{"id":683,"date":"2018-10-20T23:38:49","date_gmt":"2018-10-20T23:38:49","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/courses.lumenlearning.com\/suny-jeffersoncc-americanlit2\/?post_type=chapter&#038;p=683"},"modified":"2018-11-15T18:00:01","modified_gmt":"2018-11-15T18:00:01","slug":"bulfinchs-mythology-chs-ix-xx-and-xxv","status":"publish","type":"chapter","link":"https:\/\/courses.lumenlearning.com\/suny-jeffersoncc-mythology\/chapter\/bulfinchs-mythology-chs-ix-xx-and-xxv\/","title":{"raw":"Bulfinch's Mythology, Chs. IX, XX, and XXV","rendered":"Bulfinch&#8217;s Mythology, Chs. IX, XX, and XXV"},"content":{"raw":"<h4 id=\"id00616\">CHAPTER XIX<\/h4>\r\n<h5 id=\"id00617\">HERCULES\u2014HEBE AND GANYMEDE<\/h5>\r\n<h5 id=\"id00618\">HERCULES<\/h5>\r\n<p id=\"id00619\">Hercules was the son of Jupiter and Alcmena. As Juno was always hostile to the offspring of her husband by mortal mothers, she declared war against Hercules from his birth. She sent two serpents to destroy him as he lay in his cradle, but the precocious infant strangled them with his own hands. He was, however, by the arts of Juno rendered subject to Eurystheus and compelled to perform all his commands. Eurystheus enjoined upon him a succession of desperate adventures, which are called the \"Twelve Labors of Hercules.\" The first was the fight with the Nemean lion. The valley of Nemea was infested by a terrible lion. Eurystheus ordered Hercules to bring him the skin of this monster. After using in vain his club and arrows against the lion, Hercules strangled the animal with his hands. He returned carrying the dead lion on his shoulders; but Eurystheus was so frightened at the sight of it and at this proof of the prodigious strength of the hero, that he ordered him to deliver the account of his exploits in future outside the town.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00620\">His next labor was the slaughter of the Hydra. This monster ravaged the country of Argos, and dwelt in a swamp near the well of Amymone. This well had been discovered by Amymone when the country was suffering from drought, and the story was that Neptune, who loved her, had permitted her to touch the rock with his trident, and a spring of three outlets burst forth. Here the Hydra took up his position, and Hercules was sent to destroy him. The Hydra had nine heads, of which the middle one was immortal. Hercules struck off its heads with his club, but in the place of the head knocked off, two new ones grew forth each time. At length with the assistance of his faithful servant Iolaus, he burned away the heads of the Hydra, and buried the ninth or immortal one under a huge rock.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00621\">Another labor was the cleaning of the Augean stables. Augeas, king of Elis, had a herd of three thousand oxen, whose stalls had not been cleansed for thirty years. Hercules brought the rivers Alpheus and Peneus through them, and cleansed them thoroughly in one day.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00622\">His next labor was of a more delicate kind. Admeta, the daughter of Eurystheus, longed to obtain the girdle of the queen of the Amazons, and Eurystheus ordered Hercules to go and get it. The Amazons were a nation of women. They were very warlike and held several flourishing cities. It was their custom to bring up only the female children; the boys were either sent away to the neighboring nations or put to death. Hercules was accompanied by a number of volunteers, and after various adventures at last reached the country of the Amazons. Hippolyta, the queen, received him kindly, and consented to yield him her girdle, but Juno, taking the form of an Amazon, went and persuaded the rest that the strangers were carrying off their queen. They instantly armed and came in great numbers down to the ship. Hercules, thinking that Hippolyta had acted treacherously, slew her, and taking her girdle made sail homewards.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00623\">Another task enjoined him was to bring to Eurystheus the oxen of Geryon, a monster with three bodies, who dwelt in the island Erytheia (the red), so called because it lay at the west, under the rays of the setting sun. This description is thought to apply to Spain, of which Geryon was king. After traversing various countries, Hercules reached at length the frontiers of Libya and Europe, where he raised the two mountains of Calpe and Abyla, as monuments of his progress, or, according to another account, rent one mountain into two and left half on each side, forming the straits of Gibraltar, the two mountains being called the Pillars of Hercules. The oxen were guarded by the giant Eurytion and his two-headed dog, but Hercules killed the giant and his dog and brought away the oxen in safety to Eurystheus.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00624\">The most difficult labor of all was getting the golden apples of the Hesperides, for Hercules did not know where to find them. These were the apples which Juno had received at her wedding from the goddess of the Earth, and which she had intrusted to the keeping of the daughters of Hesperus, assisted by a watchful dragon. After various adventures Hercules arrived at Mount Atlas in Africa. Atlas was one of the Titans who had warred against the gods, and after they were subdued, Atlas was condemned to bear on his shoulders the weight of the heavens. He was the father of the Hesperides, and Hercules thought might, if any one could, find the apples and bring them to him. But how to send Atlas away from his post, or bear up the heavens while he was gone? Hercules took the burden on his own shoulders, and sent Atlas to seek the apples. He returned with them, and though somewhat reluctantly, took his burden upon his shoulders again, and let Hercules return with the apples to Eurystheus.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00625\">Milton, in his \"Comus,\" makes the Hesperides the daughters of\r\nHesperus and nieces of Atlas:<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00626\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\"\u2026 amidst the gardens fair \/ Of Hesperus and his daughters three, \/ That sing about the golden tree.\"<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00627\">The poets, led by the analogy of the lovely appearance of the western sky at sunset, viewed the west as a region of brightness and glory. Hence they placed in it the Isles of the Blest, the ruddy Isle Erythea, on which the bright oxen of Geryon were pastured, and the Isle of the Hesperides. The apples are supposed by some to be the oranges of Spain, of which the Greeks had heard some obscure accounts.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00628\">A celebrated exploit of Hercules was his victory over Antaeus. Antaeus, the son of Terra, the Earth, was a mighty giant and wrestler, whose strength was invincible so long as he remained in contact with his mother Earth. He compelled all strangers who came to his country to wrestle with him, on condition that if conquered (as they all were) they should be put to death. Hercules encountered him, and finding that it was of no avail to throw him, for he always rose with renewed strength from every fall, he lifted him up from the earth and strangled him in the air.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00629\">Cacus was a huge giant, who inhabited a cave on Mount Aventine, and plundered the surrounding country. When Hercules was driving home the oxen of Geryon, Cacus stole part of the cattle, while the hero slept. That their footprints might not serve to show where they had been driven, he dragged them backward by their tails to his cave; so their tracks all seemed to show that they had gone in the opposite direction. Hercules was deceived by this stratagem, and would have failed to find his oxen, if it had not happened that in driving the remainder of the herd past the cave where the stolen ones were concealed, those within began to low, and were thus discovered. Cacus was slain by Hercules.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00630\">The last exploit we shall record was bringing Cerberus from the lower world. Hercules descended into Hades, accompanied by Mercury and Minerva. He obtained permission from Pluto to carry Cerberus to the upper air, provided he could do it without the use of weapons; and in spite of the monster's struggling, he seized him, held him fast, and carried him to Eurystheus, and afterwards brought him back again. When he was in Hades he obtained the liberty of Theseus, his admirer and imitator, who had been detained a prisoner there for an unsuccessful attempt to carry off Proserpine.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00631\">Hercules in a fit of madness killed his friend Iphitus, and was condemned for this offence to become the slave of Queen Omphale for three years. While in this service the hero's nature seemed changed. He lived effeminately, wearing at times the dress of a woman, and spinning wool with the hand-maidens of Omphale, while the queen wore his lion's skin. When this service was ended he married Dejanira and lived in peace with her three years. On one occasion as he was travelling with his wife, they came to a river, across which the Centaur Nessus carried travellers for a stated fee. Hercules himself forded the river, but gave Dejanira to Nessus to be carried across. Nessus attempted to run away with her, but Hercules heard her cries and shot an arrow into the heart of Nessus. The dying Centaur told Dejanira to take a portion of his blood and keep it, as it might be used as a charm to preserve the love of her husband.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00632\">Dejanira did so and before long fancied she had occasion to use it. Hercules in one of his conquests had taken prisoner a fair maiden, named Iole, of whom he seemed more fond than Dejanira approved. When Hercules was about to offer sacrifices to the gods in honor of his victory, he sent to his wife for a white robe to use on the occasion. Dejanira, thinking it a good opportunity to try her love-spell, steeped the garment in the blood of Nessus. We are to suppose she took care to wash out all traces of it, but the magic power remained, and as soon as the garment became warm on the body of Hercules the poison penetrated into all his limbs and caused him the most intense agony. In his frenzy he seized Lichas, who had brought him the fatal robe, and hurled him into the sea. He wrenched off the garment, but it stuck to his flesh, and with it he tore away whole pieces of his body. In this state he embarked on board a ship and was conveyed home. Dejanira, on seeing what she had unwittingly done, hung herself. Hercules, prepared to die, ascended Mount Oeta, where he built a funeral pile of trees, gave his bow and arrows to Philoctetes, and laid himself down on the pile, his head resting on his club, and his lion's skin spread over him. With a countenance as serene as if he were taking his place at a festal board he commanded Philoctetes to apply the torch. The flames spread apace and soon invested the whole mass.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00633\">Milton thus alludes to the frenzy of Hercules:<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00634\">\"As when Alcides, from Oechalia crowned\r\nWith conquest, felt the envenomed robe, and tore,\r\nThrough pain, up by the roots Thessalian pines\r\nAnd Lichas from the top of Oeta threw\r\nInto the Euboic Sea.\"<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00635\">[Footnote: Alcides, a name of Hercules.]<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00636\">The gods themselves felt troubled at seeing the champion of the earth so brought to his end. But Jupiter with cheerful countenance thus addressed them: \"I am pleased to see your concern, my princes, and am gratified to perceive that I am the ruler of a loyal people, and that my son enjoys your favor. For although your interest in him arises from his noble deeds, yet it is not the less gratifying to me. But now I say to you, Fear not. He who conquered all else is not to be conquered by those flames which you see blazing on Mount Oeta. Only his mother's share in him can perish; what he derived from me is immortal. I shall take him, dead to earth, to the heavenly shores, and I require of you all to receive him kindly. If any of you feel grieved at his attaining this honor, yet no one can deny that he has deserved it.\" The gods all gave their assent; Juno only heard the closing words with some displeasure that she should be so particularly pointed at, yet not enough to make her regret the determination of her husband. So when the flames had consumed the mother's share of Hercules, the diviner part, instead of being injured thereby, seemed to start forth with new vigor, to assume a more lofty port and a more awful dignity. Jupiter enveloped him in a cloud, and took him up in a four-horse chariot to dwell among the stars. As he took his place in heaven, Atlas felt the added weight.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00637\">Juno, now reconciled to him, gave him her daughter Hebe in marriage.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00638\">The poet Schiller, in one of his pieces called the \"Ideal and Life,\" illustrates the contrast between the practical and the imaginative in some beautiful stanzas, of which the last two may be thus translated:<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00639\">\"Deep degraded to a coward's slave,\r\nEndless contests bore Alcides brave,\r\nThrough the thorny path of suffering led;\r\nSlew the Hydra, crushed the lion's might,\r\nThrew himself, to bring his friend to light,\r\nLiving, in the skiff that bears the dead.\r\nAll the torments, every toil of earth\r\nJuno's hatred on him could impose,\r\nWell he bore them, from his fated birth\r\nTo life's grandly mournful close.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00640\">\"Till the god, the earthly part forsaken,\r\nFrom the man in flames asunder taken,\r\nDrank the heavenly ether's purer breath.\r\nJoyous in the new unwonted lightness,\r\nSoared he upwards to celestial brightness,\r\nEarth's dark heavy burden lost in death.\r\nHigh Olympus gives harmonious greeting\r\nTo the hall where reigns his sire adored;\r\nYouth's bright goddess, with a blush at meeting,\r\nGives the nectar to her lord.