. gil, Aen. vii. 761 sq.; Hyginus, Fab. xlvii. Pirithous Homer, II. i. 263, xiv. 317 Ovid, Met. xii. 218. Hippodamia (daughter of Atrax) Ovid, Met. xii. 210 sq.
Cecrops Theseus
:
Ovid, Met.
ii.
555
Ovid,
Met.
;
vii.
CYCLES OF MYTHS
1.
Meleager, the son of Oeneus, of Calydon, and AlWith many companions he thaea, was a mighty hunter. laid low a terrible wild boar sent by Artemis, which was
159.
123
in a quarrel that arose out of the award of the prize of victory he slew a brother She besought the gods of the lower of his mother.
But
Soon afterworld to avenge the murder on her son. wards he fell in battle. The post-Homeric poets add that the Moerae had informed his mother soon after his birth
that her son would live only until a piece of wood then glowing on the hearth should be consumed by the fire
;
whereupon she quickly quenched it and saved it but after the murder of her brother she caused the death of
;
stick.
myth was that the shy Arcadian-Boeotian huntress Atalanta, who is closely
Another
later addition to the
akin to Artemis, the hunting goddess, was associated with Meleager. In consequence of his love for her he promised
her the head of the boar as a prize of honor, because she had been the first to wound the animal; thus he fell
into the quarrel with his uncle and met his death, as But Atalanta would have for her husband told above.
only one that could defeat her in a foot race, the condition being that all defeated suitors should be put to Milanion (according to another version, Hipdeath.
pomenes) received from Aphrodite three golden apples, which at her advice he flung before Atalanta during the race. While she was picking them up he reached the goal before her, and so she was compelled to become
his wife.
Althaea Ovid, Met. viii. 446 sq. ; Hyginus, Fab. Meleager: Homer, II. ix. 543 sq. ; Ovid, Met.
:
clxxi.
viii.
270
sq. ;
Hyginus, Fab. clxxiv. Chaucer, Knight's Tale 1213. Atalanta Ovid, Met. x. 565 sg., Ars Amat. iii. 775 Fab. clxxxv. Chaucer, Knight's Tale 1212.
;
:
Hyginus,
124
THE ARGONAUTS
161. The myth of the Argonauts unites the legends of the Thessalian city lolcus and the Boeotian Orchomenus, both of which were inhabited by the old race of the
Minyae, with those of Corinth, which from the earliest times had been closely connected with the far east by and this union is so complete, probably navigation under the influence of the Ionian epic poets, that the real basis of the myth can no longer be ascertained with cer;
of Jason, the leader of the the son of Aeson, but was under Argonauts. the guardianship of his uncle Pelias, and, like Achilles, Aesculapius, and Hercules, was brought up on the neightainty,
lolcus
He was
boring Pelion by the Centaur Chiron and instructed in medical science. During his absence Pelias, as Pindar
sings in his fourth Pythian 'ode of victory/ had been " That in given the following oracle every way he should
:
keep careful guard against the man of one sandal, whenever from the steep pastures to the sunny land of renowned lol" cus he shall come, be he stranger or native (vv. 75-78). As Jason on his return homeward had lost a shoe
in crossing the river Anaurus, Pelias feared that by he should be robbed of his power, and therefore sent
him him
on an expedition to bring the golden fleece from Aea, the land of Aeetes, in the hope that the youth would perish in the attempt. Jason collected a large band of heroes, built the first large ship, the Argo (' the swift ), under
7
the protection of
Hera overcame
all
ing him, and after his return ruled in lolcus, wedded to Medea, the daughter of Aeetes.
162.
kill their
For Medea persuaded the daughters of Pelias to own father, and promised to bring him to life
125
again and to renew his youth, but did not fulfill her word. According to the later version of the legend, which combines its individual features in a confused manner, she
then fled with Jason before Pelias's son Acastus to Corinth, while magnificent funeral games were celebrated Alcestis was the only in honor of the murdered man.
daughter of Pelias that took no part in the murder of her She afterwards voluntarily died for her husband father.
Admetus, the king of Pherae, since according to the will of the Moerae he could be saved by the sacrificial death of another. She was then brought back from the realm of
death by Hercules.
163.
The myth
is
of the
King Athamas,
closely related to the Athamantian plains near Halos in the Thessalian Phthiotis, had from Nephele (' cloud ') the children Phrixus and Helle. When
of course
his second wife Ino instigated him to sacrifice Phrixus to Zeus Laphystios, to remove the unfruitf nines s of the land,
who
Nephele carried
off her children through the air upon a ram furnished her by Hermes. On the way golden-fleeced Helle fell into the arm of the sea named after her (Helles-
pont), while Phrixus successfully reached Aea, the land of the light of sunrise and sunset, which was located sometimes in the east and sometimes in the west. He
ram
fleece in the
process of nature is symbolized, the carrying away of a rain cloud gilded by the sun, which is also at other times thought of as a shaggy pelt, being thus picturesquely
expressed.
On
126
and rescue of Phrixus may have originated in the worship of Zeus Laphystios, where for the sacrifice of a human being that of a ram may have been afterwards
substituted, a process such as may lie at the foundation of the legend of Iphigenia. The story relating to Helle was perhaps added only to explain the name Hellespont.
164.
of
origin
for their goal is designated as the eastern land Colchis, well known to the Corinthian navigators. Moreover, Aeetes, the son of Helios
and Persa, while he is a personality that surely originated in an epithet of the sun god, is generally considered to have been a ruler of Corinth, on whose citadel, Ephyra or Acrocorinth, Helios himself had one of the chief seats of his worship, and afterwards to have emigrated to Colchis. When Jason demanded from him the golden fleece, Aeetes declared himself ready to comply if he would first yoke two firebreathing bulls with brazen feet and with them plow the field of Ares. Medea, who was inflamed with love for the stranger, protected him from the effect of the fire by a magic ointment, and helped him to overpower the dragon which was guarding the fleece. 165. Then with the Argonauts she embarked in the ship, at the same time carrying off her young brother
Apsyrtus.
pursued by Aeetes, she killed the boy and by one into the sea, that her father might be retarded by the search for them. After an adventurous voyage, which later forms of the legend, with the widening of geographical knowledge toward the north and west, constantly extended further, they
flung his limbs one
When
127
obtained the kingdom. When Jason afterwards divorced Medea to wed the daughter of king Creon, Medea killed Creon and all his daughters by means of a magic poi-
soned garment. Then, after murdering both of her own children, she fled to Athens in a chariot drawn by dragIn consequence of her ons, where she married Aegeus.
unsuccessful murderous attack upon Theseus she returned to her home in Asia.
Medea is the mythical prototype of all witches, who were similarly charged with murdering children but at the same time she is so closely related to the moon goddesses Hecate and Hera that she must herself be re;
garded as a moon heroine. Jason, however, figure resembling the Boeotian Cadmus, and
received his
166.
name from
'lawA/cos, lolcus.
this, the simplest form of the myth of the Argonauts, was by degrees added a whole series of local
To
legends and sailors' tales, and an ever-increasing number of heroes were mentioned as having joined in the expedition. It was said that at Chalcedon, on the Bosporus,
Pollux had defeated in a boxing contest the giant Amycus (' tearer '), who had prevented the navigators from gain-
On the other side of the Bosing access to a spring. the Argonauts met the blind king Phmeus, who porus
was tormented by Harpies. As soon as he sat down to eat, the Harpies came along and seized or befouled the food. They were therefore pursued by Zetes and Calais, the sons of Boreas, and driven away forever (c/. the
Stymphalides).
vice,
To express
how
(<
to pass success?
striking together ) ;
128
porus, were said to be floating islands, which were afterwards fixed in their present position. In the adventure
in Colchis itself the sowing of the dragon's teeth mus (c/. 123) was transferred to Jason.
by Cad34
Argo
Argonauts
6,
Pindar, Pyth.
|
iv.
Vergil, Eel.
iv.
Vehat Argo
Ovid, Amor. ii. 11, Par. L. ii. 1017 :
delectos heroas.
xii.
Her.
Milton,
And more endanger'd, than when Argo pass'd Through Bosporus betwixt the justling rocks. Pope, Ode on St. Cecilia's Day 40 While Argo saw her kindred trees Descend from Pelion to the main.
:
Apollon. Rhod., Argonautica. Jason Apollod. i. 9, 16 Ovid, Met. vii. 5 sq., Epis. xvi. 229 Hyginus, Fab. xxii. xxiii. xxiv. Aeson Ovid, Met. vii. 162 sq. ; Pope, Dunciad iv. 121 As erst Medea (cruel so to save )
: ;
Ovid, Met. vii. 298 sq. ; Hyginus, Fab. xii. Ovid, Met. vii. 9 Hyginus, Fab. xxii. Alcestis Euripides, Alcestis Hyginus, Fab. 1., Ii. Admetus: Euripides, Alcestis; Ovid, Ex Pont. iii. 1, 106, Trist. v. 14, 37 Hyginus, Fab. L, Ii. Phrixus; Helle: Ovid, Epis. xvii. 141 sq., Fast. iii. 852 sq. ;
Pelias
Aeetes
Hyginus, Fab.
:
i.,
ii., iii.
iii.
9,
;
8 sq.
167.
