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      READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
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GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECELEGENDARY GREECECHAPTER XIV.
                   
            LEGENDS OF THEBES.
                
            
 THE Boeotians generally, throughout the historical
               age, though well-endowed with bodily strength and courage, are represented as
               proverbially deficient in intelligence, taste and fancy. But the legendary
               population of Thebes, the Kadmeians, are rich in
               mythical antiquities, divine as well as heroic. Both Dionysus and Heracles
               recognize Thebes as their natal city. Moreover, the two sieges of Thebes by
               Adrastus, even taken apart from Cadmus, Antiope, Amphion and Zethus, etc., are
               the most prominent and most characteristic exploits, next to the siege of Troy,
               of that preexisting race of heroes who lived in the imagination of the historical
               Hellenes.
   It is not Cadmus, but the brothers Amphion and Zethus,
               who are given to us in the Odyssey as the first founders of Thebes and the
               first builders of its celebrated walls. They are the sons of Zeus by Antiope,
               daughter of Asopus. The scholiasts who desire to reconcile this tale with the
               more current account of the foundation of Thebes by Cadmus, tell us that after
               the death of Amphion and Zethus, Eurymachus, the warlike king of the Phlegyae, invaded and ruined the newly-settled town, so
               that Cadmus on arriving was obliged to refound it.
               But Apollodorus, and seemingly the older logographers before him, placed Cadmus
               at the top, and inserted the two brothers at a lower point in the series.
               According to them, Belus and Agenor were the sons of Epaphus, (son of the
               Argeian Io), by Libya. Agenor went to Phoenicia and there became king: he bad
               for his offspring Cadmus, Phoenix, Kilix, and a
               daughter Europa; though in the Iliad Europa is called daughter of Phoenix. Zeus
               fell in love with Europa, and assuming the shape of a bull, carried her across
               the sea upon his back from Egypt to Crete, where she bore to him Minos,
               Rhadamanthus and Sarpedon. Two out of the three sons sent out by Agenos in search of their lost sister, wearied out by a
               long-protracted as well as fruitless voyage, abandoned the idea of returning
               home: Kilix settled in Cilicia, and Cadmus in Thrace.
               Thasus, the brother or nephew of Cadmus, who had accompanied them in the
               voyage, settled and gave name to the island of Phasus.
   Both Herodotus and Euripides represent Cadmus as an
               emigrant from Phoenicia, conducting a body of followers in quest of Europa. The
               account of Apollodorus describes him as having come originally from Libya or
               Egypt to Phoenicia: we may presume that this was also the statement of the
               earlier logographers Pherekydes and Hellanikus.
               Conon, who historicizes and politicizes the whole legend, seems to have found
               two different accounts; one connecting Cadmus with Egypt, another bringing him
               from Phoenicia. He tries to melt down the two into one, by representing that
               the Phoenicians, who sent out Cadmus, had acquired great power in Egypt—that
               the seat of their kingdom was the Egyptian Thebes — that Cadmus was dispatched,
               under pretense indeed of finding his lost sister, but really on a project of
               conquest—and that the name Thebes, which he gave to his new establishment in
               Boeotia, was borrowed from Thebes in Egypt, his ancestorial seats.
                Cadmus went from Thrace to Delphi to procure
               information respecting his sister Europa, but the god directed him to take no
               further trouble about her; he was to follow the guidance of a cow, and to found
               a city on the spot where the animal should lie down. The condition was realized
               on the site of Thebes. The neighboring fountain Areia was guarded by a fierce
               dragon, the offspring of Ares, who destroyed all the persons sent to fetch
               water. Cadmus killed the dragon, and at the suggestion of Athena sowed his
               teeth in the earth, there sprang up at once the armed men called the Sparti,
               among whom he flung stones, and they immediately began to assault each other
               until all were slain except five. Ares, indignant at this slaughter, was about
               to kill Cadmus; but Zeus appeased him, condemning Cadmus to an expiatory
               servitude of eight years, after which he married Harmonia, the daughter of Ares
               and Aphrodite—presenting to her the splendid necklace fabricated by the hand of
               Hephaestus, which had been given by Zeus to Europa. All the gods came to the Cadmeia, the citadel of Thebes, to present congratulations
               and gifts at these nuptials, which seem to have been hardly less celebrated in
               the mythical world than those of Peleus and Thetis. The issue of the marriage
               was one son, Polyderus, and four daughters, Autonoe,
               Ino, Semele and Agave.
   From the five who alone survived of the warriors
               sprung from the dragon’s teeth, arose five great families or gentes in Thebes; the oldest and noblest of its
               inhabitants, coeval with the foundation of the town. They were called Sparti,
               and their name seems to have given rise, not only to the fable of the sowing of
               the teeth, but also to other etymological narratives.
