Chapter VPygmalion. Dryope. Venus and Adonis. Apollo and Hyacinthus.Ceyx and Halcyone.Pygmalion saw so much to blame in women that he came at last toabhor the sex, and resolved to live unmarried. He was asculptor, and had made with wonderful skill a statue of ivory, sobeautiful that no living woman could be compared to it in beauty.It was indeed the perfect semblance of a maiden that seemed to bealive, and only prevented from moving by modesty. His art was soperfect that it concealed itself, and its product looked like theworkmanship of nature. Pygmalion admired his own work, and atlast fell in love with the counterfeit creation. Oftentimes helaid his hand upon it, as if to assure himself whether it wereliving or not, and could not even then believe that it was onlyivory. He caressed it, and gave it presents such as young girlslove, bright shells and polished stones, little birds andflowers of various hues, beads and amber. He put raiment on itslimbs, and jewels on its fingers, and a necklace about its neck.To the ears he hung earrings and strings of pearls upon thebreast. Her dress became her, and she looked not less charmingthan when unattired. He laid her on a couch spread with clothsof Tyrian dye, and called her his wife, and put her head upon apillow of the softest feathers, as if she could enjoy theirsoftness.The festival of Venus was at hand, a festival celebrated withgreat pomp at Cyprus. Victims were offered, the altars smoked,and the odor of incense filled the air. When Pygmalion hadperformed his part in the solemnities, he stood before the altarand timidly said, "Ye gods, who can do all things, give me, Ipray you, for my wife" he dared not say "my ivory virgin," butsaid instead "one like my ivory virgin." Venus, who waspresent at the festival, heard him and knew the thought he wouldhave uttered; and, as an omen of her favor, caused the flame onthe altar to shoot up thrice in a fiery point into the air. Whenhe returned home, he went to see his statue, and, leaning overthe couch, gave a kiss to the mouth. It seemed to be warm. Hepressed its lips again, he laid his hand upon the limbs; theivory felt soft to his touch, and yielded to his fingers like thewax of Hymettus. While he stands astonished and glad, thoughdoubting, and fears he may be mistaken, again and again with alover's ardor he touches the object of his hopes. It was indeedalive! The veins when pressed yielded to the finger and thenresumed their roundness. Then at last the votary of Venus foundwords to thank the goddess, and pressed his lips upon lips asreal as his own. The virgin felt the kisses and blushed, and,opening her timid eyes to the light, fixed them at the samemoment on her lover. Venus blessed the nuptials she had formed,and from this union Paphos was born, from whom the city, sacredto Venus, received its name.Schiller, in his poem, the Ideals, applies this tale of Pygmalionto the love of nature in a youthful heart. In Schiller'sversion, as in William Morris's, the statue is of marble."As once with prayers in passion flowing,Pygmalion embraced the stone,Till from the frozen marble glowing,The light of feeling o'er him shone,So did I clasp with young devotionBright Nature to a poet's heart;Till breath and warmth and vital motionSeemed through the statue form to dart."And then in all my ardor sharing,The silent form expression found;Returned my kiss of youthful daring,And understood my heart's quick sound.Then lived for me the bright creation.The silver rill with song was rife;The trees, the roses shared sensation,An echo of my boundless life."Rev. A. G. Bulfinch (brother of the author).Morris tells the story of Pygmalion and the Image in some of themost beautiful verses of the Earthly Paradise.This is Galatea's description of her metamorphosis:"'My sweet,' she said, 'as yet I am not wise,Or stored with words aright the tale to tell,But listen: when I opened first mine eyesI stood within the niche thou knowest well,And from my hand a heavy thing there fellCarved like these flowers, nor could I see things clear,But with a strange confused noise could hear."'At last mine eyes could see a woman fair,But awful as this round white moon o'erhead,So that I trembled when I saw her there,For with my life was born some touch of dread,And therewithal I heard her voice that said,"Come down and learn to love and be alive,For thee, a well-prized gift, today I give."'"DRYOPEDryope and Iole were sisters. The former was the wife ofAndraemon, beloved by her husband, and happy in the birth of herfirst child. One day the sisters strolled to the bank of astream that sloped gradually down to the water's