|
Table of Contents
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Winged Horse of the Muses
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE WINGED HORSE OF THE MUSES
I. THE FOUNTAIN OF THE HORSE
[53]
 |
EOPLE said that the gods sent him to the earth. Of
course it was very desirable to account in some way for
the appearance of so wonderful a creature, and there
was no easier way to do it. But to this day nobody
knows anything about his origin. When first seen he
was simply a beautiful horse with wings like a great
bird's, and he could travel with equal ease in the air
and on the ground.
A good many years ago—so many that we shall not bother
about the date—this wonderful animal, after a long and
wearisome flight above the clouds, alighted at a
pleasant spot near the foot of Mount Helicon, in
Bœotia. He was hot and thirsty, and having seen some
reeds growing at that spot, he hoped that he would find
there a stream of water, or at least a small pool, from
which he could drink. But to his disappointment
[54] there
wasn't a drop of water to be seen—nothing but a little
patch of boggy ground where the tall grass grew rank
and thick. In his anger he spread his wings and gave
the earth a tremendous kick with both of his hind feet
together. The ground was soft, and the force of the
blow was such that a long, deep trench was opened in
the boggy soil. Instantly a stream of water, cool and
sweet and clear, poured out and filled the trench and
ran as a swift brook across the plain toward the
distant river. The horse drank his fill from the
pleasant fountain which he himself had thus hollowed
out; and then, greatly refreshed, unfolded his wings
again and rose high in the air, ready for a flight
across the sea to the distant land of Lycia.
Men were not long in finding out that the waters of the
new spring at the foot of Mount Helicon had some
strange properties, filling their hearts with a
wonderful sense of whatever is beautiful and true and
good, and putting music into their souls and new songs
into their mouths.
And so they called the spring Hippocrene, or the
Fountain of the Horse, and poets from all parts of the
world went there to drink. But in later times the place
fell into neglect, for, somehow,
[55] people were so busy
with other things that they forgot the difference
between poetry and doggerel, and nobody cared to drink
from Hippocrene. And so the fountain was allowed to
become choked with the stones and dirt that rolled
down from the mountain; and soon wild grass and tall
reeds hid the spot from view, and nobody from that day
to this has been able to point out just where it is.
II. THE YOUNG TRAVELER
But the horse?
We left him poised high in the air, with his head
turned toward the sea and the distant land of Lycia. I
do not know how long it took him to fly across, nor
does it matter; but one day, full of vigor and
strength, and beautiful as a poet's dream, he alighted
on the great road that runs eastward a little way from
the capital city of Lycia. So softly had he descended,
and so quietly had he folded his great wings and set
his feet upon the ground, that a young man who was
walking thoughtfully along the way did not know of his
presence until he had cantered up quite close to him.
[56] The young man stopped and turned to admire the
beautiful animal, and when he came quite near reached
out his hand to stroke his nose. But the horse wheeled
about and was away again as quick as an arrow sent
speeding from a bow. The young man walked on again, and
the horse soon returned and gamboled playfully around
him, sometimes trotting swiftly back and forth along
the roadway, sometimes rising in the air and sailing in
circles round and round him. At last, after much
whistling and the offer of a handful of sweetmeats, the
young man coaxed the horse so near to him that by a
sudden leap he was able to throw himself astride of his
back just in front of his great gray wings.
"Now, my handsome fellow," he cried, "carry me
straight forward to the country that lies beyond the
great northern mountains. I would not be afraid of all
the wild beasts in Asia if I could be sure of your
help."
But the horse did not seem to understand him. He flew
first to the north, then to the south, then to the
north again, and sailed hither and thither gaily among
the white clouds. At the end of an hour he alighted at
the very spot from which he had risen, and his rider,
despairing of making
[57] any progress with him, leaped to
the ground and renewed his journey on foot. But the
horse, who seemed to have taken a great liking to the
young man, followed him, frisking hither and thither
like a frolicsome dog, not afraid of him in the least,
but very timid of all other travelers on the road. Late
in the afternoon, when they had left the pleasant
farm-lands of Lycia behind them and had come to the
border of a wild, deserted region, an old man, with a
long white beard and bright glittering eyes, met them
and stopped, as many others had already done, to admire
the beautiful animal.