   All the four daughters of Cadmus are illustrious in
               fabulous history. The, wife of Athamas, the son of
               Aeolus, has already been included among the legends of the Aeolids. Semele
               became the mistress of Zeus, and inspired Here with jealousy. Misguided by the
               malicious suggestions of that goddess, she solicited Zeus to visit her with all
               the solemnity and terrors which surrounded him when he approached Here herself.
               The god unwillingly consented, and came in his chariot in the midst of thunder
               and lightning, under which awful accompaniments the mortal frame of Semele
               perished. Zeus, taking from her the child of which she was pregnant, sewed it
               into his own thigh: after the proper interval the child was brought out and
               born, and became the great god Dionysus or Bacchus. Hermes took him to Ino and Athamas to receive their protection. Afterwards, however,
               Zeus having transformed him into a kid to conceal him from the persecution of
               Here, the nymphs of the mountain Nysa became his nurses.
   Autonoe, the third daughter of Cadmus, married the
               pastoral hero or god Aristaeus, and was mother of Aktaeon,
               a devoted hunter and a favorite companion of the goddess Artemis. She however
               became displeased with him—either because he looked into a fountain while she
               was bathing and saw her naked—or according to the legend set forth by the poet
               Stesichorus, because he loved and courted Semele—or according to Euripides,
               because he presumptuously vaunted himself as her superior in the chase. She
               transformed him into a stag, so that his own dogs set upon and devoured him.
               The rock upon which Aktaeon used to sleep when
               fatigued with the chase, and the spring whose transparent waters had too
               clearly revealed the form of the goddess, were shown to Pausanias near Plataea,
               on the road to Megara.
   PENTHEUS
                Agave, the remaining daughter of Cadmus, married
               Echion, one of the Sparti. The issue of these nuptials was Pentheus, who, when
               Cadmus became old succeeded him as king of Thebes. In his reign Dionysus
               appeared as a god, the author or discoverer of the vine with all its blessings.
               He had wandered over Asia, India and Thrace, at the head of an excited troop of
               female enthusiasts—communicating and inculcating everywhere the Bacchic
               ceremonies, and rousing in the minds of women that impassioned religious
               emotion which led them to ramble in solitary mountains at particular seasons,
               there to give vent to violent fanatical excitement, apart from the men, clothed
               in fawn skins and armed with the thyrsus. The obtrusion of a male spectator
               upon these solemnities was esteemed sacrilegious. Though the rites had been
               rapidly disseminated and fervently welcomed in many parts of Thrace, yet there
               were some places in which they had been obstinately resisted and their votaries
               treated with rudeness; especially by Lycurgus, king of the Edonian Thracians, upon whom a sharp and exemplary punishment was inflicted by
               Dionysus.
   Thebes was the first city of Greece to which Dionysus
               came, at the head of his Asiatic troop of females, to obtain divine honors and
               to establish his peculiar rites in his native city. The venerable Cadmus,
               together with his daughters and the prophet Teiresias, at once acknowledged the
               divinity of the new god, and began to offer their worship and praise to him
               along with the solemnities which he enjoined. But Pentheus vehemently opposed
               the new ceremonies, reproving and maltreating the god who introduced them: nor
               was his unbelief at all softened by the miracles which Dionysus wrought for his
               own protection and for that of his followers. His mother Agave, with her
               sisters and a large body of other women from Thebes, had gone out from Thebes
               to Mount Cithaeron to celebrate their solemnities under the influence of the
               Bacchic frenzy. Thither Pentheus followed to watch them, and there the
               punishment due to his impiety overtook him. The avenging touch of the god
               having robbed him of his senses, he climbed a tall pine for the purpose of
               overlooking the feminine multitude, who detected him in this position, pulled
               down the tree, and tore him in pieces. Agave, mad and bereft of consciousness,
               made herself the foremost in this assault, and carried back in triumph to Thebes
               the head of her slaughtered son. The aged Cadmus, with his wife Harmonia,
               retired among the Illyrians, and at the end of their lives were changed into
               serpents, Zeus permitting them to be transferred to the Elysian fields.
                LABDAKUS. —LAIUS. —ANTIOPE.
                Polydorus and Labdakus successively became kings of Thebes: the latter at his death left an infant
               son, Laius, who was deprived of his throne by Lykus.
