I. THE BEAR ON THE MOUNTAIN
In a sunny land in Greece called Arcadia
there lived a king and a queen who had no children.
They wanted very much to have a son who might live
to rule over Arcadia when the king was dead, and so,
as the years went by, they prayed to great Jupiter
on the mountain top that he would send them a son.
After a while a child was born to them, but it was
a little girl. The father was in a great rage
with Jupiter and everybody else.
“What is a girl good for?”
he said. “She can never do anything but
sing, and spin, and spend money. If the child
had been a boy, he might have learned to do many things,-to
ride, and to hunt, and to fight in the wars,-and
by and by he would have been king of Arcadia.
But this girl can never be a king.”
Then he called to one of his men and
bade him take the babe out to a mountain where there
was nothing but rocks and thick woods, and leave it
there to be eaten up by the wild bears that lived in
the caves and thickets. It would be the easiest
way, he said, to get rid of the useless little creature.
The man carried the child far up on
the mountain side and laid it down on a bed of moss
in the shadow of a great rock. The child stretched
out its baby hands towards him and smiled, but he
turned away and left it there, for he did not dare
to disobey the king.
For a whole night and a whole day
the babe lay on its bed of moss, wailing for its mother;
but only the birds among the trees heard its pitiful
cries. At last it grew so weak for want of food
that it could only moan and move its head a little
from side to side. It would have died before
another day if nobody had cared for it.
Just before dark on the second evening,
a she-bear came strolling down the mountain side from
her den. She was out looking for her cubs, for
some hunters had stolen them that very day while she
was away from home. She heard the moans of the
little babe, and wondered if it was not one of her
lost cubs; and when she saw it lying so helpless on
the moss she went to it and looked at it kindly.
Was it possible that a little bear could be changed
into a pretty babe with fat white hands and with a
beautiful gold chain around its neck? The old
bear did not know; and as the child looked at her
with its bright black eyes, she growled softly and
licked its face with her warm tongue and then lay down
beside it, just as she would have done with her own
little cubs. The babe was too young to feel afraid,
and it cuddled close to the old bear and felt that
it had found a friend. After a while it fell asleep;
but the bear guarded it until morning and then went
down the mountain side to look for food.
In the evening, before dark, the bear
came again and carried the child to her own den under
the shelter of a rock where vines and wild flowers
grew; and every day after that she came and gave the
child food and played with it. And all the bears
on the mountain learned about the wonderful cub that
had been found, and came to see it; but not one of
them offered to harm it. And the little girl grew
fast and became strong, and after a while could walk
and run among the trees and rocks and brambles on
the round top of the mountain; but her bear mother
would not allow her to wander far from the den beneath
the rock where the vines and the wild flowers grew.
One day some hunters came up the mountain
to look for game, and one of them pulled aside the
vines which grew in front of the old bear’s home.
He was surprised to see the beautiful child lying on
the grass and playing with the flowers which she had
gathered. But at sight of him she leaped to her
feet and bounded away like a frightened deer.
She led the hunters a fine chase among the trees and
rocks; but there were a dozen of them, and it was
not long till they caught her.
The hunters had never taken such game
as that before, and they were so well satisfied that
they did not care to hunt any more that day. The
child struggled and fought as hard as she knew how,
but it was of no use. The hunters carried her
down the mountain, and took her to the house where
they lived on the other side of the forest. At
first she cried all the time, for she sadly missed
the bear that had been a mother to her so long.
But the hunters made a great pet of her, and gave her
many pretty things to play with, and were very kind;
and it was not long till she began to like her new
home.
The hunters named her Atalanta, and
when she grew older, they made her a bow and arrows,
and taught her how to shoot; and they gave her a light
spear, and showed her how to carry it and how to hurl
it at the game or at an enemy. Then they took
her with them when they went hunting, and there was
nothing in the world that pleased her so much as roaming
through the woods and running after the deer and other
wild animals. Her feet became very swift, so
that she could run faster than any of the men; and
her arms were so strong and her eyes so sharp and true
that with her arrow or her spear she never missed
the mark. And she grew up to be very tall and
graceful, and was known throughout all Arcadia as
the fleet-footed huntress.
II. THE BRAND ON THE HEARTH.
Now, not very far from the land of
Arcadia there was a little city named Calydon.
It lay in the midst of rich wheat fields and fruitful
vineyards; but beyond the vineyards there was a deep
dense forest where many wild beasts lived. The
king of Calydon was named OEneus, and he dwelt in
a white palace with his wife Althea and his boys and
girls. His kingdom was so small that it was not
much trouble to govern it, and so he spent the most
of his time in hunting or in plowing or in looking
after his grape vines. He was said to be a very
brave man, and he was the friend of all the great
heroes of that heroic time.
The two daughters of OEneus and Althea
were famed all over the world for their beauty; and
one of them was the wife of the hero Hercules, who
had freed Prometheus from his chains, and done many
other mighty deeds. The six sons of OEneus and
Althea were noble, handsome fellows; but the noblest
and handsomest of them all was Meleager, the youngest.
