Greek Women by Mitchell Carroll - HTML preview

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"the longings and the groans of Helen"; and in subtly suggesting how

inevitable are the chains with which Aphrodite has bound her, the poet

wins for her our sympathy and admiration. Homer nowhere tells us of the

reconciliation of Menelaus and Helen, after the fall of Troy; but in the

Odyssey he presents a beautiful picture of Helen in Sparta, a queen once

more, beloved of husband and attendants, and presiding over her palace

with courtly grace and dignity; and in the prophecy of Proteus, the Old

Man of the Sea, the destiny of the fair queen is suggested in that of

her faithful spouse: "But thou, Menelaus, son of Zeus, art not ordained

to die and meet thy fate in Argos, the pasture land of horses; for the

deathless gods will convey thee to the Elysian plains and to the world's

end, where is Rhadamanthus of the fair hair, where life is easiest for

men. No snow is there, nor yet great storm, nor any rain, but always

ocean sendeth forth the breeze of the shrill blast to blow cool on men;

yea, for thou hast Helen to wife, and thereby they deem thee son to

Zeus."

Thus, because wedded to Zeus-begotten Helen, Menelaus himself is

deathless and immortal, and Homer meant, no doubt, to picture the royal

couple passing together in the Isles of the Blest the aeons of eternity.

Homer provided the literary types for all succeeding Greek poets, and it

is but natural that so bewitching a conception as Helen should be

frequently portrayed and adopted. But with the change in form of

government from monarchy to oligarchy, and from oligarchy to democracy,

the old epic conception of heroes and heroines frequently suffers

disparagement. In later periods, men began to meditate on moral

questions, and poets who sought to weigh the problems of human life and

destiny saw in Helen's career the old, old story of sin and sufering,

and they could not with Homeric chivalry gloze over that fatal step

which caused the wreck of empires and brought infinite woes to men.

Stesichorus was the first poet to charge Helen with all the guilt and

suffering of Hellas and of Troy; but for this offence against the

daughter of Zeus, says tradition, he was smitten with blindness, and did

not recover his sight until he had written the recantation beginning:

"Not true is that tale; nor didst thou journey in benched ships, nor

come to town of Troy,"--in which he adopted the theory that the real

Helen remained in Egypt, while a phantom accompanied Paris to Troy.

AEschylus searches into the dire consequences of Helen's sin, and on her

shoulders lays all the sufferings of Agamemnon and his descendants.

"Rightly is she called Helen," says he; "a hell of ships, hell of men,

hell of cities." He regards her as the very incarnation of evil, the

curse of two great nations. Yet even stern AEschylus yields due reverence

to her all-conquering beauty:

"Ah! silent, see she stands;

Each glowing tint, each radiant grace, That charm th' enraptur'd eye, we trace; And still the blooming form commands,

Still honor'd, still ador'd,

Though careless of her former loves,

Far o'er the rolling sea the wanton roves."

He also represents her forsaken husband ever dreaming of her, enraptured

of her beauty:

"Oft as short slumbers close his eyes, His sad soul sooth'd to rest,

The dream-created visions rise

With all her charms imprest:

But vain th' ideal scene that smiles

With rapt'rous love and warm delight;

Vain his fond hopes; his eager arms

The fleeting form beguiles,

On sleep's quick pinions passing light."

AEschylus is not the only one of the early dramatists to whom Helen

furnished a worthy theme; the titles of four lost plays show that

Sophocles wrote of the Argive queen. There is no means of knowing,

however, how this master dealt with the romance. Judging from his

treatment of the Antigone legend, it is probable that Sophocles treated

Helen as a woman of rare beauty and power, more sinned against than

sinning, and subjected her character to the most profound analysis.