               And here we approach the legend of Antiope, Zethus and Amphion, whom the
               fabulists insert at this point of the Theban series. Antiope is here the
               daughter of Nykteus, the brother of Lykus. She is deflowered by Zeus, and then, while pregnant,
               flies to Epopeus king of Sicyon: Nykteus dying entreats his brother to avenge the injury, and Lykus accordingly invades Sicyon, defeats and kills Epopeus,
               and brings back Antiope prisoner to Thebes. In her way thither, in a cave near Eleutherae, which was shown to Pausanias, she is delivered
               of the twin sons of Zeus—Amphion and Zethus—who, exposed to perish, are taken
               up and nourished by a shepherd, and pass their youth amidst herdsmen, ignorant
               of their lofty descent.
   Antiope is conveyed to Thebes, where, after undergoing
               a long persecution from Lykus and his cruel wife
               Dirke, she at length escapes, and takes refuge in the pastoral dwelling of her
               sons, now grown to manhood. Dirke pursues and requires her to be delivered up;
               but the sons recognize and protect their mother, taking an ample revenge upon
               her persecutors. Lykus is slain, and Dirke is dragged
               to death, tied to the horns of a bull.
   Amphion and Zethus, having banished Laius, become
               kings of Thebes. The former, taught by Hermes, and possessing exquisite skill
               on the lyre, employs it in fortifying the city, the stones of the walls
               arranging themselves spontaneously in obedience to the rhythm of his song.
                Zethus marries Aedon, who, in the dark and under a
               fatal mistake, kills her son Itylus: she is
               transformed into a nightingale, while Zethus dies of grief. Amphion becomes the
               husband of Niobe, daughter of Tantalus, and the father of a numerous offspring,
               the complete extinction of which by the bands of Apollo and Artemis has already
               been recounted in these pages.
   Here ends the legend of the beautiful Antiope and her
               twin sons—the rude and unpolished, but energetic, Zethus and the refined and
               amiable, but dreamy, Amphion. For so Euripides, in the drama of Antiope
               unfortunately lost, presented the two brothers, in affectionate union as well
               as in striking contrast. It is evident that the whole story stood originally
               quite apart from the Cadmeian family, and so the
               rudiments of it yet stand in the Odyssey; but the logographers, by their
               ordinary connecting artifices, have opened a vacant place for it in the
               descending series of Theban myths. And they have here proceeded in a manner not
               usual with them. For whereas they are generally fond of multiplying entities,
               and supposing different historical personages of the same name, in order to
               introduce an apparent smoothness in the chronology—they have here blended into
               one person Amphion the son of Antiope and Amphion the father of Chleris, who seem clearly distinguished from each other in
               the Odyssey. They have further assigned to the same person all the
               circumstances of the legend of Niobe, which seems to have been originally
               framed quite apart from the sons of Antiope.
   EDIPUS.
                Amphion and Zethus being removed, Laius became king of
               Thebes. With him commences the ever-celebrated series of adventures of Oedipus
               and his family. Laius forewarned by the oracle that any son whom he might beget
               would kill him, caused Oedipus as soon as he was born to be exposed on Mount
               Cithaeron. Here the herdsmen of Polybus king of Corinth accidentally found him
               and conveyed him to their master, who brought him up as his own child. In spite
               of the kindest treatment, however, Oedipus when he grew up found himself
               exposed to taunts on the score of his unknown parentage, and went to Delphi to
               inquire of the god the name of his real father. He received for answer an
               admonition not to go back to his country; if he did so, it was his destiny to
               kill his father and become the husband of his mother. Knowing no other country
               but Corinth, he accordingly determined to keep away from that city, and quitted
               Delphi by the road towards Boeotia and Phocis. At the exact spot where the
               roads leading to these two countries forked, he met Laius in a chariot drawn by
               mules, when the insolence of one of the attendants brought on an angry quarrel,
               in which Oedipus killed Laius, not knowing him to be his father.
                On the death of Laius, Kreon, the brother of Yokasta,
               succeeded to the kingdom of Thebes. At this time the country was under the
               displeasure of the gods, and was vexed by a terrible monster, with the face of
               a woman, the wings of a bird, and the tail of a lion, called the Sphinx—sent by
               the wrath of Here, and occupying the neighboring mountain of Phikium. The Sphinx had learned from the Muses a riddle,
               which she proposed to the Thebans to resolve: on every occasion of failure she
               took away one of the citizens and ate him up. Still no person could solve the
               riddle; and so great was the suffering occasioned, that Kreon was obliged to
               offer both the crown and the nuptials of his sister Yokasta to anyone who could
               achieve the salvation of the city. At this juncture Oedipus arrived and solved
               the riddle: upon which the Sphinx immediately threw herself from the acropolis
               and disappeared. As a recompense for this service, Oedipus was made king of
               Thebes, and married Yokasta, not aware that she was his mother.