Theban
In the myths that are brought together in the cycle there appears this pervading thought, that
129
not able, either by wisdom or by strength, to carry out his own plans in opposition to the will and On the contrary, the very predestination of the gods.
is
man
effect
such de-
crees of the gods as have been announced by oracles or other signs helps to fulfill the divine will. This appears
most simply in the oldest part of the cycle, the expedition of the Seven against Thebes, described in the
Thebais.
and the same thought is Epigoni (' the after-born ) out in a more complicated manner in the Oedibrought pus myth, which contains the preliminary history of this contest, and which Cinaethon of Sparta (?) had used in his Oidipodeta. Finally, the Alkmaionis, a sequel
to the story of the Epigoni, and a work belonging to the end of the sixth century B.C., described the tremendous
punishments
of relatives.
inflicted
by the gods
Statius the principal ideas of all these lost epics are combined. But this group of myths is still further perfected from the purely moral point of view in the Attic
tragedy, and is represented in the following extant the Seven against Thebes of Aeschylus, the plays
' ;
:
AnOedipus at Colonus/ and tigone of Sophocles, the 'Phoenissae' of Euripides. 168. According to a divine decree Laius, the son of Labdacus, was to be the last of the family of Cadmus who should be king of Thebes. Therefore he received from the oracle at Delphi the utterance " If thou beget a son, he will murder thee and marry his own mother." So when his wife locaste, whom the epic poets called
'Oedipus Tyrannus/
7
'
'
Epicaste, the
sister of
130
bore
pierced his feet, bound them together, and caused him to be exposed on the neighboring mountain Cithaeron, that thus by killing his
child he might render impossible the fulfillment of the But the child was discovered by a shepherd, oracle.
Lams
brought to king Polybus at Sicyon or Corinth, and by him named Oedipus ( swollen-footed '). When the boy had grown up, being taunted about his parentage, he asked the oracle at Delphi to reveal to him his real
4
that he
and
tive,
answer only the ominous response, of incest with his mother, In order to make the threat ineffec-
he did not return to Corinth; yet even before he far from Delphi he met his father Laius at a fork in the road, and being provoked by him, killed him without being aware who he was. 169. Meanwhile Thebes had been visited with a severe
had gone
The Sphinx ('throttler ), a monster, the upper scourge. part of whose body was a winged maiden, and the lower
?
part that of a lion (probably, like the "nightmare," a creature born of "such stuff as dreams are made of,"
though afterwards it was thoroughly confused with the similarly formed Egyptian-Babylonian symbol of power and swiftness), dwelt upon a mountain in the vicinity of the city and submitted to passers-by this riddle " What walks in the morning on four legs, at midday on two, and " She had killed all that had not at evening on three ? guessed it, among them, according to an older legend,
:
Haemon, the son of Creon, who after the death of his brother-in-law Laius ruled in Thebes. Creon now offered
reward to anybody freeing them from this scourge the hand of the queen and the sovereignty of Thebes.
as a
131
Oedipus correctly solved the riddle as referring to man, who creeps on all fours when a child, walks upright in
middle
170.
city,
and uses the support of a staff in old age. Oedipus accordingly became king in his native Acand, at the same time, his mother's husband.
life,
cording to the epic poets the gods soon made this crime known, probably through the seer Tiresias, as the later form of the legend states. Epicaste killed herself and
Oedipus blinded himself. Afterwards, by a second wife, Eurygania, he had the sons Eteocles and Polynices, and The tragic the two daughters Antigone and Ismene. poets mention no second marriage of Oedipus, but rather
treat all these as the children of locaste herself.
Later, on account of some trifling fault, Oedipus brought upon his sons the curse that they should divide the inheritance
He
in Thebes, or, according to the Attic version, in banishment in the sanctuary of the Semnai at Colonus, near
Athens, under the protection of Theseus. 171. Eteocles and Polynices fell into a quarrel in dividing the inheritance and the power whereupon the latter
;
fled to Adrastus,
king of Argos and Sicyon, and became He then equipped an expedition against his son-in-law. his brother, of which Adrastus undertook the command.
Polynices was further supported by his brother-in-law, the Aetolian Tydeus, a fiery son of Oeneus of Calydon
;
also
by Hippomedon and Parthenopaeus, the brothers of Adrastus by the mighty Capaneus and lastly by the
;
courageous seer
Amphiaraus, brother-in-law of Adrastus. Amphiaraus, indeed, foresaw that they should almost all perish in the expedition, but was nevertheless induced to
take part in
it
by
bribed
132
by means of a beautiful necklace, which, however, brought its possessor. Therefore he charged his son Alcmaeon (' the strong ') that as soon as he grew up he
ruin to
In spite of omens, which predicted all sorts of the Seven, trusting in their own power, advanced evil, against Thebes and assaulted the seven gates of the city. Capaneus had already scaled the walls, when a bolt from
172.
him down
again.
The two
brothers Eteocles and Polynices killed each other in single combat, yet the fight continued to rage with fearful fury. Tydeus, even in the throes of death, lacerated with his
teeth the head of his fallen antagonist and sipped the brains out of the gaping skull. Amphiaratis was buried
by Thebes in a chasm in the which Zeus opened in front of him by a thunderground, Here he ruled as a spirit giving out oracles by bolt. means of dreams. He was greatly revered also in other places, especially at Oropus in the district of Psaphis but originally he was none other than Hades himself, invoked under the name of 'the besought on every side.' 173. Adrastus, saved by his swift war horse Arion, was the only one of the seven to escape. The Thebans were
;
persuaded by him, or, according to the Attic version of the story, were compelled by Theseus, to deliver up the
Aeschylus and Sophocles add at this the story of Antigone's fate. According to them point
fallen for burial.
Polynices was to remain unburied as an enemy to his native land. But his sister Antigone, contrary to this command, dragged him upon the funeral pyre of Eteocles, or at least
133
for
by
sisterly
Ten years
Epigoni), now led by the favor of the gods, marched against Thebes, took it and demolished it, and set over it The whole as ruler Thersander, the son of Polynices.
expedition, however, is described by the later poets as a counterpart of the former one. Alcmaeon, the leader of the host, before setting out fulfilled the command of his
father
by murdering
his
mother
to
avenge him.
But
although Apollo himself had given his consent to this, the murderer, like Orestes, was pursued by the Erinyes until after long wanderings he finally obtained rest through
a.
new
oracular response.
:
locaste Homer, Od. xi. 271 sq. ; Sophocles, Antigone 861, Oedipus Rex Hyginus, Fab. Ixvi., Ixvii. Oedipus Homer, Od. xi. 271 Sophocles, Oedipus Rex, Oedipus at Colonus, Antigone Hyginus, Fab. Ixvi. Pope, Thebais i. 21
;
:
At Oedipus from his disasters trace The long confusions of his guilty race
Thebais
i.
69
Now wretched Oedipus, depriv'd of sight Leads a long death in everlasting night
;
Thebais
i.
336
Eteocles Hyginus, Fab. Ixvii. Sophocles, Antigone Aeschylus, Seven against Thebes 182 sq. ; Pope, Thebais i. 219. Polynices Sophocles, Oedipus at Colonus, Antigone Hyginus,
:
Fab.
Ixvii.-lxxii.
:
Antigone Aeschylus, Seven against Thebes 862 Sophocles, Antigone, Oedipus Rex, Oedipus at Colonus Hyginus, Fab. Ixxii. Amphiaraiis Aeschylus, Seven against Thebes 569 sq. ; Ovid, Ex Pont. iii. 1, 52:
;
;
:
Hyginus, Fab.
Ixxiii,
134
175.
Some of them were forced by Thessaly to Argolis. the Dorians into Achaia, and afterwards settled lower
Others went to Asia Minor, and there in company with the Achaians of Thessaly, who migrated thither at the same time, obtained by conquest new homes in
Italy.
the vicinity of Troy, which was then lying in ruins. It was probably the effort to explain the origin of these ruins, which went back to a prehistoric period, that caused
the migrating Grecian tribes to connect them with old myths of their own people. Taking their idea from the
conquest of this same land, which they had just made an accomplished fact, they fancied the destruction of IliosTroia to have been the result of a campaign of their
ancestors.
176. This whole legendary subject-matter was treated in the following independent epics, which group themselves round the Iliad and the Odyssey (1) The Cypria, by a
:
own
Cyprian poet, perhaps Stasinus a work originating after the completion of the interpolated additions to the Iliad.
;
(2) (3)
The The
Iliad of
B.C.
about 750
Aithiopis of Arctinus of Miletus, written perhaps 7 B.C. of the Lesbian Little Iliad (4) The
'
Lesches, of the first half of the seventh century B.C. Destruction of Ilios' (IXtbv Wpo-ts), also by (5) The
Arctinus.
(6)
The
'
Homeward Voyages
'
(Noo-rot),
by
Agias of Troezen, later than Arctinus and the Odyssey. (7) The Odyssey, to be dated somewhere about 775 B.C.
(8)
The
Telegonia, by
Eugammon
Of the foregoing, aside from fragments and meagre excerpts, only the Iliad and the Odyssey are extant.
177.
135
These were recognized by the ancients themselves as the most noble gems in the crown of epic poetry. Both of them were in earlier times ascribed to the poetic genius
of one
all
others
but the
great dissimilarity that appears in the social relations and the religious conceptions described forces us to con-
must be attributed
to different
claimed
Homer
their present form. Seven cities as their citizen. Smyrna, the first menin
tioned of these, seems to have the best right to the claim, for it appears from the Iliad itself that the poet probably
came from the region near the mouth of the river Hermus. In its original form the poem described only the momentous quarrel between Achilles and Agamemnon. But into this oldest epic, which formed the foundation of the whole Trojan chain of myths and contains the germ of
all
other
poems on the
duced
at the
at a later period
even in
its
same time the whole was probably revised; yet its present form the dramatic plot which lies at foundation is so plainly visible that there can be no
its
doubt of
178.
The
conscious formation by one individual poet. keynote of the drama of the Iliad is struck
by a description of the plague brought upon the Grecian host by Apollo, on account of an injury done to his priest
Chryses in the tenth year of the siege of Troy. Just as in the progress of the chief plot the haughtiness of
the
commander
in chief,
grievous losses
blame for the and defeats of the Greeks, so here he wrath of Apollo by refusing to listen to
Agamemnon,
is to
the request of one of his priests for the restoration of a daughter who has been carried away among the spoils
136
of war.
comes
in the dramatic
'
motive
7
:
Achilles (Gk.