While AEschylus deprived Helen of something of the delicacy and charm

with which Homer had invested her, Euripides, in a number of his plays,

goes even further, and brings her down to the level of common life. Upon

her beautiful head were heaped the reproaches of the unfortunate maidens

and matrons of Greece and Troy for the woes they had to suffer, and we

must not always take the sentiments of a Hecuba or a Clytemnestra as

expressing the poet's own convictions. In the _Daughters of Troy_, he

represents her in violent debate with her mother-in-law, Hecuba, before

Menelaus, leaving with the reader the impression that she is a guilty,

wilful woman of ignoble traits, and in other plays he lays on her the

load of guilt for all the dire consequences of her act; yet in his

treatment of Helen there is always an ethereal element, hard to define,

but recognizable. She causes ruin and destruction, she is roundly abused

and reproached, yet she herself does not deal in invective and is proof

against all physical ill, being finally deified as the daughter of Zeus,

while suffering is invariably the fate of those who abuse and censure

her. And, like Stesichorus, Euripides in his old age makes a

recantation. In the _Helen_, he follows the Stesichorean version, and

dramatizes the legend that, after she was promised to Paris by

Aphrodite, Hera in revenge fashioned like to Queen Helen a breathing

phantom out of cloud land wrought for Priam's princely son; while Hermes

caught her away and transferred her to the halls of Proteus, King of

Egypt, to keep her pure for Menelaus. Thus it was for a phantom Helen

that Greek and Trojan fought at Troy; while the real Helen passed her

days amid the palm gardens of Egypt, eagerly awaiting the return of

Menelaus, and bewailing her ill name, though she was clean of sin. After

the war, she is happily reunited with her lord.

It is hard, however, to besmirch a conception of ideal beauty, and later

writers, casting aside the imputations of the dramatists, returned to

the Homeric type. The Greek rhetoricians found in Helen a fruitful

subject for panegyric, and made her synonymous with the Greek ideal of

beauty and feminine perfection. Isocrates praises her as the incarnation

of ideal loveliness and grace; beauty is all powerful, he says, and the

Helen legend shows how beauty is the most desirable of all human gifts.

Theocritus, in his exquisite _Epithalamium_, pays an unalloyed tribute

to her beauty and goodness. She is "peerless among all Achaean women that

walk the earth;--rose-red Helen, the glory of Lacedaemon;--no one is so

gifted as she in goodly handiwork;--yea, and of a truth, none other

smites the lyre, hymning Artemis and broad-breasted Athena, with such

skill as Helen, within whose eyes dwell all the Loves."

Quintus Smyrnaeus, of the fourth century of our era, who wrote a

_Post-Homerica_, emphasizes the demonic influence that controlled the

fate of Helen, and lays her frailty to the charge of Aphrodite. He gives

a beautiful picture of the queen as she is being led to the ships of the

Achaeans: "Now, Helen lamented not, but shame dwelt in her dark eyes and

reddened her lovely cheeks ... while round her the people marvelled as

they beheld the flawless grace and winsome beauty of the woman, and none

dared upbraid her with secret taunt or open rebuke. Nay, as she had been

a goddess, they beheld her gladly, for dear and desired was she in their

sight."

Thus the Helen legend became the allegory of Greek beauty, and so

exquisite an ideal, uplifting the spirit and satisfying one's longing

for higher things, strikes a responsive chord in the hearts of lovers of

beauty in every clime. The romance of Helen, after lying dormant for

centuries, came to life again in the legend of Faust.

Marlowe treated

merely the external phases of the Faust legend; Goethe allegorized the

whole, and in the loves of Faust and Helen symbolized the passion of the

Renaissance for the Greek ideal of beauty; the fruit of the union of the

two is Euphorion, the genius of romantic art. Nor has Helen exerted less

influence on modern English poets. Landor, in numerous poems, portrays

the sweetness of her character and the omnipotence of her beauty and

charm; Swinburne dwells on the innocence and joyfulness of her

childhood; Tennyson speaks of her as

"A daughter of the gods, divinely tall, And most divinely fair;"

and Andrew Lang has written a lengthy poem on the Helen legend, in which

he ascribes her frailty to the irresistible power of Aphrodite. Thus

Homer and the Homeric Age are inextricably entwined about the name of

Helen. It is significant in the study of Greek women that at the very

dawn of Greek civilization we should find such an ideal conception of

womanhood--one that universally captivates the fancy and has exerted an

influence through all succeeding ages.

Let us now pause a moment to contemplate the most lovable of all the

women of Homer, Hector's spouse, white-armed Andromache.