\"<\/p>\r\n\r\n<h5 id=\"id00642\">HEBE AND GANYMEDE<\/h5>\r\n<p id=\"id00643\">Hebe, the daughter of Juno, and goddess of youth, was cup-bearer to the gods. The usual story is that she resigned her office on becoming the wife of Hercules. But there is another statement which our countryman Crawford, the sculptor, has adopted in his group of Hebe and Ganymede, now in the Athenaeum gallery. According to this, Hebe was dismissed from her office in consequence of a fall which she met with one day when in attendance on the gods. Her successor was Ganymede, a Trojan boy, whom Jupiter, in the disguise of an eagle, seized and carried off from the midst of his playfellows on Mount Ida, bore up to heaven, and installed in the vacant place.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00644\">Tennyson, in his \"Palace of Art,\" describes among the decorations on the walls a picture representing this legend:<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00645\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\"There, too, flushed Ganymede, his rosy thigh\r\nHalf buried in the eagle's down,\r\nSole as a flying star shot through the sky\r\nAbove the pillared town.\"<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00646\">And in Shelley's \"Prometheus\" Jupiter calls to his cup-bearer thus:<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00647\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\"Pour forth heaven's wine, Idaean Ganymede,\r\nAnd let it fill the Daedal cups like fire.\"<\/p>\r\n\r\n<h4 id=\"id00649\">CHAPTER XX<\/h4>\r\n<h5 id=\"id00650\">THESEUS\u2014DAEDALUS\u2014CASTOR AND POLLUX<\/h5>\r\n<h5 id=\"id00651\">THESEUS<\/h5>\r\n<p id=\"id00652\">Theseus was the son of Aegeus, king of Athens, and of Aethra, daughter of the king of Troezen. He was brought up at Troezen, and when arrived at manhood was to proceed to Athens and present himself to his father. Aegeus on parting from Aethra, before the birth of his son, placed his sword and shoes under a large stone and directed her to send his son to him when he became strong enough to roll away the stone and take them from under it. When she thought the time had come, his mother led Theseus to the stone, and he removed it with ease and took the sword and shoes. As the roads were infested with robbers, his grandfather pressed him earnestly to take the shorter and safer way to his father's country\u2014by sea; but the youth, feeling in himself the spirit and the soul of a hero, and eager to signalize himself like Hercules, with whose fame all Greece then rang, by destroying the evil-doers and monsters that oppressed the country, determined on the more perilous and adventurous journey by land.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00653\">His first day's journey brought him to Epidaurus, where dwelt a man named Periphetes, a son of Vulcan. This ferocious savage always went armed with a club of iron, and all travellers stood in terror of his violence. When he saw Theseus approach he assailed him, but speedily fell beneath the blows of the young hero, who took possession of his club and bore it ever afterwards as a memorial of his first victory.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00654\">Several similar contests with the petty tyrants and marauders of the country followed, in all of which Theseus was victorious. One of these evil-doers was called Procrustes, or the Stretcher. He had an iron bedstead, on which he used to tie all travellers who fell into his hands. If they were shorter than the bed, he stretched their limbs to make them fit it; if they were longer than the bed, he lopped off a portion. Theseus served him as he had served others.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00655\">Having overcome all the perils of the road, Theseus at length reached Athens, where new dangers awaited him. Medea, the sorceress, who had fled from Corinth after her separation from Jason, had become the wife of Aegeus, the father of Theseus. Knowing by her arts who he was, and fearing the loss of her influence with her husband if Theseus should be acknowledged as his son, she filled the mind of Aegeus with suspicions of the young stranger, and induced him to present him a cup of poison; but at the moment when Theseus stepped forward to take it, the sight of the sword which he wore discovered to his father who he was, and prevented the fatal draught. Medea, detected in her arts, fled once more from deserved punishment, and arrived in Asia, where the country afterwards called Media received its name from her, Theseus was acknowledged by his father, and declared his successor.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00656\">The Athenians were at that time in deep affliction, on account of the tribute which they were forced to pay to Minos, king of Crete. This tribute consisted of seven youths and seven maidens, who were sent every year to be devoured by the Minotaur, a monster with a bull's body and a human head. It was exceedingly strong and fierce, and was kept in a labyrinth constructed by Daedalus, so artfully contrived that whoever was enclosed in it could by no means, find his way out unassisted. Here the Minotaur roamed, and was fed with human victims.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00657\">Theseus resolved to deliver his countrymen from this calamity, or to die in the attempt. Accordingly, when the time of sending off the tribute came, and the youths and maidens were, according to custom, drawn by lot to be sent, he offered himself as one of the victims, in spite of the entreaties of his father. The ship departed under black sails, as usual, which Theseus promised his father to change for white, in case of his returning victorious. When they arrived in Crete, the youths and maidens were exhibited before Minos; and Ariadne, the daughter of the king, being present, became deeply enamored of Theseus, by whom her love was readily returned. She furnished him with a sword, with which to encounter the Minotaur, and with a clew of thread by which he might find his way out of the labyrinth. He was successful, slew the Minotaur, escaped from the labyrinth, and taking Ariadne as the companion of his way, with his rescued companions sailed for Athens. On their way they stopped at the island of Naxos, where Theseus abandoned Ariadne, leaving her asleep. [Footnote: One of the finest pieces of sculpture in Italy, the recumbent Ariadne of the Vatican, represents this incident. A copy is owned by the Athenaeum, Boston, and deposited, in the Museum of Fine Arts.] His excuse for this ungrateful treatment of his benefactress was that Minerva appeared to him in a dream and commanded him to do so.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00658\">On approaching the coast of Attica, Theseus forgot the signal appointed by his father, and neglected to raise the white sails, and the old king, thinking his son had perished, put an end to his own life. Theseus thus became king of Athens.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00659\">One of the most celebrated of the adventures of Theseus is his expedition against the Amazons. He assailed them before they had recovered from the attack of Hercules, and carried off their queen Antiope. The Amazons in their turn invaded the country of Athens and penetrated into the city itself; and the final battle in which Theseus overcame them was fought in the very midst of the city. This battle was one of the favorite subjects of the ancient sculptors, and is commemorated in several works of art that are still extant.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00660\">The friendship between Theseus and Pirithous was of a most intimate nature, yet it originated in the midst of arms. Pirithous had made an irruption into the plain of Marathon, and carried off the herds of the king of Athens. Theseus went to repel the plunderers. The moment Pirithous beheld him, he was seized with admiration; he stretched out his hand as a token of peace, and cried, \"Be judge thyself\u2014what satisfaction dost thou require?\" \"Thy friendship,\" replied the Athenian, and they swore inviolable fidelity. Their deeds corresponded to their professions, and they ever continued true brothers in arms. Each of them aspired to espouse a daughter of Jupiter. Theseus fixed his choice on Helen, then but a child, afterwards so celebrated as the cause of the Trojan war, and with the aid of his friend he carried her off. Pirithous aspired to the wife of the monarch of Erebus; and Theseus, though aware of the danger, accompanied the ambitious lover in his descent to the under-world. But Pluto seized and set them on an enchanted rock at his palace gate, where they remained till Hercules arrived and liberated Theseus, leaving Pirithous to his fate.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00661\">After the death of Antiope, Theseus married Phaedra, daughter of Minos, king of Crete. Phaedra saw in Hippolytus, the son of Theseus, a youth endowed with all the graces and virtues of his father, and of an age corresponding to her own. She loved him, but he repulsed her advances, and her love was changed to hate. She used her influence over her infatuated husband to cause him to be jealous of his son, and he imprecated the vengeance of Neptune upon him. As Hippolytus was one day driving his chariot along the shore, a sea-monster raised himself above the waters, and frightened the horses so that they ran away and dashed the chariot to pieces. Hippolytus was killed, but by Diana's assistance Aesculapius restored him to life. Diana removed Hippolytus from the power of his deluded father and false stepmother, and placed him in Italy under the protection of the nymph Egeria.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00662\">Theseus at length lost the favor of his people, and retired to the court of Lycomedes, king of Scyros, who at first received him kindly, but afterwards treacherously slew him. In a later age the Athenian general Cimon discovered the place where his remains were laid, and caused them to be removed to Athens, where they were deposited in a temple called the Theseum, erected in honor of the hero.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00663\">The queen of the Amazons whom Theseus espoused is by some called\r\nHippolyta. That is the name she bears in Shakspeare's \"Midsummer\r\nNight's Dream,\"\u2014the subject of which is the festivities attending\r\nthe nuptials of Theseus and Hippolyta.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00664\">Mrs. Hemans has a poem on the ancient Greek tradition that the \"Shade of Theseus\" appeared strengthening his countrymen at the battle of Marathon.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00665\">Theseus is a semi-historical personage. It is recorded of him that he united the several tribes by whom the territory of Attica was then possessed into one state, of which Athens was the capital. In commemoration of this important event, he instituted the festival of Panathenaea, in honor of Minerva, the patron deity of Athens. This festival differed from the other Grecian games chiefly in two particulars. It was peculiar to the Athenians, and its chief feature was a solemn procession in which the Peplus, or sacred robe of Minerva, was carried to the Parthenon, and suspended before the statue of the goddess. The Peplus was covered with embroidery, worked by select virgins of the noblest families in Athens. The procession consisted of persons of all ages and both sexes. The old men carried olive branches in their hands, and the young men bore arms. The young women carried baskets on their heads, containing the sacred utensils, cakes, and all things necessary for the sacrifices. The procession formed the subject of the bas-reliefs which embellished the outside of the temple of the Parthenon. A considerable portion of these sculptures is now in the British Museum among those known as the \"Elgin marbles.\"<\/p>\r\n\r\n<h5 id=\"id00666\">OLYMPIC AND OTHER GAMES<\/h5>\r\n<p id=\"id00667\">It seems not inappropriate to mention here the other celebrated national games of the Greeks. The first and most distinguished were the Olympic, founded, it was said, by Jupiter himself. They were celebrated at Olympia in Elis. Vast numbers of spectators flocked to them from every part of Greece, and from Asia, Africa, and Sicily. They were repeated every fifth year in mid-summer, and continued five days. They gave rise to the custom of reckoning time and dating events by Olympiads. The first Olympiad is generally considered as corresponding with the year 776 B.C. The Pythian games were celebrated in the vicinity of Delphi, the Isthmian on the Corinthian isthmus, the Nemean at Nemea, a city of Argolis.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00668\">The exercises in these games were of five sorts: running, leaping, wrestling, throwing the quoit, and hurling the javelin, or boxing. Besides these exercises of bodily strength and agility, there were contests in music, poetry, and eloquence. Thus these games furnished poets, musicians, and authors the best opportunities to present their productions to the public, and the fame of the victors was diffused far and wide.<\/p>\r\n\r\n<h5 id=\"id00669\">DAEDALUS<\/h5>\r\n<p id=\"id00670\">The labyrinth from which Theseus escaped by means of the clew of Ariadne was built by Daedalus, a most skilful artificer. It was an edifice with numberless winding passages and turnings opening into one another, and seeming to have neither beginning nor end, like the river Maeander, which returns on itself, and flows now onward, now backward, in its course to the sea. Daedalus built the labyrinth for King Minos, but afterwards lost the favor of the king, and was shut up in a tower. He contrived to make his escape from his prison, but could not leave the island by sea, as the king kept strict watch on all the vessels, and permitted none to sail without being carefully searched. \"Minos may control the land and sea,\" said Daedalus, \"but not the regions of the air. I will try that way.