In the temple of Apollo at Delphi
there dwelt a fair youth, whose name was Ion.
Tall he was and comely, like to the son of a King,
but of his birth no man knew anything; for he had
been laid, being yet a babe, at the door of the temple,
and the priestess had brought him up for her son.
So he had served the God from a child, being fed from
the altar and from the gifts of the strangers that
were wont to resort to the place. Now it was
the lad’s custom to rise early in the morning
and to sweep the temple with boughs of bay, and to
sprinkle it with water from the fountain of Castalia.
Also he was wont to keep the birds from the temple for
they would come from the woods of Parnassus hard by,
eagles, and swans, and others lest they
should settle on the pinnacles or defile the altar
with their prey. And for this end he carried arrows
and a bow, slaying the birds if need was, but rather
seeking to frighten them away, for he knew that some
carried messages from the Gods to mortal men, and
warned them of things to come, even as did Apollo that
was his master.
Now it befell on a day, when he had
done his office in the temple, that there drew near
to the doors a company of women. Maidens they
were from the land of Attica, and they had come with
Creuesa, who was Queen of the country. And first
they marvelled at the graved work that was on the
doors and in the porch, for some cunning workmen had
wrought thereon Hercules slaying the great dragon
of Lerna, and Iolaues standing with a torch to sear
that which he cut with his knife. Also Bellerophon
was to be seen on a horse with wings, slaying the
Chimaera; and Pallas fighting against the Sons of
Earth, with the thunderbolt of her father Zeus and
the shield of the Gorgon head. And when they had
made an end of seeing these things came the Queen
Creuesa herself and had speech with Ion. And
she told him that she was the daughter of Erechtheus,
King of Athens, and that she was married to Xuthus,
a Prince from the island of Pelops. And when
Ion would know how it had come to pass that Xuthus,
being a stranger and a foreigner, had received her
that was a Princess of the land in marriage, she said
that the Prince had fought for the men of Athens against
the land of Euboea, and had subdued it, and so had
won for himself this reward. Also when the youth
would know for what end she had come to the oracles
of Delphi, she said that she had come because having
been long married she was yet childless, and that her
husband also was with her, and that he was even then
making inquiry about this same matter in the cave
of Trophonius. For there also was an oracle giving
answers to men about things to come. Then the
Queen asked Ion of his estate, and heard from him
that the priestess of Apollo had brought him up, having
found him laid at the door of the temple.
After these things came King Xuthus
himself, who, after he had greeted the Queen, said
that Trophonius would not indeed go before the answer
of Apollo, yet promised this, that he should not go
to his home childless. So the two went together
into the shrine that they might inquire yet further
of the matter; and Ion abode without, meditating much
on the things which these strangers had said.
But after a while the King came forth
in great joy, and when he saw the youth Ion standing
without the shrine, he caught him by the hand, and
would have thrown his arms about him, but the youth
drew back, thinking that the God had smitten him with
madness, and even would have drawn his bow against
him. Then the King set forth to him the answer
that Apollo had given him. For the God had said,
“Thou art not childless as thou thinkest, but
the father of a fair son. And thy son is he whom
first thou shalt meet going forth from my shrine.”
“And now,” said the King, “thou
art he whom first I meet coming forth, and I claim
thee to be my son.” And when Ion would
know how this might be, the King said that in days
past, before he had married the Princess Creuesa, being
young and foolish, he had taken to wife a maiden of
low degree in this very city of Delphi, and that if
she had borne him a son for that he knew
not, having left her long since the child
would bear such age as Ion. And when Ion heard
this he was glad, for he had feared lest haply he should
be found to be the son of some slave. Only he
said to himself, “O my dear mother, shall I
ever see thee? For now do I long more than ever
to look upon thee; but haply thou art dead and this
may never be.”
And the maidens of Athens standing
by heard the talk between the two, and said, “It
is well for the people that the royal house should
prosper. Yet it had pleased us well that our lady
the Queen should have hope of offspring, and that
the house of Erechtheus should not be left without
an heir.”
Then said the King to Ion, “My
son, it is well both with thee and me, for I have
found that which I most desired and thou also.
And as to that which thou now sayest about thy mother,
haply, if only we have patience, this also shall be
as thou wouldst have it. But now I would have
thee leave the temple of Apollo and this thy subsistence
of alms, and come with me to the great city of Athens,
where thou shalt have great wealth, and in due time
this sceptre that I hold. But why art thou silent
and castest thine eyes to the ground? Suddenly
art thou changed from joy to sorrow, and the heart
of thy father misgiveth him.”
Then spoke Ion, saying, “My
father, the aspect of many things changeth according
as a man seeth them, whether it be near or afar off.