Homer does not

devote much space to her--only the famous parting scene and the two

lamentations which she utters over her fallen husband.

Yet, as the ideal

type of the soldier's wife, the loving mother, she has taken a hold on

the modern imagination and is the best known of all the female

characters of Greek epos. We know that she must have been beautiful,

though Homer uses only one epithet to describe her; we know that she

must have been brave and devoted and domestic, for Homer has painted for

us an ideal picture which portrays her with all these and many other

lovable attributes. Andromache is neither Trojan nor Greek; she is

universal; and wherever there are scenes of husband parted from wife, of

uncertainty as to the issue of the combat and the destiny of the

children, Andromache will be the great prototype.

Andromache feels in

her heart that sacred Ilium is doomed, and, in those cruel times when

might was right, she knew but too well what was to be the fate of

herself and the lad Astyanax. Euripides tells us how the forebodings of

Andromache came true, and dwells on those sad days for the daughters of

Troy when the mailed hand of the Achaeans carried them off captive after

the fall of the city and determined their destiny by lot.

Andromache was apportioned to Neoptolemus, Achilles's valiant son, and

in Euripides's _Daughters of Troy_ she reappears, with her child in her

arms, haled forth to her new bondage. Sadly she bewails her lost Hector,

who could have warded off from her the curse of thraldom. The Greek

herald, Talthybius, demands from her the lad Astyanax, whom the Greeks

have decided to hurl from the battlements of Troy. The child is

ruthlessly torn from his mother's embrace, and she is led off to the

hollow ships. Neoptolemus takes her over sea to his home in Thessaly,

and loves her and treats her with a kindness and consideration that are

sweetly perfect. To him she bears a son in her captivity; but not of her

own will does she share his couch, for her heart is true to the memory

of Hector. After many years, Neoptolemus weds Hermione, daughter of

Menelaus and Helen, a princess of Sparta. To them no child is born, and

Hermione's heart is filled with anger and jealousy toward the thrall,

whom her husband still treats tenderly. With her father, Menelaus,

Hermione, during Neoptolemus's absence, plots the destruction of

Andromache and her boy, but the aged Peleus protects the defenceless

ones. Neoptolemus is slain at Delphi, and Thetis, who appears at the

close of the _Andromache_, thus solves the problem of fate:

"And that war-captive dame, Andromache, In the Molossian land must find a home In lawful wedlock joined to Helenus,

With that child who alone is left alive Of AEacus' line. And kings Molossian

From him one after other long shall reign In bliss."

Readers of Virgil will recall how AEneas found Andromache in the

Molossian land, and how her heart yearned for the lad Ascanius, who

reminded her of the lost Astyanax. Euripides has been true, in the main,

to the Homeric conception of Andromache, and endows her in her captivity

with the same womanliness and domestic traits that won our hearts in the

Iliad; nevertheless, there is about her the infinite sadness that is

natural to one who has lost all that life holds dear.

Yet Euripides

falls so infinitely below the master that the picture which will abide

longest in the memory is the parting scene in the Iliad.

Homer endows his minor characters with an interest that is no less real

to us than that given to Helen and Andromache. Of these lesser

characters, a few stand out insistent of our notice. At the threshold of

the story, Chryseis and Briseis appear as the innocent causes of the

quarrel of the chieftains. Chryseis is still a maiden, as far as can be

inferred, and had not lost kindred and friends when taken captive; for

her father, the priest of sacred Chryse, comes to beg her release, with

boundless ransoms. Hence her day of captivity is brief, and the aged

father joyously welcomes his beloved daughter. She must have been

beautiful and clever, for Agamemnon prized her far above Clytemnestra.

The story of Briseis is a much sadder one, and graphically illustrates

the fate of a gentlewoman who fell into the hands of the foe. She was a

captive widow, husband and kindred having been slain by Achilles. But

her captor loved her devotedly, and to him she was a wife in all but in

name; and Patroclus had promised her that she should in time become the

wedded wife of Achilles. The young warrior weeps bitterly when she is

taken from him, but at the close of the Iliad we see them happily

reunited. She is remembered because of the great passions that gathered

about her.

