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The Abduction of Persephone. Persephone, the daughter of Zeus
and Demeter, was also called KORE [ko'ree], "girl"
or "maiden." While she was picking beautiful
flowers with the daughters of Ocean, Earth, at the will
of Zeus and to please Hades, produced a most wondrous and
radiant narcissus. As Persephone reached out to pluck the
flower, Earth yawned open, and Hades appeared in his
golden chariot and carried her away in tears. Persephone
shouted and called out to Zeus but he did not hear her
for it was by his will that HADES [hay'deez] (PLUTO), his
brother and her uncle, carried her off to be his wife and
queen of the Underworld.
Demeter's Grief and
Anger. Demeter
heard her daughter's screams and frantically rushed in
pursuit. For nine days she did not eat ambrosia or drink
nectar, nor did she bathe but roamed the earth,
disconsolate and holding burning torches in her hands.
Hecate, who had heard Persephone's screams, could not
tell Demeter who has carried her off. On the tenth day,
the sun-god Helius, who had seen everything, explained to
Demeter what had happened. He added that Demeter should
not lament. Her brother Hades would make a fine husband
for her daughter since he was a great god, who when
divine power was first divided three ways was made king
of the Underworld.
Now that she knew the truth, Demeter's grief was
intensified and a great anger rose up in her heart
against Zeus because he had willed the rape of her
daughter. She avoided the gods on Olympus and, disguising
her beautiful appearance, wandered among mortals.
Demeter Comes to
Eleusis. She came
to ELEUSIS [e-lou'sis] and, grieving, sat in the shade
beside the Maiden Well. She looked like a very old woman
who might be a housekeeper or a children's nurse. The
four daughters of CELEUS [see'le-us] or KELEUS, the king
of Eleusis, and METANEIRA [me-ta-neye'ra], his wife, saw
her there when they came to draw water and questioned her.
Demeter answered that she would tell them the truth, but
instead invented a life for her human identity. Her name
is DOSO [doh'soh], and she was carried off from Crete by
pirates, from whom she escaped when they disembarked. She
does not know where she has come to in her travels, but
she hopes that the maidens will help her find work as a
housekeeper or a nurse. Callidice, the most beautiful of
the daughters of Celeus, suggested that the old woman
remain at the well until they return home to ask their
mother if they might come back to fetch her.
Demeter Arrives at
the Home of Celeus and Metaneira. When the young women returned
home and told their mother Metaneira all about Doso, she
directed them to return quickly and hire the woman at any
price. For she cherished an only son, long prayed for,
who needed care. So they brought the goddess to their
house, grieving, with her head veiled and wearing a dark
robe. As the goddess stood in the threshold her head
reached up to the beams, and she filled the doorway with
a divine radiance. Metaneira, overcome by awe, asked her
guest to be seated. Demeter refused to sit on the
splendid couch offered but instead waited until a servant
IAMBE [eye-am'bee] brought her an artfully made chair and
threw a fleece over it. Then Demeter sat down, holding
her veil over her face, silent and serious, tasting no
food or drink and overcome by longing for her daughter.
Iambe, however, with jests and jokes (doubtlessly in
iambic meter) caused the holy lady to smile and laugh.
She refused the red wine that Metaneira offered but
instead ordered Metaneira to mix meal, water, and mint
for her. The great lady Demeter accepted the drink for
the sake of the holy rite, i.e. to initiate and observe
the holy rite or sacrament. This drink (the kykeon) very
likely represented a kind of communion.
Demeter Nurses
Demophoon.
Metaneira promised Demeter great rewards if she would
nurse her child DEMOPHOON [de-mof'oh-on], or DEMOPHON,
and bring him up. Demeter took the child to her bosom,
promising that he would not be harmed by evil charms. She
nourished him on ambrosia, and she breathed sweetness
upon him, and he grew like a god. At night, she hid him
in the fire, without the knowledge of his parents, who
were amazed how their child grew and flourished. Demeter
would have made Demophoon immortal, if foolish Metaneira
had not spied upon her and cried out in terror because
this stranger was burying her son within the blazing fire.
Demeter Reveals her
Divinity. Demeter
was enraged at the stupidity of Metaneira, who by her
interference had ruined Demeter's plan to make the boy
immortal. Nevertheless, Demeter would still allow
Demophoon to flourish as a mortal and grant him
imperishable honor because he had slept in her arms. Then
Demeter proclaimed, "I am Demeter, esteemed and
honored as the greatest benefit and joy to mortals and
immortals," and gave her instructions for the future
of Eleusis. She cast off her old age and transformed her
size and appearance. Fragrant beauty and a divine
radiance breathed around her and her golden hair flowed
down on her shoulders. The house was filled with her
brilliance as though with a lightning flash. She
disappeared and Metaneira was overcome by astonishment
and fear.
