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Hades, the King of the Dead
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HADES, THE KING OF THE DEAD.
[14]
ADES, the god of the under-world, was also a brother
of Zeus; but the Greeks did not think of him as being
bright and beautiful like the other gods. They
believed, indeed, that he helped make the seeds sprout
and push their leaves above the surface of the earth,
and that he gave men the gold and silver which they dug
out of their mines. But more often they thought of him
as the god of the gloomy world of the dead; so they
imagined that he was dark and stern in appearance, and
they feared him more than they did the other gods.
The Greeks thought that when any one died, his soul or
shade went at once to the kingdom of Hades. The way to
this under-world lay through a cave which was in the
midst of a dark and gloomy forest, by the side of a
still lake. When they had passed down through this
cavern, the shades came to a broad, swift stream of
black water. There they found a bent old man
[15] named
Charon, whose duty it was to take the shades across the
stream in a small, leaky boat. But only those spirits
could cross whose bodies had been properly burned or
buried in the world above; and those whose funerals had
not been properly attended to were compelled to wander
for a hundred years upon the river-bank before Charon
would take them across.
When the shades had crossed the river, they came upon a
terrible creature, which guarded the path so that no
one who had once passed into the kingdom of the dead
could ever come out again. This was the great dog
Cerberus, who had three heads, and who barked so
fiercely that he could be heard through all the lower
world.
Beyond him the shades entered the judgment room, where
they were judged for what they had done on earth. If
they had lived good lives, they were allowed to enter
the fields of the blessed, where flowers of gold
bloomed in beautiful meadows; and there they walked and
talked with other shades, who had led good lives in the
world above. But the Greeks thought that even these
spirits were always longing to see the light of day
again, for they believed that no life was so happy as
that which they lived on the face of the earth.
[16] The shades who had lived bad lives in the world above
were dreadfully punished in the world of the dead.
There was once a king named Sisyphus, who had been
cruel and wicked all his life. When he died, and his
shade went down to the under-world, the judge told him
that his punishment would be to roll a great stone up a
steep hill and down the other side. At first Sisyphus
thought that this would be an easy thing to do. But
when he had got the stone almost to the top, and it
seemed that one more push would send it over and end
his task, it suddenly slipped from his hands, and
rolled to the foot of the hill again. So it happened
every time; and the Greeks believed that Sisyphus would
have to keep working in this way as long as the world
lasted, and that his task would never be done.
There was once another king, named Tantalus, who was
wealthy and fortunate upon earth, and had been loved by
the gods of heaven. Zeus had even invited him to sit
at his table once, and had told him the secrets of the
gods. But Tantalus had not proved worthy of all this
honor. He had not been able to keep the secrets that
had been trusted to him, but had told them to all the
world. So when his shade came before the judge of the
dead, he, too, was
[17] given a dreadful punishment. He was
chained in the midst of a sparkling little lake where
the water came up almost to his lips. He was always
burning with thirst; but whenever he stooped to drink
from the lake, the water sank into the ground before
him. He was always hungry, and branches loaded with
delicious fruits hung just over him. But whenever he
raised his hand to gather them, the breeze swung them
just out of his reach. In this way the Greeks thought
that Tantalus was to be punished forever because he had
told the secrets of the gods.
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