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Table of Contents
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Demeter, the Earth-Goddess
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DEMETER, THE EARTH-GODDESS
[48]
EMETER was the sister of Zeus, and was the goddess who
watched over the fertile earth and the plants that grew
out of it. She taught men how to sow grain, and how to
cultivate it; so the Greeks worshiped her as the
goddess of agriculture. When they made pictures or
statues of her, they represented her as carrying
bunches of grain and poppies in her hands.
Demeter had a beautiful young daughter named
Persephone, whom she loved very much, and who helped
her in caring for the grain that men planted. When the
seed was dropped into the ground, Persephone watched
over it, and guarded it until the tiny green leaves
pushed out of the dark earth. Then Demeter cared for
it until the plant was grown and the grain was ripened.
One day the young goddess was playing with a number of
nymphs in a beautiful meadow.
[49] Beds of violets and
crocuses and other flowers were growing there, and
Persephone was gathering some of the prettiest of the
blossoms. Suddenly a great opening appeared in the
earth at her feet, and out of this a chariot came
rushing. The poor girl was seized, and placed in it,
and carried swiftly away in spite of her cries.
When Demeter found that Persephone had been stolen from
her, she was almost wild with grief. She lighted a
torch, and mounted her chariot drawn by winged snakes,
and for nine days and nine nights she searched for her
daughter without stopping to eat or to drink. On the
tenth day the Sun told her that Zeus had given
Persephone to Hades to be his queen, and that he had
taken her to the under-world. Then Demeter was very
angry. She went far away from the homes of the gods,
and hid herself on earth, where she mourned a long time
for her daughter.
One day the goddess was sitting by the side of a well,
dressed all in black, and looking like some wrinkled
old woman, when four young girls came to the well to
draw water They were sorry for the old woman, because
she seemed so sad and lonely; and they took her home
with them to their mother. They did not know, of
course, that this old woman was a
god- [50] dess; but they
were all very kind to her, and the mother kept her to
nurse her baby son. The little boy reminded the
goddess so much of her own child that she grew very
fond of him. She wished to make him immortal like the
gods, so that he might never grow old or die; and at
night, when every one else was asleep, she would lay
the child in the fire to burn away the mortal part.
But one night the baby’s mother was watching, and
screamed aloud when she saw him in the flames. That
broke the charm. But though Demeter could not make the
boy immortal after that, she did cause him to grow up
to be a great and good man.
While Demeter was thus searching for her daughter,
there was no one to look after the grain. The seed
which was planted in the ground failed to come up; and
though men plowed and plowed, nothing would grow. By
and by Zeus saw that unless the gods could get Demeter
to care for the grain again, the race of men would all
die. So he sent the gods one after another to beg her
to come back to Mount Olympus. But she refused to do
so unless they would give her back her daughter.
Then Zeus sent Hermes down into the underworld to get
Persephone. But when he had returned with her they
found that she had eaten
[51] part of a pomegranate, or
love-apple, while she was with Hades; and so she could
only be given back to her mother for part of each year.
After that, for two-thirds of the year Persephone was
allowed to live with her mother in the light and air of
the upper world, but the remainder of the time she was
obliged to stay with Hades as queen of the under-world.
The Greeks thought that when the bright springtime came
it was Persephone returning to her mother, and making
all the earth glad by her presence. But when the
winter winds blew, and the plants and flowers died,
then, they said, she had returned underground, and the
earth was left dark and dreary.
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