edge, while theupland was overgrown with myrtles. They were intending to gatherflowers for forming garlands for the altars of the nymphs, andDryope carried her child at her bosom, a precious burden, andnursed him as she walked. Near the water grew a lotus plant,full of purple flowers. Dryope gathered some and offered them tothe baby, and Iole was about to do the same, when she perceivedblood dropping from the places where her sister had broken themoff the stem. The plant was no other than the Nymph Lotis, who,running from a base pursuer, had been changed into this form.This they learned from the country people when it was too late.Dryope, horror-struck when she perceived what she had done, wouldgladly have hastened from the spot, but found her feet rooted tothe ground. She tried to pull them away, but moved nothing buther arms. The woodiness crept upward, and by degrees investedher body. In anguish she attempted to tear her hair, but foundher hands filled with leaves. The infant felt his mother's bosombegin to harden, and the milk cease to flow. Iole looked on atthe sad fate of her sister, and could render no assistance. Sheembraced the growing trunk, as if she would hold back theadvancing wood, and would gladly have been enveloped in the samebark. At this moment Andraemon, the husband of Dryope, with herfather, approached; and when they asked for Dryope, Iole pointedthem to the new-formed lotus. They embraced the trunk of the yetwarm tree, and showered their kisses on its leaves.Now there was nothing left of Dryope but her face. Her tearsstill flowed and fell on her leaves, and while she could shespoke. "I am not guilty. I deserve not this fate. I haveinjured no one. If I speak falsely, may my foliage perish withdrought and my trunk be cut down and burned. Take this infantand give him to a nurse. Let him often be brought and nursedunder my branches, and play in my shade; and when he is oldenough to talk, let him be taught to call me mother, and to saywith sadness, 'My mother lies hid under this bark' But bid him becareful of river banks, and beware how he plucks flowers,remembering that every bush he sees may be a goddess in disguise.Farewell, dear husband, and sister, and father. If you retainany love for me, let not the axe wound me, nor the flocks biteand tear my branches. Since I cannot stoop to you, climb uphither and kiss me; and while my lips continue to feel, lift upmy child that I may kiss him. I can speak no more, for alreadythe bark advances up my neck, and will soon shoot over me. Youneed not close my eyes; the bark will close them without youraid." Then the lips ceased to move, and life was extinct; butthe branches retained, for some time longer the vital heat.Keats, in Endymion, alludes to Dryope thus:"She took a lute from which there pulsing cameA lively prelude, fashioning the wayIn which her voice should wander. 'Twas a layMore subtle-cadenced, more forest-wildThan Dryope's lone lulling of her child."VENUS AND ADONISVenus, playing one day with her boy Cupid, wounded her bosom withone of his arrows. She pushed him away, but the wound was deeperthan she thought. Before it healed she beheld Adonis, and wascaptivated with him. She no longer took any interest in herfavorite resorts, Paphos, and Cnidos, and Amathos, rich inmetals. She absented herself even from Olympus, for Adonis wasdearer to her than heaven. Him she followed and bore himcompany. She who used to love to recline in the shade, with nocare but to cultivate her charms, now rambled through the woodsand over the hills, dressed like the huntress Diana. She calledher dogs, and chased hares and stags, or other game that it issafe to hunt, but kept clear of the wolves and bears, reekingwith the slaughter of the herd. She charged Adonis, too, tobeware of such dangerous animals. "Be brave towards the timid,"said she; "courage against the courageous is not safe. Bewarehow you expose yourself to danger, and put my happiness to risk.Attack not the beasts that Nature has armed with weapons. I donot value your glory so highly as to consent to purchase it bysuch exposure. Your youth, and the beauty that charms Venus,will not touch the hearts of lions and bristly boars. Think oftheir terrible claws and prodigious strength! I hate the wholerace of them. Do you ask why?" Then she told him the story ofAtalanta and Hippomenes, who were changed into lions for theiringratitude to her.Having given him this warning, she mounted her chariot drawn byswans, and drove away through the air. But Adonis was too nobleto heed such counsels. The dogs had roused a wild boar from hislair, and the youth threw his spear and wounded