When Meleager was a tiny babe only
seven days old, a strange thing happened in the white
palace of the king. Queen Althea awoke in the
middle of the night, and saw a fire blazing on the
hearth. She wondered what it could mean; and
she lay quite still by the side of the babe, and looked
and listened. Three strange women were standing
by the hearth. They were tall, and two of them
were beautiful, and the faces of all were stern.
Althea knew at once that they were the Fates who give
gifts of some kind to every child that is born, and
who say whether his life shall be a happy one or full
of sadness and sorrow.
“What shall we give to this
child?” said the eldest and sternest of the
three strangers. Her name was Atropos, and she
held a pair of sharp shears in her hand.
“I give him a brave heart,”
said the youngest and fairest. Her name was Clotho,
and she held a distaff full of flax, from which she
was spinning a golden thread.
“And I give him a gentle, noble
mind,” said the dark-haired one, whose name
was Lachesis. She gently drew out the thread which
Clotho spun, and turning to stern Atropos, said:
“Lay aside those shears, sister, and give the
child your gift.”
“I give him life until this
brand shall be burned to ashes,” was the answer;
and Atropos took a small stick of wood and laid it
on the burning coals.
The three sisters waited till the
stick was ablaze, and then they were gone. Althea
sprang up quickly. She saw nothing but the fire
on the hearth and the stick burning slowly away.
She made haste to pour water upon the blaze, and when
every spark was put out, she took the charred stick
and put it into a strong chest where she kept her treasures,
and locked it up.
“I know that the child’s
life is safe,” she said, “so long as that
stick is kept unburned.”
And so, as the years went by, Meleager
grew up to be a brave young man, so gentle and noble
that his name became known in every land of Greece.
He did many daring deeds and, with other heroes, went
on a famous voyage across the seas in search of a
marvelous fleece of gold; and when he returned to
Calydon the people declared that he was the worthiest
of the sons of OEneus to become their king.
III. THE GIFTS ON THE ALTARS.
Now it happened one summer that the
vineyards of Calydon were fuller of grapes than they
had ever been before, and there was so much wheat in
the fields that the people did not know what to do
with it.
“I will tell you what to do,”
said King OEneus. “We will have a thanksgiving
day, and we will give some of the grain and some of
the fruit to the Mighty Beings who sit among the clouds
on the mountain top. For it is from them that
the sunshine and the fair weather and the moist winds
and the warm rains have come; and without their aid
we could never have had so fine a harvest.”
The very next day the king and the
people of Calydon went out into the fields and vineyards
to offer up their thank offerings. Here and there
they built little altars of turf and stones and laid
dry grass and twigs upon them; and then on top of
the twigs they put some of the largest bunches of
grapes and some of the finest heads of wheat, which
they thought would please the Mighty Beings who had
sent them so great plenty.
There was one altar for Ceres, who
had shown men how to sow grain, and one for Bacchus,
who had told them about the grape, and one for wing-footed
Mercury, who comes in the clouds, and one for Athena,
the queen of the air, and one for the keeper of the
winds, and one for the giver of light, and one for
the driver of the golden sun car, and one for the
king of the sea, and one-which was the largest
of all-for Jupiter, the mighty thunderer
who sits upon the mountain top and rules the world.
And when everything was ready, King OEneus gave the
word, and fire was touched to the grass and the twigs
upon the altars; and the grapes and the wheat that
had been laid there were burned up. Then the
people shouted and danced, for they fancied that in
that way the thank offerings were sent right up to
Ceres and Bacchus and Mercury and Athena and all the
rest. And in the evening they went home with glad
hearts, feeling that they had done right.
But they had forgotten one of the
Mighty Beings. They had not raised any altar
to Diana, the fair huntress and queen of the woods,
and they had not offered her a single grape or a single
grain of wheat. They had not intended to slight
her; but, to tell the truth, there were so many others
that they had never once thought about her.
I do not suppose that Diana cared
anything at all for the fruit or the grain; but it
made her very angry to think that she should be forgotten.
“I’ll show them that I am not to be slighted
in this way,” she said.
All went well, however, until the
next summer; and the people of Calydon were very happy,
for it looked as though there would be a bigger harvest
than ever.
“I tell you,” said old
King OEneus, looking over his fields and his vineyards,
“it pays to give thanks. We’ll have
another thanksgiving as soon as the grapes begin to
ripen.”
But even then he did not think of Diana.
The very next day the largest and
fiercest wild boar that anybody had ever seen came
rushing out of the forest. He had two long tusks
which stuck far out of his mouth on either side and
were as sharp as knives, and the stiff bristles on
his back were as large and as long as knitting needles.
As he went tearing along towards Calydon, champing
his teeth and foaming at the mouth, he was a frightful
thing to look at, I tell you. Everybody fled
before him. He rushed into the wheat fields and
tore up all the grain; he went into the vineyards
and broke down all the vines; he rooted up all the
trees in the orchards; and, when there was nothing
else to do, he went into the pasture lands among the
hills and killed the sheep that were feeding there.