   These main tragic circumstances—that Oedipus had
               ignorantly killed his father and married his mother—belong to the oldest form
               of the legend as it stands in the Odyssey. The gods (it is added in that poem)
               quickly made the facts known to mankind. Epikasta (so
               Yokasta is here called) in an agony of sorrow hanged herself: Oedipus remained
               king of the Cadmeians, but underwent many and great
               miseries, such as the Erinnyes, who avenge an injured
               mother, inflict. A passage in the Iliad implies that he died at Thebes, since
               it mentions the funeral games which were celebrated there in honor of him. His
               misfortunes were recounted by Nestor, in the old Cyprian verses, among the
               stories of aforetime. A fatal curse hung both upon himself and upon his
               children, Eteokles, Polynikes,
               Antigone and Ismene. According to that narrative which the Attic tragedians
               have rendered universally current, they were his children by Yokasta, the
               disclosure of her true relationship to him having been very long deferred. But
               the ancient epic called Oedipodia, treading more
               closely in the footsteps of Homer, represented him as having after her death
               married a second wife, Euryganeia, by whom the four
               children were born to him: and the painter Onatas adopted this story in preference to that of Sophocles.
   The disputes of Eteokles and Polynikes for the throne of their father gave
               occasion not only to a series of tragic family incidents, but also to one of
               the great quasi-historical events of legendary Greece—the two sieges of Thebes
               by Adrastus, king of Argos. The two ancient epic poems called the Thebais and the Epigoni (if indeed both were not parts of
               one very comprehensive poem) detailed these events at great length, and as it
               appears, with distinguished poetical merit; for Pausanias pronounces the Cyclic Thebais (so it was called by the subsequent critics
               to distinguish it from the more modern Thebais of
               Antimachus) inferior only to the Iliad and Odyssey; and the ancient elegiac
               poet Kallinus treated it as an Homeric composition. Of this once-valued poem we
               unfortunately possess nothing but a few scanty fragments. The leading points of
               the legend are briefly glanced at in the Iliad; but our knowledge of the
               details is chiefly derived from the Attic tragedians, who transformed the
               narratives of their predecessors at pleasure, and whose popularity constantly
               eclipsed and obliterated the ancient version. Antimachus of Kolophon,
               contemporary with Euripides, in his long epic, probably took no less liberties
               with the old narrative. His Thebaid never became generally popular, but it
               exhibited marks of study and elaboration which recommended it to the esteem of
               the Alexandrine critics, and probably contributed to discredit in their eyes
               the old cyclic poem.
   The logographers, who gave a continuous history of
               this siege of Thebes, had at least three preexisting epic poems—the Thebais, the Oedipodia, and the Alkmaeonis,— from which they could borrow. The subject was
               also handled in some of the Hesiodic poems, but we do not know to what extent.
               The Thebais was composed more in honor of Argos than
               of Thebes, as the first line of it, one of the few fragments still preserved,
               betokens.
   SIEGES OF THEBES.
                The legend, about to recount fraternal dissension of
               the most implacable kind, comprehending in its results not only the immediate
               relations of the infuriated brothers, but many chosen companions of the heroic
               race along with them, takes its start from the paternal curse of Oedipus, which
               overhangs and determines all the gloomy sequel.
                Oedipus, though king of Thebes and father of four
               children by Euryganeia (according to the Oedipodia), has become the devoted victim of the Erinnyes, in consequence of the self-inflicted death of his
               mother, which he has unconsciously caused, as well as of his unintentional
               parricide. Though he had long forsworn the use of all the ornaments and
               luxuries which his father had inherited from his kingly progenitors, yet when through
               age he had come to be dependent upon his two sons. Polynikes one day broke through this interdict, and set before him the silver table and
               the splendid wine-cup of Cadmus, which Laius had always been accustomed to
               employ. The old king had no sooner seen these precious appendages of the regal
               life of his father, than his mind was overrun by a calamitous frenzy, and he
               imprecated terrible curses on his sons, predicting that there would be bitter
               and endless warfare between them. The goddess Erinnys heard and heeded him; and
               he repeated the curse again on another occasion, when his sons, who had always
               been accustomed to send to him the shoulder of the victims sacrificed on the
               altar, caused the buttock to be served to him in place of it. He resented this as
               an insult, and prayed the gods that they might perish each by the hand of the
               other. Throughout the tragedians as well as in the old epic, the paternal
               curse, springing immediately from the misguided Oedipus himself, but remotely
               from the parricide and incest with which he has tainted his breed, is seen to
               domineer over the course of events—the Erinnys who executes that curse being
               the irresistible, though concealed, agent. Aeschylus not only preserves the
               fatal efficiency of the paternal curse, but even briefly glances at the causes
               assigned for it in the Thebais, without superadding
               any new motives. In the judgment of Sophocles, or of his audience, the
               conception of a father cursing his sons upon such apparently trifling grounds
               was odious; and that great poet introduced many aggravating circumstances,
               describing the old blind father as having been barbarously turned out of doors
               by his sons to wander abroad in exile and poverty. Though by this change he
               rendered his poem more coherent and self-justifying, yet he departed, from the
               spirit of the old legend, according to which Oedipus has contracted by his
               unconscious misdeeds an incurable taint destined to pass onward to his progeny.
