Epimetheus
the Titan had a brother who was the wisest of all
beings—Prometheus called the Foreseer. But Epimetheus himself was
slow-witted and scatter-brained. His wise brother once sent him a
message bidding him beware of the gifts that Zeus might send him.
Epimetheus heard, but he did not heed the warning, and thereby he
brought upon the race of men troubles and cares.
Prometheus,
the wise Titan, had saved men from a great trouble that Zeus
would have brought upon them. Also he had given them the gift of
fire. Zeus was the more wroth with men now because fire, stolen
from him, had been given them; he was wroth with the race of
Titans, too, and he pondered in his heart how he might injure
men, and how he might use Epimetheus, the mindless Titan, to
further his plan.
While he
pondered there was a hush on high Olympus, the mountain of the
gods. Then Zeus called upon the artisan of the gods, lame
Hephæstus, and he commanded him to make a being out of clay that
would have the likeness of a lovely maiden. With joy and pride
Hephæstus worked at the task that had been given him, and he
fashioned a being that had the likeness of a lovely maiden, and
he brought the thing of his making before the gods and the
goddesses.
All strove to
add a grace or a beauty to the work of Hephæstus. Zeus granted
that the maiden should see and feel. [pg 84] Athene dressed her in garments that were
as lovely as flowers. Aphrodite, the goddess of love, put a charm
on her lips and in her eyes. The Graces put necklaces around her
neck and set a golden crown upon her head. The Hours brought her
a girdle of spring flowers. Then the herald of the gods gave her
speech that was sweet and flowing. All the gods and goddesses had
given gifts to her, and for that reason the maiden of Hephæstus’s
making was called Pandora, the All-endowed.
She was
lovely, the gods knew; not beautiful as they themselves are, who
have a beauty that awakens reverence rather than love, but
lovely, as flowers and bright waters and earthly maidens are
lovely. Zeus smiled to himself when he looked upon her, and he
called to Hermes who knew all the ways of the earth, and he put
her into the charge of Hermes. Also he gave Hermes a great jar to
take along; this jar was Pandora’s dower.
Epimetheus
lived in a deep-down valley. Now one day, as he was sitting on a
fallen pillar in the ruined place that was now forsaken by the
rest of the Titans, he saw a pair coming toward him. One had
wings, and he knew him to be Hermes, the messenger of the gods.
The other was a maiden. Epimetheus marveled at the crown upon her
head and at her lovely garments. There was a glint of gold all
around her. He rose from where he sat upon the broken pillar and
he stood to watch the pair. Hermes, he saw, was carrying by its
handle a great jar.
[pg 85] In wonder and delight he
looked upon the maiden. Epimetheus had seen no lovely thing for
ages. Wonderful indeed was this Golden Maid, and as she came
nearer the charm that was on her lips and in her eyes came to the
Earth-born One, and he smiled with more and more delight.
Hermes came
and stood before him. He also smiled, but his smile had something
baleful in it. He put the hands of the Golden Maid into the great
soft hand of the Titan, and he said, “O
Epimetheus, Father Zeus would be reconciled with thee, and as a
sign of his good will he sends thee this lovely goddess to be thy
companion.”
Oh, very
foolish was Epimetheus the Earth-born One! As he looked upon the
Golden Maid who was sent by Zeus he lost memory of the wars that
Zeus had made upon the Titans and the Elder Gods; he lost memory
of his brother chained by Zeus to the rock; he lost memory of the
warning that his brother, the wisest of all beings, had sent him.
He took the hands of Pandora, and he thought of nothing at all in
all the world but her. Very far away seemed the voice of Hermes
saying, “This jar, too, is from Olympus;
it has in it Pandora’s dower.”
The jar stood
forgotten for long, and green plants grew over it while
Epimetheus walked in the garden with the Golden Maid, or watched
her while she gazed on herself in the stream, or searched in the
untended places for the fruits that the Elder Gods would eat,
when they feasted with the Titans in the old days, before Zeus
had come to his power. And lost to Epimetheus [pg 86] was the memory of his
brother now suffering upon the rock because of the gift he had
given to men.
And Pandora,
knowing nothing except the brightness of the sunshine and the
lovely shapes and colors of things and the sweet taste of the
fruits that Epimetheus brought to her, could have stayed forever
in that garden.
But every day
Epimetheus would think that the men and women of the world should
be able to talk to him about this maiden with the wonderful
radiance of gold, and with the lovely garments, and the marvelous
crown. And one day he took Pandora by the hand, and he brought
her out of that deep-lying valley, and toward the homes of men.
He did not forget the jar that Hermes had left with her. All
things that belonged to the Golden Maid were precious, and
Epimetheus took the jar along.
