HIS FIFTH LABOR: THE AUGEAN STABLE
[233] THE next labor which Eurystheus laid upon Hercules was to
clean out a stable.
That does not sound very much after the others. But
then the stable was that of Augeas, King of Elis, which
was at once the largest and the dirtiest in the whole
world.
Augeas had a prodigious number of oxen and goats, and
the stable in which they were all kept had never been
cleaned. The result was a mountain of filth and litter,
which not even Hercules could clear away in a
lifetime—not, of course, from want of strength,
but from want of time. Hercules beheld with disgust and
dismay the loathsome and degrading toil in which he was
to spend the rest of his days. The other labors had at
least been honorable, and befitting a prince: this
would have appalled a scavenger.
"It is very good of such a hero as you," said Augeas,
"to undertake to clean my stable. It really does want
cleaning, as you see: and it was very kind of
Eurystheus to think of it. You shall not find me
ungrateful.
[234] I will give you one ox and one goat in every ten—when
the job is done."
He could very safely promise this, because he knew that
the job could never be done.
"I am not serving for hire," said Hercules. "Nevertheless
it is only right that you should not let
your stable get into such a state as this, and then get
it put right for nothing. You want a lesson: and you
shall have it, too."
Seeing that mere strength would be wasted in such toil,
Hercules went to work with his brain as well. Through
the land of Elis ran the river Alpheus, that same
Alpheus which had told Ceres what had become of
Proserpine. Hercules carefully studied the country; and
having laid his plans, dug a channel from near the
source of the river to one of the entrances of the
stable. Then, damming up the old channel, he let the
stream run into the new. The new course was purposely
made narrow, so that the current might be exceedingly
strong. When all was ready, he opened the sluice at one
entrance of the stable, so that the water poured in a
flood through the whole building, and out at a gate on
the other side. And it had all been so managed that
when the river had poured through, and was shut off
again, all the filth and litter had been carried away
by the Alpheus underground, and the stable had been
washed clean, without a scrap of refuse to be found
[235] anywhere. For the Alpheus you must know, did not run
into the sea, like other rivers. It disappeared down a
deep chasm, then ran through a natural tunnel under the
sea, and rose again, far away, in the island of Sicily,
where it had brought to Ceres the news from
underground. Thus everything thrown into it in Elis
came up again in Sicily—and the Sicilians must
have been considerably astonished at that
extraordinary eruption of stable litter. Perhaps it is
that which, acting as manure, has helped to make Sicily
so fertile.
Hercules made a point of claiming his price. But Augeas
said:—
"Nonsense! A bargain is a bargain. You undertook to
clean my stable: and you have done nothing of the kind.
No work, no pay."
"What can you mean?" asked Hercules. "Surely I have
cleaned your stable—you will not find in it a
broken straw."
"No," said Augeas. "It was the Alpheus did that: not
you."
"But it was I who used the Alpheus—"
"Yes; no doubt. But the impudence of expecting me to
pay a tenth of all my flocks and herds for an idea so
simple that I should have thought of it myself, if you
hadn't, just by chance, happened to think of it before
me! You have not earned your wages. You
[236] cleaned the stable by an unfair trick: and it was the
river cleaned it—not you."
"Very well," said Hercules grimly. "If you had paid me
honestly, I would have given you your goats and your
oxen back again; for, as I told you, I do not serve for
reward. But now I perceive that I have not quite
cleaned your stable. There is still one piece of dirt
left in it—and that is a cheating knave, Augeas
by name. So, as I cannot go back to Mycenæ till
my work is done—"
He was about to throw Augeas into the river, to follow
the rest of the litter: and about what afterwards
happened, different people tell different things. I
very strongly agree, however, with those who tell that
Hercules spared the life of Augeas after having given
him a lesson: for certainly he was not worth the
killing. And I am the more sure of this because, after
his death, Augeas was honored as hero—which
surely would not have happened if he had not learned to
keep both his stables and his promises clean before he
died.
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