"Who are you, young man," he inquired, "and what are
you doing with so handsome a steed here in this lonely
place?"
"My name is Bellerophon," answered the young man, "and
I am going by order of King Iobates to the country
beyond the northern mountains, where I expect to slay
the Chimæra, which lives there. But as for this horse,
all I know is that he has followed me since early
morning. Whose he is and from whence he came I cannot
tell."
The old man was silent for a few moments as if in deep
thought, while Bellerophon, very weary
[58] with his long
walk, sat down on a stone to rest, and the horse
strolled along by the roadside nipping the short grass.
"Do you see the white roof over there among the trees?"
finally asked the old man. " Well, under it there is a
shrine to the goddess Athena, of which I am the keeper.
A few steps beyond it is my own humble cottage, where I
spend my days in study and meditation. If you will go
in and lodge with me for the night, I may be able to
tell you something about the task that you have
undertaken."
Bellerophon was very glad to accept the old man's
invitation, for the sun had already begun to dip below
the western hills. The hut contained only two rooms,
but everything about it was very clean and cozy, and
the kind host spared no pains to make his guest
comfortable and happy. After they had eaten supper and
were still reclining on couches at the side of the
table, the old man looked Bellerophon sharply in the
face and said:
"Now tell me all about yourself and your kindred, and
why you are going thus alone and on foot into the
country of the Chimæra."
III. BELLEROPHON'S STORY
"My father," answered Bellerophon, "is Glaucus, the
king of far-off Corinth, where he has great wealth in
horses and in ships; and my grandfather was Sisyphus,
of whom you have doubtless heard, for he was famed all
over the world for his craftiness and his fine business
qualities, that made him the richest of men. I was
brought up in my father's house, and it was intended
that I should succeed him as king of Corinth; but three
years ago a sad misfortune happened to me. My younger
brother and I were hunting among the wooded hills of
Argos, and we were having fine sport, for we had taken
much game. We had started home with our booty, and I,
who was the faster walker, was some distance ahead of
my brother, when, suddenly, a deer sprang up between me
and the sun. Half-blinded by the light, I turned and
let fly an arrow quickly. The creature bounded swiftly
away, unhurt, but a cry of anguish from the low
underbrush told me that I had slain my brother.
"Vainly did I try to stanch the flow of blood; vainly
did I call upon the gods to save him and
[60] me. He raised
his eyes to mine, smiled feebly, pressed my hand as in
forgiveness, and was no more.
"I knew that I dared not return home, for the laws of
our country are very severe against any one who, though
by accident, causes the death of another. Indeed, until
I could be purified from my brother's blood, I dared
not, as you know, look any man in the face. For a long
time I wandered hither and thither, like a hunted
beast, shunning the sight of every human being, and
living upon nuts and fruits and such small game as I
could bring down with my arrows. At length I bethought
me that perhaps old King Prœtus of Tiryns, in whose
land I then was, might purify me; or if not, he might
at least slay me at the altar, which would be better
than living longer as a fugitive; and so, under the
cover of night, I went down into Tiryns, and entering
the temple with my cloak thrown over my head, knelt
down at the shrine where penitent men are wont to seek
purification.
"I need not tell you how the king found me and purified
me and took me into his own house and treated me for a
long time as his own son; it would make my story too
long. . . . But a few
[61] weeks ago I noticed that a great
change had come over him, for he no longer showed me
the kind attention which I had learned to expect of
him. The queen, too, seemed to have become my enemy,
and treated me with the haughtiest disdain. Indeed, I
began to suspect that she was urging her husband to put
me out of the way, and I should not have been surprised
if he had banished me from his court. I was, of course,
uncomfortable, and was trying to think of some excuse
for leaving Tiryns, when the king, very early one
morning, called me into his private chamber. He held
in his hand a wooden tablet, sealed with his own
signet, and he seemed to be greatly excited about
something.
" 'Bellerophon,' he said, 'I have written on this tablet
a letter of very great importance, which I wish to send
to my father-in-law, King Iobates, of Lycia, beyond the
sea. You are the only man whom I can trust to carry
this letter, and so I beg that you will get ready to go
at once. A ship is in the harbor already manned for the
voyage, and the wind is fair. Before the sun rises you
may be well out at sea.'