\" So he set to work to fabricate wings for himself and his young son Icarus. He wrought feathers together, beginning with the smallest and adding larger, so as to form an increasing surface. The larger ones he secured with thread and the smaller with wax, and gave the whole a gentle curvature like the wings of a bird. Icarus, the boy, stood and looked on, sometimes running to gather up the feathers which the wind had blown away, and then handling the wax and working it over with his fingers, by his play impeding his father in his labors. When at last the work was done, the artist, waving his wings, found himself buoyed upward, and hung suspended, poising himself on the beaten air. He next equipped his son in the same manner, and taught him how to fly, as a bird tempts her young ones from the lofty nest into the air. When all was prepared for flight he said, \"Icarus, my son, I charge you to keep at a moderate height, for if you fly too low the damp will clog your wings, and if too high the heat will melt them. Keep near me and you will be safe.\" While he gave him these instructions and fitted the wings to his shoulders, the face of the father was wet with tears, and his hands trembled. He kissed the boy, not knowing that it was for the last time. Then rising on his wings, he flew off, encouraging him to follow, and looked back from his own flight to see how his son managed his wings. As they flew the ploughman stopped his work to gaze, and the shepherd leaned on his staff and watched them, astonished at the sight, and thinking they were gods who could thus cleave the air.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00671\">They passed Samos and Delos on the left and Lebynthos on the right, when the boy, exulting in his career, began to leave the guidance of his companion and soar upward as if to reach heaven. The nearness of the blazing sun softened the wax which held the feathers together, and they came off. He fluttered with his arms, but no feathers remained to hold the air. While his mouth uttered cries to his father it was submerged in the blue waters of the sea, which thenceforth was called by his name. His father cried, \"Icarus, Icarus, where are you?\" At last he saw the feathers floating on the water, and bitterly lamenting his own arts, he buried the body and called the land Icaria in memory of his child. Daedalus arrived safe in Sicily, where he built a temple to Apollo, and hung up his wings, an offering to the god.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00672\">Daedalus was so proud of his achievements that he could not bear the idea of a rival. His sister had placed her son Perdix under his charge to be taught the mechanical arts. He was an apt scholar and gave striking evidences of ingenuity. Walking on the seashore he picked up the spine of a fish. Imitating it, he took a piece of iron and notched it on the edge, and thus invented the SAW. He put two pieces of iron together, connecting them at one end with a rivet, and sharpening the other ends, and made a PAIR OF COMPASSES. Daedalus was so envious of his nepnew's performances that he took an opportunity, when they were together one day on the top of a high tower, to push him off. But Minerva, who favors ingenuity, saw him falling, and arrested his fate by changing him into a bird called after his name, the Partridge. This bird does not build his nest in the trees, nor take lofty flights, but nestles in the hedges, and mindful of his fall, avoids high places.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00673\">The death of Icarus is told in the following lines by Darwin:<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00674\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\"\u2026 with melting wax and loosened strings\r\nSunk hapless Icarus on unfaithful wings;\r\nHeadlong he rushed through the affrighted air,\r\nWith limbs distorted and dishevelled hair;\r\nHis scattered plumage danced upon the wave,\r\nAnd sorrowing Nereids decked his watery grave;\r\nO'er his pale corse their pearly sea-flowers shed,\r\nAnd strewed with crimson moss his marble bed;\r\nStruck in their coral towers the passing bell,\r\nAnd wide in ocean tolled his echoing knell.\"<\/p>\r\n\r\n<h5 id=\"id00675\">CASTOR AND POLLUX<\/h5>\r\n<p id=\"id00676\">Castor and Pollux were the offspring of Leda and the Swan, under which disguise Jupiter had concealed himself. Leda gave birth to an egg from which sprang the twins. Helen, so famous afterwards as the cause of the Trojan war, was their sister.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00677\">When Theseus and his friend Pirithous had carried off Helen from Sparta, the youthful heroes Castor and Pollux, with their followers, hastened to her rescue. Theseus was absent from Attica and the brothers were successful in recovering their sister.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00678\">Castor was famous for taming and managing horses, and Pollux for skill in boxing. They were united by the warmest affection and inseparable in all their enterprises. They accompanied the Argonautic expedition. During the voyage a storm arose, and Orpheus prayed to the Samothracian gods, and played on his harp, whereupon the storm ceased and stars appeared on the heads of the brothers. From this incident, Castor and Pollux came afterwards to be considered the patron deities of seamen and voyagers, and the lambent flames, which in certain states of the atmosphere play round the sails and masts of vessels, were called by their names.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00679\">After the Argonautic expedition, we find Castor and Pollux engaged in a war with Idas and Lynceus. Castor was slain, and Pollux, inconsolable for the loss of his brother, besought Jupiter to be permitted to give his own life as a ransom for him. Jupiter so far consented as to allow the two brothers to enjoy the boon of life alternately, passing one day under the earth and the next in the heavenly abodes. According to another form of the story, Jupiter rewarded the attachment of the brothers by placing them among the stars as Gemini the Twins.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00680\">They received divine honors under the name of Dioscuri (sons of Jove). They were believed to have appeared occasionally in later times, taking part with one side or the other, in hard-fought fields, and were said on such occasions to be mounted on magnificent white steeds. Thus in the early history of Rome they are said to have assisted the Romans at the battle of Lake Regillus, and after the victory a temple was erected in their honor on the spot where they appeared.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00681\">Macaulay, in his \"Lays of Ancient Rome,\" thus alludes to the legend:<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00682\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\"So like they were, no mortal\r\nMight one from other know;\r\nWhite as snow their armor was,\r\nTheir steeds were white as snow.\r\nNever on earthly anvil\r\nDid such rare armor gleam,\r\nAnd never did such gallant steeds\r\nDrink of an earthly stream.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00683\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\"Back comes the chief in triumph\r\nWho in the hour of fight\r\nHath seen the great Twin Brethren\r\nIn harness on his right.\r\nSafe comes the ship to haven,\r\nThrough billows and through gales.\r\nIf once the great Twin Brethren\r\nSit shining on the sails.\"<\/p>\r\n\r\n<h4 id=\"id00834\">CHAPTER XXV<\/h4>\r\n<h5 id=\"id00835\">ARION\u2014IBYCUS\u2014SIMONIDES\u2014SAPPHO<\/h5>\r\n<p id=\"id00836\">The poets whose adventures compose this chapter were real persons some of whose works yet remain, and their influence on poets who succeeded them is yet more important than their poetical remains. The adventures recorded of them in the following stories rest on the same authority as other narratives of the \"Age of Fable,\" that is, of the poets who have told them. In their present form, the first two are translated from the German, Arion from Schlegel, and Ibycus from Schiller.<\/p>\r\n\r\n<h5 id=\"id00837\">ARION<\/h5>\r\n<p id=\"id00838\">Arion was a famous musician, and dwelt in the court of Periander, king of Corinth, with whom he was a great favorite. There was to be a musical contest in Sicily, and Arion longed to compete for the prize. He told his wish to Periander, who besought him like a brother to give up the thought. \"Pray stay with me,\" he said, \"and be contented. He who strives to win may lose.\" Arion answered, \"A wandering life best suits the free heart of a poet. The talent which a god bestowed on me, I would fain make a source of pleasure to others. And if I win the prize, how will the enjoyment of it be increased by the consciousness of my widespread fame!\" He went, won the prize, and embarked with his wealth in a Corinthian ship for home. On the second morning after setting sail, the wind breathed mild and fair. \"O Periander,\" he exclaimed, \"dismiss your fears! Soon shall you forget them in my embrace. With what lavish offerings will we display our gratitude to the gods, and how merry will we be at the festal board!\" The wind and sea continued propitious. Not a cloud dimmed the firmament. He had not trusted too much to the ocean\u2014but he had to man. He overheard the seamen exchanging hints with one another, and found they were plotting to possess themselves of his treasure. Presently they surrounded him loud and mutinous, and said, \"Arion, you must die! If you would have a grave on shore, yield yourself to die on this spot; but if otherwise, cast yourself into the sea.\" \"Will nothing satisfy you but my life?\" said he. \"Take my gold, and welcome. I willingly buy my life at that price.\" \"No, no; we cannot spare you. Your life would be too dangerous to us. Where could we go to escape from Periander, if he should know that you had been robbed by us? Your gold would be of little use to us, if on returning home, we could never more be free from fear.\" \"Grant me, then,\" said he, \"a last request, since nought will avail to save my life, that I may die, as I have lived, as becomes a bard. When I shall have sung my death song, and my harp-strings shall have ceased to vibrate, then I will bid farewell to life, and yield uncomplaining to my fate.\" This prayer, like the others, would have been unheeded,\u2014they thought only of their booty,\u2014but to hear so famous a musician, that moved their rude hearts. \"Suffer me,\" he added, \"to arrange my dress. Apollo will not favor me unless I be clad in my minstrel garb.\"<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00839\">He clothed his well-proportioned limbs in gold and purple fair to see, his tunic fell around him in graceful folds, jewels adorned his arms, his brow was crowned with a golden wreath, and over his neck and shoulders flowed his hair perfumed with odors. His left hand held the lyre, his right the ivory wand with which he struck its chords. Like one inspired, he seemed to drink the morning air and glitter in the morning ray. The seamen gazed with admiration. He strode forward to the vessel's side and looked down into the deep blue sea. Addressing his lyre, he sang, \"Companion of my voice, come with me to the realm of shades. Though Cerberus may growl, we know the power of song can tame his rage. Ye heroes of Elysium, who have passed the darkling flood,\u2014ye happy souls, soon shall I join your band. Yet can ye relieve my grief? Alas, I leave my friend behind me. Thou, who didst find thy Eurydice, and lose her again as soon as found; when she had vanished like a dream, how didst thou hate the cheerful light! I must away, but I will not fear. The gods look down upon us. Ye who slay me unoffending, when I am no more, your time of trembling shall come. Ye Nereids, receive your guest, who throws himself upon your mercy!\" So saying, he sprang into the deep sea. The waves covered him, and the seamen held on their way, fancying themselves safe from all danger of detection.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00840\">But the strains of his music had drawn round him the inhabitants of the deep to listen, and Dolphins followed the ship as if chained by a spell. While he struggled in the waves, a Dolphin offered him his back, and carried him mounted thereon safe to shore. At the spot where he landed, a monument of brass was afterwards erected upon the rocky shore, to preserve the memory of the event.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00841\">When Arion and the dolphin parted, each to his own element, Arion thus poured forth his thanks: \"Farewell, thou faithful, friendly fish! Would that I could reward thee; but thou canst not wend with me, nor I with thee. Companionship we may not have. May Galatea, queen of the deep, accord thee her favor, and thou, proud of the burden, draw her chariot over the smooth mirror of the deep.\"<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00842\">Arion hastened from the shore, and soon saw before him the towers of Corinth. He journeyed on, harp in hand, singing as he went, full of love and happiness, forgetting his losses, and mindful only of what remained, his friend and his lyre. He entered the hospitable halls, and was soon clasped in the embrace of Periander. \"I come back to thee, my friend,\" he said. \"The talent which a god bestowed has been the delight of thousands, but false knaves have stripped me of my well-earned treasure; yet I retain the consciousness of wide spread fame.\" Then he told Periander all the wonderful events that had befallen him, who heard him with amazement. \"Shall such wickedness triumph?\" said he. \"Then in vain is power lodged in my hands. That we may discover the criminals, you must remain here in concealment, and so they will approach without suspicion.\" When the ship arrived in the harbor, he summoned the mariners before him. \"Have you heard anything of Arion?\" he inquired. \"I anxiously look for his return.\" They replied, \"We left him well and prosperous in Tarentum.\" As they said these words, Arion stepped forth and faced them. His well- proportioned limbs were arrayed in gold and purple fair to see, his tunic fell around him in graceful folds, jewels adorned his arms, his brow was crowned with a golden wreath, and over his neck and shoulders flowed his hair perfumed with odors; his left hand held the lyre, his right the ivory wand with which he struck its chords. They fell prostrate at his feet, as if a lightning bolt had struck them. \"We meant to murder him, and he has become a god. O Earth, open and receive us!\" Then Periander spoke. \"He lives, the master of the lay! Kind Heaven protects the poet's life. As for you, I invoke not the spirit of vengeance; Arion wishes not your blood. Ye slaves of avarice, begone! Seek some barbarous land, and never may aught beautiful delight your souls!