               His mind is alienated, and he curses them, not because he has suffered seriously
               by their guilt, but because he is made the blind instrument of an avenging
               Erinnys for the ruin of the house of Laius.
   After the death of Oedipus and the celebration of his
               funeral games, at which amongst others, Argeia,
               daughter of Adrastus (afterwards the wife of Polynikes),
               was present, his two sons soon quarreled respecting the succession. The
               circumstances are differently related; but it appears that, according to the
               original narrative, the wrong and injustice was on the part of Polynikes, who, however, was obliged to leave Thebes and to
               seek shelter with Adrastus, king of Argos. Here he met Tydeus,
               a fugitive, at the same time, from Aetolia: it was dark when they arrived, and
               a broil ensued between the two exiles, but Adrastus came out and parted them.
               He had been enjoined by an oracle to give his two daughters in marriage to a
               lion and a boar, and he thought this occasion had now arrived, inasmuch as one
               of the combatants carried on his shield a lion, the other a boar. He
               accordingly gave Deipyle in marriage to Tydeus, and Argeia to Polynikes: moreover, he resolved to restore by armed
               resistance both his sons-in-law to their respective countries.
   POLYNIKES AND ADRASTUS. AMPHIARAUS.
                On proposing the expedition to the Argeian chiefs
               around him he found most of them willing auxiliaries; but Amphiaraus—formerly
               his bitter opponent, but now reconciled to him, and husband of his sister Eriphyle—strongly opposed him. He denounced the enterprise
               as unjust and contrary to the will of the gods. Again, being of a prophetic
               stock, descended from Melampus, he foretold the certain death both of himself
               and of the principal leaders, should they involve themselves as accomplices in
               the mad violence of Tydeus or the criminal ambition
               of Polynikes. Amphiaraus, already distinguished both
               in the Kalychinian boar-hunt and in the funeral games
               of Pelias, was in the Theban war the most conspicuous of all the heroes, and
               absolutely indispensable to its success. But his reluctance to engage in it was
               invincible, nor was it possible to prevail upon him except through the
               influence of his wife Eriphyle. Polynikes,
               having brought with him from Thebes the splendid robe and necklace given by the
               gods to Harmonia on her marriage with Cadmus, offered it as a bribe to Eriphyle, on condition that she would influence the
               determination of Amphiaraus. The sordid wife, seduced by so matchless a
               present, betrayed the lurking-place of her husband, and involved him in the
               fatal expedition. Amphiaraus, reluctantly dragged forth, and foreknowing the
               disastrous issue of the expedition both to himself and to his associates,
               addressed his last injunctions, at the moment of mounting his chariot, to his
               sons Alkmaeon and Amphilochus, commanding Alkmaeon to avenge his approaching death by killing the
               venal Eriphyle, and by undertaking a second
               expedition against Thebes.
   The Attic dramatists describe this expedition as
               having been conducted by seven chiefs, one to each of the seven celebrated
               gates of Thebes. But the Cyclic Thebais gave to it a
               much more comprehensive character, mentioning auxiliaries from Arcadia,
               Messene, and various parts of Peloponnesus; and the application of Tydeus and Polynikes at Mycenae
               in the course of their circuit made to collect allies, is mentioned in the
               Iliad. They were well received at Mycenae; but the warning signals given by the
               gods were so terrible that no Mycenaean could venture to accompany them. The
               seven principal chiefs however were Adrastus, Amphiaraus, Kapaneus, Hippomedon, Parthenopaeus, Tydeus and Polynikes.
   When the army had advanced as far as the river Asifipus, a halt was made for sacrifice and banquet; while Tydeus was sent to Thebes as envoy to demand the
               restoration of Polynikes to his rights. His demand
               was refused; but finding the chief Cadmeians assembled at the banquet in the house of Eteoklus, he
               challenged them all to contend with him in boxing or wrestling. So efficacious
               was the aid of the goddess Athene that he overcame them all; and the Cadmeians were so indignant at their defeat, that they
               placed an ambuscade of fifty men to intercept him in his way back to the army.