Grecian camp,
victorious
Achilleus), the noblest champion in the in the name of the army, which has been
up to this time, demands from Agamemnon that he surrender this maiden Chrysei's. The plot deepens as follows: Agamemnon indeed grants the request, but in compensation for his own loss, takes away from Achilthe girl Briseis, present by the army.
les
and at his request his mother Thetis the disposer of battle, to grant victory to prays Zeus, the Trojans until her son shall have received full satisdraws from
battle,
faction.
179.
In Books
ii.-vii.
comes the
first
climax, in a sub-
about an Agamemnon sidiary plot. end of the war, without Achilles, by a single combat between Paris, who carried off Helen, and her rightful
First
tries to bring
Paris, being vanquished, is rescued but the treaty is immediately broken by Aphrodite, by a treacherous shot of the Trojan Pandarus. Now
husband Menelatis.
the Achaians advance, and Diomedes, the son of Tydeus and ruler of Argos, who is under the special protection of Athena, and Ajax, the son of Telamon of Salamis, next
to Achilles the
distin-
guish themselves in single combats. As Agamemnon already fancies that he has nearly won the victory over Troy, and at the same time over his rival Achilles, Zeus,
out of regard for his promise made to Thetis, forbids the gods to take any further part in the struggle. Consequently the Greeks are driven back into their camp, where-
arid this
137
In order not
to be forced to give
way
to Achilles,
Agamemnon
gether.
But Diomedes and the aged Nestor, who rules the Messenian and Triphylian Pylus, and who surpasses all the other chieftains in wisdom and eloquence, hinder him by their opposition. Therefore the Greeks attempt once more to conquer in open battle, but suffer a complete defeat, and Agamemnon himself is wounded, like most
of the other champions. The chief climax of the action, and the apparent approach of victory for the hero of the drama, i.e. Achilles, are marked by the battle round the ships (Books
Hector, the most valiant son of king Priam of and Apollo force their way into the Grecian camp Troy, and set fire to the ships, at which the destruction of the whole host seems almost inevitable. Then in the direst necessity comes a change in affairs, caused by the waverHalf renouncing his decision, ing of Achilles himself. he sends to the assistance of the hard-pressed fighters his friend Patroclus, whom he allows to put on his own armor and to take command of his Myrmidons. They
xiii.-xv.).
drive the
his
enemy out of the camp but as Patroclus, against friend's command, pursues the Trojans, he is killed by
;
Hector (Book
181.
xvi.).
At
this
(Books
xvii.-xxi.).
The
final
motive
'
of dramatic inter-
ation of
is
and the humiliYet even now Achilles's victory Agamemnon. only apparent, as he himself well understands. For
champion, has invited against himself the charge
he, the
of arrogance, since, on account of the merely personal injury done him by Agamemnon, he has too long inac-
138
This fault tively viewed the destruction of his people. of his causes the death of Patroclus, and with it the
After obtaining through his xxii.). mother new weapons from Hephaestus, Achilles kills Hector, although he knows that he himself must inevitably die shortly after laying low this enemy, and Hector himself, when mortally wounded, reminds him
catastrophe (Book
of the certainty that such a fate will befall him. action comes to an end with the funerals of Patroclus
The
and Hector and the lament of Achilles over the loss of his In his lament he is preparing himself for his friend. own death, which follows so immediately that, so far as
Homer
182.
is
concerned,
it
It cannot at present be decided whether we may attribute to Homer some sort of an original sketch, or rough
draft of the Odyssey, which served as a model for all the poets describing the return home of the Trojan heroes
;
but at any rate this poem, as well as the Iliad, was laid out according to a plan exhibiting a unity that has been
marred only by
later interpolations.
Among
these in-
terpolations is, together with the larger part of the last ' ' book, the whole Telemachy (Books i.-iv.), in which the
journey of Telemachus to Pylus and Laconia is described. To get information concerning the whereabouts of his father, who has now been away nearly twenty years, he
tells
goes to the aged Nestor, and then to Menelaiis. Each him of his own return home and of that of other
Menelaiis he learns also that his father is on the island of the nymph Calypso in the far a prisoner But before Telemachus gets back to Ithaca, his west. father himself has already arrived there. His journey therefore has no influence on the course of events.
heroes.
From
139
like the
The
old Nostos
('
and this speaks strongly for the identity of their Iliad described only the last year of the wanderings, authors
the catastrophe proper, while the previous events were set forth by a narrative put into the mouth of During his wanderings on the return from Odysseus.
i.e.
Troy, Odysseus (Lat. Ulixes, Eng. Ulysses), the ruler of the little island of Ithaca, has lost his companions and Though consumed with longing for his home, he ships.
lives
for seven
Calypso ('the concealer'), who tries to create in him a permanent attachment for herself. But with longing equal to his own his faithful wife Penelope awaits his return in Ithaca, although wooed by numerous haughty
nymph
suitors.
approaches the island of the Fhaeaces. But here Poseidon dashes his craft to pieces, and only by the help of the goddess Ino-Leucothea is he able to swim to the shore.
184.
him
Nausicaa, the daughter of king Alcinotis, gives At clothing and directs him to her father's palace.
lost
He had
many
tells of his
Cicones.
The
Lotus in the land of the Lotophagl (' Lotus-eaters '), and he had been compelled to drag them to the ships by main
force, since eating it
had made them forget their native Then the voyagers had come into
the cave of the one-eyed Cyclops Polyphemus, who devoured several of them, but finally in a drunken sleep
was blinded by Odysseus. Since Polyphemus was a son of Poseidon, that god was now angry at Odysseus and his
140
Next they came to Aeolus, the ruler of companions. the winds, who, being graciously disposed towards them, shut up all contrary winds in a bag and so they might
;
have reached home safely if the comrades of Odysseus had not secretly opened the bag. 185. Then all the ships except the one on which Odysseus himself was sailing were wrecked by the giWith the one remaining ship he gantic Laestrygones.
reached the island of the enchantress Circe, who at but first metamorphosed a part of the crew into swine
;
on being threatened by Odysseus, she restored them to their human form, and they were then all gladly reOn her advice Odysseus proceeded to ceived by her. the entrance of the lower world, to ask the shade of the Past the islands seer Tiresias about the way homewards.
of the bird-formed SIrenes
(<
Sirens
'),
by
their singing in order to kill them, and between the abode of the sea monsters Scylla and Charybdis, he sailed to the island Thrinacia ('three-pointed ), where
7
his comrades, constrained by hunger, slew some cattle In punishment for out of the sacred herds of Helios.
this the lightning of
Zeus shattered the last ship, and only Odysseus, who had taken no part in the sacrilege, saved himself, reaching the island of Calypso after drifting about on the mast for nine days. 186. Alcinous, touched with sympathy at this narrative, now gives the much-tormented sufferer many gifts and sends him to Ithaca on a swift vessel. That he may
not be recognized at once, his protectress Athena gives him the appearance of a beggar. In this form he hunts up his shepherd Eumaeus, and from him learns of the
Odysseus
tells
nobody
141
except his son Telemaclius who he is but his old dog and his nurse Euryclea recognize him in spite of his metamorphosis, while he is staying in his own house as a
Penelope has just announced that she will marry stretch the bow of her deceased husband and 'shoot an arrow through the openings of twelve axes All the suitors placed in a row one behind another.
beggar. the one
who can
attempt in vain to bend the bow but Odysseus easily accomplishes the feat. Being changed back to his proper form, he makes himself known, and with the assistance
;
of his son
and two
savage
faithful shepherds,
conflict,
Eumaeus and
Phi-
loetius, in a
he puts
all
for the first time Penelope learns of her husband's return. Finally Odysseus seeks out his old
sword.
Then
father Laertes,
who
is
II.
Chryseis
Homer,
ii.
402
Hy-
Amor.
et passim; Ovid, Amor. i. 9, 33, Rem. 37 Hygirius, Fab. xcvi. Shak., Love's Labour's Lost v. 2, 635, Troilus and Cressida passim. Briseis Homer, II. i., et passim ; Ovid, Rem. Amor. 777, 783, Her. iii.; Hyginus, Fab. cvi.
Achilles: Homer,
777, Trist.
II.
i.,
iii.
5,
Pandarus
Homer,
II. ii.,
et
v.
496
Shak.,
Diomedes: Homer,
II.
ii.,
xiii.
100 sq.;
Ajax
Ajax
;
Homer, II. ii., et passim; Sophocles, (son of Telamon) Horace, Od. ii. 4, 5 Ovid, Met. xiii. 2
:
Clipei
Shak., King Henry VI. pt. ii. v. 1, 26, Troilus and Cressida passim. Nestor: Homer, II. i., et passim, Od. iii. passim; Ovid, Met. xiii. 63 Shak., Rape of Lucrece 203
cvii., cxiv.
;
Hyginus, Fab.
pt.
iii. iii.
2, 188,
142
Euripides,
et
Vergil, Aen.
Homer, II. xxii. passim ; Ovid, Met. xiii. 470 sq. ; i., ii. passim; Hyginus, Fab. xc. Shak., Hamlet ii. 2, 469, King Henry VI. pt. iii. ii. 5, 120, Troilus and Cressida passim. Patroclus: Homer, II. xvi., et passim. Telemachus Homer, Od. passim ; Ovid, Her. i. 98, 107. Calypso Homer, Od. vii. 245
:
Priam
Vergil, Aen.
Ovydryp, 5o\6ecr<ra
Od.
i.
Amor.
ii.
17, 15:
Traditur et
45
Odysseus
Ars Amat.
ii.
(Ulysses):
123,
Homer,
xiii.
II. ii.
Met.
