THE SUN-FLOWER
HERE was a nymph named Clytĭĕ, who was so
beautiful that Apollo fell in love with her. She was
very proud and glad of being loved by the god of the
[50] Sun, and loved him a great deal more than he loved
her. But she believed that his love was as great as
her own: and so she lived happily for a long time.
But one day, Apollo happened to see a king's daughter,
whose name was Leucŏthŏē.
He thought she was
the most beautiful creature he had ever seen: so he
fell in love with her, and forgot Clytie as much as if
there was nobody but Leucothoe in the world. Clytie,
however, knew nothing of all this, and only wondered
why Apollo never came to see her any more.
Now the king, whose name was Orchămus, kept his
daughter very strictly: and did not wish her to have
anything to do with Apollo. I suppose he was afraid
of Apollo's loving her for a time, and then leaving her
to be miserable and unhappy, as happened to many
nymphs and princesses in those days besides Clytie. So
when King Orchamus found that Apollo was making
love to Leucothoe, he shut her up in his palace, and
would not allow her to go out or anybody else to
go in.
But Apollo was much too clever to be beaten in
that way. He disguised himself as Leucothoe's own
mother, and so came to see her whenever he pleased,
without anybody being anything the wiser. And so
everything went on just as he wished, if it had not been
for Clytie, whom he had treated just as King Orchamus
was afraid he would treat Leucothoe.
[51] Clytie wondered why Apollo never came to see her
till she could bear it no longer; and she watched him,
to find out what was the reason of it all. She watched
till at last she saw somebody who looked like a queen
go into the palace of King Orchamus. But she knew
Apollo much too well to be taken in by any disguise.
She secretly followed him into the palace, and found
him making love to Leucothoe.
In her misery and jealousy, she went straight to
King Orchamus, and told him what she had seen.
Perhaps she hoped that the king would send his
daughter away altogether, so that Apollo would then
come back to her. She could not possibly foresee
what would really happen. King Orchamus was so
enraged with his daughter for receiving Apollo's visits
against his commands that he ordered Leucothoe to be
buried alive. Of course he could not punish Apollo:
because Apollo was a god, while he was only a king.
Perhaps you will think that Apollo might have
managed to save Leucothoe from such a terrible death
as her father had ordered for her. As he did not, I
suppose that King Orchamus had her buried before
anybody could tell the news—at any rate she was
dead when Apollo arrived at her grave. All he could
do for her was to show his love and his sorrow by
turning her into a tree from which people take a
sweet-smelling gum called myrrh.
[52] As to Clytie, whose jealousy had caused the death
of the princess, he refused ever to speak to her or look
at her again: and he turned her into a sunflower,
which has no perfume like the myrrh-tree into which
he had changed Leucothoe. But, in spite of his scorn
and of everything he could do to her, Clytie loved him
still: and though he would not look at her, she still
spends her whole time in gazing up at him with her
blossoms, which are her eyes. People say that the
blossoms of the sunflower always turn toward the sun—towards
the east when he is rising, towards the west
when he is setting, and straight up at noon, when he
is in the middle of the sky. Of course, like all other
blossoms, they close at night, when he is no longer to
be seen. As for the sun himself, I suspect he has forgotten
both Clytie and Leucothoe long ago; and sees
no difference between them and any other trees or
flowers.
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