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IX. THE
LEMNIAN MAIDENS
ND now
the Argonauts were no longer on a ship that was being dashed on by the
sea and
beaten upon by the winds. They had houses to live in; they had
honey-tasting
things to eat, and when they went through the island each man might
have with
him one of the maidens of Lemnos. It was a change that was welcome to
the
wearied voyagers.
They
helped the women in the work of the fields; they hunted the beasts with
them,
and over and over again they were surprised at how skillfully the women
had
ordered all affairs. Everything in Lemnos was strange to the Argonauts,
and
they stayed day after day, thinking each day a fresh adventure. Sometimes
they would leave the fields and the chase, and this hero or that hero,
with her
who was his friend amongst the Lemnian maidens, would go far into that
strange
land and look upon lakes that were all covered with golden and silver
water
lilies, or would gather the blue flowers from creepers that grew around
dark
trees, or would hide themselves so that they might listen to the
quick-moving
birds that sang in the thickets. Perhaps on their way homeward they
would see
the Argo in the harbor, and they would think of Heracles who
was aboard, and
they would call to him. But the ship and the voyage they had been on
now seemed
far away to them, and the Quest of the Golden Fleece seemed to them a
story
they had heard and that they had thought of, but that they could never
think on
again with all that fervor. When Jason
looked on Hypsipyle he saw one who seemed to him to be only childlike
in size.
Greatly was he amazed at the words that poured forth from her as she
stood at
the stone throne of King Thoas — he was amazed as one is amazed at the
rush of
rich notes that comes from the throat of a little bird; all that she
said was
made lightninglike by her eyes — her eyes that were not clear and quiet
like
the eyes of the maidens he had seen in Iolcus, but that were dark and
burning.
Her mouth was heavy and this heavy mouth gave a shadow to her face that
but for
it was all bright and lovely. Hypsipyle
spoke two languages — one, the language of the mothers of the women of
Lemnos,
which was rough and harsh, a speech to be flung out to slaves, and the
other
the language of Greece, which their fathers had spoken, and which
Hypsipyle
spoke in a way that made it sound like strange music. She spoke and
walked and
did all things in a queenlike way, and Jason could see that, for all
her youth
and childlike size, Hypsipyle was one who was a ruler. From the
moment she took his hand it seemed that she could not bear to be away
from him.
Where he walked, she walked too; where he sat she sat before him,
looking at
him with her great eyes while she laughed or sang. Like the
perfume of strange flowers, like the savor of strange fruit was
Hypsipyle to
Jason. Hours and hours he would spend sitting beside her or watching
her while
she arrayed herself in white or in brightly colored garments. Not to
the chase
and not into the fields did Jason go, nor did he ever go with the
others into
the Lemnian land; all day he sat in the palace with her, watching her,
or
listening to her singing, or to the long, fierce speeches that she used
to make
to her nurse or to the four maidens who attended her. In the
evening they would gather in the hall of the palace, the Argonauts and
the
Lemnian maidens who were their comrades. There were dances, and always
Jason
and Hypsipyle danced together. All the Lemnian maidens sang
beautifully, but
none of them had any stories to tell. And when
the Argonauts would have stories told the Lemnian maidens would forbid
any tale
that was about a god or a hero; only stories that were about the
goddesses or
about some maiden would they let be told. Orpheus, who knew the histories of the gods, would have told them many stories, but the only story of his that they would come from the dance to listen to was a story of the goddesses, of Demeter and her daughter Persephone. Once when
Demeter was going through the world, giving men grain to be sown in
their
fields, she heard a cry that came to her from across high mountains and
that
mounted up to her from the sea. Demeter’s heart shook when she heard
that cry,
for she knew that it came to her from her daughter, from her only
child, young
Persephone. She stayed
not to bless the fields in which the grain was being sown, but she
hurried,
hurried away, to Sicily and to the fields of Enna, where she had left
Persephone. All Enna she searched, and all Sicily, but she found no
trace of
Persephone, nor of the maidens whom Persephone had been playing with.