124
;
passim, Od. passim; Ovid, Vergil, Aen. ii. passim; Shak., Eape of Lucrece 200
sq. ;
: ;
Sly Ulysses
King Henry VI. pt. iii. iii. 2, 180, Coriolanus Cressida passim; Pope, Argus 9:Forgot of
all his
i.
3, 93,
Troilus and
The
faithful
i.,
Ars Amat.
153
:
iii.
v.
3, 92.
vi.
Alcinous
55
;
Homer, Od.
ii.
12, vii.
i.
10,
Vergil, Geor.
sq., xiv.
87
ii.
2,
iii.
Fab. cxxv.
Ovid, Met. xiv. 233; Hyginus, Fab. cxxv.
143
xiv. 10 sq. ; Vergil,
O
:
Chaucer, Knight's Tale 1086. Sirenes Homer, Od. xii. 167 Ovid, Met. v. 555 iii. oil Hyginus, Fab. cxli. Milton, Comus 878:
; ;
sq.,
Ars Amat.
And
Shak., Sonnet cxix.
i.
430, et passim
Ovid, Her.
i.
105, Met.
144.
D.
187.
In religion, as in
ual
life,
which was really native in Rome, or at least filled the old, simple forms with new meaning. This process began as early as the reign of the two Tarquinii, when Greek ideas found entrance into Rome, partly through the Etruscans, and partly through the colonies of southern Italy, such as Cumae. From about the time of the second Punic war
these ideas began to destroy entirely the old beliefs, at least in the better educated circles of society. At last,
almost
their
the varieties of worship that existed anywhere within the borders of the mighty Roman Empire found
all
All the testimony that we possess in literature concerning the relations of the ancient Roman
way
to
Rome.
religion has been influenced by this Hellenizing tendency and only the festival calendar, which had been made up
;
before that period, and the existence of certain priesthoods whose institution dates back to the very earliest
times furnish, concerning what is genuinely Roman, information that is trustworthy, though meagre. In the fol-
which forced
landmarks, in order that, so far as possible, everything its way from Greece into the Roman religion
be excluded.
144
may
145
I.
CONCEPTION
In studying the beliefs of the Romans we find side by side with the regular deities a series of divinities
188.
who, without being reduced to a uniform conception or perfected to the point of enjoying a complete personality, continued to occupy the position of deified ancestors and
of spirits (daimones). (1) First among these should be mentioned the divini-
representing souls the Manes, Lemures, and Larvae. Closely akin to these were the Genii, who represented the vital force and power of procreation in men, and the
ties
:
Junoiies of
women, spirits corresponding in their nature to the Genii. They were supposed to enter the body at and leave it at death then they became Manes. birth,
;
Like the souls of the dead, the Genii were supposed to have the form of serpents. But the Genius and the Juno were also worshiped as the tutelary spirits of men and women, by whom oaths were ratified, and to whom sacrifices were offered on birthdays. , from this idea of a tutelary spirit, conceived Starting of as a person endowed with procreative power, the
afterwards came to attribute Genii to the family also, to the city, to the State, and at pleasure to every locality where a creative activity might manifest itself, and by
this process made them practically representatives of the real divinities of nature.
189.
Eomans
An
was occupied by a
intermediate position like that of these Genii class of divinities essentially similar
to them, the Lares, who were regarded as tutelary spirits of fields, vineyards, roads, and groves, and at the same
146
many respects In earlier quite characteristic of the worship of the dead. times we hear usually of only a single Lar familiaris, who
and represents hearth and home; afterwards, however, they always appear in pairs. Little wooden images of them, very much alike, were placed above, or near, the hearth in the atrium; and at every meal, and especially on the Calends, Nones, Ides, and at all family festivals, the matron of the house offered to them a little food and a fresh wreath.
protects
Under the term del Penates, divinities whose images were likewise placed near the hearth, were included all the gods that were regarded as protectors of the provisions (penus) in the house, without its being necessarily true that the same gods were everywhere meant. Janus, and Vesta, are named among them. From the Juppiter, individual house their functions, like those of the Genii, were transferred to society in common, and consequently Penates publicl were worshiped on the common hearth in
the temple of Vesta. 190. (2) Divinities entirely peculiar to the Eoman faith, not represented as having any distinguishing characteristics
as
individuals, were
i.e.
the Indigetes
('
those acting
within'), spirits about individual acts in particular persons or things. To each one of these divinities only a single, strictly defined action was ascribed, which was exactly expressed by the
divinity's name; it was therefore necessary to take heed to call for help upon exactly the right Indiges, and at the
whatsoever
moment. Consequently the Pontifices, a college of priests who had a decisive superintendence over these
right
147
an almost endless
series of
the pattern of a few ancient forms of this sort, particuBecause larly, it seems, during the fourth century B.C.
of this very exaggeration in their number and importance they soon lost their significance; at any rate, the worship
of the Indigetes had by the time of the second Punic war fallen into disuse. How subtle these distinctions
be seen, for example, in the fact that on the occasion of a child's first leaving the house it was considered necessary to invoke Abeona, on its return, Adeona,
were
may
and
at the
same time
also
Domiduca and
Iterduca.
II.
(1) Among the Romans the only proper divinities nature with fully individualized personality were the of representatives of the forces operating in springs and
rivers.
in Greece, the divinities of springs were usually thought of as female beings they were worshiped in the groves surrounding the springs, but even in very early
;
As
times were also developed into goddesses of prophecy and From song, and into such as come to help difficult births.
the idea of their relation to prophecy and song the Camenae, who dwelt in a grove outside the Porta Capena, came to be identified with the Greek Muses while the prophe;
Numa,
Egeria,
who was
closely con-
nected with the Camenae, and dwelt in the same grove, was principally invoked in the capacity of a goddess
The essential characteristics of both these were combined in Carmenta, the mother of Evantypes
of
birth.
148
der,
derived her name from Carmen (' prophBut the spring goddess Juturna, whose name was ecy'). borne by several springs in Latium, came to be regarded as the wife of Janus and the mother of Fons or Fontus,
who probably
i.e.
192.
of the spring itself conceived of as a god. Among river gods at Rome pater Tibennus en-
A
'),
duty of keeping in repair the pans sublicius, i.e. the bridge The authority of the on piles leading over the river. Pontifices was so great that they gradually rose into the
position of a general court of control over all religious The very early period of their origin is indiaffairs.
cated by a decision that no iron should be employed in The annual sacrifice of the soputting up the bridge.
On this called Argei was also of very ancient origin. made of rushes were cast occasion in later times figures from the bridge into the stream as a substitute for the
custom of sacrificing human beings. In Lavinium the god of the Numicius was worshiped in Umbria, the Clitumnus in Campania, the Volturnus. 193, Compared with these divinities, who were associearlier
;
;
ated with individual springs or individual rivers, Neptunus the representative of water in general, stood (' Neptune '),
apparently,
in
the earlier
ground.
23d
of
god of the sea by being identified with Poseidon, whose worship was introduced into Rome in the year 399 B.C.
by order
149
Among
earliest times the following are pretty closely related to the spirits of activity discussed above Janus, the spirit of the door arch (janus), or of the house door as a whole
:
(jdniia) Vesta, the goddess of the hearth fire Volcanus, the exciter of conflagrations the war god Mars the gods
; ; ;
;
sowing and reaping, Saturnus and Consus and the series of gods and goddesses whose activity is manifested
of
;
growth of plants. Janus, from being the tutelary spirit of the individual door, developed into the representative of entering, in general, and so became the god of beginning (indeed, both these ideas were expressed by the Romans in the Therefore the beginning of the day single word initiuvi). and of the month, i.e. morning (Janus Mdtutinus) and the His month, Januarius, Kalendae, were sacred to him. which is coincident with the beginning of increase in the length of days, was at a comparatively late period
in the
promoted
to
the position of being the beginning of On the 9th of January, the date of the
1
sacrificial festival (Agonium) celebrated in his honor, the bellwether of a flock was sacrificed to him, originally by the king himself, who evidently, on the transfer of the
domestic worship of Janus to the State, became the representative of the father of the family, afterwards by
the rex sacrorum.
at the
commence-
ment
1
of
all
actions, particularly at
the
beginning of
Diva Angerona, whose worship was celebrated on the 21st of December, and who was represented with mouth bound or covered with a finger (favete linguist), was perhaps an ancient goddess of the fortunate commencement of the year. But Anna Peranna (or Perenna), the goddess of continuing years, whose festival was kept on the 15th of March, is to be regarded as the representative of the new year.
150
prayers and offerings; indeed, he was regarded even at a very early period as the pnncipium, and the father of
the gods.
chief sanctuary of this god, the Janus Geminus, or Quinnus, situated at the north end of the Forum, opposite 'the sanctuary of Vesta, which served as the
195.
The
hearth of the State, was the very ancient arched doorway or entrance of the Forum, which was itself patterned after the atrium of a house. The doors on the two sides of the passageway were kept open as long as
common
an army was in the field, probably for the reason that at one time the king himself used to march with his troops to war, and it was necessary that the city gate should stand open for him until his return, as the house door
did for the father of the family. Under the archway stood an image of the god with two faces, one looking
outward and one inward. Although this image was probably patterned after Greek models, yet it is clear that the intention was to express by it the attentiveness and watchfulness which are characteristic of a doorLike a real janitor (' doorkeeper '), he carried keeper. a key and a switch or staff (virga) for driving away and the nature of his activity troublesome intruders was indicated by the epithets Patulcius (' opener '), and
;
Clusivms or Clusius
('
closer').
His other principal ancient place of worship was the hill named for him Janiculum, on which king Ancus Marcius had built a fortress, to protect the commercial road leading into Etruria, and the harbor in the Tiber So from being the god of entrance situated at its foot. and departure he became the protector of commerce and navigation; his head and the prow of a ship were stamped
151
and afterwards repreof harbors, Portumis, were sentations of the special god made to imitate this well-known Janus type.
coin, the as;
Eoman
Like the Hestia of the Greeks, Vesta embodied and the power manifesting itself in the hearth fire hearth fire itself was worshiped as a goddess, withthe
196.