\"<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00843\">Spenser represents Arion, mounted on his dolphin, accompanying the train of Neptune and Amphitrite:<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00844\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\"Then was there heard a most celestial sound\r\nOf dainty music which did next ensue,\r\nAnd, on the floating waters as enthroned,\r\nArion with his harp unto him drew\r\nThe ears and hearts of all that goodly crew;\r\nEven when as yet the dolphin which him bore\r\nThrough the Aegean Seas from pirates' view,\r\nStood still, by him astonished at his lore,\r\nAnd all the raging seas for joy forgot to roar.\"<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00845\">Byron, in his \"Childe Harold,\" Canto II., alludes to the story of Arion, when, describing his voyage, he represents one of the seamen making music to entertain the rest:<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00846\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\"The moon is up; by Heaven a lovely eve!\r\nLong streams of light o'er dancing waves expand;\r\nNow lads on shore may sigh and maids believe;\r\nSuch be our fate when we return to land!\r\nMeantime some rude Arion's restless hand\r\nWakes the brisk harmony that sailors love;\r\nA circle there of merry listeners stand,\r\nOr to some well-known measure featly move\r\nThoughtless as if on shore they still were free to rove.\"<\/p>\r\n\r\n<h5 id=\"id00847\">IBYCUS<\/h5>\r\n<p id=\"id00848\">In order to understand the story of Ibycus which follows it is necessary to remember, first, that the theatres of the ancients were immense fabrics capable of containing from ten to thirty thousand spectators, and as they were used only on festival occasions, and admission was free to all, they were usually filled. They were without roofs and open to the sky, and the performances were in the daytime. Secondly, the appalling representation of the Furies is not exaggerated in the story. It is recorded that Aeschylus, the tragic poet, having on one occasion represented the Furies in a chorus of fifty performers, the terror of the spectators was such that many fainted and were thrown into convulsions, and the magistrates forbade a like representation for the future.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00849\">Ibycus, the pious poet, was on his way to the chariot races and musical competitions held at the Isthmus of Corinth, which attracted all of Grecian lineage. Apollo had bestowed on him the gift of song, the honeyed lips of the poet, and he pursued his way with lightsome step, full of the god. Already the towers of Corinth crowning the height appeared in view, and he had entered with pious awe the sacred grove of Neptune. No living object was in sight, only a flock of cranes flew overhead taking the same course as himself in their migration to a southern clime. \"Good luck to you, ye friendly squadrons,\" he exclaimed, \"my companions from across the sea. I take your company for a good omen. We come from far and fly in search of hospitality. May both of us meet that kind reception which shields the stranger guest from harm!\"<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00850\">He paced briskly on, and soon was in the middle of the wood. There suddenly, at a narrow pass, two robbers stepped forth and barred his way. He must yield or fight. But his hand, accustomed to the lyre, and not to the strife of arms, sank powerless. He called for help on men and gods, but his cry reached no defender's ear. \"Then here must I die,\" said he, \"in a strange land, unlamented, cut off by the hand of outlaws, and see none to avenge my cause.\" Sore wounded, he sank to the earth, when hoarse screamed the cranes overhead. \"Take up my cause, ye cranes,\" he said, \"since no voice but yours answers to my cry.\" So saying he closed his eyes in death.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00851\">The body, despoiled and mangled, was found, and though disfigured with wounds, was recognized by the friend in Corinth who had expected him as a guest. \"Is it thus I find you restored to me?\" he exclaimed. \"I who hoped to entwine your temples with the wreath of triumph in the strife of song!\"<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00852\">The guests assembled at the festival heard the tidings with dismay. All Greece felt the wound, every heart owned its loss. They crowded round the tribunal of the magistrates, and demanded vengeance on the murderers and expiation with their blood.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00853\">But what trace or mark shall point out the perpetrator from amidst the vast multitude attracted by the splendor of the feast? Did he fall by the hands of robbers or did some private enemy slay him? The all-discerning sun alone can tell, for no other eye beheld it. Yet not improbably the murderer even now walks in the midst of the throng, and enjoys the fruits of his crime, while vengeance seeks for him in vain. Perhaps in their own temple's enclosure he defies the gods mingling freely in this throng of men that now presses into the amphitheatre.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00854\">For now crowded together, row on row, the multitude fill the seats till it seems as if the very fabric would give way. The murmur of voices sounds like the roar of the sea, while the circles widening in their ascent rise tier on tier, as if they would reach the sky.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00855\">And now the vast assemblage listens to the awful voice of the chorus personating the Furies, which in solemn guise advances with measured step, and moves around the circuit of the theatre. Can they be mortal women who compose that awful group, and can that vast concourse of silent forms be living beings?<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00856\">The choristers, clad in black, bore in their fleshless hands torches blazing with a pitchy flame. Their cheeks were bloodless, and in place of hair writhing and swelling serpents curled around their brows. Forming a circle, these awful beings sang their hymns, rending the hearts of the guilty, and enchaining all their faculties. It rose and swelled, overpowering the sound of the instruments, stealing the judgment, palsying the heart, curdling the blood.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00857\">\"Happy the man who keeps his heart pure from guilt and crime! Him we avengers touch not; he treads the path of life secure from us. But woe! woe! to him who has done the deed of secret murder. We the fearful family of Night fasten ourselves upon his whole being. Thinks he by flight to escape us? We fly still faster in pursuit, twine our snakes around his feet, and bring him to the ground. Unwearied we pursue; no pity checks our course; still on and on, to the end of life, we give him no peace nor rest.\" Thus the Eumenides sang, and moved in solemn cadence, while stillness like the stillness of death sat over the whole assembly as if in the presence of superhuman beings; and then in solemn march completing the circuit of the theatre, they passed out at the back of the stage.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00858\">Every heart fluttered between illusion and reality, and every breast panted with undefined terror, quailing before the awful power that watches secret crimes and winds unseen the skein of destiny. At that moment a cry burst forth from one of the uppermost benches\u2014\"Look! look! comrade, yonder are the cranes of Ibycus!\" And suddenly there appeared sailing across the sky a dark object which a moment's inspection showed to be a flock of cranes flying directly over the theatre. \"Of Ibycus! did he say?\" The beloved name revived the sorrow in every breast. As wave follows wave over the face of the sea, so ran from mouth to mouth the words, \"Of Ibycus! him whom we all lament, whom some murderer's hand laid low! What have the cranes to do with him?\" And louder grew the swell of voices, while like a lightning's flash the thought sped through every heart, \"Observe the power of the Eumenides! The pious poet shall be avenged! the murderer has informed against himself. Seize the man who uttered that cry and the other to whom he spoke!\"<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00859\">The culprit would gladly have recalled his words, but it was too late. The faces of the murderers, pale with terror, betrayed their guilt. The people took them before the judge, they confessed their crime, and suffered the punishment they deserved.<\/p>\r\n\r\n<h5 id=\"id00860\">SIMONIDES<\/h5>\r\n<p id=\"id00861\">Simonides was one of the most prolific of the early poets of Greece, but only a few fragments of his compositions have descended to us. He wrote hymns, triumphal odes, and elegies. In the last species of composition he particularly excelled. His genius was inclined to the pathetic, and none could touch with truer effect the chords of human sympathy. The \"Lamentation of Danae,\" the most important of the fragments which remain of his poetry, is based upon the tradition that Danae and her infant son were confined by order of her father, Acrisius, in a chest and set adrift on the sea. The chest floated towards the island of Seriphus, where both were rescued by Dictys, a fisherman, and carried to Polydectes, king of the country, who received and protected them. The child, Perseus, when grown up became a famous hero, whose adventures have been recorded in a previous chapter.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00862\">Simonides passed much of his life at the courts of princes, and often employed his talents in panegyric and festal odes, receiving his reward from the munificence of those whose exploits he celebrated. This employment was not derogatory, but closely resembles that of the earliest bards, such as Demodocus, described by Homer, or of Homer himself, as recorded by tradition.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00863\">On one occasion, when residing at the court of Scopas, king of Thessaly, the prince desired him to prepare a poem in celebration of his exploits, to be recited at a banquet. In order to diversify his theme, Simonides, who was celebrated for his piety, introduced into his poem the exploits of Castor and Pollux. Such digressions were not unusual with the poets on similar occasions, and one might suppose an ordinary mortal might have been content to share the praises of the sons of Leda. But vanity is exacting; and as Scopas sat at his festal board among his courtiers and sycophants, he grudged every verse that did not rehearse his own praises. When Simonides approached to receive the promised reward Scopas bestowed but half the expected sum, saying, \"Here is payment for my portion of thy performance; Castor and Pollux will doubtless compensate thee for so much as relates to them.\" The disconcerted poet returned to his seat amidst the laughter which followed the great man's jest. In a little time he received a message that two young men on horseback were waiting without and anxious to see him. Simonides hastened to the door, but looked in vain for the visitors. Scarcely, however, had he left the banqueting hall when the roof fell in with a loud crash, burying Scopas and all his guests beneath the ruins. On inquiring as to the appearance of the young men who had sent for him, Simonides was satisfied that they were no other than Castor and Pollux themselves.<\/p>\r\n\r\n<h5 id=\"id00864\">SAPPHO<\/h5>\r\n<p id=\"id00865\">Sappho was a poetess who flourished in a very early age of Greek literature. Of her works few fragments remain, but they are enough to establish her claim to eminent poetical genius. The story of Sappho commonly alluded to is that she was passionately in love with a beautiful youth named Phaon, and failing to obtain a return of affection she threw herself from the promontory of Leucadia into the sea, under a superstition that those who should take that \"Lover's-leap\" would, if not destroyed, be cured of their love.<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00866\">Byron alludes to the story of Sappho in \"Childe Harold,\" Canto\r\nII.:<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00867\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\"Childe Harold sailed and passed the barren spot\r\nWhere sad Penelope o'erlooked the wave,\r\nAnd onward viewed the mount, not yet forgot,\r\nThe lover's refuge and the Lesbian's grave.\r\nDark Sappho! could not verse immortal save\r\nThat breast imbued with such immortal fire?<\/p>\r\n<p id=\"id00868\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\"'Twas on a Grecian autumn's gentle eve\r\nChilde Harold hailed Leucadia's cape afar;\" etc.<\/p>","rendered":"<h4 id=\"id00616\">CHAPTER XIX<\/h4>\n<h5 id=\"id00617\">HERCULES\u2014HEBE AND GANYMEDE<\/h5>\n<h5 id=\"id00618\">HERCULES<\/h5>\n<p id=\"id00619\">Hercules was the son of Jupiter and Alcmena. As Juno was always hostile to the offspring of her husband by mortal mothers, she declared war against Hercules from his birth. She sent two serpents to destroy him as he lay in his cradle, but the precocious infant strangled them with his own hands. He was, however, by the arts of Juno rendered subject to Eurystheus and compelled to perform all his commands. Eurystheus enjoined upon him a succession of desperate adventures, which are called the &#8220;Twelve Labors of Hercules.&#8221; The first was the fight with the Nemean lion. The valley of Nemea was infested by a terrible lion. Eurystheus ordered Hercules to bring him the skin of this monster. After using in vain his club and arrows against the lion, Hercules strangled the animal with his hands. He returned carrying the dead lion on his shoulders; but Eurystheus was so frightened at the sight of it and at this proof of the prodigious strength of the hero, that he ordered him to deliver the account of his exploits in future outside the town.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00620\">His next labor was the slaughter of the Hydra. This monster ravaged the country of Argos, and dwelt in a swamp near the well of Amymone. This well had been discovered by Amymone when the country was suffering from drought, and the story was that Neptune, who loved her, had permitted her to touch the rock with his trident, and a spring of three outlets burst forth. Here the Hydra took up his position, and Hercules was sent to destroy him. The Hydra had nine heads, of which the middle one was immortal. Hercules struck off its heads with his club, but in the place of the head knocked off, two new ones grew forth each time. At length with the assistance of his faithful servant Iolaus, he burned away the heads of the Hydra, and buried the ninth or immortal one under a huge rock.