From all
whom she met she begged for tidings, but although some had seen maidens
gathering flowers and playing together, no one could tell Demeter why
her child
had cried out nor where she had since gone to. There were
some who could have told her. One was Cyane, a water nymph. But Cyane,
before
Demeter came to her, had been changed into a spring of water. And now,
not
being able to speak and tell Demeter where her child had gone to and
who had
carried her away, she showed in the water the girdle of Persephone that
she had
caught in her hands. And Demeter, finding the girdle of her child in
the
spring, knew that she had been carried off by violence. She lighted a
torch at
Ætna’s burning mountain, and for nine days and nine nights she went
searching
for her through the darkened places of the earth. Then, upon
a high and a dark hill, the Goddess Demeter came face to face with
Hecate, the
Moon. Hecate, too, had heard the cry of Persephone; she had sorrow for
Demeter’s sorrow: she spoke to her as the two stood upon that dark,
high hill,
and told her that she should go to Helios for tidings — to bright
Helios, the
watcher for the gods, and beg Helios to tell her who it was who had
carried off
by violence her child Persephone. Demeter
came to Helios. He was standing before his shining steeds, before the
impatient
steeds that draw the sun through the course of the heavens. Demeter
stood in
the way of those impatient steeds; she begged of Helios who sees all
things
upon the earth to tell her who it was had carried off by violence
Persephone,
her child. And
Helios, who may make no concealment, said: “Queenly Demeter, know that
the king
of the Underworld, dark Aidoneus, has carried off Persephone to make
her his
queen in the realm that I never shine upon.” He spoke, and as he did,
his
horses shook their manes and breathed out fire, impatient to be gone.
Helios
sprang into his chariot and went flashing away. Demeter,
knowing that one of the gods had carried off Persephone against her
will, and
knowing that what was done had been done by the will of Zeus, would go
no more
into the assemblies of the gods. She quenched the torch that she had
held in
her hands for nine days and nine nights; she put off her robe of
goddess, and
she went wandering over the earth, uncomforted for the loss of her
child. And
no longer did she appear as a gracious goddess to men; no longer did
she give
them grain; no longer did she bless their fields. None of the things
that it
had pleased her once to do would Demeter do any longer. II Persephone
had been playing with the nymphs who are the daughters of Ocean —
Phæno,
Ianthe, Melita, Ianeira, Acaste in the lovely fields of Enna. They went
to
gather flowers — irises and crocuses, lilies, narcissus, hyacinths and
rose-blooms — that grow in those fields. As they went, gathering
flowers in
their baskets, they had sight of Pergus, the pool that the white swans
come to
sing in. Beside a
deep chasm that had been made in the earth a wonder flower was growing
— in
color it was like the crocus, but it sent forth a perfume that was like
the
perfume of a hundred flowers. And Persephone thought as she went toward
it that
having gathered that flower she would have something much more
wonderful than
her companions had. She did
not know that Aidoneus, the lord of the Underworld, had caused that
flower to
grow there so that she might be drawn by it to the chasm that he had
made. As
Persephone stooped to pluck the wonder flower, Aidoneus, in his chariot
of
iron, dashed up through the chasm, and grasping the maiden by the
waist, set
her beside him. Only Cyane, the nymph, tried to save Persephone, and it
was
then that she caught the girdle in her hands. The maiden
cried out, first because her flowers had been spilled, and then because
she was
being reft away. She cried out to her mother, and her cry went over
high
mountains and sounded up from the sea. The daughters of Ocean,
affrighted, fled
and sank down into the depths of the sea. In his
great chariot of iron that was drawn by black steeds Aidoneus rushed
down
through the chasm he had made. Into the Underworld he went, and he
dashed
across the River Styx, and he brought his chariot up beside his throne.
And on
his dark throne he seated Persephone, the fainting daughter of Demeter. No more
did the Goddess Demeter give grain to men; no more did she bless their
fields:
weeds grew where grain had been growing, and men feared that in a while
they
would famish for lack of bread. She
wandered through the world, her thought all upon her child, Persephone,
who had
been taken from her. Once she sat by a well by a wayside, thinking upon
the
child that she might not come to and who might not come to her. She saw
four maidens come near; their grace and their youth reminded her of her
child.