The race of
men at the time were simple and content. Their days were passed
in toil, but now, since Prometheus had given them fire, they had
good fruits of their toil. They had well-shaped tools to dig the
earth and to build houses. Their homes were warmed with fire, and
fire burned upon the altars that were upon their ways.
Greatly they
reverenced Prometheus; who had given them fire, and greatly they
reverenced the race of the Titans. So when Epimetheus came
amongst them, tall as a man walking with stilts, they welcomed
him and brought him and the Golden [pg 87] Maid to their hearths. And Epimetheus
showed Pandora the wonderful element that his brother had given
to men, and she rejoiced to see the fire, clapping her hands with
delight. The jar that Epimetheus brought he left in an open
place.
In carrying
it up the rough ways out of the valley Epimetheus may have
knocked the jar about, for the lid that had been tight upon it
now fitted very loosely. But no one gave heed to the jar as it
stood in the open space where Epimetheus had left it.
At first the
men and women looked upon the beauty of Pandora, upon her lovely
dresses, and her golden crown and her girdle of flowers, with
wonder and delight. Epimetheus would have every one admire and
praise her. The men would leave off working in the fields, or
hammering on iron, or building houses, and the women would leave
off spinning or weaving, and come at his call, and stand about
and admire the Golden Maid. But as time went by a change came
upon the women: one woman would weep, and another would look
angry, and a third would go back sullenly to her work when
Pandora was admired or praised.
Once the
women were gathered together, and one who was the wisest amongst
them said: “Once we did not think about
ourselves, and we were content. But now we think about ourselves,
and we say to ourselves that we are harsh and ill-favored indeed
compared to the Golden Maid that the Titan is so enchanted with.
And we hate to see our own men praise and [pg 88] admire her, and often, in
our hearts, we would destroy her if we could.”
“That is true,” the women said. And then a
young woman cried out in a most yearnful voice, “O tell us, you who are wise, how can we make
ourselves as beautiful as Pandora!”
Then said
that woman who was thought to be wise, “This Golden Maid is lovely to look upon because she
has lovely apparel and all the means of keeping herself lovely.
The gods have given her the ways, and so her skin remains fair,
and her hair keeps its gold, and her lips are ever red and her
eyes shining. And I think that the means that she has of keeping
lovely are all in that jar that Epimetheus brought with
her.”
When the
woman who was thought to be wise said this, those around her were
silent for a while. But then one arose and another arose, and
they stood and whispered together, one saying to the other that
they should go to the place where the jar had been left by
Epimetheus, and that they should take out of it the salves and
the charms and the washes that would leave them as beautiful as
Pandora.
So the women
went to that place. On their way they stopped at a pool and they
bent over to see themselves mirrored in it, and they saw
themselves with dusty and unkempt hair, with large and knotted
hands, with troubled eyes, and with anxious mouths. They frowned
as they looked upon their images, and they said in harsh voices
that in a while they would have ways of making themselves as
lovely as the Golden Maid. [pg 89]
And as they
went on they saw Pandora. She was playing in a flowering field,
while Epimetheus, high as a man upon stilts, went gathering the
blossoms of the bushes for her. They went on, and they came at
last to the place where Epimetheus had left the jar that held
Pandora’s dower.
A great stone
jar it was; there was no bird, nor flower, nor branch painted
upon it. It stood high as a woman’s shoulder. And as the women
looked on it they thought that there were things enough in it to
keep them beautiful for all the days of their lives. But each one
thought that she should not be the last to get her hands into
it.
Once the lid
had been fixed tightly down on the jar. But the lid was shifted a
little now. As the hands of the women grasped it to take off the
lid the jar was cast down, and the things that were inside
spilled themselves forth.
They were
black and gray and red; they were crawling and flying things.
And, as the women looked, the things spread themselves abroad or
fastened themselves upon them.
The jar, like
Pandora herself, had been made and filled out of the ill will of
Zeus. And it had been filled, not with salves and charms and
washes, as the women had thought, but with Cares and Troubles.
Before the women came to it one Trouble had already come forth
from the jar—Self-thought that was upon the top of the heap. It
was Self-thought that had afflicted the women, making them
troubled about their own looks, and envious of the graces of the
Golden Maid. [pg
90]
And now the
others spread themselves out—Sickness and War and Strife between
friends. They spread themselves abroad and entered the houses,
while Epimetheus, the mindless Titan, gathered flowers for
Pandora, the Golden Maid.
Lest she
should weary of her play he called to her. He would take her into
the houses of men. As they drew near to the houses they saw a
woman seated on the ground, weeping; her husband had suddenly
become hard to her and had shut the door on her face. They came
upon a child crying because of a pain that he could not
understand. And then they found two men struggling, their strife
being on account of a possession that they had both held
peaceably before.