               All of them perished by the band of this warrior, small in stature and of few
               words, but desperate and irresistible in the fight. One alone was spared in
               consequence of special signals from the gods.
   The Cadmeians, assisted by
               their allies the Phocaeans and the Phlegyae, marched
               out to resist the invaders, and fought a battle near the Ismenian hill, in which they were defeated and forced to retire within the walls. The
               prophet Teiresias acquainted them that if Menoekeus,
               son of Kreon, would offer himself as a victim to Ares, victory would be assured
               to Thebes. The generous youth, as soon as he learnt that his life was to be the
               price of safety to his country, went and slew himself before the gates. The
               heroes along with Adrastus now commenced a vigorous attack upon the town, each
               of the seven selecting one of the gates to assault. The contest was long and
               strenuously maintained but the devotion of Menoekeus had procured for the Thebans the protection of the gods. Parthenopaeus was killed with a stone by Periklymenus; and when the
               furious Kapaneus, having planted a scaling-ladder, had mounted the walls, he
               was smitten by a thunderbolt from Zeus and cast down dead upon the earth. This
               event struck terror into the Argeians, and Adrastus
               called back his troops from the attack. The Thebans now sallied forth to pursue
               them, when Eteokles, arresting the battle, proposed
               to decide the controversy by single combat with his brother. The challenge,
               eagerly accepted by Polynikes, was agreed to by
               Adrastus: a single combat ensued between the two brothers, in which both were
               exasperated to fury and both ultimately slain by each other's hand. This equal
               termination left the result of the general contest still undetermined, and the
               bulk of the two armies renewed the fight. In the sanguinary struggle which
               ensued the sons of Astakus on the Theban side
               displayed the most conspicuous and successful valor. One of them, Melanippus, mortally wounded Tydeus — while two others, Leades and Amphidikus,
               killed Eteoklus and Hippomedon.
               Amphiaraus avenged Tydeus by killing Melanippus; but unable to arrest the rout of the army, he
               fled with the rest, closely pursued by Periklymenus.
               The latter was about to pierce him with his spear, when the beneficence of Zeus
               rescued him from this disgrace—miraculously opening the earth under him, so
               that Amphiaraus with his chariot and horses was received unscathed into her
               bosom. The exact spot where this memorable incident happened was indicated by a
               sepulchral building, and shown by the Thebans down to the days of Pausanias—its
               sanctity being attested by the fact, that no animal would consent to touch the
               herbage which grew within the sacred inclosure.
               Amphiaraus, rendered immortal by Zeus, was worshipped as a god at Argos, at
               Thebes and at Orepus —and for many centuries gave
               answers at his oracle to the questions of the pious applicant.
   Adrastus, thus deprived of the prophet and warrior
               whom he regarded as “the eye of his army”, and having seen the other chiefs
               killed in the disastrous fight, was forced to take flight singly, and was
               preserved by the matchless swiftness of his horse Areion, the offspring of
               Poseidon. He reached Argos on his return, bringing with him nothing except “his
               garments of woe and his black-manned steed”.
                ANTIGONE
                Kreon, father of the heroic youth Menoekeus,
               succeeding to the administration of Thebes after the death of the two hostile
               brothers and the repulse of Adrastus, caused Eteokles to be buried with distinguished honor, but cast out ignominiously the body of Polynikes as a traitor to his country, forbidding everyone
               on pain of death to consign it to the tomb. He likewise refused permission to
               Adrastus to inter the bodies of his fallen comrades. This proceeding, so
               offensive to Grecian feeling, gave rise to two further tales; one of them at
               least of the highest pathos and interest. Antigone, the sister of Polynikes, heard with indignation the revolting edict
               consigning her brother’s body to the dogs and vultures, and depriving it of
               those rites which were considered essential to the repose of the dead. Unmoved
               by the dissuading counsel of an affectionate but timid sister, and unable to
               procure assistance, she determined to brave the hazard and to bury the body
               with her own hands. She was detected in the act; and Kreon, though forewarned
               by Teiresias of the consequences, gave orders that she should be buried alive,
               as having deliberately set at naught the solemn edict of the city. His son
               Haemon, to whom she was engaged to be married, in vain interceded for her life.
               In an agony of despair he slew himself in the sepulcher to which the living
               Antigone had been consigned; and his mother Eurydike, the wife of Kreon,
               inconsolable for his death, perished by her own hand. And thus the new light
               which seemed to be springing up over the last remaining scion of the devoted
               family of Oedipus, is extinguished amidst gloom and horrors—which overshadowed
               also the house and dynasty of Kreon.
