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GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECELegendary Greece:FROM THE GODS AND HEROES TO THE FOUNDATION OF THE OLIMPIC GAMES (776 BC)CHAPTER III
LEGEND OF THE IAPETIDS
THE
sons of the Titan god Iapetus, as described in the Hesiodic theogony,
are Atlas, Mencetius, Prometheus, and
Epimetheus. Of these, Atlas alone is mentioned by Homer in the Odyssey, and
even he not as the son of Iapetus: the latter himself is named in the
Iliad as existing in Tartarus along with Kronos. The Homeric
Atlas “knows the depths of the whole sea, and keeps by himself those tall
pillars which hold the heaven apart from the earth”.
As the
Homeric theogony generally appears much expanded in Hesiod, so also
does the family of Iapetus, with their varied adventures. Atlas is here
described, not as the keeper of the intermediate pillars between heaven and
earth, but as himself condemned by Zeus to support the heaven on his head and
hands; while the fierce Menoetius is pushed down to Erebus as a
punishment for his ungovernable insolence. But the remaining two brothers,
Prometheus and Epimetheus, are among the most interesting creations of Grecian
legend, and distinguished in more than one respect from all the remainder.
First,
the main battle between Zeus and the Titan gods is a contest of force purely
and simply—mountains are hurled and thunder is launched, and the victory
remains to the strongest. But the competition between Zeus and Prometheus is
one of craft and stratagem: the victor does indeed remain to the former, but
the honors of the fight belong to the latter. Secondly, Prometheus and
Epimetheus (the fore-thinker and the after-thinker) are characters stamped at
the same mint, and by the same effort, the express contrast and antithesis of
each other. Thirdly, mankind are here expressly brought forward, not indeed as
active partners in the struggle, but as the grand and capital subjects
interested,—as gainers or sufferers by the result. Prometheus appears in the
exalted character of champion of the human race, even against the formidable superiority
of Zeus.
In the
primitive or Hesiodic legend, Prometheus is not the creator or molder of man;
it is only the later additions which invest him with this character. The race
are supposed as existing, and Prometheus, a member of the dispossessed body of
Titan gods, comes forward as their representative and defender. The
advantageous bargain which he made with Zeus on their behalf, in respect to the
partition of the sacrificial animals, has been recounted in a preceding
chapter. Zeus felt that he had been outwitted, and was exceeding wroth. In his
displeasure he withheld from mankind the inestimable comfort of fire, so that
the race would have perished, had not Prometheus stolen fire, in defiance of
the Supreme Ruler, and brought it to men in the hollow stem of the plant called
giant-fennel.
Zeus
was now doubly indignant, and determined to play off a still more ruinous
stratagem. Hephaestus, by his direction, molded the form of a beautiful virgin;
Athene dressed her, Aphrodite and the Charites bestowed upon her both
ornament and fascination, while Hermes infused into her the mind of a dog, a
deceitful spirit, and treacherous words. The messengers of the gods conducted
this “fascinating mischief” to mankind, at a time when Prometheus was not
present. Now Epimetheus had received from his brother peremptory injunctions
not to accept from the hands of Zeus any present whatever; but the beauty of
Pandora (so the newly-formed female was called) was not to be resisted. She was
received and admitted among men, and from that moment their comfort and tranquility
was exchanged for suffering of every kind. The evils to which mankind are
liable had been before enclosed in a cask in their own keeping; Pandora in her
malice removed the lid of the cask, and out flew these thousand evils and
calamities, to exercise for ever their
destroying force. Hope alone remained imprisoned, and therefore without
efficacy, as before—the inviolable lid being replaced before she could escape.
Before this incident (says the legend) men had lived without disease or
suffering; but now both earth and sea are full of mischiefs. Maladies of every
description stalk abroad by day as well as by night, without any hope fox man
of relief to come.
The
Theogony gives the legend here recounted, with some variations—leaving out the
part of Epimetheus altogether, as well as the cask of evils. Pandora is the
ruin of man, simply as the mother and representative of the female sex. And the
variations are thus useful, as they enable us to distinguish the essential from
the accessory circumstances of the story.