Demeter's
Instructions.
Before her disappearance, Demeter had ordered that the
people of Eleusis build for her a great temple and an
altar below the town on the rising hill above the well
Kallichoron; she promised to teach them her rites so that
by performing them with reverence they might propitiate
her heart. King Celeus saw to it that Demeter's will was
accomplished.
Demeter's
Determined Grief. Demeter,
still wasted with longing for her daughter, caused for
mortals a most devastating year with no harvest. The
earth would not send up a single sprout. She would not
only have destroyed the entire human race with cruel
famine but would also have deprived the Olympian gods of
their glorious prestige from gifts and sacrifices. Zeus
finally took notice. He sent Iris to Demeter in her
temple at Eleusis with his command that she rejoin the
company of the gods. Demeter refused to obey. So Zeus
sent down all the immortal gods, who approached Demeter
one by one, offering any gifts or honors that she might
choose. Demeter stubbornly insisted that she would never
set foot on Olympus until she with her own eyes saw her
daughter again.
Zeus' Orders to
Hades. Thus Zeus
was forced to send Hermes down to explain to Hades all
that Demeter had said and done; Hermes also delivered the
command that Persephone must return with him out of the
Underworld so that her mother might see her and desist
from her wrath. Hades smiled grimly and immediately
obeyed Zeus the king. He ordered Persephone to return
with a loving heart to her mother; but he also told her
that he was not an unworthy husband for her, since he was
the full brother of her father Zeus and that while she
was with him she would rule as his queen, a great goddess.
Those who did not propitiate her power by performing holy
rites and sacrifices would find eternal retribution.
Persephone Eats of
the Pomegranate.
Joyous Persephone jumped up quickly. But (according to
the poet of the Hymn) Hades secretly gave his wife the
fruit of the pomegranate to eat to insure the fulfillment
of his words to her as her husband; she should not remain
the whole year above with her mother Demeter but would
rule with him below for part of the time.
He then yoked his immortal horses to his golden chariot,
which Persephone mounted. Hermes took the reins, and in
no time at all they came to a halt in front of the temple
where Demeter waited.
Demeter's Ecstatic
Reunion with her Daughter. At the sight of her daughter, Demeter rushed out
of the temple with the passion of a maenad, and
Persephone leaped down from the chariot and ran to meet
her mother, throwing her arms around her neck.
Immediately Demeter sensed some treachery and asked if
Persephone had eaten any food in the Underworld. If she
had not, she would live with her father Zeus and mother
Demeter above, but if she had eaten anything, she would
live a third part of the year in the Underworld and the
other two thirds in the upper world. With the burgeoning
spring she would wondrously rise again from the gloomy
region below. Demeter ended by asking by what trick Hades
has deceived her.
Persephone said that she would tell the truth. According
to her version (contradicting the description of Hades'
secret deception given above), when she jumped up at the
news of her return, Hades swiftly put into her mouth the
fruit of the pomegranate and compelled her to eat it by
force, against her will. Then Persephone painfully
described how Hades carried her off, despite her screams.
Their mutual grief was soothed by their loving and tender
embraces. Hecate arrived and affectionately shared their
joy. From that time on she became one of Persephone's
attendants.
Demeter Restores
Fertility to the Earth. Zeus sent Rhea to lead Demeter back among the
gods with the following message. He promised to grant
Demeter the honors among the immortals that she would
choose, and he consented that her daughter live a third
part of the year below and the other two thirds above,
with her mother and the other gods. Rhea swiftly rushed
down and delivered Zeus' pronouncements and encouraged
Demeter to comply, first by restoring the earth's
fertility for mortals. Demeter obeyed. She miraculously
caused fruit to spring up from the fertile earth that had
previously been barren, and the whole land blossomed with
flowers.
Demeter Establishes
her Eleusinian Mysteries. Then Demeter went to the leaders of the people
of Eleusis and showed them how to perform her sacred
rites and taught them her holy mysteries, which no one is
allowed in any way to violate, question, or reveal. After
she had ordained these things, Demeter and Persephone
returned to Olympus. The two goddesses send to their
beloved mortals PLUTUS [plou'tus], or PLOUTOS, a god of
agricultural plenty, prosperity, and wealth (not to be
confused with Pluto, i.e. Hades). |
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