Right glad was I to find a father in thee; but as
to what else thou sayest, hearken to me. Men
say that the Athenians are a people that have dwelt
in the land from the beginning. Wherefore I shall
have among them a double reproach, being both basely
born and also a foreigner. And if I come to high
place in the state, they that are beneath me shall
hate me, seeing that men love not those that are above
them. Also those that are of high account among
the citizens shall have much jealousy against me,
for such men have ever great enmity against their rivals.
Think also of thy house, how matters shall stand there.
For before, thy wife the Queen shared with thee this
reproach of childlessness, but now will she stand
alone and bear her sorrow by herself. How then
shall she not hate me when she seeth me at thy right
hand? And so shalt thou either for love of her
go back from what thou hast promised to me, or else,
seeking my profit, shalt trouble thine own house.
For thou knowest what deadly deeds with the sword
and with poison women holding themselves to be wronged
have wrought against their husbands. And of a
truth, my father, I hold that thy wife, seeing that
she groweth old without hope of children, is most
miserable among women. And then as to kingship,
I count that this is more pleasant to regard from
afar than to possess; for how can he be happy who
liveth in daily fear of death? And if thou sayest
that great store of wealth out-weigheth all other things,
and that it is pleasant to be rich, I hold otherwise.
I would have neither poverty nor riches, but to live
quietly and without trouble. For listen, my father,
to the good things that I have had in this place that
which all men count dear, even leisure; and such labour
as I did, not toilsome, and to be free from all ill
company, and to be constant in prayers to the Gods,
or in talk with men, ever consorting with new company
among such as came to inquire of the god. Surely,
my father, this life is better than that which thou
promisest to me.”
“My son,” the King made
answer, “learn to take the good which the Gods
have provided for thee. First, then, I will bring
thee to the feast which I purpose to hold in this
place as though thou wert a stranger. And afterwards
I will take thee to the city of Athens, yet not declaring
at the first thy birth, for I would not vex my wife
with my good luck, seeing that she is yet childless.
Only in time I will work with her that thou shalt
bear rule in the land with her good will. And
now call such of thy friends as thou wilt to the feast,
for thou must even bid farewell to this city of Delphi.”
And Ion made answer, “Let it
be so; only if I find not my mother, my life is nothing
worth.”
And to the maidens the King said,
“Take heed that ye keep silence on these matters,
or ye shall surely die.”
But they were much troubled in heart
for their mistress that she should be childless, while
the King her husband had found a son. Also they
doubted much whether they should not tell the Queen
the things which they had heard.
And now there was seen to come near
to the shrine an old man who had in days past been
servant to King Erechtheus; and when the Queen saw
him, she reached her hand to him, and helped him to
climb the steps of the temple, for he was very feeble
with age. And when he was come to the top, the
Queen turned her to the maidens that stood by and inquired
of them whether they knew aught of the answer which
the God had given to her husband in the matter of
his childlessness. But they were loath to make
answer, remembering that the King had bidden them to
be silent under pain of death; but at the last, for
the thing pleased them not, both for pity of their
mistress and also for hatred that a stranger should
be King in Athens, they said, “O lady, thou must
never hold a child in thy arms or nurse a babe at
thy breast.” And when the old man asked for
the Queen was distraught with grief whether
the King also shared this trouble, they said, “Not
so, old man; to him Apollo giveth a son.”
“How so?” said he; “is
this son yet to be born, or doth he live already?”
“He is a youth full grown.
For the God said, ’He whom thou shalt first
meet, coming forth from this shrine, is thy son.’
And know, lady, that this youth is he who is wont
to serve in this shrine, with whom thou talkedst at
the first. But more than this I know not; only
that thy husband is gone without thy knowledge to
hold a great feast, and that the lad sitteth thereat
in much honour.”
And when the old man heard these things
he waxed wroth and said, “Lady, there is treachery
in this matter. We are betrayed by thy husband,
and of fixed purpose set at naught, that he may drive
us out of the house of thy father, King Erechtheus.
And this I say not because I hate thy husband, but
that I love thee more. Hearken, then, to my words.
He came a stranger to the city of Athens, and took
thee to wife, and had with thee the inheritance of
thy father’s kingdom; and when he found thee
childless, he was not content to bear this reproach
with thee, but wedded secretly some slave woman, and
gave the child whom she bare to him to some citizen
of Delphi to rear for him. And the child grew
up, as thou knowest, a minister in the temple of Apollo.
And when thy husband knew that he was come to full
age he devised this device that thou and he should
come to this place, and make inquiry of the god, whether
there might be any remedy for thy childlessness.
And now thou wilt suffer the foulest wrong, for he
will bring this son of a bondwoman to be lord in thy
house. Wherefore I give thee this counsel.