They stepped lightly along, carrying bronze pitchers in their hands,
for they
were coming to the Well of the Maiden beside which Demeter sat. The
maidens thought when they looked upon her that the goddess was some
ancient
woman who had a sorrow in her heart. Seeing that she was so noble and
so
sorrowful looking, the maidens, as they drew the clear water into their
pitchers, spoke kindly to her. “Why do
you stay away from the town, old mother?” one of the maidens said. “Why
do you
not come to the houses? We think that you look as if you were
shelterless and
alone, and we should like to tell you that there are many houses in the
town
where you would be welcomed.” Demeter’s
heart went out to the maidens, because they looked so young and fair
and simple
and spoke out of such kind hearts. She said to them: “Where can I go,
dear
children? My people are far away, and there are none in all the world
who would
care to be near me.” Said one
of the maidens: “There are princes in the land who would welcome you in
their
houses if you would consent to nurse one of their young children. But
why do I
speak of other princes beside Celeus, our father? In his house you
would indeed
have a welcome. But lately a baby has been born to our mother,
Metaneira, and
she would greatly rejoice to have one as wise as you mind little
Demophoön.” All the
time that she watched them and listened to their voices Demeter felt
that the
grace and youth of the maidens made them like Persephone. She thought
that it
would ease her heart to be in the house where these maidens were, and
she was
not loath to have them go and ask of their mother to have her come to
nurse the
infant child. Swiftly
they ran back to their home, their hair streaming behind them like
crocus
flowers; kind and lovely girls whose names are well remembered —
Callidice and
Cleisidice, Demo and Callithoë. They went to their mother and they told
her of
the stranger-woman whose name was Doso. She would make a wise and a
kind nurse
for little Demophoön, they said. Their mother, Metaneira, rose up from
the
couch she was sitting on to welcome the stranger. But when she saw her
at the
doorway, awe came over her, so majestic she seemed. Metaneira
would have her seat herself on the couch but the goddess took the
lowliest
stool, saying in greeting: “May the gods give you all good, lady.” “Sorrow
has set you wandering from your good home,” said Metaneira to the
goddess, “but
now that you have come to this place you shall have all that this house
can
bestow if you will rear up to youth the infant Demophoön, child of many
hopes
and prayers.” The child
was put into the arms of Demeter; she clasped him to her breast, and
little
Demophoön looked up into her face and smiled. Then Demeter’s heart went
out to
the child and to all who were in the household. He grew in strength and beauty in her charge. And little Demophoön was not nourished as other children are nourished, but even as the gods in their childhood were nourished. Demeter fed him on ambrosia, breathing on him with her divine breath the while. And at night she laid him on the hearth, amongst the embers, with the fire all around him. This she did that she might make him immortal, and like to the gods. But one
night Metaneira looked out from the chamber where she lay, and she saw
the
nurse take little Demophoön and lay him in a place on the hearth with
the
burning brands all around him. Then Metaneira started up, and she
sprang to the
hearth, and she snatched the child from beside the burning brands.