;
The
city also
Vesta and
its
Penates.
was situated in a small circular temple on the south side The service of the goddess was attended of the Forum.
by six maidens, who, being chosen in childhood by the Pontifex Maximus, were required to remain unmarried If one of these Vestal virgins allowed for thirty years.
to
go out, or became guilty of unchastity, the severest penalties were inflicted upon her by the
the sacred
fire to
Pontifex Maximus.
The sacred
fire
could be newly
kindled only by means of the old fire drill, or, afterwards, by the burning glass. The Vestalia, the principal festival
of the goddess, came on the 9th of June, and on this day the matrons offered sacrifices of food on the common
hearth.
In contrast to Vesta, who occupied the position of a benefactress, yet supplementary to her, was Volcanus,
197.
the representative of the power of fire that destroys all the works of men's hands, i.e. the god of conflagrations.
Since it was necessary that he should be kept removed from the houses of the city, he had his temple outside the walls, in the Campus Martius. His principal festival was celebrated on the 23d of August, at the time when,
after the ingathering of the harvest, the full granaries especially needed his protection. In order that he might
subdue a
fire
that
out,
he was called in
152
He may have been flattery Mulciber, mltis or quietus. connected with the fire of the lightning at first because
this causes conflagrations
;
celebrated in
of his
May,
in
it
the ground, whose worship was seems probable that other results
fire
activity
the
the
of
the
smith's
and
then
only
by
being
Hephaestus. 198. Like Yolcanus, the divinities that protected agriculture, Saturnus, Consus, and Ops, retained their character as spirits of activity. Saturnus, or Saeturnus, was the god of sowing after the sowing of the winter grain was
;
was celebrated in
his
honor from the 17th to the 21st or 23d of December, with banqueting, the interchange of presents, and exemption of the slaves from their customary duties. The wax candles that were regularly included among the gifts
undoubtedly symbolized the newly-beginning increase of sunlight, which gave ground for the hope that the seed buried in the ground would thrive. The ancient sanctuary of Saturn, and his temple, which was built by Tarquinius Superbus, were situated beside the ascent that
Forum to the Capitol. Consus, on the other was the harvest god, the deus condendi, i.e. god of hand,
led from the
As this prodstowing away the produce of the fields. uce was originally kept in subterranean rooms, the old altar of Consus in the Circus Maximus was usually concealed in the ground, and was uncovered and cleared for use in sacrifice only during the festivals of the Consualia,
153
which were celebrated with running matches on the 21st of August and the 15th of December. With Consus is intimately associated Ops Consiva, i.e. She represented the opima Ops, the wife of Consus. um copia, the abundance of the products that were frag stored away at harvest time her two feasts, the Opiconslvia and the Opalia, were separated from those of her husband by intervals of only three days in each case. At a later period Saturn was identified with Cronus, and Ops with Rhea, and many peculiarities of the Greek forms of their worship were transferred to this worship in Rome. 199. (3) The vital forces operating in forest and field were ascribed to the activity of various impregnating gods and conceiving goddesses. The country people and shepherds believed that they owed to these divinities the products of the ground and the abundance of their flocks, and worshiped them and the divinities, as did their worshipers, had their favorite abodes in shady groves and at bubbling springs. Their nature was as simple and rustic as the mind of the worshipers, and everything dear and precious to the countryman was committed to their pro;
;
tecting care.
Faunus was the husband or father of Fauna, who was usually invoked as Bona Dea. His name signifies the benevolent god/ being derived from favere (' to be graHe appeared in human form under the name cious'). Evander (Gk. Euandros, 'good man'), who was said to have established the first settlement on the site where Rome was afterwards located. It was also told of this Evander that he had founded the oldest sanctuary of Faunus in a grotto on the Palatine hill, and instituted the "feast of the Luper'
154
calia,
at
which was celebrated there on the 15th of February, which the Luperci, i.e. the priests of Faunus Lupercus
little wolf), girded with goatskins, but otherwise naked, (' tried to secure fruitfulness for man, beast, and field by
running round the ancient limits of the town's territory. In harmony with this custom Faunus himself was represented naked, with goatskin, garland, cornucopia, and
drinking horn.
Very closely related to Faunus was Silvlnus, the of the forest but his activity, as his name indispirit cates, was confined exclusively to the forest, and there200.
;
fore in his representations in art he wears a pine wreath, and carries a pine branch on his arm. He, as well as
Faunus, frightened the lonesome wanderer by the prophesying voices of the forest. Silvanus especially protected boundaries and property in general. In the luxuriant productiveness of the fields and vine-
yards the Romans thought they saw the particular activity of Liber and his wife Libera, who, like Juppiter Liber,
being designated by their names bountiful dispensers of plenty, were afterwards regularly identified with Dionysus and Persephone. The name of the latter was changed in Italy to the form Proserpina. Similarly, gardens and their fruit trees were under the
special protection of Vertumnus, who was supposed to change his form as the gardens themselves changed their
appearance in the varying seasons, and of Pomona, the beautiful dispenser of fruits, either of whom could be recognized by the ever present pruning knife.
201.
Among
at
was situated
Her most noted sanctuary at Rome the foot of the Aventine hill. The anni-
155
first
May.
of
Her
secret
sacrifices
women
Eome,
men being
of December, in the house of a praetor or a consul, who in this function probably had taken the place earlier In works of art she appears as a allotted to the king.
woman
in a sitting posture, fully clothed like her huscarries in her arms a cornucopia.
;
already been and perhaps Diana, mentioned, Feronia, Flora, Pales, were closely related to the Bona Dea. Feronia was a goddess of central Italy, whose worship was carried on chiefly in a grove near Capena, not far from Mount Soracte in Etruria, and in a similar one near
Tarracina, in the vicinity of the Pontine marshes. At Eome a festival in her honor was kept about the middle of November in the Campus Martins. She was always
who have
invoked as a giver of the blessings of the harvest and, inasmuch as at all harvest festivals the slaves enjoyed
;
many liberties,
accomplished in the temple of this goddess. 202. Flora, who likewise was indigenous
central
Italy, was in the narrower sense a goddess of flowers, and then, by a natural development of the thought, a dispenser
of fruitfulness.
on the Quirinal
festival
On
(Flordlia) was celebrated with wanton dances and coarse jests after a while scenic games and games of the circus were added to the festivities. With her was associated Eobigus, the god that protected the grain from the robigo (' rust ').
;
156
and
nected with pd-sco (<to pasture') (c/. Pan). In Kome the seat of her worship was on the Palatium (Palatine hill),
after her.
On
the 21st of
April the Palllia (or Parilia) were celebrated in her honor, a feast at which sheep and stables were purified
sacrifices.
For
the same purpose shepherds and flocks leaped over heaps of burning straw. similar custom prevailed at the feast of Feronia, and is still in vogue in Germany at the
and St. John's day. Diana should probably be added to this series Like all the others, she of goddesses of fruitfulness. was worshiped in well-watered groves (Diana Nemorenon Mount Tifata, near Capua, and in the sis), especially
At Aricia the custom vicinity of Tusculum, near Aricia. was for him to succeed to the priesthood who should slay
his predecessor with a
bough broken
This was evidently a kind of human sacrifice which was offered with the assistance of the goddess herself, who At Rome her anmanifested her power in her trees.
cient temple
was situated on the Aventine. Here, and throughout Italy, her principal feast was kept on the Ides of August, a day on which sacrifices were offered In Aricia there was a torchlight to Vertumnus also.
procession in the early morning to honor her, just as Pales was worshiped at sunrise, and Flora by lighting 1 Like Feronia, she protected slaves, evidently candles.
those especially that had fled into the forest which was
1 Mater Matuta, for whom the Matralia ('mother festival') were observed, was, like Diana, a goddess both of the dawn and of birth.
157
consecrated to her, and were pursued like fleeing stags. Like the Bona Dea, moreover, she was especially wor-
shiped by
cundity and an easy birth. perhaps, accounts for the fact that several of her temples, for example, those at Tusculum, Aricia, and Rome, were
sanctuaries of confederacies of various Latin tribes.
At
a later period Diana, as goddess of groves and fruitfulness, was fully identified with Artemis, and thus
became a goddess, of the hunt, and a moon goddess, an idea which, so far as the indigenous Diana is concerned, could have had no foundation except in her feast on
the Ides.
more doubtful what position was originally occupied by Mars, who from the earliest times was
204.
(4)
It is
worshiped in all the tribes of central Italy. Various things go to show that he was an old sun god, viz. his
close relationship to the Greek Apollo; certain ancient formulas of supplication, in which he is entreated to pro-
and bless the fields, crops, vineyards, etc. and the dedication of the so-called ver sacrum, i.e. the offering of the next spring's expected increase in human beings,
tect
;
cattle,
and
disaster.
which was promised at times of severe On the other hand, he was closely enough
crops,
related to the spirits of activity to represent principally, at least in later times, the divine power exerted in war.
his efficacy in war was not restricted to so narrow a province as was that of the Indigetes of later times, who
But
were creations of the elaborate wisdom of the priests. His name Mars, or Mavors, and his ancient epithet
Gradivus cannot be explained with certainty but it is evident from his old symbolic attributes, and from what
;
158
we know
war
205.
was regarded
as a god of
In the royal residence of the old Romans, the Eegia, were kept the sacred spears of Mars and a shield King Numa had eleven (ancile) which fell from heaven.
other shields
made
like this.
Salii
or priests of Mars, each provided with one of (< leapers '), these shields, in the month sacred to the god (March)
The
significance of his other feasts indicates that this celemarked the beginning of the season
which was
restricted to the
summer.