In every
house they went to Epimetheus would say, “I am the brother of Prometheus, who gave you the
gift of fire.” But instead of giving them a welcome the
men would say, “We know nothing about
your relation to Prometheus. We see you as a foolish man upon
stilts.”
Epimetheus
was troubled by the hard looks and the cold words of the men who
once had reverenced him. He turned from the houses and went away.
In a quiet place he sat down, and for a while he lost sight of
Pandora. And then it seemed to him that he heard the voice of his
wise and suffering brother saying, “Do
not accept any gift that Zeus may send you.”
He rose up
and he hurried away from that place, leaving Pandora playing by
herself. There came into his scattered mind Regret and Fear. As
he went on he stumbled. He fell [pg 91] from the edge of a cliff, and the sea
washed away the body of the mindless brother of Prometheus.
Not
everything had been spilled out of the jar that had been brought
with Pandora into the world of men. A beautiful, living thing was
in that jar also. This was Hope. And this beautiful, living thing
had got caught under the rim of the jar and had not come forth
with the others. One day a weeping woman found Hope under the rim
of Pandora’s jar and brought this living thing into the house of
men. And now because of Hope they could see an end to their
troubles. And the men and women roused themselves in the midst of
their afflictions and they looked toward gladness. Hope, that had
been caught under the rim of the jar, stayed behind the
thresholds of their houses.
As for
Pandora, the Golden Maid, she played on, knowing only the
brightness of the sunshine and the lovely shapes of things.
Beautiful would she have seemed to any being who saw her, but now
she had strayed away from the houses of men and Epimetheus was
not there to look upon her. Then Hephæstus, the lame artisan of
the gods, left down his tools and went to seek her. He found
Pandora, and he took her back to Olympus. And in his brazen house
she stays, though sometimes at the will of Zeus she goes down
into the world of men.
When
Polydeuces had ended the story that Castor had begun, Heracles
cried out: “For the Argonauts, too, there
has been [pg 92] a
Golden Maid—nay, not one, but a Golden Maid for each. Out of the
jar that has been with her ye have taken forgetfulness of your
honor. As for me, I go back to the Argo
lest one of these Golden Maids should hold me back from the
labors that make great a man.”
So Heracles
said, and he went from Hypsipyle’s hall. The heroes looked at
each other, and they stood up, and shame that they had stayed so
long away from the quest came over each of them. The maidens took
their hands; the heroes unloosed those soft hands and turned away
from them.
Hypsipyle
left the throne of King Thoas and stood before Jason. There was a
storm in all her body; her mouth was shaken, and a whole life’s
trouble was in her great eyes. Before she spoke Jason cried out:
“What Heracles said is true, O Argonauts!
On the Quest of the Golden Fleece our lives and our honors
depend. To Colchis—to Colchis must we go!”
He stood
upright in the hall, and his comrades gathered around him. The
Lemnian maidens would have held out their arms and would have
made their partings long delayed, but that a strange cry came to
them through the night. Well did the Argonauts know that cry—it
was the cry of the ship, of Argo herself. They knew that
they must go to her now or stay from the voyage for ever. And the
maidens knew that there was something in the cry of the ship that
might not be gainsaid, and they put their hands before their
faces, and they said no other word. [pg 93]
Then said
Hypsipyle, the queen, “I, too, am a
ruler, Jason, and I know that there are great commands that we
have to obey. Go, then, to the Argo.
Ah, neither I nor the women of Lemnos will stay your going now.
But to-morrow speak to us from the deck of the ship and bid us
farewell. Do not go from us in the night, Jason.”
Jason and the
Argonauts went from Hypsipyle’s hall. The maidens who were left
behind wept together. All but Hypsipyle. She sat on the throne of
King Thoas and she had Polyxo, her nurse, tell her of the ways of
Jason’s voyage as he had told of them, and of all that he would
have to pass through. When the other Lemnian women slept she put
her head upon her nurse’s knees and wept; bitterly Hypsipyle
wept, but softly, for she would not have the others hear her
weeping.
By the coming
of the morning’s light the Argonauts had made all ready for their
sailing. They were standing on the deck when the light came, and
they saw the Lemnian women come to the shore. Each looked at her
friend aboard the Argo, and spoke, and went away.
And last, Hypsipyle, the queen, came. “Farewell, Hypsipyle,” Jason said to her, and
she, in her strange way of speaking, said:
“What you told us I have remembered—how you will come
to the dangerous passage that leads into the Sea of Pontus, and
how by the flight of a pigeon you will know whether or not you
may go that way. O Jason, let the [pg 94] dove you fly when you come to that
dangerous place be Hypsipyle’s.”
She showed a
pigeon held in her hands. She loosed it, and the pigeon alighted
on the ship, and stayed there on pink feet, a white-feathered
pigeon. Jason took up the pigeon and held it in his hands, and
the Argo drew swiftly away from the
Lemnian land.
