I
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 [pg 62] 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 [pg 63] 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, [pg 64] 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.
III
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 [pg 65] 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 [pg 66] 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.
[pg 67] 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. “Demophoõn, 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 Demophoõn will know age and
death.”
The seeming
old age that was upon her had fallen from [pg 68] 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.
[pg 69] 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 [pg
70] 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 [pg 71] 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 [pg 72] 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 [pg
73] 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.