“Demophoön,
my son,” she cried, “what would this stranger-woman do to you, bringing
bitter
grief to me that ever I let her take you in her arms?” Then said
Demeter: “Foolish indeed are you mortals, and not able to foresee what
is to
come to you of good or of evil! Foolish indeed are you, Metaneira, for
in your
heedlessness you have cut off this child from an immortality like to
the
immortality of the gods themselves. For he had lain in my bosom and had
become
dear to me and I would have bestowed upon him the greatest gift that
the Divine
Ones can bestow, for I would have made him deathless and unaging. All
this,
now, has gone by. Honor he shall have indeed, but Demophoön will know
age and
death.” The
seeming old age that was upon her had fallen from Demeter; beauty and
stature
were hers, and from her robe there came a heavenly fragrance. There
came such
light from her body that the chamber shone. Metaneira remained
trembling and
speechless, unmindful even to take up the child that had been laid upon
the
ground. It was
then that his sisters heard Demophoön wail; one ran from her chamber
and took
the child in her arms; another kindled again the fire upon the hearth,
and the
others made ready to bathe and care for the infant. All night they
cared for
him, holding him in their arms and at their breasts, but the child
would not be
comforted, because the nurses who handled him now were less skillful
than was
the goddess-nurse. And as for
Demeter, she left the house of Celeus and went upon her way, lonely in
her
heart, and unappeased. And in the world that she wandered through, the
plow
went in vain through the ground; the furrow was sown without any avail,
and the
race of men saw themselves near perishing for lack of bread. But again
Demeter came near the Well of the Maiden. She thought of the daughters
of
Celeus as they came toward the well that day, the bronze pitchers in
their
hands, and with kind looks for the stranger — she thought of them as
she sat by
the well again. And then she thought of little Demophoön, the child she
had
held at her breast. No stir of living was in the land near their home,
and only
weeds grew in their fields. As she sat there and looked around her
there came
into Demeter’s heart a pity for the people in whose house she had
dwelt. She rose up and she went to the house of Celeus. She found him beside his house measuring out a little grain. The goddess went to him and she told him that because of the love she bore his household she would bless his fields so that the seed he had sown in them would come to growth. Celeus rejoiced, and he called all the people together, and they raised a temple to Demeter. She went through the fields and blessed them, and the seed that they had sown began to grow. And the goddess for a while dwelt amongst that people, in her temple at Eleusis. IV
But still
she kept away from the assemblies of the gods. Zeus sent a messenger to
her,
Iris with the golden wings, bidding her to Olympus. Demeter would not
join the
Olympians. Then, one after the other, the gods and goddesses of Olympus
came to
her; none were able to make her cease from grieving for Persephone, or
to go
again into the company of the immortal gods. And so it
came about that Zeus was compelled to send a messenger down to the
Underworld
to bring Persephone back to the mother who grieved so much for the loss
of her.
Hermes was the messenger whom Zeus sent. Through the darkened places of
the
earth Hermes went, and he came to that dark throne where the lord
Aidoneus sat,
with Persephone beside him. Then Hermes spoke to the lord of the
Underworld,
saying that Zeus commanded that Persephone should come forth from the
Underworld that her mother might look upon her. Then
Persephone, hearing the words of Zeus that might not be gainsaid,
uttered the
only cry that had left her lips since she had sent out that cry that
had
reached her mother’s heart. And Aidoneus, hearing the command of Zeus
that
might not be denied, bowed his dark, majestic head. She might
go to the Upperworld and rest herself in the arms of her mother, he
said. And
then he cried out: “Ah, Persephone, strive to feel kindliness in your
heart
toward me who carried you off by violence and against your will. I can
give to
you one of the great kingdoms that the Olympians rule over. And I, who
am
brother to Zeus, am no unfitting husband for you, Demeter’s child.” So Aidoneus,
the dark lord of the Underworld said, and he made ready the iron
chariot with
its deathless horses that Persephone might go up from his kingdom. Beside the single tree in his domain Aidoneus stayed the chariot. A single fruit grew on that tree, a bright pomegranate fruit. Persephone stood up in the chariot and plucked the fruit from the tree. Then did Aidoneus prevail upon her to divide the fruit, and, having divided it, Persephone ate seven of the pomegranate seeds. It was
Hermes who took the whip and the reins of the chariot. He drove on, and
neither
the sea nor the water-courses, nor the glens nor the mountain peaks
stayed the
deathless horses of Aidoneus, and soon the chariot was brought near to
where
Demeter awaited the coming of her daughter. And when,
from a hilltop, Demeter saw the chariot approaching, she flew like a
wild bird
to clasp her child. Persephone, when she saw her mother’s dear eyes,
sprang out
of the chariot and fell upon her neck and embraced her. Long and long
Demeter
held her dear child in her arms, gazing, gazing upon her. Suddenly her
mind
misgave her. With a great fear at her heart she cried out: “Dearest,
has any
food passed your lips in all the time you have been in the Underworld?”
She had
not tasted food in all the time she was there, Persephone said. And
then,
suddenly, she remembered the pomegranate that Aidoneus had asked her to
divide.