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00621\">Another labor was the cleaning of the Augean stables. Augeas, king of Elis, had a herd of three thousand oxen, whose stalls had not been cleansed for thirty years. Hercules brought the rivers Alpheus and Peneus through them, and cleansed them thoroughly in one day.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00622\">His next labor was of a more delicate kind. Admeta, the daughter of Eurystheus, longed to obtain the girdle of the queen of the Amazons, and Eurystheus ordered Hercules to go and get it. The Amazons were a nation of women. They were very warlike and held several flourishing cities. It was their custom to bring up only the female children; the boys were either sent away to the neighboring nations or put to death. Hercules was accompanied by a number of volunteers, and after various adventures at last reached the country of the Amazons. Hippolyta, the queen, received him kindly, and consented to yield him her girdle, but Juno, taking the form of an Amazon, went and persuaded the rest that the strangers were carrying off their queen. They instantly armed and came in great numbers down to the ship. Hercules, thinking that Hippolyta had acted treacherously, slew her, and taking her girdle made sail homewards.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00623\">Another task enjoined him was to bring to Eurystheus the oxen of Geryon, a monster with three bodies, who dwelt in the island Erytheia (the red), so called because it lay at the west, under the rays of the setting sun. This description is thought to apply to Spain, of which Geryon was king. After traversing various countries, Hercules reached at length the frontiers of Libya and Europe, where he raised the two mountains of Calpe and Abyla, as monuments of his progress, or, according to another account, rent one mountain into two and left half on each side, forming the straits of Gibraltar, the two mountains being called the Pillars of Hercules. The oxen were guarded by the giant Eurytion and his two-headed dog, but Hercules killed the giant and his dog and brought away the oxen in safety to Eurystheus.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00624\">The most difficult labor of all was getting the golden apples of the Hesperides, for Hercules did not know where to find them. These were the apples which Juno had received at her wedding from the goddess of the Earth, and which she had intrusted to the keeping of the daughters of Hesperus, assisted by a watchful dragon. After various adventures Hercules arrived at Mount Atlas in Africa. Atlas was one of the Titans who had warred against the gods, and after they were subdued, Atlas was condemned to bear on his shoulders the weight of the heavens. He was the father of the Hesperides, and Hercules thought might, if any one could, find the apples and bring them to him. But how to send Atlas away from his post, or bear up the heavens while he was gone? Hercules took the burden on his own shoulders, and sent Atlas to seek the apples. He returned with them, and though somewhat reluctantly, took his burden upon his shoulders again, and let Hercules return with the apples to Eurystheus.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00625\">Milton, in his &#8220;Comus,&#8221; makes the Hesperides the daughters of<br \/>\nHesperus and nieces of Atlas:<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00626\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0&#8220;\u2026 amidst the gardens fair \/ Of Hesperus and his daughters three, \/ That sing about the golden tree.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00627\">The poets, led by the analogy of the lovely appearance of the western sky at sunset, viewed the west as a region of brightness and glory. Hence they placed in it the Isles of the Blest, the ruddy Isle Erythea, on which the bright oxen of Geryon were pastured, and the Isle of the Hesperides. The apples are supposed by some to be the oranges of Spain, of which the Greeks had heard some obscure accounts.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00628\">A celebrated exploit of Hercules was his victory over Antaeus. Antaeus, the son of Terra, the Earth, was a mighty giant and wrestler, whose strength was invincible so long as he remained in contact with his mother Earth. He compelled all strangers who came to his country to wrestle with him, on condition that if conquered (as they all were) they should be put to death. Hercules encountered him, and finding that it was of no avail to throw him, for he always rose with renewed strength from every fall, he lifted him up from the earth and strangled him in the air.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00629\">Cacus was a huge giant, who inhabited a cave on Mount Aventine, and plundered the surrounding country. When Hercules was driving home the oxen of Geryon, Cacus stole part of the cattle, while the hero slept. That their footprints might not serve to show where they had been driven, he dragged them backward by their tails to his cave; so their tracks all seemed to show that they had gone in the opposite direction. Hercules was deceived by this stratagem, and would have failed to find his oxen, if it had not happened that in driving the remainder of the herd past the cave where the stolen ones were concealed, those within began to low, and were thus discovered. Cacus was slain by Hercules.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00630\">The last exploit we shall record was bringing Cerberus from the lower world. Hercules descended into Hades, accompanied by Mercury and Minerva. He obtained permission from Pluto to carry Cerberus to the upper air, provided he could do it without the use of weapons; and in spite of the monster&#8217;s struggling, he seized him, held him fast, and carried him to Eurystheus, and afterwards brought him back again. When he was in Hades he obtained the liberty of Theseus, his admirer and imitator, who had been detained a prisoner there for an unsuccessful attempt to carry off Proserpine.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00631\">Hercules in a fit of madness killed his friend Iphitus, and was condemned for this offence to become the slave of Queen Omphale for three years. While in this service the hero&#8217;s nature seemed changed. He lived effeminately, wearing at times the dress of a woman, and spinning wool with the hand-maidens of Omphale, while the queen wore his lion&#8217;s skin. When this service was ended he married Dejanira and lived in peace with her three years. On one occasion as he was travelling with his wife, they came to a river, across which the Centaur Nessus carried travellers for a stated fee. Hercules himself forded the river, but gave Dejanira to Nessus to be carried across. Nessus attempted to run away with her, but Hercules heard her cries and shot an arrow into the heart of Nessus. The dying Centaur told Dejanira to take a portion of his blood and keep it, as it might be used as a charm to preserve the love of her husband.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00632\">Dejanira did so and before long fancied she had occasion to use it. Hercules in one of his conquests had taken prisoner a fair maiden, named Iole, of whom he seemed more fond than Dejanira approved. When Hercules was about to offer sacrifices to the gods in honor of his victory, he sent to his wife for a white robe to use on the occasion. Dejanira, thinking it a good opportunity to try her love-spell, steeped the garment in the blood of Nessus. We are to suppose she took care to wash out all traces of it, but the magic power remained, and as soon as the garment became warm on the body of Hercules the poison penetrated into all his limbs and caused him the most intense agony. In his frenzy he seized Lichas, who had brought him the fatal robe, and hurled him into the sea. He wrenched off the garment, but it stuck to his flesh, and with it he tore away whole pieces of his body. In this state he embarked on board a ship and was conveyed home. Dejanira, on seeing what she had unwittingly done, hung herself. Hercules, prepared to die, ascended Mount Oeta, where he built a funeral pile of trees, gave his bow and arrows to Philoctetes, and laid himself down on the pile, his head resting on his club, and his lion&#8217;s skin spread over him. With a countenance as serene as if he were taking his place at a festal board he commanded Philoctetes to apply the torch. The flames spread apace and soon invested the whole mass.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00633\">Milton thus alludes to the frenzy of Hercules:<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00634\">&#8220;As when Alcides, from Oechalia crowned<br \/>\nWith conquest, felt the envenomed robe, and tore,<br \/>\nThrough pain, up by the roots Thessalian pines<br \/>\nAnd Lichas from the top of Oeta threw<br \/>\nInto the Euboic Sea.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00635\">[Footnote: Alcides, a name of Hercules.]<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00636\">The gods themselves felt troubled at seeing the champion of the earth so brought to his end. But Jupiter with cheerful countenance thus addressed them: &#8220;I am pleased to see your concern, my princes, and am gratified to perceive that I am the ruler of a loyal people, and that my son enjoys your favor. For although your interest in him arises from his noble deeds, yet it is not the less gratifying to me. But now I say to you, Fear not. He who conquered all else is not to be conquered by those flames which you see blazing on Mount Oeta. Only his mother&#8217;s share in him can perish; what he derived from me is immortal. I shall take him, dead to earth, to the heavenly shores, and I require of you all to receive him kindly. If any of you feel grieved at his attaining this honor, yet no one can deny that he has deserved it.&#8221; The gods all gave their assent; Juno only heard the closing words with some displeasure that she should be so particularly pointed at, yet not enough to make her regret the determination of her husband. So when the flames had consumed the mother&#8217;s share of Hercules, the diviner part, instead of being injured thereby, seemed to start forth with new vigor, to assume a more lofty port and a more awful dignity. Jupiter enveloped him in a cloud, and took him up in a four-horse chariot to dwell among the stars. As he took his place in heaven, Atlas felt the added weight.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00637\">Juno, now reconciled to him, gave him her daughter Hebe in marriage.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00638\">The poet Schiller, in one of his pieces called the &#8220;Ideal and Life,&#8221; illustrates the contrast between the practical and the imaginative in some beautiful stanzas, of which the last two may be thus translated:<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00639\">&#8220;Deep degraded to a coward&#8217;s slave,<br \/>\nEndless contests bore Alcides brave,<br \/>\nThrough the thorny path of suffering led;<br \/>\nSlew the Hydra, crushed the lion&#8217;s might,<br \/>\nThrew himself, to bring his friend to light,<br \/>\nLiving, in the skiff that bears the dead.<br \/>\nAll the torments, every toil of earth<br \/>\nJuno&#8217;s hatred on him could impose,<br \/>\nWell he bore them, from his fated birth<br \/>\nTo life&#8217;s grandly mournful close.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00640\">&#8220;Till the god, the earthly part forsaken,<br \/>\nFrom the man in flames asunder taken,<br \/>\nDrank the heavenly ether&#8217;s purer breath.<br \/>\nJoyous in the new unwonted lightness,<br \/>\nSoared he upwards to celestial brightness,<br \/>\nEarth&#8217;s dark heavy burden lost in death.<br \/>\nHigh Olympus gives harmonious greeting<br \/>\nTo the hall where reigns his sire adored;<br \/>\nYouth&#8217;s bright goddess, with a blush at meeting,<br \/>\nGives the nectar to her lord.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h5 id=\"id00642\">HEBE AND GANYMEDE<\/h5>\n<p id=\"id00643\">Hebe, the daughter of Juno, and goddess of youth, was cup-bearer to the gods. The usual story is that she resigned her office on becoming the wife of Hercules. But there is another statement which our countryman Crawford, the sculptor, has adopted in his group of Hebe and Ganymede, now in the Athenaeum gallery. According to this, Hebe was dismissed from her office in consequence of a fall which she met with one day when in attendance on the gods. Her successor was Ganymede, a Trojan boy, whom Jupiter, in the disguise of an eagle, seized and carried off from the midst of his playfellows on Mount Ida, bore up to heaven, and installed in the vacant place.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00644\">Tennyson, in his &#8220;Palace of Art,&#8221; describes among the decorations on the walls a picture representing this legend:<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00645\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0&#8220;There, too, flushed Ganymede, his rosy thigh<br \/>\nHalf buried in the eagle&#8217;s down,<br \/>\nSole as a flying star shot through the sky<br \/>\nAbove the pillared town.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00646\">And in Shelley&#8217;s &#8220;Prometheus&#8221; Jupiter calls to his cup-bearer thus:<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00647\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0&#8220;Pour forth heaven&#8217;s wine, Idaean Ganymede,<br \/>\nAnd let it fill the Daedal cups like fire.