"I took the tablet and embarked, as he wished, without
so much as bidding good-by to any of
[62] his household. A
good ship and fresh breezes carried me over the sea to
Lycia, where I was welcomed most kindly by your good
king Iobates. For he had known both my father and my
grandfather, and he said that he owed me honor for
their sakes. Nine days he held a great feast in his
palace, and all the most famous philosophers,
merchants, and warriors were invited to his table, in
order that I might meet them and hear them talk. I had
not forgotten the tablet that King Prœtus had given
me, and several times I had made a start to give it to
Iobates; but I knew that it would be bad taste to speak
of business at such a time. On the tenth day, however,
after all the guests had gone home, he said to me:
" 'Now tell me what message you have brought from my
son-in-law Prœtus and my dear daughter Anteia. For I
know that they have sent me some word.'
"Then I gave him the tablet. He untied the ribbon which
bound the two blocks of wood together, and when he had
broken the seal he lifted them apart and read that
which was engraved on the wax between them. I do not
know what this message was, but it must have been
something of great importance, for the king's face grew
[63] very pale, and he staggered as if he would fall. Then
he left the room very quickly, and I did not see him
again until this morning, when he called me into his
council-chamber. I was surprised to notice how haggard
and worn he was, and how very old he seemed to have
become within the past three days.
"Young man,' he said, speaking rather sharply, I
thought,—'Young man, they tell me that you are brave
and fond of hunting wild beasts, and that you are
anxious to win fame by doing some daring deed. I have
word, only this morning, that the people who live on
the other side of the northern mountains are in great
dread of a strange animal that comes out of the caves
and destroys their flocks, and sometimes carries their
children off to its lair. Some say it is a lion, some a
dragon, and some laugh at the whole affair and call it
a goat. I think myself that it must be the very same
beast that infested the mountain valleys some years
ago, and was called by our wise men a Chimæra; and for
the sake of the good people whom it annoys, I should
like to have it killed. Every one to whom I have spoken
about it, however, is afraid to venture into its
haunts.'
[64] " 'I am not afraid,' said I. 'I will start to the
mountains this very hour, and if I don't bring you the
head of the Chimæra to hang up in your halls, you may
brand me as a coward.'
" 'You are a brave young man,' said the king, 'and I will
take you at your word, but I would advise you to lose
no time in starting.'
"I was surprised at the way in which the king dismissed
me, and the longer I thought about the matter the
stranger it all seemed. But there was only one thing to
do. I walked out of the king's palace, found the
shortest road to Mount Climax, and—here I am!"
IV. THE DREAM AND THE GIFTS
"Do you have any idea what it was that King Prœtus
wrote to King Iobates?" asked the old man.
"Why should I?"
"Then I will tell you. He wrote to say that you had
been accused of treasonable crimes in Tiryns, and that,
not wishing to harm you himself, he had sent you to
Lycia to be put to death. King Iobates was loath to
have this done, and so he has sent you out against the
Chimæra,
[65] knowing that no man ever fought with that
monster and lived. For she is a more terrible beast
than you would believe. All the region beyond the
mountains has been laid waste by her, hundreds of
people have been slain by her fiery breath alone, and a
whole army that was lately sent out against her was
routed and put to flight. The king knows very well that
she will kill you."
"But what kind of a beast is this Chimæra?" asked
Bellerophon.
"She is a strange kind of monster," was the answer.
"Her head and shoulders are those of a lion, her body
is that of a goat, and her hinder parts are those of a
dragon. She fights with her hot breath and her long
tail, and she stays on the mountains by night, and goes
down into the valleys by day."
"If I had only a shield, and my bow and arrows, and
could ride the good winged horse whithersoever I wished
him to go, I would not be afraid of all the Chimæras
in the world," said Bellerophon.
"Let me tell you something," said the old man. "Do you
go out to the little temple in the grove before us and
lie down to sleep at the foot of the shrine. Everybody
knows that to people who are
[66] in need of help Athena
often comes in dreams to give good advice. Perhaps she
will favor you with her counsel and aid, if you only
show that you have faith in her."
Bellerophon went at once to the little temple and
stretched himself out on the floor close to the shrine
of the goddess. The winged horse, who had been feeding
on the grass, followed him to the door, and then lay
down on the ground outside.
