|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At Old Cheiron's School
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AT OLD CHEIRON'S SCHOOL
[79] AFTER a long, hard journey by land and sea, Odysseus
and his tutor, with bold Echion, came to Iolcos. Aged
Peleus, king of Phthia and the fertile plains of
Iolcos, greeted them with show of heartiest welcome;
for he remembered that Laertes had been his friend and
comrade long years before, when together on the Argo
they sailed the briny deep, and he was glad to see the
son of that old comrade; and he took Odysseus by the
hand, and led him into his palace, and gave him of the
best of all that he had.
"Tarry with me for a month," he said. "My ships are now
at sea, but they will return; and when the moon rises
again full and round, as it did last night, I will send
you safe to Corinth on the shores of the Bay of Crissa."
And so Odysseus and the bard staid a whole month at
Iolcos, in the house of Peleus the king. There were
feasting and merriment in the halls every day; and yet
time hung heavily, for the boy longed to re-behold
[80] his
own loved Ithaca, and could hardly wait to see the moon
grow full and round again.
"What mountain is that which looms up so grandly on our
left, and whose sides seem covered with dark forests?"
asked Odysseus one day, as he walked with his tutor
beside the sea.
"It is famous Mount Pelion," said the bard; "and that
other mountain with the steeper sides, which stands out
faintly against the far horizon, is the scarcely less
famed Ossa."
"I have heard my father speak of piling Pelion upon
Ossa," said Odysseus, "but I cannot understand how that
can be done."
"There were once two brothers, the tallest that the
grain-giving earth has ever reared," said Phemius.
"Their names were Otus and Ephialtes; and they
threatened to make war even against the deathless ones
who dwell on Mount Olympus. They boasted that they
would pile Ossa on Olympus, and Pelion, with all its
woods, upon the top of Ossa, that so they might make a
pathway to the sky. And, had they lived to manhood's
years, no one can say what deeds they would have done.
But silver-bowed Apollo, with his swift arrows, slew
the twain ere yet the down had bloomed upon their
cheeks or darkened their chins with the promise of
manhood. And so Pelion still stands beside the sea, and
Ossa, in its own place, guards the lovely vale of
Tempe."
[81] "Oh, now I remember something else about Mount Pelion,"
cried Odysseus. "It was from the trees which grew upon
its sides, that the ship Argo was built. And I have
heard my father tell how Cheiron the Centaur once lived
in a cave on Pelion, and taught the young heroes who
came to learn of him; and how young Jason came down the
mountain one day, and boldly stood before King Pelias,
who had robbed old Æson, his father, of the
kingdom which was rightfully his. Would that I had been
one of Cheiron's pupils, and had shared the instruction
which he gave to those youthful heroes!"
"The old Centaur still lives in his cave on Mount
Pelion," said Phemius. "To-morrow, if King Peleus is
willing, we will go and see him."
And so, the next day, the two went out of Iolcos,
through vineyards and fields and olive orchards,
towards Pelion, the snow-crowned warder of the shore.
They followed a winding pathway, and came ere long to
the foot of the mighty mountain. Above them were
frowning rocks, and dark forests of pine, which seemed
ready to fall upon and crush them. But among the trees,
and in the crannies of the rocks, there grew thousands
of sweetest flowers, and every kind of health-giving
herb, and tender grass for the mountain-climbing deer.
Up and up they climbed, until the dark forests gave
place to stunted shrubs, and the shrubs to barren
rocks. Then the pathway led downward again to the head
of a narrow glen, where roared a foaming
water- [82] fall. There they came to the mouth of a cave opening out upon
a sunny ledge, and almost hidden behind a broad curtain
of blossoming vines. From within the cave there came
the sound of music,—the sweet tones of a harp,
mingled with the voices of singers.
Of what did they sing?
They sang of things pure and good and beautiful,—of
the mighty sea, and the grain-bearing earth, and the
blue vault of heaven; of faith, strong and holy; of
hope, bright and trustful; of love, pure and mighty.