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h4 id=\"id00649\">CHAPTER XX<\/h4>\n<h5 id=\"id00650\">THESEUS\u2014DAEDALUS\u2014CASTOR AND POLLUX<\/h5>\n<h5 id=\"id00651\">THESEUS<\/h5>\n<p id=\"id00652\">Theseus was the son of Aegeus, king of Athens, and of Aethra, daughter of the king of Troezen. He was brought up at Troezen, and when arrived at manhood was to proceed to Athens and present himself to his father. Aegeus on parting from Aethra, before the birth of his son, placed his sword and shoes under a large stone and directed her to send his son to him when he became strong enough to roll away the stone and take them from under it. When she thought the time had come, his mother led Theseus to the stone, and he removed it with ease and took the sword and shoes. As the roads were infested with robbers, his grandfather pressed him earnestly to take the shorter and safer way to his father&#8217;s country\u2014by sea; but the youth, feeling in himself the spirit and the soul of a hero, and eager to signalize himself like Hercules, with whose fame all Greece then rang, by destroying the evil-doers and monsters that oppressed the country, determined on the more perilous and adventurous journey by land.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00653\">His first day&#8217;s journey brought him to Epidaurus, where dwelt a man named Periphetes, a son of Vulcan. This ferocious savage always went armed with a club of iron, and all travellers stood in terror of his violence. When he saw Theseus approach he assailed him, but speedily fell beneath the blows of the young hero, who took possession of his club and bore it ever afterwards as a memorial of his first victory.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00654\">Several similar contests with the petty tyrants and marauders of the country followed, in all of which Theseus was victorious. One of these evil-doers was called Procrustes, or the Stretcher. He had an iron bedstead, on which he used to tie all travellers who fell into his hands. If they were shorter than the bed, he stretched their limbs to make them fit it; if they were longer than the bed, he lopped off a portion. Theseus served him as he had served others.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00655\">Having overcome all the perils of the road, Theseus at length reached Athens, where new dangers awaited him. Medea, the sorceress, who had fled from Corinth after her separation from Jason, had become the wife of Aegeus, the father of Theseus. Knowing by her arts who he was, and fearing the loss of her influence with her husband if Theseus should be acknowledged as his son, she filled the mind of Aegeus with suspicions of the young stranger, and induced him to present him a cup of poison; but at the moment when Theseus stepped forward to take it, the sight of the sword which he wore discovered to his father who he was, and prevented the fatal draught. Medea, detected in her arts, fled once more from deserved punishment, and arrived in Asia, where the country afterwards called Media received its name from her, Theseus was acknowledged by his father, and declared his successor.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00656\">The Athenians were at that time in deep affliction, on account of the tribute which they were forced to pay to Minos, king of Crete. This tribute consisted of seven youths and seven maidens, who were sent every year to be devoured by the Minotaur, a monster with a bull&#8217;s body and a human head. It was exceedingly strong and fierce, and was kept in a labyrinth constructed by Daedalus, so artfully contrived that whoever was enclosed in it could by no means, find his way out unassisted. Here the Minotaur roamed, and was fed with human victims.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00657\">Theseus resolved to deliver his countrymen from this calamity, or to die in the attempt. Accordingly, when the time of sending off the tribute came, and the youths and maidens were, according to custom, drawn by lot to be sent, he offered himself as one of the victims, in spite of the entreaties of his father. The ship departed under black sails, as usual, which Theseus promised his father to change for white, in case of his returning victorious. When they arrived in Crete, the youths and maidens were exhibited before Minos; and Ariadne, the daughter of the king, being present, became deeply enamored of Theseus, by whom her love was readily returned. She furnished him with a sword, with which to encounter the Minotaur, and with a clew of thread by which he might find his way out of the labyrinth. He was successful, slew the Minotaur, escaped from the labyrinth, and taking Ariadne as the companion of his way, with his rescued companions sailed for Athens. On their way they stopped at the island of Naxos, where Theseus abandoned Ariadne, leaving her asleep. [Footnote: One of the finest pieces of sculpture in Italy, the recumbent Ariadne of the Vatican, represents this incident. A copy is owned by the Athenaeum, Boston, and deposited, in the Museum of Fine Arts.] His excuse for this ungrateful treatment of his benefactress was that Minerva appeared to him in a dream and commanded him to do so.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00658\">On approaching the coast of Attica, Theseus forgot the signal appointed by his father, and neglected to raise the white sails, and the old king, thinking his son had perished, put an end to his own life. Theseus thus became king of Athens.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00659\">One of the most celebrated of the adventures of Theseus is his expedition against the Amazons. He assailed them before they had recovered from the attack of Hercules, and carried off their queen Antiope. The Amazons in their turn invaded the country of Athens and penetrated into the city itself; and the final battle in which Theseus overcame them was fought in the very midst of the city. This battle was one of the favorite subjects of the ancient sculptors, and is commemorated in several works of art that are still extant.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00660\">The friendship between Theseus and Pirithous was of a most intimate nature, yet it originated in the midst of arms. Pirithous had made an irruption into the plain of Marathon, and carried off the herds of the king of Athens. Theseus went to repel the plunderers. The moment Pirithous beheld him, he was seized with admiration; he stretched out his hand as a token of peace, and cried, &#8220;Be judge thyself\u2014what satisfaction dost thou require?&#8221; &#8220;Thy friendship,&#8221; replied the Athenian, and they swore inviolable fidelity. Their deeds corresponded to their professions, and they ever continued true brothers in arms. Each of them aspired to espouse a daughter of Jupiter. Theseus fixed his choice on Helen, then but a child, afterwards so celebrated as the cause of the Trojan war, and with the aid of his friend he carried her off. Pirithous aspired to the wife of the monarch of Erebus; and Theseus, though aware of the danger, accompanied the ambitious lover in his descent to the under-world. But Pluto seized and set them on an enchanted rock at his palace gate, where they remained till Hercules arrived and liberated Theseus, leaving Pirithous to his fate.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00661\">After the death of Antiope, Theseus married Phaedra, daughter of Minos, king of Crete. Phaedra saw in Hippolytus, the son of Theseus, a youth endowed with all the graces and virtues of his father, and of an age corresponding to her own. She loved him, but he repulsed her advances, and her love was changed to hate. She used her influence over her infatuated husband to cause him to be jealous of his son, and he imprecated the vengeance of Neptune upon him. As Hippolytus was one day driving his chariot along the shore, a sea-monster raised himself above the waters, and frightened the horses so that they ran away and dashed the chariot to pieces. Hippolytus was killed, but by Diana&#8217;s assistance Aesculapius restored him to life. Diana removed Hippolytus from the power of his deluded father and false stepmother, and placed him in Italy under the protection of the nymph Egeria.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00662\">Theseus at length lost the favor of his people, and retired to the court of Lycomedes, king of Scyros, who at first received him kindly, but afterwards treacherously slew him. In a later age the Athenian general Cimon discovered the place where his remains were laid, and caused them to be removed to Athens, where they were deposited in a temple called the Theseum, erected in honor of the hero.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00663\">The queen of the Amazons whom Theseus espoused is by some called<br \/>\nHippolyta. That is the name she bears in Shakspeare&#8217;s &#8220;Midsummer<br \/>\nNight&#8217;s Dream,&#8221;\u2014the subject of which is the festivities attending<br \/>\nthe nuptials of Theseus and Hippolyta.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00664\">Mrs. Hemans has a poem on the ancient Greek tradition that the &#8220;Shade of Theseus&#8221; appeared strengthening his countrymen at the battle of Marathon.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00665\">Theseus is a semi-historical personage. It is recorded of him that he united the several tribes by whom the territory of Attica was then possessed into one state, of which Athens was the capital. In commemoration of this important event, he instituted the festival of Panathenaea, in honor of Minerva, the patron deity of Athens. This festival differed from the other Grecian games chiefly in two particulars. It was peculiar to the Athenians, and its chief feature was a solemn procession in which the Peplus, or sacred robe of Minerva, was carried to the Parthenon, and suspended before the statue of the goddess. The Peplus was covered with embroidery, worked by select virgins of the noblest families in Athens. The procession consisted of persons of all ages and both sexes. The old men carried olive branches in their hands, and the young men bore arms. The young women carried baskets on their heads, containing the sacred utensils, cakes, and all things necessary for the sacrifices. The procession formed the subject of the bas-reliefs which embellished the outside of the temple of the Parthenon. A considerable portion of these sculptures is now in the British Museum among those known as the &#8220;Elgin marbles.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h5 id=\"id00666\">OLYMPIC AND OTHER GAMES<\/h5>\n<p id=\"id00667\">It seems not inappropriate to mention here the other celebrated national games of the Greeks. The first and most distinguished were the Olympic, founded, it was said, by Jupiter himself. They were celebrated at Olympia in Elis. Vast numbers of spectators flocked to them from every part of Greece, and from Asia, Africa, and Sicily. They were repeated every fifth year in mid-summer, and continued five days. They gave rise to the custom of reckoning time and dating events by Olympiads. The first Olympiad is generally considered as corresponding with the year 776 B.C. The Pythian games were celebrated in the vicinity of Delphi, the Isthmian on the Corinthian isthmus, the Nemean at Nemea, a city of Argolis.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00668\">The exercises in these games were of five sorts: running, leaping, wrestling, throwing the quoit, and hurling the javelin, or boxing. Besides these exercises of bodily strength and agility, there were contests in music, poetry, and eloquence. Thus these games furnished poets, musicians, and authors the best opportunities to present their productions to the public, and the fame of the victors was diffused far and wide.<\/p>\n<h5 id=\"id00669\">DAEDALUS<\/h5>\n<p id=\"id00670\">The labyrinth from which Theseus escaped by means of the clew of Ariadne was built by Daedalus, a most skilful artificer. It was an edifice with numberless winding passages and turnings opening into one another, and seeming to have neither beginning nor end, like the river Maeander, which returns on itself, and flows now onward, now backward, in its course to the sea. Daedalus built the labyrinth for King Minos, but afterwards lost the favor of the king, and was shut up in a tower. He contrived to make his escape from his prison, but could not leave the island by sea, as the king kept strict watch on all the vessels, and permitted none to sail without being carefully searched. &#8220;Minos may control the land and sea,&#8221; said Daedalus, &#8220;but not the regions of the air. I will try that way.&#8221; So he set to work to fabricate wings for himself and his young son Icarus. He wrought feathers together, beginning with the smallest and adding larger, so as to form an increasing surface. The larger ones he secured with thread and the smaller with wax, and gave the whole a gentle curvature like the wings of a bird. Icarus, the boy, stood and looked on, sometimes running to gather up the feathers which the wind had blown away, and then handling the wax and working it over with his fingers, by his play impeding his father in his labors. When at last the work was done, the artist, waving his wings, found himself buoyed upward, and hung suspended, poising himself on the beaten air. He next equipped his son in the same manner, and taught him how to fly, as a bird tempts her young ones from the lofty nest into the air. When all was prepared for flight he said, &#8220;Icarus, my son, I charge you to keep at a moderate height, for if you fly too low the damp will clog your wings, and if too high the heat will melt them. Keep near me and you will be safe.&#8221; While he gave him these instructions and fitted the wings to his shoulders, the face of the father was wet with tears, and his hands trembled. He kissed the boy, not knowing that it was for the last time. Then rising on his wings, he flew off, encouraging him to follow, and looked back from his own flight to see how his son managed his wings. As they flew the ploughman stopped his work to gaze, and the shepherd leaned on his staff and watched them, astonished at the sight, and thinking they were gods who could thus cleave the air.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00671\">They passed Samos and Delos on the left and Lebynthos on the right, when the boy, exulting in his career, began to leave the guidance of his companion and soar upward as if to reach heaven. The nearness of the blazing sun softened the wax which held the feathers together, and they came off. He fluttered with his arms, but no feathers remained to hold the air. While his mouth uttered cries to his father it was submerged in the blue waters of the sea, which thenceforth was called by his name. His father cried, &#8220;Icarus, Icarus, where are you?