It was nearly morning when Bellerophon dreamed that a
tall and stately lady, with large round eyes, and long
hair that fell in ringlets upon her shoulders, carne
into the temple and stood beside him.
"Do you know who the winged steed is that waits outside
the door for you?" she asked.
"Truly, I do not," answered Bellerophon. "But if I had
some means of making him understand me, he might be my
best friend and helper."
"His name is Pegasus," said the lady, "and he was born
near the shore of the great western ocean. He has come
to help you in your fight with the Chimæra, and you
can guide him anywhere you wish if you will only put
this ribbon into his mouth, holding on to the ends
yourself."
[67] With these words, she placed a beautiful bridle in
Bellerophon's hands, and, turning about, walked
silently away.
When the sun had risen and Bellerophon awoke, the
bridle was lying on the floor beside him, and near it
were a long bow with arrows and a shield. It was the
first bridle that he had ever seen—some people say
that it was the first that was ever made—and the
young man examined it with great curiosity. Then he
went out and quickly slipped the ribbon bit into the
mouth of Pegasus, and leaped upon his back. To his
great joy, he saw that now the horse understood all his
wishes.
"Here are your bow and arrows and your shield," cried
the old man, handing them to him. "Take them, and may
Athena be with you in your fight with the Chimæra!"
V. THE FIGHT WITH THE CHIMÆRA
At a word from Bellerophon, Pegasus rose high in the
air, and then, turning, made straight northward toward
the great mountains. It was evening when they reached
Mount Climax, and quite dark when they at last hovered
over the spot
[68] which the Chimæra was said to visit at
night. Bellerophon would have passed on without seeing
her, had not a burning mountain sent out a great sheet
of flame that lighted up the valleys and gave him a
plain view of the monster crouching in the shadow of a
cliff. He fitted an arrow quickly in his bow and, as
Pegasus paused above the edge of the cliff, he let fly
directly at her fearful head. The arrow missed the
mark, however, and struck the beast in the throat,
giving her an ugly wound. Then you should have seen the
fury of the Chimæra, how she reared herself on her
hind feet; how she leaped into the air; how she beat
the rocks with her long dragon's tail; how she puffed
and fumed and roared and blew her fiery breath toward
Pegasus, hoping to scorch his wings or smother both
horse and rider with its poisonous fumes. Bellerophon,
when he saw her in her mad rage, could no longer wonder
that the whole country had been in terror of her.
"Pegasus rose high in the air."
|
"Now, my good Pegasus," he said, stroking the horse's
mane, "steady yourself just out of her reach, and let
me send her another keepsake!"
This time the arrow struck the beast in the back, and
instead of killing her, only made her
[71] more furious than
ever. She attacked everything that was in her reach,
clawed the rocks, knocked trees down with her tail, and
filled all the mountain-valleys with the noise of her
mad roarings. The third arrow, however, was sent with a
better aim, and the horrid creature, pierced to the
heart, fell backward lifeless, and rolled over and over
down the steep mountain side, and far out into the
valley below.
Bellerophon slept on the mountain that night, while his
steed kept watch by his side. In the morning he went
down and found the Chimæra lying stiff and dead in the
spot where she had rolled, while a score of gaping
countrymen stood around at a safe distance, rejoicing
that the monster which had laid waste their fields and
desolated their homes had at last been slain.
Bellerophon cut off the creature's head, and
remounting Pegasus, set out on his return to King
Iobates.
Of course old Iobates was astonished to see Bellerophon
come back with the monster's head in his arms. All that
he did was to thank the young hero for the great
service which he had done for his country; and then he
began to study up some other means of putting him out
of the way.
[72] At length, Bellerophon bethought him that, since this
world was beset with so many distressing things, worse
even than Chimæras, he would leave it and ride on the
back of Pegasus to heaven. There is no knowing what he
might have done, had not Zeus, just in the nick of
time, sent a gadfly to sting the horse. Pegasus made a
wild plunge to escape the fly, and Bellerophon, taken
by surprise, was tumbled to the earth. Strange to say,
the hero was not killed, but only blinded by his fall;
and he never heard of Pegasus again.
|