When she told that she had eaten seven seeds from it Demeter wept, and
her
tears fell upon Persephone’s face. “Ah, my
dearest,” she cried, “if you had not eaten the pomegranate seeds you
could have
stayed with me, and always we should have been together. But now that
you have
eaten food in it, the Underworld has a claim upon you. You may not stay
always
with me here. Again you will have to go back and dwell in the dark
places under
the earth and sit upon Aidoneus’s throne. But not always you will be
there.
When the flowers bloom upon the earth you shall come up from the realm
of
darkness, and in great joy we shall go through the world together,
Demeter and
Persephone.” And so it
has been since Persephone came back to her mother after having eaten of
the
pomegranate seeds. For two seasons of the year she stays with Demeter,
and for
one season she stays in the Underworld with her dark lord. While she is
with
her mother there is springtime upon the earth. Demeter blesses the
furrows, her
heart being glad because her daughter is with her once more. The
furrows become
heavy with grain, and soon the whole wide earth has grain and fruit,
leaves and
flowers. When the furrows are reaped, when the grain has been gathered,
when
the dark season comes, Persephone goes from her mother, and going down
into the
dark places, she sits beside her mighty lord Aidoneus and upon his
throne. Not
sorrowful is she there; she sits with head unbowed, for she knows
herself to be
a mighty queen. She has joy, too, knowing of the seasons when she may
walk with
Demeter, her mother, on the wide places of the earth, through fields of
flowers
and fruit and ripening grain. Such was
the story that Orpheus told — Orpheus who knew the histories of the
gods. A day came
when the heroes, on their way back from a journey they had made with
the
Lemnian maidens, called out to Heracles upon the Argo . Then
Heracles, standing
on the prow of the ship, shouted angrily to them. Terrible did he seem
to the
Lemnian maidens, and they ran off, drawing the heroes with them.
Heracles
shouted to his comrades again, saying that if they did not come aboard
the Argo and make ready for the voyage to Colchis, he would go
ashore and carry them to
the ship, and force them again to take the oars in their hands. Not all
of what
Heracles said did the Argonauts hear. That
evening the men were silent in Hypsipyle’s hall, and it was Atalanta,
the
maiden, who told the evening’s story. There are
two Atalantas, she said; she herself, the Huntress, and another who is
noted
for her speed of foot and her delight in the race — the daughter of
Schoeneus,
King of Bœotia, Atalanta of the Swift Foot. So proud
was she of her swiftness that she made a vow to the gods that none
would be her
husband except the youth who won past her in the race. Youth after
youth came
and raced against her, but Atalanta, who grew fleeter and fleeter of
foot, left
each one of them far behind her. The youths who came to the race were
so many
and the clamor they made after defeat was so great, that her father
made a law
that, as he thought, would lessen their number. The law that he made
was that
the youth who came to race against Atalanta and who lost the race
should lose
his life into the bargain. After that the youths who had care for their
lives
stayed away from Bœotia. Once there
came a youth from a far part of Greece into the country that Atalanta’s
father
ruled over. Hippomenes was his name. He did not know of the race, but
having
come into the city and seeing the crowd of people, he went with them to
the
course. He looked upon the youths who were girded for the race, and he
heard
the folk say amongst themselves, “Poor youths, as mighty and as
high-spirited
as they look, by sunset the life will be out of each of them, for
Atalanta will
run past them as she ran past the others.” Then Hippomenes spoke to the
folk in
wonder, and they told him of Atalanta’s race and of what would befall
the
youths who were defeated in it. “Unlucky youths,” cried Hippomenes,
“how
foolish they are to try to win a bride at the price of their lives.” Then, with
pity in his heart, he watched the youths prepare for the race. Atalanta
had not
yet taken her place, and he was fearful of looking upon her. “She is a
witch,”
he said to himself, “she must be a witch to draw so many youths to
their
deaths, and she, no doubt, will show in her face and figure the witch’s
spirit.” But even
as he said this, Hippomenes saw Atalanta. She stood with the youths
before they
crouched for the first dart in the race. He saw that she was a girl of
a light
and a lovely form. Then they crouched for the race; then the trumpets
rang out,
and the youths and the maiden darted like swallows over the sand of the
course.