&#8221; At last he saw the feathers floating on the water, and bitterly lamenting his own arts, he buried the body and called the land Icaria in memory of his child. Daedalus arrived safe in Sicily, where he built a temple to Apollo, and hung up his wings, an offering to the god.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00672\">Daedalus was so proud of his achievements that he could not bear the idea of a rival. His sister had placed her son Perdix under his charge to be taught the mechanical arts. He was an apt scholar and gave striking evidences of ingenuity. Walking on the seashore he picked up the spine of a fish. Imitating it, he took a piece of iron and notched it on the edge, and thus invented the SAW. He put two pieces of iron together, connecting them at one end with a rivet, and sharpening the other ends, and made a PAIR OF COMPASSES. Daedalus was so envious of his nepnew&#8217;s performances that he took an opportunity, when they were together one day on the top of a high tower, to push him off. But Minerva, who favors ingenuity, saw him falling, and arrested his fate by changing him into a bird called after his name, the Partridge. This bird does not build his nest in the trees, nor take lofty flights, but nestles in the hedges, and mindful of his fall, avoids high places.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00673\">The death of Icarus is told in the following lines by Darwin:<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00674\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0&#8220;\u2026 with melting wax and loosened strings<br \/>\nSunk hapless Icarus on unfaithful wings;<br \/>\nHeadlong he rushed through the affrighted air,<br \/>\nWith limbs distorted and dishevelled hair;<br \/>\nHis scattered plumage danced upon the wave,<br \/>\nAnd sorrowing Nereids decked his watery grave;<br \/>\nO&#8217;er his pale corse their pearly sea-flowers shed,<br \/>\nAnd strewed with crimson moss his marble bed;<br \/>\nStruck in their coral towers the passing bell,<br \/>\nAnd wide in ocean tolled his echoing knell.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h5 id=\"id00675\">CASTOR AND POLLUX<\/h5>\n<p id=\"id00676\">Castor and Pollux were the offspring of Leda and the Swan, under which disguise Jupiter had concealed himself. Leda gave birth to an egg from which sprang the twins. Helen, so famous afterwards as the cause of the Trojan war, was their sister.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00677\">When Theseus and his friend Pirithous had carried off Helen from Sparta, the youthful heroes Castor and Pollux, with their followers, hastened to her rescue. Theseus was absent from Attica and the brothers were successful in recovering their sister.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00678\">Castor was famous for taming and managing horses, and Pollux for skill in boxing. They were united by the warmest affection and inseparable in all their enterprises. They accompanied the Argonautic expedition. During the voyage a storm arose, and Orpheus prayed to the Samothracian gods, and played on his harp, whereupon the storm ceased and stars appeared on the heads of the brothers. From this incident, Castor and Pollux came afterwards to be considered the patron deities of seamen and voyagers, and the lambent flames, which in certain states of the atmosphere play round the sails and masts of vessels, were called by their names.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00679\">After the Argonautic expedition, we find Castor and Pollux engaged in a war with Idas and Lynceus. Castor was slain, and Pollux, inconsolable for the loss of his brother, besought Jupiter to be permitted to give his own life as a ransom for him. Jupiter so far consented as to allow the two brothers to enjoy the boon of life alternately, passing one day under the earth and the next in the heavenly abodes. According to another form of the story, Jupiter rewarded the attachment of the brothers by placing them among the stars as Gemini the Twins.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00680\">They received divine honors under the name of Dioscuri (sons of Jove). They were believed to have appeared occasionally in later times, taking part with one side or the other, in hard-fought fields, and were said on such occasions to be mounted on magnificent white steeds. Thus in the early history of Rome they are said to have assisted the Romans at the battle of Lake Regillus, and after the victory a temple was erected in their honor on the spot where they appeared.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00681\">Macaulay, in his &#8220;Lays of Ancient Rome,&#8221; thus alludes to the legend:<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00682\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0&#8220;So like they were, no mortal<br \/>\nMight one from other know;<br \/>\nWhite as snow their armor was,<br \/>\nTheir steeds were white as snow.<br \/>\nNever on earthly anvil<br \/>\nDid such rare armor gleam,<br \/>\nAnd never did such gallant steeds<br \/>\nDrink of an earthly stream.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00683\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0&#8220;Back comes the chief in triumph<br \/>\nWho in the hour of fight<br \/>\nHath seen the great Twin Brethren<br \/>\nIn harness on his right.<br \/>\nSafe comes the ship to haven,<br \/>\nThrough billows and through gales.<br \/>\nIf once the great Twin Brethren<br \/>\nSit shining on the sails.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h4 id=\"id00834\">CHAPTER XXV<\/h4>\n<h5 id=\"id00835\">ARION\u2014IBYCUS\u2014SIMONIDES\u2014SAPPHO<\/h5>\n<p id=\"id00836\">The poets whose adventures compose this chapter were real persons some of whose works yet remain, and their influence on poets who succeeded them is yet more important than their poetical remains. The adventures recorded of them in the following stories rest on the same authority as other narratives of the &#8220;Age of Fable,&#8221; that is, of the poets who have told them. In their present form, the first two are translated from the German, Arion from Schlegel, and Ibycus from Schiller.<\/p>\n<h5 id=\"id00837\">ARION<\/h5>\n<p id=\"id00838\">Arion was a famous musician, and dwelt in the court of Periander, king of Corinth, with whom he was a great favorite. There was to be a musical contest in Sicily, and Arion longed to compete for the prize. He told his wish to Periander, who besought him like a brother to give up the thought. &#8220;Pray stay with me,&#8221; he said, &#8220;and be contented. He who strives to win may lose.&#8221; Arion answered, &#8220;A wandering life best suits the free heart of a poet. The talent which a god bestowed on me, I would fain make a source of pleasure to others. And if I win the prize, how will the enjoyment of it be increased by the consciousness of my widespread fame!&#8221; He went, won the prize, and embarked with his wealth in a Corinthian ship for home. On the second morning after setting sail, the wind breathed mild and fair. &#8220;O Periander,&#8221; he exclaimed, &#8220;dismiss your fears! Soon shall you forget them in my embrace. With what lavish offerings will we display our gratitude to the gods, and how merry will we be at the festal board!&#8221; The wind and sea continued propitious. Not a cloud dimmed the firmament. He had not trusted too much to the ocean\u2014but he had to man. He overheard the seamen exchanging hints with one another, and found they were plotting to possess themselves of his treasure. Presently they surrounded him loud and mutinous, and said, &#8220;Arion, you must die! If you would have a grave on shore, yield yourself to die on this spot; but if otherwise, cast yourself into the sea.&#8221; &#8220;Will nothing satisfy you but my life?&#8221; said he. &#8220;Take my gold, and welcome. I willingly buy my life at that price.&#8221; &#8220;No, no; we cannot spare you. Your life would be too dangerous to us. Where could we go to escape from Periander, if he should know that you had been robbed by us? Your gold would be of little use to us, if on returning home, we could never more be free from fear.&#8221; &#8220;Grant me, then,&#8221; said he, &#8220;a last request, since nought will avail to save my life, that I may die, as I have lived, as becomes a bard. When I shall have sung my death song, and my harp-strings shall have ceased to vibrate, then I will bid farewell to life, and yield uncomplaining to my fate.&#8221; This prayer, like the others, would have been unheeded,\u2014they thought only of their booty,\u2014but to hear so famous a musician, that moved their rude hearts. &#8220;Suffer me,&#8221; he added, &#8220;to arrange my dress. Apollo will not favor me unless I be clad in my minstrel garb.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00839\">He clothed his well-proportioned limbs in gold and purple fair to see, his tunic fell around him in graceful folds, jewels adorned his arms, his brow was crowned with a golden wreath, and over his neck and shoulders flowed his hair perfumed with odors. His left hand held the lyre, his right the ivory wand with which he struck its chords. Like one inspired, he seemed to drink the morning air and glitter in the morning ray. The seamen gazed with admiration. He strode forward to the vessel&#8217;s side and looked down into the deep blue sea. Addressing his lyre, he sang, &#8220;Companion of my voice, come with me to the realm of shades. Though Cerberus may growl, we know the power of song can tame his rage. Ye heroes of Elysium, who have passed the darkling flood,\u2014ye happy souls, soon shall I join your band. Yet can ye relieve my grief? Alas, I leave my friend behind me. Thou, who didst find thy Eurydice, and lose her again as soon as found; when she had vanished like a dream, how didst thou hate the cheerful light! I must away, but I will not fear. The gods look down upon us. Ye who slay me unoffending, when I am no more, your time of trembling shall come. Ye Nereids, receive your guest, who throws himself upon your mercy!&#8221; So saying, he sprang into the deep sea. The waves covered him, and the seamen held on their way, fancying themselves safe from all danger of detection.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00840\">But the strains of his music had drawn round him the inhabitants of the deep to listen, and Dolphins followed the ship as if chained by a spell. While he struggled in the waves, a Dolphin offered him his back, and carried him mounted thereon safe to shore. At the spot where he landed, a monument of brass was afterwards erected upon the rocky shore, to preserve the memory of the event.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00841\">When Arion and the dolphin parted, each to his own element, Arion thus poured forth his thanks: &#8220;Farewell, thou faithful, friendly fish! Would that I could reward thee; but thou canst not wend with me, nor I with thee. Companionship we may not have. May Galatea, queen of the deep, accord thee her favor, and thou, proud of the burden, draw her chariot over the smooth mirror of the deep.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00842\">Arion hastened from the shore, and soon saw before him the towers of Corinth. He journeyed on, harp in hand, singing as he went, full of love and happiness, forgetting his losses, and mindful only of what remained, his friend and his lyre. He entered the hospitable halls, and was soon clasped in the embrace of Periander. &#8220;I come back to thee, my friend,&#8221; he said. &#8220;The talent which a god bestowed has been the delight of thousands, but false knaves have stripped me of my well-earned treasure; yet I retain the consciousness of wide spread fame.&#8221; Then he told Periander all the wonderful events that had befallen him, who heard him with amazement. &#8220;Shall such wickedness triumph?&#8221; said he. &#8220;Then in vain is power lodged in my hands. That we may discover the criminals, you must remain here in concealment, and so they will approach without suspicion.&#8221; When the ship arrived in the harbor, he summoned the mariners before him. &#8220;Have you heard anything of Arion?&#8221; he inquired. &#8220;I anxiously look for his return.&#8221; They replied, &#8220;We left him well and prosperous in Tarentum.&#8221; As they said these words, Arion stepped forth and faced them. His well- proportioned limbs were arrayed in gold and purple fair to see, his tunic fell around him in graceful folds, jewels adorned his arms, his brow was crowned with a golden wreath, and over his neck and shoulders flowed his hair perfumed with odors; his left hand held the lyre, his right the ivory wand with which he struck its chords. They fell prostrate at his feet, as if a lightning bolt had struck them. &#8220;We meant to murder him, and he has become a god. O Earth, open and receive us!&#8221; Then Periander spoke. &#8220;He lives, the master of the lay! Kind Heaven protects the poet&#8217;s life. As for you, I invoke not the spirit of vengeance; Arion wishes not your blood. Ye slaves of avarice, begone! Seek some barbarous land, and never may aught beautiful delight your souls!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00843\">Spenser represents Arion, mounted on his dolphin, accompanying the train of Neptune and Amphitrite:<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00844\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0&#8220;Then was there heard a most celestial sound<br \/>\nOf dainty music which did next ensue,<br \/>\nAnd, on the floating waters as enthroned,<br \/>\nArion with his harp unto him drew<br \/>\nThe ears and hearts of all that goodly crew;<br \/>\nEven when as yet the dolphin which him bore<br \/>\nThrough the Aegean Seas from pirates&#8217; view,<br \/>\nStood still, by him astonished at his lore,<br \/>\nAnd all the raging seas for joy forgot to roar.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00845\">Byron, in his &#8220;Childe Harold,&#8221; Canto II., alludes to the story of Arion, when, describing his voyage, he represents one of the seamen making music to entertain the rest:<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00846\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0&#8220;The moon is up; by Heaven a lovely eve!<br \/>\nLong streams of light o&#8217;er dancing waves expand;<br \/>\nNow lads on shore may sigh and maids believe;<br \/>\nSuch be our fate when we return to land!