Homer presents two pictures of heroic motherhood in sorrow,--Hecuba and

Thetis; for the latter, though a goddess, is perfectly human in her

devotion to her fated son, Achilles. To her he goes for comfort, and she

is ever resourceful in responding to his wants. She weeps over his

destiny, but, since he has chosen the better part, she nobly supports

him in every struggle. Hecuba is truly the companion of her husband,

King Priam, associated with him in his projects, and sharing his

counsels. She has borne him nineteen children, and these she has seen

slain, one after another, by the hand of the foe. Hector is her favorite

son, in whose courage she recognizes the bulwark of Ilium. When she sees

him exposed to certain death, her anxiety overcomes her pride and she

beseeches him to come within the walls; and when at last her son has

succumbed, we find in her the same mingling of grief and of pride. Her

wild despair seems to be assuaged by the thought that her son died

gloriously. This heroic sentiment sustains her before the corpse of

Hector, and even in her lamentation she voices her calm courage.

IV

WOMEN OF THE ODYSSEY

Ten years have passed since the fall of Ilium, and the various heroes of

the Greeks have met with diverse fortunes. Agamemnon, king of men, has

returned to his fatherland, but merely to find treason and death at the

hands of AEgisthus, the new lord of Clytemnestra, his wife. Menelaus,

after long wanderings, especially in Egypt, has reestablished his

kingdom in Sparta, with Helen as his queen. Odysseus, King of Ithaca,

had the longest and most perilous voyage homeward, and, after meeting

with various misadventures, has been detained for nearly eight long

years, consuming his own heart, in the island paradise of Calypso,

Meanwhile, on his own island, Ithaca, things have begun to go amiss. The

island chiefs, men of the younger generation, begin to woo Penelope and

to harass her son, Telemachus. The wooers, after being rebuffed for

years by the fair queen, are becoming insolent, quartering themselves

upon her, and devouring her substance. At this time the action of the

Odyssey begins.

The determined time has now arrived when, by the counsels of the gods,

Odysseus is to be brought home to free his house, to avenge himself on

the wooers, and to recover his kingdom, Pallas Athena is the chief

agent in the restoration of Odysseus to his fatherland.

She beseeches

Zeus that he may be delivered, and in accordance with this prayer Hermes

is sent to Calypso to bid her release Odysseus.

Meanwhile, the goddess,

in human form, visits Telemachus in Ithaca, and urges the young prince

to withstand the suitors who are devastating his house, and to go in

search of his father. Touched by the words of the goddess, youth rapidly

gives way to manhood, and Telemachus determines to assert his rights and

to find his father.

After the departure of the goddess, the prince enters the court where

the suitors are gathered, listening to the singing of the renowned

minstrel Phemius; and his song was of the pitiful return of the Achaeans.

We now have our first vision of discreet Penelope. From her upper

chamber she hears the glorious strain, and she descends the high stairs

from her apartments, accompanied by two of her handmaids. "Now, when the

fair lady had come unto the wooers, she stood by the doorpost of the

well-builded roof, holding up her glistening tire before her face; and a

faithful maiden stood on either side of her." She begs Phemius to cease

from this sorrowful strain, which wastes her heart within her breast,

since to her, above all women, hath come a sorrow comfortless, because

she holds in constant memory so dear a head,--even that man whose fame

is noised abroad from Hellas to mid-Argos. Telemachus gently rebukes his

mother for interrupting the song of the minstrel, and bids her return to

her chamber and to her own housewiferies, the loom and distaff, and bid

the handmaids ply their tasks. Then in amaze she goes back to her

chamber, for she lays up the wise saying of her son in her heart. She

ascends to the upper chamber with the women, her handmaids, and there

bewails Odysseus, her dear lord, till gray-eyed Athena casts sweet sleep

upon her eyelids.

Telemachus begins to assert himself before the violent suitors. When

night falls and each goes to his own house to lie down to rest, the

young prince is attended to his chamber by the aged Euryclea, who had

nursed him when a little one. She bears the burning torches, and

prepares the chamber for her young master; and when he takes off his

soft doublet, she folds and smooths it and hangs it on a pin by the

jointed bedstead. Then she goes forth from the room, and there, all

night long, wrapped in a fleece of wool, Telemachus meditates in his

heart upon the journey that Athena has shown him.