Then the singing ceased, and the harp was laid aside.
Odysseus and the bard went quickly forward, and stood
waiting beside the wide-open door. They could see, by
looking in, that the low walls of the cave were adorned
with shields of leather or bronze, with the antlers of
deer, and with many other relics of battle or of the
chase. Upon the smooth white floor were soft couches of
bearskins; and upon the hearth stone in the centre
blazed a bright fire of twigs, casting a ruddy,
flickering light into the farthest nook and cranny of
that strange room.
They had not long to wait at the door. An old man with
white hair, and beard reaching to his waist, with eyes
as clear and bright as those of a falcon, and with a
step as firm as that of youth, came quickly forward to
greet them. Odysseus thought that he had never seen a
man with so noble and yet so sad a mien.
"Hail, strangers!" said the aged hero, taking their
hands. "Hail, son of Laertes—for I know
thee!— [83] welcome to the home of Cheiron, the last of his race!
Come in, and you shall be kindly entertained; and after
you have rested your weary limbs, you shall tell me why
you have come to Pelion, and what favor you have to ask
of me."
Therewith he turned again into the broad cave-hall, and
Odysseus and his tutor followed him. And he led his
guests, and seated them on pleasant couches not far
from the glowing fire upon the hearth. Then a comely
youth brought water in a stone pitcher, and poured it
in a basin, that they might wash their hands. And
another lad brought wheaten bread, and set it by them
on a polished table; and another brought golden honey
in the honeycomb, and many other dainties, and laid
them on the board. And when they were ready, a fourth
lad lifted and placed before them a platter of venison,
and cups full of ice-cold water from the mountain
cataract. While they sat, partaking of these bounties,
not a word was spoken in the cave; for old Cheiron
never forgot the courtesy due to guests and strangers.
When they had finished, he bade them stay a while upon
the couches where they sat; and he took a golden lyre
in his hands, and deftly touched the chords, bringing
forth the most restful music that Odysseus had ever
heard. He played a soft, low melody which seemed to
carry their minds far away into a summerland of peace,
where they wandered at will by the side of still
waters, and through sunlit fields and groves, and
reposed under the shelter of calm blue skies, shielded
[84] by the boundless love of the unknown Creator. When he
had finished, Odysseus thought no more of the toilsome
journey from Iolcos, or of the wearisome climbing of
the mountain: he thought only of the wise and wonderful
old man who sat before him.
"Now tell me," said Cheiron, laying his lyre aside,—"tell
me what errand brings you hither, and what I can
do to aid you."
"We have no errand," answered Phemius, "save to see one
of the immortals, and to listen to the words of wisdom
and beauty which fall from his lips. We know that you
have been the friend and teacher of heroes such as have
not had their peers on earth; and this lad Odysseus,
who is himself the son of a hero, would fain learn
something from you."
Cheiron smiled, and looked full into the young lad's
face.
"I have trained many such youths as you for the battle
of life," he said. "And your father, as were all the
Argonauts, was well known to me. You are welcome to
Mount Pelion, and to old Cheiron's school. But why do
you look at my feet?"
Odysseus blushed, but could make no answer.
"I understand it," said Cheiron, speaking in a tone of
sadness. "You expected to find me half man, half horse,
and you were looking for the hoofs; for thus have many
men thought concerning me and my race. Long time ago my
people dwelt in the valleys and upon the plains of
Thessaly; and they were the first who
[85] tamed the wild
horses of the desert flats, and taught them to obey the
hand of their riders. For untold years my fathers held
this land, and they were as free as the winds which
play upon the top of Pelion. Their warriors, galloping
on their swift horses with their long lances ready in
their hands, knew no fear, nor met any foe that could
stand against them; and hence men called them Centaurs,
the piercers of the air. But by and by there came a
strong people from beyond the sea, who built houses of
stone, and lived in towns; and these made cruel war
upon the swift-riding Centaurs. They were the Lapiths,
the stone-persuaders, and they had never seen or heard
of horses; and for a long time they fancied that our
warriors were monsters, half-steed, half-man, living
wild among the mountains and upon the plain. And so the
story has gone abroad throughout the world, that all
the Centaurs, and even I, the last of the race, are
hardly human, but have hoofs and manes, and live as
horses live.