On
the
27th of February and the 14th of March, near the old altar of Mars, situated in the midst of the Campus Martius, the Equlria were held, which consisted in a
review of horses, and a chariot race.
the 23d
of
of
On
March,
at
the
feast
of
Quinqudtrus and
Tubilustrmm, the weapons and war trumpets were Likewise on the 19th of Octoinspected and purified.
ber,
the war season, a purification weapons (ArmUustrium) took place, while the sacrifice of the October horse evidently corresponded to the
after the
close
of
of
Equlria of the spring; for the horse that had been victorious at the preceding chariot race was on the 15th
of October sacrificed to Mars.
The wolf, the emblem of murder attended by bloodshed, was considered sacred to Mars likewise the woodpecker (picus), which produced the impression of being a war;
(which pierces into the trees as a battering-ram bores through the gates), and by the feathlike creature
by his
bill
ery,
Here we
find the
Rom-
159
their father, of the warlike Romans. and, accordingly, the ancestor 206. Quirmus, the chief god of the Sabines, who settled
;
Eemus
for the
on the Quirinal hill, was so closely related to the old Latin Mars that the worship of the two gods easily blended. Yet side by side with the flamen Mdrtialis (Mars's especial priest) there continued to exist a separate flamen Quirinalis; and besides the Palatine Salii of Mars there were twelve Salii peculiar to Quirinus, who had their abode on the Quirinal. While Mars was
regarded as the father of Eomulus, Quirinus was afterwards identified with Eomulus himself. That he was also considered a tribal god seems to be indicated further by the festival customs of the Quirinalia, which were celebrated on the 17th of February.
Janus: Ovid,
vii.
Fast.
i.
64
sg.,
ii.
49
ii.
sg.,
1,
180, 610,
:
viii.
127
"
Vesta Vestal Virgins Fire worship was a special feature of Indo-European religious conception. We find this tendency more
:
or less
marked
From
the
smothered spark to the orb of day, adoration was given to this allpurifying, changing element. The Hindu looked upon the fire as an intercessory priest that would carry his oblation to heaven. In
the Persian religion fire was the mysterious symbol demanding veneration. This idea is emphasized in the Avesta. In the tomb of Darius at Naqshi Rustam, opposite the figure of the king is the altar with the sacred fire blazing. This same conception of the
sanctity of fire gave rise to the story of Prometheus among the Greeks, and established the holy fire at the Roman temple of Vesta. The first hymn of the Rig Veda describes the priesthood of fire, from which the few following stanzas are translated. Rig
Veda
i.
160
1. Agni I praise the household priest the heavenly lord of sacrifice, The Hotar most generous in blessings. 2. Agni as by ancient seers so by recent ones is to be praised,
|
He
4.
shall bring hither the gods. What holy sacrifice thou, Agni, art encompassing,
Accompany
iv.
us into well-being.
Ovid, Met. xv. 864, Fast. iii. 45, vi. 713 sq. ; Vergil, Geor. i. 498, 384, Aen. ii. 296, 567 Macaulay, Battle of Lake Regillus 35. Bona Dea Ovid, Ars Amat. iii. 244. Silvanus: Ovid, Met. xiv. 639; Vergil, Eel. x. 24; Spenser, F. Q. i. vi. 14. Vertumnus Ovid, Met. xiv. 642 sq. ; Pope, Vertumnus and
;
:
:
Pomona
Keats,
Endymion
ii.
444
Taste these juicy pears Sent me by sad Vertumnus, when his fears Were high about Pomona.
Pomona
Ovid, Met. xiv. 623 sq. ; Pope. See Pan with flocks, with fruits
;
37:
;
Capys
18.
Spenser, F. Q. i. iv. 17. Pales: Ovid, Fast. iv. 722 sq. ; Macaulay, Prophecy of Capys 18. Mars Gradivus Ovid, Ars Amat. ii. 566, Fast. ii. 861, iii. 169
:
III.
DIVINITIES OF THE
HEAVENS
207. Mightier than all the divinities of the earth, who have just been discussed, appear to have been the representatives of those forces that operate in the heavens and in the air. In Italy these forces were embodied in the divine pair, Juppiter and Juno. The former was, perhaps, considered the god whose power was exercised
by day
the latter, a
moon goddess,
who
ruled by night.
161
atmosphere is the thunderstorm whose agency this was traced, like Zeus among the Greeks, was considered the most powerful god, who held everything else under his sway. He carried the lightning as his weapon, and in the earliest times in particular forms of worship was even called by the name Fulgur (' lightning
He was the giver of signs by means of lightning '). and by birds, the observation and the interpretation of which was the duty of the college of priests called
Augurs.
and
the
also sent the fructifying thundershowers, in times of prolonged drouth was invoked under
Elicius
('
He
name
'
the rain).
and of luxuriant plenteousness, whose chief characteristic was Liberdlitds (' generosity ). When
so regarded he enjoyed the epithet Liber. The celebration of the festivals relating to the culture of the vine was in
the Vmalia Eustica on the 19th of August, the Meditrmdlia on the llth of October, and the Vmalia
his honor,
viz.
agriculture, cattle-raising, and young people just getting their growth were under his protection and a chapel of Juventas (' youth ') was ac; ;
cordingly located in his temple on the Capitoline hill. 208. On the other hand the phenomena of the thun-
destruc-
tion were ascribed to a divinity that was distinguished from Juppiter, viz. Vejovis or Vedjovis, i.e. the evil
Juppiter.
His sanctuary was situated between the two summits of the Capitoline. He was represented as a youth with a bunch of thunderbolts or arrows in his
hand.
162
god of the thunderstorms which come up in the night sub mane (' towards morning '), was but a secondary form of Juppiter. It is still doubtful whether the old epithet Lucetius (' light-bringer ') did,
usually assumed, characterize Juppiter as the god of the light of the sky, or whether this name, too, should be referred to the light of the thunderbolt,
is
Summanus
as
the lightning.
of the thunderstorm, under the name of Juppiter Stator, became a helper in battle, and under the epithet Victor was considered the bestower of
209.
Victorious generals offered to Juppiter Feretrius victory. as a gift the spolia opima, i.e. the armor of the opposing
slain with their own hands. His servants were the Fetiales, who with solemn ceremonies demanded satisfaction for injuries, declared wars, and concluded treaties for his lightning-flash punished the perjured one who violated a treaty. For this reason Juppiter was invoked as the god of oaths of other kinds Dius Fidius, the god of fidelity, was regarded as the Genius of Juppiter, and the sanctuary of Fides (i.e. conceived of as a goddess) from the earliest fidelity
;
;
'
'
times stood close beside his temple on the Capitoline. In this temple, moreover, was the sacred boundary stone,
the
of Terminus, in order that Juppiter might be recognized as the protector of boundaries and property.
emblem
where the worship of Juppiter was carried on was a sacred grove on the summit of the Mdns Albanus, where formerly the Latin communities had united themselves under the leadership of Alba Longa
of the oldest sanctuaries for the worship of Juppiter Latiaris, the protector of Latium. The younger Tarquinius, who built the temple on
One
163
the Capitoline, likewise erected one on this very spot. Here the Feriae Latlnae were celebrated with sacrifices
and games
and commanders
to
whom
the senate
had
refused a regular triumph at the Capitol often inarched to this sanctuary to offer their spoils of war.
after Eome had gained the leadership over the temple on the southern summit of the CapiLatium, toline became the most important place of Juppiter's worship for, as Rome itself dictated its commands to the
210.
But
world, so the Roman Juppiter Capitollnus, or J. Optimus Maximus, ruled over heaven and earth. He was the
proper lord and protector of the free city therefore the victorious home-returning commander rendered to him fitting thanks, and, arrayed with the attributes and
;
the god, marched in triumph up to the Capitol, to lay the victor's laurel in the lap of the god who gave the victory, and to dedicate the most valuable
raiment of
part of the booty to his temple. The most important games, the Ludl Magm, out of which the Ludl Edmanl
cele-
Side by side with the worship of Juppiter upon the Capitoline was that of .his wife Juno and his daughter
Minerva.
cella,
the central division belonging to Juppiter himself, the one on his left to Juno, and that on his right to Minerva.
The
association of the three divinities was, to be sure, entirely Greek in its origin, but was adopted in Etruria, and thence carried over to Rome towards the close of the
The
who
first minister of Juppiter was the flamen Dialis, offered sacrifices on all the Ides (days of full moon),
164
all of
to Juppiter, and at all the other the flaminica, wife of the Jlamen, was god the priestess of Juno. Their married life was supposed to emblematize that of the divine pair whom they repre-
feasts of this
sented.
which was common throughout Italy from ancient times, was very prominent among the Latins, Oscans, and Umbrians. With the Latins, one month, Junius or Junonius, was named after her, and on its Calends the feast of Juno Moneta (' the reminding ') was kept at Kome, probably to celebrate her marriage with Juppiter. Juno Moneta had an ancient temple on the Capitoline, and in the inclosure belonging to this were kept the sacred
212.
The worship
of Juno,
known as the rescuers of the city. As the wife of Juppiter Rex she was called Eegma her son Mars was born on the first of March, the date on which the women
geese
;
celebrated in her honor the Matronalia ('mother festiMoreover, all the Calends (days of new moon) val').
were sacred to her, probably because she was originally a moon goddess. To this fact her epithets Lucetia and Luclna (' light-bringer ') refer, though under the latter name she was usually invoked as the goddess of childbirth. Juno Lucina, who in works of art often carries in her arms a child in swaddling clothes, had a very ancient grove on the Esquiline, and w as worshiped exr
As goddess of marriage 'she tensively all over Italy. was called also Juno Juga or Jugalis ('the conjugal'), or Pronuba ('bridesmaid'). Her epithet Sospita, which
was current especially at Lanuvium, designated her a protectress or savior in general. so represented, she
When
is
armed with
shield
165
over her head, shoulders, and back. Juno Reglna, like Juppiter Rex, carries the scepter as a distinctive attribute.