   The other tale stands more apart from the original
               legend, and seems to have had its origin in the patriotic pride of the
               Athenians. Adrastus, unable to obtain permission from the Thebans to inter the
               fallen chieftains, presented himself in suppliant guise, accompanied by their
               disconsolate mothers, to Theseus at Eleusis. He implored the Athenian warrior
               to extort from the perverse Thebans that last melancholy privilege which no
               decent or pious Greeks ever thought of withholding, and thus to stand forth as
               the champion of Grecian public morality in one of its most essential points,
               not less than of the rights of the subterranean gods. The Thebans obstinately
               persisting in their refusal, Theseus undertook an expedition against their
               city, vanquished them in the field, and compelled them by force of arms to
               permit the sepulture of their fallen enemies. This chivalrous interposition,
               celebrated in one of the preserved dramas of Euripides, formed a subject of
               glorious recollection to the Athenians throughout the historical age: their
               orators dwelt upon it in terms of animated panegyric; and it seems to have been
               accepted as a real fact of the past time, with no less implicit conviction than
               the battle of Marathon. But the Thebans, though equally persuaded of the truth
               of the main story, dissented from the Athenian version of it, maintaining that
               they had given up the bodies for sepulture voluntarily and of their own accord.
               The tomb of the chieftains was shown near Eleusis even ill the days of
               Pausanias.
                SECOND EXPEDITION.—THE EPIGONI.
                The defeat of the seven chiefs before Thebes was amply
               avenged by their sons, again under the guidance of Adrastus: Egialeus son of Adrastus, Thersander son of Polynikes, Alkmaeon and
               Amphilochus, sons of Amphiaraus, Diomedes son of Tydeus, Sthenelus son of Kapaneus, Promachus son of Parthenopaeus, and Euryalus son of Mekistheus, joined in this expedition. Though all these
               youthful warriors, called the Epigoni, took part in the expedition, the grand
               and prominent place appears to have been occupied by Alkmaeon,
               son of Amphiaraus. Assistance was given to them from Corinth and Megara, as
               well as from Messena and Arcadia; while Zeus manifested his favorable
               dispositions by signals not to be mistaken. At the river Glisas the Epigoni were met by the Theban in arms, and a battle took place in which
               the latter were completely defeated. Laodamas, son of Eteokles,
               killed Egialeus, son of Adrastus; but he and his army
               were routed and driven within the walls by the valor and energy of Alkmaeon. The defeated Cadmeians consulted the prophet Teiresias, who informed them that the gods had declared
               for their enemies, and that there was no longer any hope of successful
               resistance. By his advice they sent a herald to the assailants offering to
               surrender the town, while they themselves convoyed away their wives and
               children, and fled under the command of Laodamas to the Illyrians, upon which
               the Epigoni entered Thebes, and established Thersander, son of Polynikes, on the throne.
   Adrastus, who in the former expedition had been the
               single survivor amongst so many fallen companions, now found himself the only
               exception to the general triumph and joy of the conquerors: he had lost his son Egialeus, and the violent sorrow arising from the
               event prematurely cut short his life. His soft voice and persuasive eloquence
               were proverbial in the ancient epic. He was worshipped as a hero both at Argos
               and at Sicyon, but with especial solemnity in the last-mentioned place, where
               his Heroum stood in the public agora, and where his
               exploits as well as his sufferings were celebrated periodically in lyric
               tragedies. Melanippus, son of Astakus,
               the brave defender of Thebes, who had slain both Tydeus and Mekistheus, was worshipped with no less solemnity
               by the Thebans. The enmity of these two heroes rendered it impossible for both
               of them to be worshipped close upon the same spot. Accordingly it came to pass
               during the historical period, about the time of the Solonian legislation at
               Athens, that Kleisthenes, despot of Sicyon, wishing to banish the hero Adrastus
               and abolish the religious solemnities celebrated in honor of the latter by the
               Sicyonians, first applied to the Delphian oracle for permission to carry this
               banishment into effect directly and forcibly. That permission being refused, ho
               next sent to Thebes an intimation that he was anxious to introduce their hero Melanippus into Sicyon. The Thebans willingly consented,
               and he assigned to the new hero a consecrated spot in the strongest and most
               commanding portion of the Sicyonian prytaneium. He did this (says the historian) “knowing that
               Adrastus would forthwith go away of his own accord; since Melanippus was of all persons the most odious to him, as having slain both his son-in-law
               and his brother”. Kleisthenes moreover diverted the festivals and sacrifices
               which had been offered to Adrastus, to the newly established hero Melanippus; and the lyric tragedies from the worship of
               Adrastus to that of Dionysus. But his dynasty did not long continue after his
               decease, and the Sicyonians then reestablished their ancient solemnities.