"Long and sad was the war between the Centaurs and the
Lapiths; but the stone-persuaders were stronger than
the piercers of the air. In time, my people were driven
into the mountains, where they lived as wild men in the
caves, and in the sunless gorges and ravines; and their
enemies, the Lapiths, abode in the rich valleys, and
held the broad pasture-lands which had once been
ours. Then it chanced that Peirithous, king of the
Lapiths, saw Hippodameia,
[86] fairest of our mountain
maidens, and wished to wed her. Whether her father
consented to the marriage, or whether the Lapiths
carried her away by force, I cannot tell; but
Peirithous made a great wedding feast, and to it he
invited the chiefs of the Centaurs, and great Theseus
of Athens, and Nestor of sandy Pylos, and many others
of the noblest heroes of Hellas. Many wild and dark
stories have been told of what happened at that
wedding feast; but you must remember that all these
stories have come from the mouths of our enemies, the
stone-persuading Lapiths, and that their truth may well
be doubted. Let me tell you about it, as I understand
the facts to be:—
"In the midst of the feast, when the Lapiths were
drunken with wine, Eurytion, the boldest of the
Centaurs, rose quickly to his feet, and beckoned to his
fellows. Without a word they seized upon the bride;
they carried her, not unwilling, from the hall; they
seated her upon a swift steed which stood ready at the
door; then in hot haste they mounted, aiming to ride
with their prize back to their mountain homes. But the
Lapiths were aroused, and rushed from the hall ere our
horsemen were outside of the gates. Fearful was the
struggle which followed. Our men were armed with pine
clubs only, which they had hidden beneath their cloaks,
for they dared not bring weapons to the wedding feast.
The Lapiths fought with spears; and with pitiless hate
they slew one after another of the Centaurs, until
hardly a single man escaped to the
[87] mountains. But the
war ended not with that; for Peirithous, burning with
anger, drove the remnant of people out of their
mountain homes, and forced them to flee far away to the
lonely land of Pindus; and I, alone of all my race, was
left in my cavern-dwelling on the wooded slopes of
Pelion."
When Cheiron had ended his story, Odysseus saw that his
eyes were filled with tears, and that his hand trembled
as he reached again for his lyre, and played a short,
sad melody, as mournful as a funeral song.
"Why did you not go with your kindred to the land of
Pindus?" asked Phemius.
"This is my home," answered Cheiron. "The fair valley
which you see yonder was once my father's pasture land.
All the country that lies before us, even to the
meeting of the earth and the sky, is the country of my
forefathers. I have neither parents, nor brothers, nor
wife, nor children. Why should I wish to go away from
all that is dear to me? This is a pleasant place, and
the young boys who have been my pupils have made my
life very happy."
"Please tell us about your pupils," said Odysseus,
moving nearer to the wise old man.
"So many boys have been under my care," said Cheiron,
"that I could not tell you about them all. Some have
come and been taught, and gone back to their homes; and
the world has never heard of them, because their lots
have been cast in pleasant places, and their lives have
been spent in peace.
[88] There have been others who have
made their names famous upon the earth; for their paths
were beset with difficulties, and before them loomed
great mountains which they must needs remove or be
crushed by them. Among these latter were Heracles,
doomed to a life of labor, because another had usurped
the place which he should have had; young Jason, hiding
from the cruel hatred of his uncle Pelias; and gentle
Asclepius, bereft of a mother's love, and cast
friendless upon the world's cold mercies. And there
were also Peleus my grandson, who is now your host at
Iolcos; and Actæon, the famous hunter; and many of
the heroes who afterward sailed on the Argo, to the
golden strand of Colchis. Each of these lads had a mind
of his own, and tastes which it was for me to foster
and to train. Heracles was headstrong, selfish,
impulsive,—terrible when he did not bridle his
passions; and yet his great heart was full of love for
the poor, the weak, and the down-trodden, and he
studied to make plans for lightening their burdens.