the animal with asidelong stroke. The beast drew out the weapon with his jaws,and rushed after Adonis, who turned and ran; but the boarovertook him, and buried his tusks in his side, and stretched himdying upon the plain.Venus, in her swan-drawn chariot, had not yet reached Cyprus,when she heard coming up through mid air the groans of herbeloved, and turned her white-winged coursers back to earth. Asshe drew near and saw from on high his lifeless body bathed inblood, she alighted, and bending over it beat her breast and toreher hair. Reproaching the Fates, she said, "Yet theirs shall bebut a partial triumph; memorials of my grief shall endure, andthe spectacle of your death, my Adonis, and of my lamentationshall be annually renewed. Your blood shall be changed into aflower; that consolation none can envy me." Thus speaking, shesprinkled nectar on the blood; and as they mingled, bubbles roseas in a pool on which raindrops fall, and in an hour's time theresprang up a flower of bloody hue like that of a pomegranate. Butit is short-lived. It is said the wind blows the blossoms open,and afterwards blows the petals away; so it is called Anemone, orwind Flower, from the cause which assists equally in itsproduction and its decay.Milton alludes to the story of Venus and Adonis in his Comus:"Beds of hyacinth and rosesWhere young Adonis oft reposes,Waxing well of his deep woundIn slumber soft, and on the groundSadly sits th'Assyrian queen."And Morris also in Atalanta's Race:"There by his horn the Dryads well might knowHis thrust against the bear's heart had been true,And there Adonis bane his javelin slew"APOLLO AND HYACINTHUSApollo was passionately fond of a youth named Hyacinthus. Heaccompanied him in his sports, carried the nets when he wentfishing, led the dogs when he went to hunt, followed him in hisexcursions in the mountains, and neglected for him his lyre andhis arrows. One day they played a game of quoits together, andApollo, heaving aloft the discus, with strength mingled withskill, sent it high and far. Hyacinthus watched it as it flew,and excited with the sport ran forward to seize it, eager to makehis throw, when the quoit bounded from the earth and struck himin the forehead. He fainted and fell. The god, as pale ashimself, raised him and tried all his art to stanch the wound andretain the flitting life, but all in vain; the hurt was past thepower of medicine. As, when one has broken the stem of a lily inthe garden, it hangs its head and turns its flowers to the earth,so the head of the dying boy, as if too heavy for his neck, fellover on his shoulder. "Thou diest, Hyacinth," so spoke Phoebus,"robbed of thy youth by me. Thine is the suffering, mine thecrime. Would that I could die for thee! But since that may notbe thou shalt live with me in memory and in song. My lyre shallcelebrate thee, my song shall tell thy fate, and thou shaltbecome a flower inscribed with my regrets." While Apollo spoke,behold the blood which had flowed on the ground and stained theherbage, ceased to be blood; but a flower of hue more beautifulthan the Tyrian sprang up, resembling the lily, if it were notthat this is purple and that silvery white (it is evidently notour modern hyacinth that is here described. It is perhaps somespecies of iris, or perhaps of larkspur, or of pansy.) And thiswas not enough for Phoebus; but to confer still grater honor, hemarked the petals with his sorrow, and inscribed "Ah! Ah!" uponthem, as we see to this day. The flower bears the name ofHyacinthus, and with every returning spring revives the memory ofhis fate.It was said that Zephyrus (the West-wind), who was also fond ofHyacinthus and jealous of his preference of Apollo, blew thequoit out of its course to make it strike Hyacinthus. Keatsalludes to this in his Endymion, where he describes the lookers-on at the game of quoits:"Or they might watch the quoit-pitchers, intentOn either side, pitying the sad deathOf Hyacinthus, when the cruel breathOf Zephyr slew him; Zephyr penitent,Who now ere Phoebus mounts the firmament,Fondles the flower amid the sobbing rain."An allusion to Hyacinthus will also be recognized in Milton'sLycidas:"Like to that sanguine flower inscribed with woe."CEYX AND HALCYONE: OR, THE HALCYON BIRDSCeyx was King of Thessaly, where he reigned in peace withoutviolence or wrong. He was son of Hesperus, the Day-star, and theglow of his beauty reminded one of his father. Halcyone, thedaughter of Aeolus, was his wife, and devotedly attached to him.Now Ceyx was in deep affliction for the loss of his brother, anddireful prodigies following his brother's death made him feel asif the gods were hostile