Devise some device, and be it with the sword or with
poison, or with whatever thou wilt, slay thy husband
and his son, or they shall surely slay thee. For
if thou spare them thou wilt surely die. For
if there be two enemies under one roof, it must needs
be that the one perish. And now, if thou wilt,
I will do this deed for thee, and slay them at the
feast which he prepareth; for I have had sustenance
in the house of thy father to this day, for which
I would fain make this return.”
Then the Queen and the old man talked
together about the matter. And when he would
have had her slay her husband, she refused, saying
that she could not do the deed, for that she thought
of the time when he was faithful and loving to her.
But when he would have her execute vengeance on the
youth, she consented. Only she doubted how this
might be done. Then the old man cried, “Arm
thine attendants with the sword and slay him.”
“Aye,” said the Queen,
“and I would lead them myself; but where shall
I slay him?”
“Slay him,” said the old
man, “in the tent where he feasteth his friends.”
“Nay,” answered the Queen,
“the deed would be too manifest; the hands also
of slaves are ever feeble.”
Then the old man cried in a rage,
“I see thou playest the coward. Take counsel
for thyself.”
Then said the Queen, “I have
a plan in my heart that is both crafty and sure.
Listen now, and I will unfold it to thee. Thou
knowest how in time past the Giants that were the
sons of Earth made war against the Gods in the plain
of Phlegra; and that Earth, seeking to help her children,
brought forth the Gorgon; and that Pallas, the daughter
of Zeus, slew the monster. Know then that Pallas
gave to Ericthonius, who was the first King of the
land of Attica, being sprung from the earth, two drops
of the blood of the Gorgon, whereof the one hath the
power to kill whomsoever it shall touch, and the other
to heal all manner of diseases. And these she
shut in gold to keep them; and Ericthonius gave them
to King Erechtheus my father, and he, when he died,
gave them to me. And I carry them in a bracelet
on my wrist. And thou shalt take the one that
worketh death, and with it thou shalt slay this youth.”
“’Tis well thought,”
the old man made answer; “but where shall I do
the deed?”
“In Athens,” said the
Queen, “when he shall have come to my house.”
But the old man said, “That
is not well; for thou wilt have the repute of the
deed, even if thou slay him not. Slay him rather
in this place, where thou shalt be more likely to
deceive thy husband, for it must not be that he know
it.”
When the Queen heard this she said,
“Hear, then, what thou must do. Go to the
place where my husband maketh a sacrifice and a feast
following. And when the guests are even now ready
to cease from their feasting and make libations to
the Gods, drop his drop of death into the cup of him
who would lord it over my house. Of a surety if
it pass his throat he shall never come to the city
of Athens.”
So the old man went on his errand,
and as he went he said to himself, “Old foot
of mine, do this thy business as though thou wert young.
Thou hast to help the house of thy master against
an enemy. Let them that are happy talk of piety;
he that would work his adversary woe must take no
account of laws.”
But meanwhile Xuthus had bidden the
youth Ion have a care for the feast, for that he himself
had yet sacrifice to make, at which he might haply
tarry long time. Wherefore Ion set up a great
tent on poles, looking neither wholly to the south
nor to the west, but between the two. And the
tent he made foursquare, being of a hundred feet each
way, for he purposed to call the whole people of Delphi
to the feast. Then he took curtains from the
treasure-house to cover it within, very marvellous
to behold; for on them was wrought the Heaven with
all the gathering of the stars, and the Sun driving
his chariot to the west, and dark-robed Night, with
the stars following her, the Pleiades, and Orion with
his sword, and the Bear turning about the Pole, and
the bright circle of the Moon; and on the other side
the Morning chasing the stars. Also there were
tapestries from foreign land, ships fighting with ships,
and strange shapes, half men half beasts, and the
hunting of stags and lions.
But in the midst of the tent great
bowls were set for wine; and a herald bade all the
men of Delphi to the feast. But when they had
had enough of eating and drinking, the old man, the
servant of the Queen, came forward; and all men laughed
to see him how busy he was. For he took the water
that should have been mixed with the wine and used
it for the washing of hands, and burnt the incense,
and took upon himself the ordering of the cups.
And after a while he said, “Take away those cups,
and bring greater that we may be merry.”
So they brought great cups of gold and silver.
And the old man took one that was more beautiful than
the rest, and filled it to the brim and gave it to
the youth Ion, as though he would do him great honour;
but he dropped into it the deadly drop. Only
no man saw the thing that he did. But when they
were all about to drink, some one spake an evil word
to his neighbour, and Ion heard it, and having full
knowledge of augury, held it to be of ill omen, and
bade them fill another bowl; and that every one should
pour out upon the ground that which was in his cup.
And on this there came down a flight of doves, for
such dwelt in the temple of Apollo without fear, and
sipped of the wine that had been poured forth.