<br \/>\nMeantime some rude Arion&#8217;s restless hand<br \/>\nWakes the brisk harmony that sailors love;<br \/>\nA circle there of merry listeners stand,<br \/>\nOr to some well-known measure featly move<br \/>\nThoughtless as if on shore they still were free to rove.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h5 id=\"id00847\">IBYCUS<\/h5>\n<p id=\"id00848\">In order to understand the story of Ibycus which follows it is necessary to remember, first, that the theatres of the ancients were immense fabrics capable of containing from ten to thirty thousand spectators, and as they were used only on festival occasions, and admission was free to all, they were usually filled. They were without roofs and open to the sky, and the performances were in the daytime. Secondly, the appalling representation of the Furies is not exaggerated in the story. It is recorded that Aeschylus, the tragic poet, having on one occasion represented the Furies in a chorus of fifty performers, the terror of the spectators was such that many fainted and were thrown into convulsions, and the magistrates forbade a like representation for the future.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00849\">Ibycus, the pious poet, was on his way to the chariot races and musical competitions held at the Isthmus of Corinth, which attracted all of Grecian lineage. Apollo had bestowed on him the gift of song, the honeyed lips of the poet, and he pursued his way with lightsome step, full of the god. Already the towers of Corinth crowning the height appeared in view, and he had entered with pious awe the sacred grove of Neptune. No living object was in sight, only a flock of cranes flew overhead taking the same course as himself in their migration to a southern clime. &#8220;Good luck to you, ye friendly squadrons,&#8221; he exclaimed, &#8220;my companions from across the sea. I take your company for a good omen. We come from far and fly in search of hospitality. May both of us meet that kind reception which shields the stranger guest from harm!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00850\">He paced briskly on, and soon was in the middle of the wood. There suddenly, at a narrow pass, two robbers stepped forth and barred his way. He must yield or fight. But his hand, accustomed to the lyre, and not to the strife of arms, sank powerless. He called for help on men and gods, but his cry reached no defender&#8217;s ear. &#8220;Then here must I die,&#8221; said he, &#8220;in a strange land, unlamented, cut off by the hand of outlaws, and see none to avenge my cause.&#8221; Sore wounded, he sank to the earth, when hoarse screamed the cranes overhead. &#8220;Take up my cause, ye cranes,&#8221; he said, &#8220;since no voice but yours answers to my cry.&#8221; So saying he closed his eyes in death.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00851\">The body, despoiled and mangled, was found, and though disfigured with wounds, was recognized by the friend in Corinth who had expected him as a guest. &#8220;Is it thus I find you restored to me?&#8221; he exclaimed. &#8220;I who hoped to entwine your temples with the wreath of triumph in the strife of song!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00852\">The guests assembled at the festival heard the tidings with dismay. All Greece felt the wound, every heart owned its loss. They crowded round the tribunal of the magistrates, and demanded vengeance on the murderers and expiation with their blood.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00853\">But what trace or mark shall point out the perpetrator from amidst the vast multitude attracted by the splendor of the feast? Did he fall by the hands of robbers or did some private enemy slay him? The all-discerning sun alone can tell, for no other eye beheld it. Yet not improbably the murderer even now walks in the midst of the throng, and enjoys the fruits of his crime, while vengeance seeks for him in vain. Perhaps in their own temple&#8217;s enclosure he defies the gods mingling freely in this throng of men that now presses into the amphitheatre.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00854\">For now crowded together, row on row, the multitude fill the seats till it seems as if the very fabric would give way. The murmur of voices sounds like the roar of the sea, while the circles widening in their ascent rise tier on tier, as if they would reach the sky.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00855\">And now the vast assemblage listens to the awful voice of the chorus personating the Furies, which in solemn guise advances with measured step, and moves around the circuit of the theatre. Can they be mortal women who compose that awful group, and can that vast concourse of silent forms be living beings?<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00856\">The choristers, clad in black, bore in their fleshless hands torches blazing with a pitchy flame. Their cheeks were bloodless, and in place of hair writhing and swelling serpents curled around their brows. Forming a circle, these awful beings sang their hymns, rending the hearts of the guilty, and enchaining all their faculties. It rose and swelled, overpowering the sound of the instruments, stealing the judgment, palsying the heart, curdling the blood.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00857\">&#8220;Happy the man who keeps his heart pure from guilt and crime! Him we avengers touch not; he treads the path of life secure from us. But woe! woe! to him who has done the deed of secret murder. We the fearful family of Night fasten ourselves upon his whole being. Thinks he by flight to escape us? We fly still faster in pursuit, twine our snakes around his feet, and bring him to the ground. Unwearied we pursue; no pity checks our course; still on and on, to the end of life, we give him no peace nor rest.&#8221; Thus the Eumenides sang, and moved in solemn cadence, while stillness like the stillness of death sat over the whole assembly as if in the presence of superhuman beings; and then in solemn march completing the circuit of the theatre, they passed out at the back of the stage.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00858\">Every heart fluttered between illusion and reality, and every breast panted with undefined terror, quailing before the awful power that watches secret crimes and winds unseen the skein of destiny. At that moment a cry burst forth from one of the uppermost benches\u2014&#8221;Look! look! comrade, yonder are the cranes of Ibycus!&#8221; And suddenly there appeared sailing across the sky a dark object which a moment&#8217;s inspection showed to be a flock of cranes flying directly over the theatre. &#8220;Of Ibycus! did he say?&#8221; The beloved name revived the sorrow in every breast. As wave follows wave over the face of the sea, so ran from mouth to mouth the words, &#8220;Of Ibycus! him whom we all lament, whom some murderer&#8217;s hand laid low! What have the cranes to do with him?&#8221; And louder grew the swell of voices, while like a lightning&#8217;s flash the thought sped through every heart, &#8220;Observe the power of the Eumenides! The pious poet shall be avenged! the murderer has informed against himself. Seize the man who uttered that cry and the other to whom he spoke!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00859\">The culprit would gladly have recalled his words, but it was too late. The faces of the murderers, pale with terror, betrayed their guilt. The people took them before the judge, they confessed their crime, and suffered the punishment they deserved.<\/p>\n<h5 id=\"id00860\">SIMONIDES<\/h5>\n<p id=\"id00861\">Simonides was one of the most prolific of the early poets of Greece, but only a few fragments of his compositions have descended to us. He wrote hymns, triumphal odes, and elegies. In the last species of composition he particularly excelled. His genius was inclined to the pathetic, and none could touch with truer effect the chords of human sympathy. The &#8220;Lamentation of Danae,&#8221; the most important of the fragments which remain of his poetry, is based upon the tradition that Danae and her infant son were confined by order of her father, Acrisius, in a chest and set adrift on the sea. The chest floated towards the island of Seriphus, where both were rescued by Dictys, a fisherman, and carried to Polydectes, king of the country, who received and protected them. The child, Perseus, when grown up became a famous hero, whose adventures have been recorded in a previous chapter.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00862\">Simonides passed much of his life at the courts of princes, and often employed his talents in panegyric and festal odes, receiving his reward from the munificence of those whose exploits he celebrated. This employment was not derogatory, but closely resembles that of the earliest bards, such as Demodocus, described by Homer, or of Homer himself, as recorded by tradition.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00863\">On one occasion, when residing at the court of Scopas, king of Thessaly, the prince desired him to prepare a poem in celebration of his exploits, to be recited at a banquet. In order to diversify his theme, Simonides, who was celebrated for his piety, introduced into his poem the exploits of Castor and Pollux. Such digressions were not unusual with the poets on similar occasions, and one might suppose an ordinary mortal might have been content to share the praises of the sons of Leda. But vanity is exacting; and as Scopas sat at his festal board among his courtiers and sycophants, he grudged every verse that did not rehearse his own praises. When Simonides approached to receive the promised reward Scopas bestowed but half the expected sum, saying, &#8220;Here is payment for my portion of thy performance; Castor and Pollux will doubtless compensate thee for so much as relates to them.&#8221; The disconcerted poet returned to his seat amidst the laughter which followed the great man&#8217;s jest. In a little time he received a message that two young men on horseback were waiting without and anxious to see him. Simonides hastened to the door, but looked in vain for the visitors. Scarcely, however, had he left the banqueting hall when the roof fell in with a loud crash, burying Scopas and all his guests beneath the ruins. On inquiring as to the appearance of the young men who had sent for him, Simonides was satisfied that they were no other than Castor and Pollux themselves.<\/p>\n<h5 id=\"id00864\">SAPPHO<\/h5>\n<p id=\"id00865\">Sappho was a poetess who flourished in a very early age of Greek literature. Of her works few fragments remain, but they are enough to establish her claim to eminent poetical genius. The story of Sappho commonly alluded to is that she was passionately in love with a beautiful youth named Phaon, and failing to obtain a return of affection she threw herself from the promontory of Leucadia into the sea, under a superstition that those who should take that &#8220;Lover&#8217;s-leap&#8221; would, if not destroyed, be cured of their love.<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00866\">Byron alludes to the story of Sappho in &#8220;Childe Harold,&#8221; Canto<br \/>\nII.:<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00867\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0&#8220;Childe Harold sailed and passed the barren spot<br \/>\nWhere sad Penelope o&#8217;erlooked the wave,<br \/>\nAnd onward viewed the mount, not yet forgot,<br \/>\nThe lover&#8217;s refuge and the Lesbian&#8217;s grave.<br \/>\nDark Sappho! could not verse immortal save<br \/>\nThat breast imbued with such immortal fire?<\/p>\n<p id=\"id00868\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0&#8220;&#8216;Twas on a Grecian autumn&#8217;s gentle eve<br \/>\nChilde Harold hailed Leucadia&#8217;s cape afar;&#8221; etc.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":53936,"menu_order":2,"template":"","meta":{"_candela_citation":"[]","CANDELA_OUTCOMES_GUID":"","pb_show_title":"on","pb_short_title":"","pb_subtitle":"","pb_authors":[],"pb_section_license":""},"chapter-type":[],"contributor":[],"license":[],"class_list":["post-683","chapter","type-chapter","status-publish","hentry"],"part":654,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/courses.lumenlearning.com\/suny-jeffersoncc-mythology\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/683","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/courses.lumenlearning.com\/suny-jeffersoncc-mythology\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/courses.lumenlearning.com\/suny-jeffersoncc-mythology\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/chapter"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/courses.lumenlearning.com\/suny-jeffersoncc-mythology\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/53936"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/courses.lumenlearning.com\/suny-jeffersoncc-mythology\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/683\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":689,"href":"https:\/\/courses.lumenlearning.com\/suny-jeffersoncc-mythology\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/683\/revisions\/689"}],"part":[{"href":"https:\/\/courses.lumenlearning.com\/suny-jeffersoncc-mythology\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/parts\/654"}],"metadata":[{"href":"https:\/\/courses.lumenlearning.com\/suny-jeffersoncc-mythology\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/683\/metadata\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/courses.lumenlearning.com\/suny-jeffersoncc-mythology\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=683"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"chapter-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/courses.lumenlearning.com\/suny-jeffersoncc-mythology\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapter-type?post=683"},{"taxonomy":"contributor","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/courses.lumenlearning.com\/suny-jeffersoncc-mythology\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/contributor?post=683"},{"taxonomy":"license","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/courses.lumenlearning.com\/suny-jeffersoncc-mythology\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/license?post=683"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}