Jason loved the water; and wrapped in his cloak, he
would sit for hours on Pelion's top, and gaze with
longing eyes upon the purple sea. Asclepius delighted
to wander among the crags and in the ravines of Pelion,
gathering herbs and flowers, and studying the habits of
birds and beasts. And Actæon had a passion for the
woods and the fields, and had ever a pack of swift
hounds at his heels, ready for the chase of wild boar
or mountain deer.
"When these lads came to me, I saw that I must give
[89] to
each the food which was best fitted for his needs, and
which his mind most craved. Had I dealt with all alike,
and taught all the same lessons, I doubt if any would
have grown to manhood's full estate. But, while I
curbed the headstrong will of Heracles, I did what I
could to foster his love of virtue and his inventive
genius; I taught young Jason all that I knew about this
wonderful earth, and the seas and islands which lie
around it; I led Asclepius farther along the pathway
which he had chosen, and showed him the virtues that
were hidden in plants and flowers; I went with
Actæon upon the chase, and taught him that there is
no sport in cruelty, and that the life of the weakest
creature should not be taken without good cause. Thus I
moulded the mind of each of the lads according to its
bent; and each one grew in stature and in strength and
in beauty, before my eyes. And then there were general
lessons which I gave to them all, leading them to the
knowledge of those things which are necessary to the
well-equipped and perfect man of our day. I taught them
how to wield the weapons of warfare and of the chase;
how to ride and to swim; and how to bear fatigue
without murmuring, and face danger without fear. And I
showed them how to take care of their own bodies, so
that they might be strong and graceful, and full of
health and vigor; and I taught them how to heal
diseases, and how to treat wounds, and how to nurse the
sick. And, more than all else, I taught them to
reverence and love that great Power,
[90] so little
understood by us, but whom mankind will someday learn
to know.
"It was not long till Heracles went out in his might to
rid the world of monsters, to defend the innocent and
the helpless, and to set right that which is wrong;
and, for aught I know, he is toiling still along the
straight road of Virtue, towards the blue mountains of
Fame. And Jason, as you know, left me, and went down to
Iolcos, to claim his birthright of old Pelias; and
being bidden to bring the Golden Fleece to Hellas, he
built the Argo, and sailed with the heroes to far-away
Colchis. It was a proud day for me, his old teacher,
when he came back to Iolcos with the glittering
treasure; and I trusted that a life of happiness and
glory was before him. But, alas! he had forgotten my
teaching, and had, joined himself to evil; and Medea
the witch, whom he loved, brought untold misery upon
his head, and drove him ere long to an untimely death.
"Then Asclepius went out upon his mission; everywhere
that he went, he healed and purified and raised and
blessed. He was the greatest conqueror among all my
pupils; but he won, not by strength like Heracles, nor
by guile like Jason, but through gentleness and
sympathy and brotherly love, and by knowledge and skill
and patient self-sacrifice; and to him men gave the
highest honor, because he cured while others killed.
But the powers of darkness are ever hateful towards the
good; and Hades, when he saw
[91] that Asclepius snatched
back to life even those who were at death's door,
complained that the great healer was robbing his
kingdom. And men say that Zeus hearkened to this
complaint, and that he smote Asclepius with his
thunderbolts. Then the face of the sun was veiled in
sorrow, and men and beasts and all creatures upon the
earth wept for great grief, and the trees dropped their
leaves to the ground, and the flowers closed their
petals and withered upon their stalks, because the
gentle physician, who had cured all pains and sickness,
was no longer in the land of the living. And the wrath
of silver-bowed Apollo was stirred within him, and he
went down to the great smithy of Hephaestus, and, with
his swift arrows, slew the Cyclopes who had forged the
thunderbolts for Zeus, and spared not one. Then Zeus in
his turn was filled with anger; and he sent the
golden-haired Apollo to Pherae, in Thessaly, to serve
for a whole year as bondsman to King Admetus."
