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VI. HOW
ORPHEUS THE MINSTREL WENT DOWN TO THE WORLD OF THE DEAD
ANY
were
the minstrels who, in the early days, went through the world, telling
to men
the stories of the gods, telling of their wars and their births. Of all
these
minstrels none was so famous as Orpheus who had gone with the
Argonauts; none
could tell truer things about the gods, for he himself was half divine.
But a
great grief came to Orpheus, a grief that stopped his singing and his
playing
upon the lyre. His young wife Eurydice was taken from him. One day,
walking in
the garden, she was bitten on the heel by a serpent, and straightway
she went
down to the world of the dead. Then everything in this world was dark and bitter for the minstrel Orpheus; sleep would not come to him, and for him food had no taste. Then Orpheus said: “I will do that which no mortal has ever done before; I will do that which even the immortals might shrink from doing: I will go down into the world of the dead, and I will bring back to the living and to the light my bride Eurydice.” Then
Orpheus went on his way to the valley of Acherusia which goes down,
down into
the world of the dead. He would never have found his way to that valley
if the
trees had not shown him the way. For as he went along Orpheus played
upon his
lyre and sang, and the trees heard his song and they were moved by his
grief,
and with their arms and their heads they showed him the way to the
deep, deep
valley of Acherusia. Down, down
by winding paths through that deepest and most shadowy of all valleys
Orpheus
went. He came at last to the great gate that opens upon the world of
the dead.
And the silent guards who keep watch there for the rulers of the dead
were
affrighted when they saw a living being, and they would not let Orpheus
approach the gate. But the
minstrel, knowing the reason for their fear, said: “I am not Heracles
come
again to drag up from the world of the dead your three-headed dog
Cerberus. I
am Orpheus, and all that my hands can do is to make music upon my
lyre.” And then
he took the lyre in his hands and played upon it. As he played, the
silent
watchers gathered around him, leaving the gate unguarded. And as he
played the
rulers of the dead came forth, Aidoneus and Persephone, and listened to
the
words of the living man. “The cause
of my coming through the dark and fearful ways,” sang Orpheus, “is to
strive to
gain a fairer fate for Eurydice, my bride. All that is above must come
down to
you at last, O rulers of the most lasting world. But before her time
has
Eurydice been brought here. I have desired strength to endure her loss,
but I
cannot endure it. And I come before you, Aidoneus and Persephone,
brought here
by Love.” When
Orpheus said the name of Love, Persephone, the queen of the dead, bowed
her
young head, and bearded Aidoneus, the king, bowed his head also.
Persephone
remembered how Demeter, her mother, had sought her all through the
world, and
she remembered the touch of her mother’s tears upon her face. And
Aidoneus
remembered how his love for Persephone had led him to carry her away
from the
valley in the upper world where she had been gathering flowers. He and
Persephone bowed their heads and stood aside, and Orpheus went through
the gate
and came amongst the dead. Still upon
his lyre he played. Tantalus — who, for his crimes, had been condemned
to stand
up to his neck in water and yet never be able to assuage his thirst —
Tantalus
heard, and for a while did not strive to put his lips toward the water
that
ever flowed away from him; Sisyphus — who had been condemned to roll up
a hill
a stone that ever rolled back — Sisyphus heard the music that Orpheus
played,
and for a while he sat still upon his stone. And even those dread ones
who
bring to the dead the memories of all their crimes and all their
faults, even
the Eumenides had their cheeks wet with tears. In the
throng of the newly come dead Orpheus saw Eurydice. She looked upon her
husband, but she had not the power to come near him. But slowly she
came when
Aidoneus called her. Then with joy Orpheus took her hands. It would
be granted them — no mortal ever gained such privilege before — to
leave, both
together, the world of the dead, and to abide for another space in the
world of
the living. One condition there would be — that on their way up through
the
valley of Acherusia neither Orpheus nor Eurydice should look back. They went
through the gate and came amongst the watchers that are around the
portals.
These showed them the path that went up through the valley of
Acherusia. That
way they went, Orpheus and Eurydice, he going before her. Up and up
through the darkened ways they went, Orpheus knowing that Eurydice was
behind
him, but never looking back upon her. But as he went, his heart was
filled with
things to tell — how the trees were blossoming in the garden she had
left; how
the water was sparkling in the fountain; how the doors of the house
stood open,
and how they, sitting together, would watch the sunlight on the laurel
bushes.
All these things were in his heart to tell her, to tell her who came
behind
him, silent and unseen. And now
they were nearing the place where the valley of Acherusia opened on the
world
of the living. Orpheus looked on the blue of the sky. A white-winged
bird flew
by. Orpheus turned around and cried, “O Eurydice, look upon the world
that I
have won you back to!” He turned
to say this to her. He saw her with her long dark hair and pale face.
He held
out his arms to clasp her. But in that instant she slipped back into
the depths
of the valley. And all he heard spoken was a single word, “Farewell!”
Long,
long had it taken Eurydice to climb so far, but in the moment of his
turning
around she had fallen back to her place amongst the dead. Down
through the valley of Acherusia Orpheus went again. Again he came
before the
watchers of the gate. But now he was not looked at nor listened to,
and,
hopeless, he had to return to the world of the living. The birds
were his friends now, and the trees and the stones. The birds flew
around him
and mourned with him; the trees and stones often followed him, moved by
the
music of his lyre. But a savage band slew Orpheus and threw his severed
head
and his lyre into the River Hebrus. It is said by the poets that while
they
floated in midstream the lyre gave out some mournful notes and the head
of
Orpheus answered the notes with song. And now that
he was no longer to be counted with the living, Orpheus went down to
the world
of the dead, not going now by that steep descent through the valley of
Acherusia, but going down straightway. The silent watchers let him
pass, and he
went amongst the dead and saw his Eurydice in the throng. Again they
were
together, Orpheus and Eurydice, and as they went through the place that
King
Aidoneus ruled over, they had no fear of looking back, one upon the
other. |