And all the rest drank and suffered no harm; but that
which had settled where the youth Ion had poured out
from his cup shook and reeled and screamed aloud,
and so died, being sorely rent with the pangs of death.
And when the youth saw this he cried, “Who is
it that hath plotted my death? Tell me, old man,
for thou gavest me the cup.” And he leapt
over the table and laid hands on him. And at
last the old man, being sorely pressed, unfolded the
whole matter. Then Ion gathered all the Princes
of Delphi together, and told them that the strange
woman, the daughter of Erechtheus, had plotted his
death by poison. And the sentence of the Princes
was that she should be cast down from the rock on which
their city was built, because she had sought to slay
with poison the minister of the god.
Then one who had seen the whole matter
from the beginning to the end, ran with all speed
and told it to the Queen; and she, when she heard it,
and that the officers of the people were coming to
lay hands on her, fled to the altar of Apollo, and
sat upon it in the place whereon the sacrifice was
laid; for they that flee to the altar are sacred, and
it is a sin against the god if any man touch them.
But in a short space came Ion with a troop of armed
men, breathing out threats and fury against the Queen.
And when he saw her he said, “What a viper is
this that thou hast brought forth, land of Attica!
Worse is she than the drop of Gorgon’s blood
wherewith she would have slain me. Seize her that
she may be thrown from the rock. ’Tis well
for me that I set not foot in her house in Athens;
for then had she caught me in a net, and I had surely
died. But now the altar of Apollo shall not save
her.”
And he bade the men drag her from
the holy place. But even as he spake came in
the Pythia, the priestess. And when Ion had greeted
her, asking her whether she knew how this woman had
sought to slay him, she answered that she knew it,
but that he too was fierce above measure, and that
he must not defile with blood the house whereto he
went in the city of Athens. And when he was loath
to listen to her, she said, “Seest thou this
that I hold in my hand?” Now what she held was
a basket with tufts of wool about it. “This
is that in which I found thee, long ago, a new-born
babe. And Apollo hath laid it upon me not to say
aught of this before, but now to give it into thy
hands. Take it, therefore, for the swaddling
clothes wherein thou wast wrapped are within, and find
out for thyself of what race thou art. And now,
farewell; for I love thee as a mother loveth her child.”
Then Ion said to himself, “This
is a sorrowful thing to see, this basket in which
my mother laid me long since, putting me away from
her in secret, so that I have grown up as one without
a name in this temple. The god hath dealt kindly
with me, yet hath my fortune and the fortune of my
mother been but ill. And what if I find that I
am the son of some bondwoman. It was better to
know nought than to know this. But I may not
fight against the will of the god; wherefore I will
open it and hear my past whatever it be.”
So he opened the basket, and marvelled
that it was not wasted with time, and that there was
no decay upon that which was within. But when
the Queen saw the basket, she knew it, and leapt from
where she sat upon the altar, and told him all that
was in her heart, that in time past, before she was
wedded to King Xuthus, she had borne a son to Apollo,
and had laid the babe in this basket, and with him
swaddling clothes of things which she had woven with
her own hands, and “Thou,” she said, “art
my son, whom I see after this long time.”
And when the young man doubted whether
this was so, the Queen told him the pattern of the
clothes; that there was one which she had woven being
yet a girl, not finished with skill, but like rather
to the task of one that learns, and that there was
wrought upon it the head of the Gorgon, and that it
was fringed about with snakes, like to Pallas’s
shield, the aegis. Also she said that there were
necklaces wrought like to the scales of a snake, and
a wreath of olive besides, as befitted the child of
a daughter of Athens.
Then Ion knew that the Queen was his
mother; yet was he sore perplexed, for the god had
given him as a son to King Xuthus, nor did he doubt
but that the god ever speaketh that which is true.
Then he said that he would himself inquire of Apollo.
But as he turned to go, lo! a great brightness in
the air, and the shape as of one of the dwellers in
heaven. And when he was afraid, and would have
fled with the Queen, there came a voice, saying, “Flee
not, for I am a friend and not an enemy. I am
Pallas, and I come from King Apollo with a message
to this youth and to the Queen. To Ion he saith,
’Thou art my son, whom this woman bare to me
in time past.’ And to the Queen, ’Take
this thy son with thee to the city of Athens, and
set him on the throne of thy father, for it is meet
that he, being of the race of Erechtheus, should sit
thereon. And know that he shall become a great
nation, and that his children in time to come shall
dwell in the islands of the sea, and in the lands
that border thereon, and that they shall be called
Ionians after his name. Know also that thou shalt
bear children to Xuthus Dorus and AEolus and
that these also shall become fathers of nations.’”
And when the goddess had thus spoken
she departed; and the two, Ion and Queen Creuesa,
with King Xuthus also, went to their home in great
joy and peace.