At this moment, a tall and very handsome lad, whom
Odysseus had not yet seen, came into the room. He was
not more than six years old; his long amber hair fell
in waves upon his shoulders; his eyes twinkled and
flashed like the sunlight on the blue sea waves; he
held his head erect, and he walked with a noble grace
which betokened the proud soul within his breast. The
eyes of Odysseus were fixed upon him, and he wondered
who this noble human being could be.
[92] Cheiron saw his
questioning look, and called the young lad to him.
"Odysseus," said he, "this is my great-grandchild,
young Achilles, the son of King Peleus your host.
Something tells me that your life and his will in
aftertimes be strangely mingled; whether as friends or
as foes, I cannot tell. You shall be friends to-day, at
least, and after a while you shall go out together, and
try your skill at archery. But, Achilles, you may go
now and play with your fellows: I have something more
to say to young Odysseus."
The lad turned, and left the room as gracefully as he
had entered. Then Cheiron turned again to Odysseus and
the bard.
"I was telling you about my pupils," he said; "and I
will speak of but one other, for there are reasons why
you should know his history. Peleus, the son of
Æacus and my loved daughter Endeis, was brought
to me by his mother from Ægina. There was
something in the boy's face which showed that a
strange, sad life was to be his; and, although he was
not a promising lad, yet when he left me to go with
Jason to Colchis, I felt great grief at losing him. But
by and by, after the heroes had returned, I heard that
Peleus had done many wicked things in Ægina, and
that he had been driven into exile for his crimes. He
went first to Ceyx in Thessaly, a lonely wanderer, cast
off and forsaken by all his friends. And a story is
told, that in his loneliness and his sorrow, he one day
prayed to Zeus that
[93] he would give him companions. And
Zeus heard his prayer, and great armies of ants were
changed at once into men; and they did homage to
Peleus, and became his subjects, and hence he is still
called the King of the Myrmidons. Then he went to
Phthia where Eurytion reigned. And Eurytion purified
him from his crimes, and gave him his daughter Antigone
in wedlock, and with her the third of his kingdom. But
in an evil day they hunted the wild boar together in
the woods of Calydon, and Peleus unwittingly slew his
friend with an ill-aimed arrow. Then he fled from the
people of Phthia, and came to Iolcos, where Acastus,
the son of old Pelias, ruled. And Acastus welcomed him
kindly, and purified him from the stain of Eurytion's
death, and gave him of the best of all that he had, and
entertained him for a long time as his guest. But
Astydamia, the wife of King Acastus, falsely accused
Peleus of another crime, and besought her husband to
slay him. Then the heart of Acastus was sad, for he
would not shed the blood of one who was his guest. But
he persuaded Peleus to join him in hunting wild beasts
in the woods of Pelion; for he hoped that then some way
might open for him to rid himself of the unfortunate
man. All day long they toiled up and down the slopes;
they climbed the steep cliffs; they forced their way
through brakes and briery thickets; and at last Peleus
was so overwearied that he sank down on a bed of moss,
and fell asleep. Then Acastus slyly took his weapons
from him, and left him
[94] there alone and unarmed, hoping
that the wild beasts would find and slay him. When
Peleus awoke, he saw himself surrounded by mountain
robbers; he felt for his sword, but it was gone; even
his shield was nowhere to be found. He called aloud to
Acastus, but the king was dining at that moment in
Iolcos. I heard his cry, however; I knew his voice, and
I hastened to his aid. The robbers fled when they saw
me coming; and I led my dear but erring grandson back
to my cavern, where the days of his boyhood and
innocence had been spent.
"But I see that the sun is sinking in the west. I will
say no more until after we have partaken of food."
With these words Cheiron arose, and left the room.
Odysseus, anxious to become acquainted with the lads,
arose also, and walked out into the open air. Achilles
was waiting for him just outside the door, and the two
boys were soon talking with each other as if they had
long been friends.
|