to him. He thought best therefore tomake a voyage to Claros in Ionia, to consult the oracle ofApollo. But as soon as he disclosed his intention to his wifeHalcyone, a shudder ran through her frame, and her face grewdeadly pale. "What fault of mine, dearest husband, has turnedyour affection from me? Where is that love of me that used to beuppermost in your thoughts? Have you learned to feel easy in theabsence of Halcyone? Would you rather have me away?" She alsoendeavored to discourage him, by describing the violence of thewinds, which she had known familiarly when she lived at home inher father's house, Aeolus being the god of the winds, and havingas much as he could do to restrain them. "They rush together,"said she, "with such fury that fire flashes from the conflict.But if you must go," she added, "dear husband, let me go withyou, Otherwise I shall suffer, not only the real evils which youmust encounter, but those also which my fears suggest."These words weighed heavily on the mind of king Ceyx, and it wasno less his own wish than hers to take her with him, but he couldnot bear to expose her to the dangers of the sea. He answered,therefore, consoling her as well as he could, and finished withthese words: "I promise, by the rays of my father the Day-star,that if fate permits I will return before the moon shall havetwice rounded her orb." When he had thus spoken he ordered thevessel to be drawn out of the ship-house, and the oars and sailsto be put aboard. When Halcyone saw these preparations sheshuddered, as if with a presentiment of evil. With tears andsobs she said farewell, and then fell senseless to the ground.Ceyx would still have lingered, but now the young men graspedtheir oars and pulled vigorously through the waves, with long andmeasured strokes. Halcyone raised her streaming eyes, and sawher husband standing on the deck, waving his hand to her. Sheanswered his signal till the vessel had receded so far that shecould no longer distinguish his form from the rest. When thevessel itself could no more be seen, she strained her eyes tocatch the last glimmer of the sail, till that too disappeared.Then, retiring to her chamber, she threw herself on her solitarycouch.Meanwhile they glide out of the harbor, and the breeze playsamong the ropes. The seamen draw in their oars, and hoist theirsails. When half or less of their course was passed, as nightdrew on, the sea began to whiten with swelling waves, and theeast wind to blow a gale. The master gives the word to take insail, but the storm forbids obedience, for such is the roar ofthe winds and waves that his orders are unheard. The men, oftheir own accord, busy themselves to secure the oars, tostrengthen the ship, to reef the sail. While they thus do whatto each one seems best, the storm increases. The shouting of themen, the rattling of the shrouds, and the dashing of the waves,mingle with the roar of the thunder. The swelling sea seemslifted up to the heavens, to scatter its foam among the clouds;then sinking away to the bottom assumes the color of the shoal,a Stygian blackness.The vessel obeys all these changes. It seems like a wild beastthat rushes on the spears of the hunters. Rain falls intorrents, as if the skies were coming down to unite with the sea.When the lightning ceases for a moment, the night seems to addits own darkness to that of the storm; then comes the flash,rending the darkness asunder, and lighting up all with a glare.Skill fails, courage sinks, and death seems to come on everywave. The men are stupefied with terror. The thought ofparents, and kindred, and pledges left at home, comes over theirminds. Ceyx thinks of Halcyone. No name but hers is on hislips, and while he yearns for her, he yet rejoices in herabsence. Presently the mast is shattered by a stroke oflightning, the rudder broken, and the triumphant surge curlingover looks down upon the wreck, then falls, and crushes it tofragments. Some of the seamen, stunned by the stroke, sink, andrise no more; others cling to fragments of the wreck. Ceyx, withthe hand that used to grasp the sceptre, holds fast to a plank,calling for help, alas, in vain, upon his father and hisfather-in-law. But oftenest on his lips was the name ofHalcyone. His thoughts cling to her. He prays that the wavesmay bear his body to her sight, and that it may receive burial ather hands. At length the waters overwhelm him, and he sinks.The Day-star looked dim that night. Since it could not leave theheavens, it shrouded its face with clouds.In the mean while Halcyone, ignorant of all these horrors,counted the days till her husband's promised return. Now shegets ready the