On came
Atalanta, far, far ahead of the youths who had started with her. Over
her bare
shoulders her hair streamed, blown backward by the wind that met her
flight.
Her fair neck shone, and her little feet were like flying doves. It
seemed to
Hippomenes as he watched her that there was fire in her lovely body. On
and on
she went as swift as the arrow that the Scythian shoots from his bow.
And as he
watched the race he was not sorry that the youths were being left
behind.
Rather would he have been enraged if one came near overtaking her, for
now his
heart was set upon winning her for his bride, and he cursed himself for
not
having entered the race. She passed
the last goal mark and she was given the victor’s wreath of flowers.
Hippomenes
stood and watched her and he did not see the youths who had started
with her —
they had thrown themselves on the ground in their despair. Then wild,
as though he were one of the doomed youths, Hippomenes made his way
through the
throng and came before the black-bearded King of Bœotia. The king’s
brows were
knit, for even then he was pronouncing doom upon the youths who had
been left
behind in the race. He looked upon Hippomenes, another youth who would
make the
trial, and the frown became heavier upon his face. But
Hippomenes saw only Atalanta. She came beside her father; the wreath
was upon
her head of gold, and her eyes were wide and tender. She turned her
face to
him, and then she knew by the wildness that was in his look that he had
come to
enter the race with her. Then the flush that was on her face died away,
and she
shook her head as if she were imploring him to go from that place. The
dark-bearded king bent his brows upon him and said, “Speak, O youth,
speak and
tell us what brings you here.” Then cried
Hippomenes as if his whole life were bursting out with his words: “Why
does
this maiden, your daughter, seek an easy renown by conquering weakly
youths in
the race? She has not striven yet. Here stand I, one of the blood of
Poseidon,
the god of the sea. Should I be defeated by her in the race, then,
indeed,
might Atalanta have something to boast of.” Atalanta
stepped forward and said: “Do not speak of it, youth. Indeed I think
that it is
some god, envious of your beauty and your strength, who sent you here
to strive
with me and to meet your doom. Ah, think of the youths who have striven
with me
even now! Think of the hard doom that is about to fall upon them! You
venture
your life in the race, but indeed I am not worthy of the price. Go
hence, O
stranger youth, go hence and live happily, for indeed I think that
there is
some maiden who loves you well.” “Nay,
maiden,” said Hippomenes, “I will enter the race and I will venture my
life on
the chance of winning you for my bride. What good will my life and my
spirit be
to me if they cannot win this race for me?” She drew
away from him then and looked upon him no more, but bent down to fasten
the
sandals upon her feet. And the black-bearded king looked upon
Hippomenes and
said, “Face, then, this race to-morrow. You will be the only one who
will enter
it. But bethink thee of the doom that awaits thee at the end of it.”
The king
said no more, and Hippomenes went from him and from Atalanta, and he
came again
to the place where the race had been run. He looked
across the sandy course with its goal marks, and in his mind he saw
again
Atalanta’s swift race. He would not meet doom at the hands of the
king’s
soldiers, he knew, for his spirit would leave him with the greatness of
the
effort he would make to reach the goal before her. And he thought it
would be
well to die in that effort and on that sandy place that was so far from
his own
land. Even as he
looked across the sandy course now deserted by the throng, he saw one
move
across it, coming toward him with feet that did not seem to touch the
ground.