Lucina
Ovid, Fast.
ii.
449
Gratia Luciriae.
nomina
lucus,
Seu
Shak., Pericles
iii.
Genitalis.
v.
1, 10,
Cymbeline
4,
43
Chaucer, Knight's
Tale 1227.
IV.
DIVINITIES OF
DEATH
213.
The idea
become
in
of a general realm of the dead did not thoroughly prevalent at Eome, as has been shown
and accordingly no divinities conceived of as rulers of such a domain were independently developed among the Romans. The coming of death itself, however, was ascribed to the activity of a god who ruled sometimes terribly, and again gently, who was named Orcus, although his form was not fully perfected in the minds of his worshipers. Besides him there appeared un9
;
der various appellations a motherly guardian of the dead, who was probably really Mother 1 Earth (Tellus or Terra
Mater), inasmuch as she received the dead into her bosom. From the Manes and Lares she was named Mania, Lara
from the Larvae, Avia Larvarum (' grandm other of ghosts'), and like them was represented as of frightful form. Finally, on account of the silence of
or
Larunda
means
of the
166
the
dumb
or silent goddess ). Perhaps it would be best to place in this group Acca Larentia (mother of the Lares ? ) also,
to
whom
seem
to characterize her, like Tellus, as a goddess of the fruitfulness of the ground. (For Libitina see 216.)
Tellus: Ovid, Met.
iii.
i.
iv.
V.
PERSONIFICATIONS
214. By transferring to the spiritual and moral realm the same kind of conceptions which had called forth belief in the spirits of activity (Indigetes), the Romans
very early reached the point of worshiping actual peroldest of these belong the following Fortuna (the goddess of fortune '), usually distinguished
sonifications.
:
To the
'
by a rudder and a cornucopia; Fides (' fidelity '), with ears of corn and a fruit basket Concordia (' harmony '), with a horn of plenty and a cup Honos and Virtus (the god of honor and the female representative of valor ), both in full armor Spes (' hope '), with a flower in her hand; Pudicitia (' chastity '), veiled; and Salus (' deliverance/ 'safety'). Afterwards were added Pietas ('love
; ;
'
'
'
fevers
Febris (' goddess of with cup and scepter, '), '), Pax (' goddess of peace '), with the olive branch. Finally, in the imperial epoch, it became the custom to personify any abstract idea whatever in the form of a
of parents
),
Libertas ('freedom
),
dementia
mildness ('
woman
167
VI.
215. Towards the end of the epoch of the kings the Etruscan culture, and with it, and through its agency, the culture of Greece, which already prevailed in southern Italy, began to exert an influence at Rome also. The Sibyl-
lection of
Cumae, and containing a colwere particularly instrumental in oracles, introducing into Rome the worship of a whole multitude of Greek divinities. As the process went on, either the
Greek
were transferred to those of the native spirits of activity to which they were by nature closely related, or with the foreign ideas the foreign names also were borrowed. So Minerva originally, in all probability, represented
only the divine power that produces thought and understanding in the human race, and was, at the same Her receptime, the protectress of expert workmanship. tion into the trinity ( 211) worshiped at the Capitol she
owed entirely to her identification with Pallas Athena, whose characteristics were now attributed to
Minerva, except that she did not become properly a
war goddess.
216.
venustus
Venus, likewise, whose name is connected with was not worshiped at Rome in (' charming '),
the oldest times; it was the Greek Aphrodite, coming from southern Italy, and afterwards from Mount Eryx in Sicily, that found entrance into Rome under that name. Her oldest temple was in the grove of Libitina, a goddess of desire and of death and her epithets, Murcia and were undoubtedly borrowed from particular Cloacina,
;
localities.
168
Mercurius
the
By being identified with Hermes he became, for the first time, a fully developed god. But since he always remained far more exmercatura,
traffic.'
the spirit of
'
clusively the god of merchants than Hermes was, the money bag was his constant attribute in Italy.
The
ness,
case
was similar with Hercules Herakles, the and the dispenser of rural fruitful:
was confused with the begetting Genius of Juppiter (who was supposed to have a Genius just as truly as every man had). Thus characterized he was united in wedlock with that Juno who represented the creative power of woman. But afterwards the purely Grecian form of the myth was so completely intermingled with
view of the between Hera and Herakles, all sorts enmity prevailing
this exclusively Italian conception that, in
of contradictions resulted.
217.
On
the contrary, the worship of Ceres at Kome To be sure the name is closely
connected with crescere and creare, but the divine person was no more nor less than Demeter, who under that name was introduced into Kome in 496 B.C., and
little
Rome
women.
but likewise purely Greek, was the worship ludl Apollinares were celebrated on the 13th of July after 212 B.C., in consequence
Still older,
of Apollo, in
Dls pater, likewise, of an oracle of the Sibylline books. the ruler of the lower world, and the husband of Proserpina,
169
('
Dls
is
dives
B.C.
the
Magna Mater Idaea, i.e. of Ma or Ammas, was brought from Pessinus to Rome. In 186 B.C. the worship of Bacchus, which had degenerated on account of its excesses, was of necessity forcibly suppressed. Then Isis and Sarapis came in from Alexandria; and, finally, among many
important systems of worship, the Mysteries ( secret worship') of the Persian sun god Mithras were introless
(
duced, into which had already been incorporated many of the ideas and usages of Christianity, which was by
this time victoriously advancing. self, as in Greece, so also in Rome,
Thus Christianity
found a
soil
it-
well pre-
vi.
98, 176;
A slip-shod
Shak.,
Taming
of the
Shrew
2, 70,
Othello
iii.
4, 70.
INDEX
[Of several references under one head, the most important one
is
placed
first,
in full-faced type. Keferences to literary passages stand last, also in full-faced type. The numbers refer to sections, except when preceded by the letter p.]
Acamas
157
Agenor 123,
Agla'ia 113
62, p.
96
Agonium
Aides
v.
194
Acheron
6, 7, p.
Achilles 177 sq., 2, 58, 131, p. 141 Achilieus v. Achilles Acrisius 128
Ajax
179, p.
Actaeon
141 128
Alcldes 136
Alcinoiis 186, 184, p. Alcmaeon 174, 171
142
Aea
161, 163
8, p.
Aeacus
Aeetes 164
sq., 161, p.
128
Aegeus 151
Aegle 103, p. 78
Alcmene 136, 29 Alpheus 76, p. 62 Althaea 159, p. 123 Amalthea 30, 146 Amazones 58, 133, 141, Amazons v. Amazones
ambrosia 28
155, p.
51
Aegyptus 126
Aello 43
sq.
Ammas
86
v.
Ma
p.
Aeneas
107, p.
Amor
v.
Eros
133
Amphion
sq., p.
124 sq., p.
96
61
Amphitrite
70, 72, p.
Agamemnon
Aganippe
11 -L
131, 177
103
Amphitryon 136
sq., p.
116
Amycus
171
166
172
Anchises 107, p. 86
ancliia 205
Androgeos 153
Andromeda
128, p.
102
Auxo
115
Bacchae 86 Bacchus 85
sq., 218, p.
74
Bear 63
Bellerophou v. Bellerophontes Bellerophontes 133, 36, 58, p. 105 Bellona 116, p. 89
Apate 14 Aphrodite 105 sq., 33, 81, 179, 216, p. 85 Aphrodites 107 Apollo 49 sq., 29, 54, 57,
144, 178, 180, 204, 217, p.
117, 1GO,
199, p.
160
49
Apsyrtus
1(55,
p.
128 33
Cabin 33
Cacus 141
Cadmus 123,
96
Argo 161, p. 128 Argonauts 161 sq., p. 128 Argus 126, p. 102 Ariadne 153, 92, 158, p. 74
Arlon 74, 173
Aristaeus 50, 57, p. 50 Armilustriiun 205 Artemis 57 sq., 29 sq., 49, 63, 81, 110, 125, 131, 153, 159 sq., 203,
p.
Calliope 114
Camenae
191
50
Cecrops
150, p. Celeiis 97
122
sq., 139, 147,
Centauri 77 sq., 68
156, p.
62
Atalanta Ate 14
160, p.
123
Athamas
163
sq.,
Athena 35
32,
Cercopes 145
33
Cercyon 151
Ceres 94, 217, p. 75 Cerynean hind 139 Ceto 69
INDEX
Chalkeia 38 Charis 113,33, 105
173
Charitesll2sq.,30, 105 Charon 7, p. 8 Charybdis71, 185, p. 61 Chimaera 133, p. 105 Chiron 78, 139, 1GI Chrysaor 36 Chryseis 178, p. 141
Chryses 178 Chytroi 3 Cicones 184
Cilix 123
Demeter 94
75
Demophoon Demophoon
Desire v. Pothos Despoina 98 Diana 203, p. 50 dies paren tales 3 Dike 115, 14,30
Circe 185, 60, p. 143 dementia 214 Clio 114 Clotho 118 Clymene 54 Clytaemnestra 131, 134 Clytia 54 Cocytus 6, p. 7 Concordia 214 Consudlia 198 Consus 198 Core 95 sq. creation of man 34
Diomedes (son of Ares) 141 Diomedes (son of Tydeus) 179 sq., p. 141 32 Dione_29, 105, p. Dionysia 87 sq., 95 Dionysus 85 sq., 32, 48, 77, 153, 200, p. 74 Dioscuri 134 sq., 124, 156, p. 106
Diovis 23 Dirce 124, p. 96 Dis Pater 101,217 Discordia 116
Dithyrambus 88
Creon 137, 165, 168, p. 116 Cretan bull 62, 141, 152 Creusa 150 Cromyonian sow 151 Cronus 21, 30, 94, 198, p. 29 Cupido 111, p. 86 CybeleSl, 30, 58, p. 51 Cyclopes 20, 21, 33, 36, 184, Cycnus 145
Dms
Fidius 209
102, 149, 172
p.