garments which he shall put on, and now what sheshall wear when he arrives. To all the gods she offers frequentincense but more than all to Juno. For her husband, who was nomore, she prayed incessantly; that he might be safe; that hemight come home; that he might not, in his absence, see any onethat he would love better than her. But of all these prayers,the last was the only one destined to be granted. The goddess,at length, could not bear any longer to be pleaded with for onealready dead, and to have hands raised to her altars, that oughtrather to be offering funeral rites. So, calling Iris, she said,"Iris, my faithful messenger, go to the drowsy dwelling ofSomnus, and tell him to send a vision to Halcyone, in the form ofCeyx, to make known to her the event."Iris puts on her robe of many colors, and tingeing the sky withher bow, seeks the palace of the King of Sleep. Near theCimmerian country, a mountain cave is the abode of the dull god,Somnus, Here Phoebus dares not come, either rising, or atmidday, or setting. Clouds and shadows are exhaled from theground, and the light glimmers faintly. The bird of dawn, withcrested head, never calls aloud there to Aurora, nor watchfuldog, nor more sagacious goose disturbs the silence. (Thiscomparison of the dog and the goose is a reference by Ovid to apassage in Roman history.) No wild beast, nor cattle, nor branchmoved with the wind, nor sound of human conversation, breaks thestillness. Silence reigns there; and from the bottom of the rockthe River Lethe flows, and by its murmur invites to sleep.Poppies grow abundantly before the door of the cave, and otherherbs, from whose juices Night collects slumbers, which shescatters over the darkened earth. There is no gate to themansion, to creak on its hinges, nor any watchman; but in themidst, a couch of black ebony, adorned with black plumes andblack curtains. There the god reclines, his limbs relaxed withsleep. Around him lie dreams, resembling all various forms, asmany as the harvest bears stalks, or the forest leaves, or theseashore grains of sand.As soon as the goddess entered and brushed away the dreams thathovered around her, her brightness lit up all the cave. The god,scarce opening his eyes, and ever and anon dropping his beardupon his breast, at last shook himself free from himself, andleaning on his arm, inquired her errand, for he knew who shewas. She answered, "Somnus, gentlest of the gods, tranquillizerof minds and soother of careworn hearts, Juno sends you hercommands that you dispatch a dream to Halcyone, in the city ofTrachinae, representing her lost husband and all the events ofthe wreck."Having delivered her message, Iris hasted away, for she could notlonger endure the stagnant air, and as she felt drowsinesscreeping over her, she made her escape, and returned by her bowthe way she came. Then Somnus called one of his numerous sons,Morpheus, the most expert at counterfeiting forms, and inimitating the walk, the countenance, and mode of speaking, eventhe clothes and attitudes most characteristic of each. But heonly imitates men, leaving it to another to personate birds,beasts, and serpents. Him they call Icelos; and Phantasos is athird, who turns himself into rocks, waters, woods, and otherthings without life. These wait upon kings and great personagesin their sleeping hours, while others move among the commonpeople. Somnus chose, from all the brothers, Morpheus, toperform the command of Iris; then laid his head on his pillow andyielded himself to grateful repose.Morpheus flew, making no noise with his wings, and soon came tothe Haemonian city, where, laying aside his wings, he assumed theform of Ceyx. Under that form, but pale like a dead man, naked,he stood before the couch of the wretched wife. His beard seemedsoaked with water, and water trickled from his drowned locks.Leaning over the bed, tears streaming from his eyes, he said, "Doyou recognize your Ceyx, unhappy wife, or has death too muchchanged my visage? Behold me, know me, your husband's shade,instead of himself. Your prayers, Halcyone, availed me nothing.I am dead. No more deceive yourself with vain hopes of myreturn. The stormy winds sunk my ship in the Aegean Sea; wavesfilled my mouth while it called aloud on you. No uncertainmessenger tells you this, no vague rumor brings it to your ears.I come in person, a shipwrecked man, to tell you my fate. Arise!Give me tears, give me lamentations, let me not go down toTartarus unwept." To these words Morpheus added the voice whichseemed to be that of her husband; he seemed to pour forth genuinetears; his hands had the gestures of Ceyx.Halcyone, weeping, groaned, and