She was a woman of wonderful presence. As Hippomenes looked upon her he
knew
that she was Aphrodite, the goddess of beauty and of love. “Hippomenes,”
said the immortal goddess, “the gods are mindful of you who are sprung
from one
of the gods, and I am mindful of you because of your own worth. I have
come to
help you in your race with Atalanta, for I would not have you slain,
nor would
I have that maiden go unwed. Give your greatest strength and your
greatest
swiftness to the race, and behold! here are wonders that will prevent
the
fleet-footed Atalanta from putting all her spirit into the race.” And then
the immortal goddess held out to Hippomenes a branch that had upon it
three
apples of shining gold. “In
Cyprus,” said the goddess, “where I have come from, there is a tree on
which
these golden apples grow. Only I may pluck them. I have brought them to
you,
Hippomenes. Keep them in your girdle, and in the race you will find out
what to
do with them, I think.” So
Aphrodite said, and then she vanished, leaving a fragrance in the air
and the
three shining apples in the hands of Hippomenes. Long he looked upon
their
brightness. They were beside him that night, and when he arose in the
dawn he
put them in his girdle. Then, before the throng, he went to the place
of the
race. When he
showed himself beside Atalanta all around the course were silent, for
they all
admired Hippomenes for his beauty and for the spirit that was in his
face; they
were silent out of compassion, for they knew the doom that befell the
youths
who raced with Atalanta. And now
Schœneus, the black-bearded king, stood up, and he spoke to the throng,
saying,
“Hear me all, both young and old: this youth, Hippomenes, seeks to win
the race
from my daughter, winning her for his bride. Now, if he be victorious
and
escape death I will give him my dear child, Atalanta, and many fleet
horses
besides as gifts from me, and in honor he shall go back to his native
land. But
if he fail in the race, then he will have to share the doom that has
been meted
out to the other youths who raced with Atalanta hoping to win her for a
bride.”
Then
Hippomenes and Atalanta crouched for the start. The trumpets were
sounded and
they darted off. Side by
side with Atalanta Hippomenes went. Her flying hair touched his breast,
and it
seemed to him that they were skimming the sandy course as if they were
swallows. But then Atalanta began to draw away from him. He saw her
ahead of
him, and then he began to hear the words of cheer that came from the
throng —
“Bend to the race, Hippomenes! Go on, go on! Use your strength to the
utmost.”
He bent himself to the race, but further and further from him Atalanta
drew. Then it
seemed to him that she checked her swiftness a little to look back at
him. He
gained on her a little. And then his hand touched the apples that were
in his
girdle. As it touched them it came into his mind what to do with the
apples. He was not
far from her now, but already her swiftness was drawing her further and
further
away. He took one of the apples into his hand and tossed it into the
air so
that it fell on the track before her. Atalanta
saw the shining apple. She checked her speed and stooped in the race to
pick it
up. And as she stooped Hippomenes darted past her, and went flying
toward the
goal that now was within his sight. But soon
she was beside him again. He looked, and he saw that the goal marks
were far,
far ahead of him. Atalanta with the flying hair passed him, and drew
away and
away from him. He had not speed to gain upon her now, he thought, so he
put his
strength into his hand and he flung the second of the shining apples.
The apple
rolled before her and rolled off the course. Atalanta turned off the
course,
stooped and picked up the apple. Then did
Hippomenes draw all his spirit into his breast as he raced on. He was
now
nearer to the goal than she was. But he knew that she was behind him,
going
lightly where he went heavily. And then she was beside him, and then
she went
past him. She paused in her speed for a moment and she looked back on
him. As he
raced on, his chest seemed weighted down and his throat was crackling
dry. The
goal marks were far away still, but Atalanta was nearing them. He took
the last
of the golden apples into his hand. Perhaps she was now so far that the
strength of his throw would not be great enough to bring the apple
before her. But with all the strength he could put into his hand he flung the apple. It struck the course before her feet and then went bounding wide. Atalanta swerved in her race and followed where the apple went. Hippomenes marveled that he had been able to fling it so far. He saw Atalanta stoop to pick up the apple, and he bounded on. And then, although his strength was failing, he saw the goal marks near him. He set his feet between them and then fell down on the ground. The
attendants raised him up and put the victor’s wreath upon his head. The
concourse of people shouted with joy to see him victor. But he looked
around
for Atalanta and he saw her standing there with the golden apples in
her hands.
“He has won,” he heard her say, “and I have not to hate myself for
bringing a
doom upon him. Gladly, gladly do I give up the race, and glad am I that
it is
this youth who has won the victory from me.” She took
his hand and brought him before the king. Then Schoeneus, in the sight
of all
the rejoicing people, gave Atalanta to Hippomenes for his bride, and he
bestowed upon him also a great gift of horses. With his dear and
hard-won
bride, Hippomenes went to his own country, and the apples that she
brought with
her, the golden apples of Aphrodite, were reverenced by the people. |