“Thus
(says the poet, at the conclusion of his narrative) it is not possible to
escape from the purposes of Zeus”. His myth, connecting the calamitous
condition of man with the malevolence of the supreme god, shows, first, by what
cause such an unfriendly feeling was raised; next, by what instrumentality its
deadly results were brought about. The human race are not indeed the creation,
but the protected flock of Prometheus, one of the elder or dispossessed Titan
gods. When Zeus acquires supremacy, mankind along with the rest become subject
to him, and are to make the best bargain they can, respecting worship and
service to be yielded. By the stratagem of their advocate Prometheus, Zeus is
cheated into such a partition of the victims as is eminently unprofitable to
him; whereby his wrath is so provoked, that he tries to subtract from man the
use of feeling of fire. Here, however, his scheme is frustrated by the theft of
Prometheus: but his second attempt is more successful, and he in his turn
cheats the unthinking Epimetheus into the acceptance of a present (in spite of
the peremptory interdict of Prometheus) by which the whole of man’s happiness
is wrecked. This legend grows out of two feelings; partly as to the relations
of the gods with man, partly as to the relation of the female sex with the
male. The present gods are unkind towards man, but the old gods, with whom
man's lot was originally cast, were much kinder—and the ablest among them
stands forward as the indefatigable protector of the race. Nevertheless, the
mere excess of his craft proves the ultimate ruin of the cause which he
espouses. He cheats Zeus out of a fair share of the sacrificial victim, so as
both to provoke and justify a retaliation which he cannot be always at hand to
ward off; the retaliation is, in his absence, consummated by a snare laid for
Epimetheus and voluntarily accepted. And thus, though Hesiod ascribes the
calamitous condition of man to the malevolence of Zeus, his piety suggests two
exculpatory pleas for the latter; mankind have been the first to defraud Zeus
of his legitimate share of the sacrifice—and they have moreover been consenting
parties to their own ruin. Such are the feelings, as to the relation between
the gods and man, which have been one of the generating elements of this
legend. The other element, a conviction of the vast mischief arising to man
from women, whom yet they cannot dispense with, is frequently and strongly set
forth in several of the Greek poets—by Simonides of Amorgos and Phokylidis, not less than by Euripides.
Punishment
of Prometheus
But the
miseries arising from woman, however great they might be, did not reach
Prometheus himself. For him, the rash champion who had ventured “to compete in
sagacity” with Zeus, a different punishment was in store. Bound by heavy chains
to a pillar, he remained fast imprisoned for several generations: every day did
an eagle prey upon his liver, and every night did the liver grow afresh for the
next day’s suffering. At length Zeus, eager to enhance the glory of his favorite
son, Heracles, permitted the latter to kill the eagle and rescue the captive.
Such is
the Promethean myth as it stands in the Hesiodic poems; its earliest form, as
far as we can trace. Upon it was founded the sublime tragedy of Aeschylus, “The
Enchained Prometheus”, together with at least one more tragedy, now lost, by
the same author. Aeschylus has made several important alterations; describing
the human race, not as having once enjoyed and subsequently lost a state of
tranquility and enjoyment, but as originally feeble and wretched. He suppresses
both the first trick played off by Prometheus upon Zeus respecting the
partition of the victim—and the final formation and sending of Pandora—which
are the two most marked portions of the Hesiodic story; while on the other hand
he brings out prominently and enlarges upon the theft of fire, which in Hesiod
is but slightly touched. If he has thus relinquished the antique simplicity of
the story, he has rendered more than ample compensation by imparting to it a grandeur
of ideal, a large reach of thought combined with appeals to our earnest and
admiring sympathy, and a pregnancy of suggestion in regard to the relations
between the gods and man, which soar far above the Hesiodic level, and which
render his tragedy the most impressive, though not the most artistically
composed, of all Grecian dramatic productions. Prometheus there appears not
only as the heroic champion and sufferer in the cause and for the protection of
the human race, but also as the gifted teacher of all the arts, helps, and
ornaments of life, amongst which fire is only one: all this against the will
and in defiance of the purpose of Zeus, who, on acquiring his empire, wished to
destroy the human race and to beget some new breed. Moreover, new relations
between Prometheus and Zeus are superadded by Aeschylus. At the commencement of
the struggle between Zeus and the Titan gods, Prometheus had vainly attempted
to prevail upon the latter to conduct it with prudence; but when he found that
they obstinately declined all wise counsel, and that their ruin was inevitable,
he abandoned their cause and joined Zeus. To him and to his advice Zeus owed
the victory; yet the monstrous ingratitude and tyranny of the latter is now
manifested by nailing him to a rock, for no other crime than because he
frustrated the purpose of extinguishing the human race, and furnished to them
the means of living with tolerable comfort. The new ruler Zeus, insolent with
his victory over the old gods, tramples down all right, and sets at naught
sympathy and obligation, as well towards gods as towards man. Yet the prophetic
Prometheus, in the midst of intense suffering, is consoled by the foreknowledge
that the time will come when Zeus must again send for him, release him, and
invoke his aid, as the sole means of averting from himself dangers otherwise
insurmountable. The security and means of continuance for mankind have now been
placed beyond the reach of Zeus—whom Prometheus proudly defies, glorying in his
generous and successful championship, despite the terrible price which he is
doomed to pay for it.
As
the Aeschylean Prometheus, though retaining the old lineaments, has
acquired a new coloring, soul, and character, so he has also become identified
with a special locality. In Hesiod there is no indication of the place in which
he is imprisoned; but Aeschylus places it in Scythia, and the general belief of
the Greeks supposed it to be on Mount Caucasus. So long and so firmly did this
belief continue, that the Roman general Pompey, when in command of an army in
Colchis, made with his companion, the literary Greek Theophanes, a special
march to view the spot in Caucasus where Prometheus had been transfixed.
CHAPTER IVHEROIC LEGENDS.—GENEALOGY OF ARGOS.
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