   Near the Proetid gate of Thebes were seen the tombs of
               two combatants who had hated each other during life even more than Adrastus and Melanippus the two brothers Eteokles and Polynikes. Even as heroes and objects of worship,
               they still continued to manifest their inextinguishable hostility: those who
               offered sacrifices to them observed that the flame and the smoke from the two
               adjoining altars abhorred all communion, and flew off in directions exactly
               opposite. The Theban exegetes assured Pausanias of this fact. And though he did
               not himself witness it, yet having seen with his own eyes a miracle not very
               dissimilar at Pionis in Mysia, he had no difficulty
               in crediting their assertion.
   ALKMAEON
                Amphiaraus when forced into the first attack of
               Thebes—against his own foreknowledge and against the warnings of the gods had
               enjoined his sons Alkmaeon and Amphilochus not only
               to avenge his death upon the Thebans, but also to punish the treachery of their
               mother, “Eriphyle, the destroyer of her husband”. In
               obedience to this command, and having obtained the sanction of the Delphian
               oracle, Alkmaeon slew his mother; but the awful
               Erinnys, the avenger of matricide, inflicted on him a long and terrible
               punishment, depriving him of his reason, and chasing him about from place to
               place without the possibility of repose or peace of mind. He craved protection
               and cure from the god at Delphi, who required him to dedicate at the temple, as
               an offering, the precious necklace of Cadmus, that irresistible bribe which had
               originally corrupted Eriphyle. He further intimated
               to the unhappy sufferer, that though the whole earth was tainted with his
               crime, and had become uninhabitable for him, yet there was a spot of ground
               which was not under the eye of the sun at the time when the matricide was
               committed, and where therefore Alkmaeon yet might
               find a tranquil shelter. The promise was realized at the mouth of the river
               Achelous, whose turbid stream was perpetually depositing new earth and forming
               additional islands. Upon one of these, near Eniadae, Alkmaeon settled, permanently and in peace: he became the
               primitive hero of Acarnania, to which his son Acarnan gave name. The necklace
               was found among the treasures of Delphi, together with that which had been
               given by Aphrodite to Helen, by the Phokian plunderers who stripped the temple in the time of Philip of Macedon. The Phokian women quarreled about these valuable ornaments: and
               we are told that the necklace of Eriphyle was
               allotted to a woman of gloomy and malignant disposition, who ended by putting
               her husband to death; that of Helen to a beautiful but volatile wife, who
               abandoned her husband from preference for a young Epirot.
   There were several other legends respecting the
               distracted Alkmaeon, either appropriated or invented
               by the Attic tragedians. He went to Phegeus, king of Psophis in Arcadia, whose daughter Arsinoe he married,
               giving as a nuptial present the necklace of Eriphyle.
               Being however unable to remain there, in consequence of the unremitting
               persecutions of the maternal Erinnys, he sought shelter at the residence of
               king Acheous, whose daughter Kallirhoe he made his wife, and on whose soil he obtained repose. But Kallirhoe would not be satisfied without the possession of the necklace of Eriphyle, and Alkmaeon went back
               to Psophis to fetch it, where Phegeus and his sons slew him. He had left twin sons, infants, with Kallirhoe,
               who prayed fervently to Zeus that they might be preternaturally invested with
               immediate manhood, in order to revenge the murder of their father. Her prayer
               was granted, and her sons Amphoterus and Acarnan, having instantaneously sprung
               up to manhood, proceeded into Arcadia, slew the murderers of their father, and
               brought away the necklace of Eriphyle, which they
               carried to Delphi
   Euripides deviated still more widely from the ancient
               epic, by making Alkmaeon the husband of Manto,
               daughter of Teiresias, and the father of Amphilochus. According to the Cyclic Thebais, Manto was consigned by the victorious Epigoni as a
               special offering to the Delphian god; and Amphilochus was son of Amphiaraus,
               not son of Alkmaeon. He was the eponymous hero of the
               town called the Amphilochian Argos, in Acarnania, on
               the shore of the Gulf of Ambrakia. Thucydides tells
               us that he went thither on his return from the Trojan war, being dissatisfied
               with the state of affairs which he found at the Peloponnesian Argos. The
               Acarnanians were remarkable for the numerous prophets which they supplied to
               the rest of Greece: their heroes were naturally drawn from the great prophetic race
               of the Melampodids.
   Thus ends the legend of the two sieges of Thebes; the
               greatest event, except the siege of Troy, in the ancient epic; the greatest
               enterprise of war, between Greeks and Greeks, during the time of those who are
               called the Heroes.
                
 
 CHAPTER XV . LEGEND OF TROY.
                  
            
 
 
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