The next day, after a stormy meeting of the assembly, Telemachus

secretly sets sail for Pylus, accompanied by the goddess Athena, in the

form of Mentor. Only Euryclea, the youth's faithful nurse, knows of his

journey, and she has taken a great oath not to reveal it to his mother

till the eleventh or twelfth day. Nestor graciously receives Telemachus

at Pylus, and, as he himself has no news of Odysseus, sends him on to

Sparta, to King Menelaus, in the company of his own son, Pisistratus.

The young men are graciously received by Menelaus and Helen, and

Telemachus learns that Odysseus was a captive on an island of the deep

in the halls of the nymph Calypso.

Meanwhile, the suitors in Ithaca learn of Telemachus's departure and lay

an ambush to intercept him on his return. Discreet Penelope, too, learns

by chance of his absence, and of the plots of the wooers, and her heart

melts within her at the thought of danger to her child.

The good nurse

Euryclea tells her of Telemachus's plan, and lulls her queen's grief.

Penelope returns to her chamber and prays to Athena to save her dear son

and ward off from him the malice of the suitors. As she lies there in

her upper chamber, fasting, and tasting neither meat nor drink, and

musing over the fate of her dear son, gray-eyed Athena makes a phantom

in the likeness of Penelope's sister, Iphthime, and sends her to comfort

Penelope amid her sorrow and lamenting. Reassured by the phantom

concerning her son, the devoted matron begs for news of her husband,

pleading to know whether he be alive or dead, but this information is

denied her. Yet the heart of the disconsolate wife and mother is

cheered, so sweet was the vision that came to her in the dead of night.

Homer now transports us to an assembly of the gods.

Athena tells the

tale of the many woes of Odysseus, and Zeus commands Hermes, the

messenger god, to bid Calypso release Odysseus and start him on his

voyage to the Phaeacians, who are destined to return the wanderer to his

own dear country. Hermes quickly reaches the far-off isle of Ogygia,

where was the grotto of the nymph of the braided tresses. The fair

goddess at once knows him, and, after giving him entertainment, inquires

his message. Calypso regretfully and well-nigh rebelliously receives the

command of Zeus, and complains of the jealousy of the gods, who forbid

goddesses openly to mate with men. Yet, as none can make void the

purpose of Zeus, she will obey the command. Hermes departs, and the

nymph goes on her way to the great-hearted Odysseus. She finds him

sitting on the shore; his eyes were never dry of tears, his sweet life

was ebbing away as he mourned for his return, and through his tears he

looked wistfully over the unharvested deep. Calypso bids him sorrow no

more, for she will send him away, and directs him how to prepare a barge

on which to make the voyage. Four days are devoted to the making of the

barge, and on the fifth the goddess sends him on his way, providing him

with food and drink for his journey, and causing a gentle wind to blow.

Goodly Odysseus joyously sets his sail to the breeze, and keeps his eye

on the star Orion, which the fair goddess had bidden him to keep ever on

his left as he traverses the deep.

Seventeen days he sails placidly along, and on the eighteenth appear the

shadowy hills of the land of the Phaeacians, whither he is bound. Then

spies him his old enemy, Poseidon, and the earth shaker gathers the

clouds and rouses the storms, and down speeds night from heaven. The

great waves smite down upon Odysseus, and he loses the helm from his

hand and the mast is broken. He is thrown from his raft; but, again

clutching it, clambers upon it, avoiding grim death.

Woman is again

destined to be the means of salvation for the hero. Ino of the fair

ankles, daughter of Cadmus, in time past a mortal maiden, but now a sea

nymph, Leucothea, marks his dire straits and takes pity upon him, and

gives him her veil to wind about him when he throws himself into the

deep. When his raft is at last broken asunder, he wraps the veil about

him; and for two days and nights it bears him up until at length he

makes the rugged shore. Throwing the veil into the stream, to be wafted

back to fair-ankled Ino, Odysseus, bruised and battered, clambers among

the reeds on the bank. He finds a resting place underneath two olive

trees, and Athena