30
Daimones 10, 12 sq., 188, Damastes 151 Danae 128, 24, p. 102 Danaides 127 Danaiis 126 sq., p. 102 Dea Muta, Tacita 213
Dei Parentes 9 Deianira 146 sq.
191
eagle 25, 28, 34 earthquakes 73, 22 Egeria 191 Elaphebolia 57 Electra 131 Eleusinia 95, 98
Elysium
8, 123, p.
Endymion 61 Enyo (Bellona) 116, p. 89 Enyo (one of the Graeae) 42 Eos 63 sq., 44, p 51 Epaphus 126, p. 102
Epicaste 168, 170 Epigoni 174, 167
Deidamia 156
174
Equlria 205 Erato 114 Erechtheus 38, 44, 150, p. 33 Erichthonius 38, 99 Erinyes 41, 131, 174, p. 34
Eriphyle 171
92
24, 38
Ens
116
sq., 105, p.
Gamelia 56 86
139
Eros 110
Erymanthian boar
Erythea 141
p.
32
Eryx
141
Geryones
Giants
v.
141, p.
117
Gigantes
Eumaeus
186
Graeae
Gratiae
42, p.
v.
33
Eurygama Eurynome
170
Hades 100
76
Haemon
169
Hebe 28,
143, p. 32 Hecate 59 sq., 96, 165, p. 51 Hector 180s?., p. 142 Helen 131, 29, 107, 134 sq., 156, p. 103
179,
Helieia 54 Helios 54, 62, 96, 141, 164, 185 Helle 163, p. 128 Heosphoros 63 Hephaestus 32 sq., 28, 38 sq., 181,
197, p.
32
24, 28 sq., 32 sq., 49, 126,
Hera 56,
136
sq_.,
32
Herakles
Hercules
INDEX
Hercules 136 sq.,
21(5,
175
133
116 Hermaphroditus 107, p. 86 Hermes 45 sq., 25, 52, 05, 110, 13<>, 216, p. 38 Hermionc 131, p. 103 heroes 122 sq., 8, 13
p.
12G,
Ion 150
Iphigema
131, p.
103
Herse 38
Hesperides
Hestiii
(57
51
142, p.
117
Himeros
111
v. Isthmia 122 Itonians 145 Hippodamia (daughter of Oeno- Ixion 77 sq. p. 62 maiis) 130, p. 103 Janus 194 sq., 189, 191, p. 159 Hippolyte 155, 141, p. 117 Jason 161 sq., p. 128 Hippolytus 155, p. 122 Juno 211 sq., 28, 188, 207, 216, p. 32 Hippomedon 171 JQnones 188 Hippomenes 160 Honos 214 Juppiter 207 sq., 23, 28, 189, p 30 Horae 115,30 Juturna 191
human
203
Juventas 207
Hyacinthus
50
Karneia 50
Keresll6,3
kerykeion 45, 65
Labdacus 168
labyrinth 153 Lachesis 118 Laertes 186, p. 143
Laestrygones
Lai us 168 sq. Lamios 145 Laomedon 28
185, p.
142
Lapithae 77,
156, p.
62
Lara 213
Ldrentdlia 213 Lares 189
v. Lara Larvae 3, 188 Latona 29
Larunda
laurel 51, 53
Leda 134,
29, p.
106
176
Lemures
3, 188
Lemur ia
Medusa Megara
138, p.
116
Lethe 6, p. 8 Leto 49, 29, 57, 125, p. 49 Leucothea 70, 183, p. 61 Liber 200 Libera 200
Libertas 214 Libitma 216 Lichtis 147 Linus 137 Lotophagi 184
36, 128 137 Meleager 159 sq., p. Melicertes 70, p. 61 Melkart 70, 149
123
Mem n on 64
Mene
61
Melpomene 114
Menelaus 131, 179, 182, p. 103 Menestheus 157 Menios 140 Mercurius 216, 47, p. 38
7, 6, 41, 60,
Lower World
98
sq.,
100 sq., 129, 132, 142 sq., 147, 156, 185, 213 Lucifer 63
Minerva 215, 211, p. 33 Minos 62, 8, p. 9 Minotaur v. Minotaurus Minotaurus 152 sq., 62, Minyas 91
Mithras 218
158, p.
51
Luna
55
Mnemosyne
Moerae 118,
114
Lyaeus 88, p. 74 Lycaon 26, p. 32 Lycians 49, 133 Lycomedes 157 Lycurgus 91 Lycus 124 Lynceus 127 sq.
moon 55
165, 203
sq., 191, p.
86
89, 98,
218
Naiades
80, p.
v.
62
Ma
Naiads
Naiades
78
Nausicaa 184
Magna Mater
necromancy 4
nectar 28
Manes 9, 188, p. 9 Mania 213 Marathonian bull 152 Mars 204 sq., 212, p. 160, Marsyas 79, p. 62
Mater Matiita 203
Mdtrdlia 203 Mdtrondlia 212
Nekysia 3
Nemean
p.
lion 138
89
Neptunus
Medea 164
122
INDEX
Nereus 69, Nessus 147
p.
177
60
Nestor 180, 182, p. 141 nightmare 1, 169 Nike 36, 14, 24, 40, 104
Nile 76
130, p.
96
Numa
191, 205
58, 86, 90
Pegasus 133,
36, p.
105
Oceanus 68, 96, p. 60 Ocypete 43 Odysseus 182 sq., p. 142 Oedipus 167 sq., p. 133 Oeneus 146, 159, 171 Oenomaus 130, p. 103 Oenopion 92 Ogygia 183 omens v. haruspicina Omphale 145, p. 117
Opdlia 195 Opiconsivia 195 Ops 198
oracles 52, 19, 25, 99, 102, 149, 172 Orcus 213
Peitho 105 Pelias 161 sq., p. 128 Pelops 130, p. 103 Penates 189, 196 Penelope 183, 186, p. 142
Persephone 98, p. 75
Perses 59 Perseus 128,
24,
,9?.,
p.
14,
102
99,
Oreades 80
Orestes 131, p. 103
orgies 86, 218 Orion 63, 57, p.
personifications 214
103
sq.,
personifications of towns 99
Phaeaces 183
50
117
Phmeus
Palaemon
70, p.
166, p.
128
61
Pales 202 sq., p. 160 Palilia 202 Palladia 35 Pallas 152 Pallas Athena v. Athena Pan 83 sq., p. 74 Panacea 103 Panathenaia 38
Phlegra 20 Phlegyas 78, p. 62 Phobos 116, 105 Phoebus v. Apollo Phoenix 123, 62 Pholus 139
178
Pietas 214
122
Remus
Pittheus 151
Pityokamptes
v.
Sinis
p.
32
75
Podalirius 103
Romulus 205
106
sq.
sacrifices
Polymnia 114 Polymces 170 sq., p. 133 Polypemon 151 Polyphemus 184, 70, p. 142 pomegranates 56, 96 Pomona 200, p. 160
pontifices 192, 190, 196 Port un us 195 Poseidon 72 sq., 37 sq., 98, 128, 150 sq., 183 sq., 193, p. 61 Pothos 111
Saturnus 198,
p.
29
ScyHa71,
185, p.
61
prayer 17,
15,
41
Selene 61, 29, 55, 83 Semele 90, 24, 123, p. 74 Semnai 41 170
,
Priam
107, 180, p.
142
39,
142,
p.
33,
Psyche 111,5,48
Pudlcitia 214
purification 17, 15, 16, 27, 51 Pyanepsia 154, 50
serpent 4, 20, 23, 38, 97, 102 sq. 123, 133, 135, 137, 188 Sibylline books 215, 193, p. 169 Silcni 79 Silvanus 200, p. 160 Sinis 151 Sirenes 185, p. 143 Sirens v. Sirenes Sirius 63
6, p.
souls 1 sq., 10, 43, 48, 116, 188 sq. souls in animal form 4 Sparti 123, 137, 168
Spes 214
Python
50, p.
49
spirits of
spolia
sta?*s
opima 209
Staphylus 92
63
INDEX
Steropes 21 Strophius 131
179
v.
Trmacria
Thrmacia
Summanus
sun 49
208
Syleus 145
Tyche 120
sq., p.
92
Tydeusl71
sq., 179
Tantalus Tartarus
129, p.
102
Ulysses
186, p.
v.
8, 21, p.
Odysseus Odysseus
108, p.
142
31
166
Terminus 209
Terpsichore 114
Terra Mater
v.
Tellus
Venus 216, p. 85 sacrum 204 Vertumnus 200, 203, p. 160 Vesta 195 sq., 189, p. 159
ver
Vestdlia 196 Victoria v. Nike Vlndlia 207 Virtus 214 vittae 16
Thanatos
101, 111
Thargelia 50 sq.
Themis 115,14,30,118
Thersander 174 Theseus 150 sq.,
170, 173, p. 122 Thesmophoria 97
58, 72, 141, 143,
Volcanus
water 68
197, p.
32
wind 43
sq., 181, p.
184
61
130,
51, 205
thunderstorms
207 sq.
20
sq.,
12,
65, p.
38
Thyiades86
Tiberinus 192
Tiresias 170, 185 Titanes 21, 89, p.
Zeus 20
sq., 32 sq., 36, 45, 56 sq., 90, 96, 105, 113 sq., 118, 124, 126,
30
128 sq., 132, 134, 136 sq., 163, 178 sq., 183, 185, p. 30 Zeus Asterios 62
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By M. GRANT DANIELL,
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