stretched out her arms in hersleep, striving to embrace his body, but grasping only the air."Stay!" she cried; "whither do you fly? Let us go together."Her own voice awakened her. Starting up, she gazed eagerlyaround, to see if he was still present, for the servants, alarmedby her cries, had brought a light. When she found him not, shesmote her breast and rent her garments. She cares not to unbindher hair, but tears it wildly. Her nurse asks what is the causeof her grief. "Halcyone is no more," she answers; "she perishedwith her Ceyx. Utter not words of comfort, he is shipwrecked anddead. I have seen him. I have recognized him. I stretched outmy hands to seize him and detain him. His shade vanished, but itwas the true shade of my husband. Not with the accustomedfeatures, not with the beauty that was his, but pale, naked, andwith his hair wet with sea-water, he appeared to wretched me.Here, in this very spot, the sad vision stood," and she lookedto find the mark of his footsteps. "This it was, this that mypresaging mind foreboded, when I implored him not to leave me totrust himself to the waves. O, how I wish, since thou wouldstgo, that thou hadst taken me with thee! It would have been farbetter. Then I should have had no remnant of life to spendwithout thee, nor a separate death to die. If I could bear tolive and struggle to endure, I should be more cruel to myselfthan the sea has been to me. But I will not struggle. I willnot be separated from thee, unhappy husband. This time, at leastI will keep thee company. In death, if one tomb may not includeus, one epitaph shall; if I may not lay my ashes with thine, myname, at least, shall not be separated." Her grief forbade morewords, and these were broken with tears and sobs.It was now morning. She went to the sea-shore, and sought thespot where she last saw him, on his departure. "Here he lingeredand cast off his tacklings and gave me his last kiss." While shereviews every moment, and strives to recall every incident,looking out over the sea, she descries an indistinct objectfloating in the water. At first she was in doubt what it was,but by degrees the waves bore it nearer, and it was plainly thebody of a man. Though unknowing of whom, yet, as it was of someshipwrecked one, she was deeply moved, and gave it her tears,saying, "Alas! Unhappy one, and unhappy, if such there be, thywife!" Borne by the waves, it came nearer. As she more and morenearly views it, she trembles more and more. Now, now itapproaches the shore. Now marks that she recognizes appear. Itis her husband! Stretching out her trembling hands towards it,she exclaims, "O, dearest husband, is it thus you return to me?"There was built out from the shore a mole, constructed to breakthe assaults of the sea, and stem its violent ingress. Sheleaped upon this barrier and (it was wonderful she could do so)she flew, and striking the air with wings produced on theinstant, skimmed along the surface of the water, an unhappy bird.As she flew, her throat poured forth sounds full of grief, andlike the voice of one lamenting. When she touched the mute andbloodless body, she enfolded its beloved limbs with her new-formed wings, and tried to give kisses with her horny beak.Whether Ceyx felt it, or whether it was only the action of thewaves, those who looked on doubted, but the body seemed to raiseits head. But indeed he did feel it, and by the pitying godsboth of them were changed into birds. They mate and have theiryoung ones. For seven placid days, in winter time, Halcyonebroods over her nest, which floats upon the sea. Then the way issafe to seamen. Aeolus guards the winds, and keeps them fromdisturbing the deep. The sea is given up, for the time, to hisgrandchildren.The following lines from Byron's Bride of Abydos might seemborrowed from the concluding part of this description, if it werenot stated that the author derived the suggestion from observingthe motion of a floating corpse."As shaken on his restless pillow,His head heaves with the heaving billow;That hand, whose motion is not life,Yet feebly seems to menace strife,Flung by the tossing tide on high,.Then levelled with the wave "Milton, in his Hymn for the Nativity, thus alludes to the fableof the Halcyon:"But peaceful was the nightWherein the Prince of lightHis reign of peace upon the earth began;The winds with wonder whist,Smoothly the waters kist,Whispering new joys to the mild oceanWho now hath quite forgot to raveWhile birds of calm sit brooding on the charmed wave."Keats, also, in Endymion, says:"O magic sleep! O comfortable birdThat broodest o'er the troubled sea of the mindTill it is hushed and smooth."