He was so fierce and so fleet of foot that the bravest
warrior hardly dared to attack him. His thick
skin was proof against arrows and against such spears
as the people of Calydon had; and I do not know how
many men he killed with those terrible razor tusks
of his. For weeks he had pretty much his own way,
and the only safe place for anybody was inside of the
walls.
When he had laid waste the whole country
he went back into the edge of the forest; but the
people were so much afraid of him that they lived in
dread every day lest he should come again and tear
down the gates of the city.
“We must have forgotten somebody
when we gave thanks last year,” said King OEneus.
“Who could it have been?”
And then he thought of Diana.
“Diana, the queen of the chase,”
said he, “has sent this monster to punish us
for forgetting her. I am sure that we shall remember
her now as long as we live.”
Then he sent messengers into all the
countries near Calydon, asking the bravest men and
skillfullest hunters to come at a certain time and
help him hunt and kill the great wild boar. Very
many of these men had been with Meleager in that wonderful
voyage in search of the Golden Fleece, and he felt
sure they would come.
IV. THE HUNT IN THE FOREST.
When the day came which King OEneus
had set, there was a wonderful gathering of men at
Calydon. The greatest heroes in the world were
there; and every one was fully armed, and expected
to have fine sport hunting the terrible wild boar.
With the warriors from the south there came a tall
maiden armed with bow and arrows and a long hunting
spear. It was our friend Atalanta, the huntress.
“My daughters are having a game
of ball in the garden,” said old King OEneus.
“Wouldn’t you like to put away your arrows
and your spear, and go and play with them?”
Atalanta shook her head and lifted
her chin as if in disdain.
“Perhaps you would rather stay
with the queen, and look at the women spin and weave,”
said OEneus.
“No,” answered Atalanta,
“I am going with the warriors to hunt the wild
boar in the forest!”
How all the men opened their eyes!
They had never heard of such a thing as a girl going
out with heroes to hunt wild boars.
“If she goes, then I will not,” said one.
“Nor I, either,” said another.
“Nor I,” said a third.
“Why, the whole world would laugh at us, and
we should never hear the end of it.”
Several threatened to go home at once;
and two brothers of Queen Althea, rude, unmannerly
fellows, loudly declared that the hunt was for heroes
and not for puny girls.
But Atalanta only grasped her spear
more firmly and stood up, tall and straight, in the
gateway of the palace. Just then a handsome young
man came forward. It was Meleager.
“What’s this?” he
cried. “Who says that Atalanta shall not
go to the hunt? You are afraid that she’ll
be braver than you-that is all. Pretty
heroes you are! Let all such cowards go home at
once.”
But nobody went, and it was settled
then and there that the maiden should have her own
way. And yet the brothers of Queen Althea kept
on muttering and complaining.
For nine days the heroes and huntsmen
feasted in the halls of King OEneus, and early on
the tenth they set out for the forest. Soon the
great beast was found, and he came charging out upon
his foes. The heroes hid behind the trees or
climbed up among the branches, for they had not expected
to see so terrible a creature. He stood in the
middle of a little open space, tearing up the ground
with his tusks. The white foam rolled from his
mouth, his eyes glistened red like fire, and he grunted
so fiercely that the woods and hills echoed with fearful
sounds.
Then one of the bravest of the men
threw his spear. But that only made the beast
fiercer than ever; he charged upon the warrior, caught
him before he could save himself, and tore him in
pieces with his tusks. Another man ventured too
far from his hiding-place and was also overtaken and
killed. One of the oldest and noblest of the heroes
leveled his spear and threw it with all his force;
but it only grazed the boar’s tough skin and
glanced upward and pierced the heart of a warrior
on the other side. The boar was getting the best
of the fight.
Atalanta now ran forward and threw
her spear. It struck the boar in the back, and
a great stream of blood gushed out. A warrior
let fly an arrow which put out one of the beast’s
eyes. Then Meleager rushed up and pierced his
heart with his spear. The boar could no longer
stand up; but he fought fiercely for some moments,
and then rolled over, dead.
The heroes then cut off the beast’s
head. It was as much as six of them could carry.
Then they took the skin from his great body and offered
it to Meleager as a prize, because he had given the
death wound to the wild boar. But Meleager said:
“It belongs to Atalanta, because
it was she who gave him the very first wound.”
And he gave it to her as the prize of honor.
You ought to have seen the tall huntress
maiden then, as she stood among the trees with the
boar’s skin thrown over her left shoulder and
reaching down to her feet. She had never looked
so much like the queen of the woods. But the
rude brothers of Queen Althea were vexed to think
that a maiden should win the prize, and they began
to make trouble. One of them snatched Atalanta’s
spear from her hand, and dragged the prize from her
shoulders, and the other pushed her rudely and bade
her go back to Arcadia and live again with the she-bears
on the mountain side. All this vexed Meleager,
and he tried to make his uncles give back the spear
and the prize, and stop their unmannerly talk.
But they grew worse and worse, and at last set upon
Meleager, and would have killed him if he had not
drawn his sword to defend himself. A fight followed,
and the rude fellows struck right and left as though
they were blind. Soon both were stretched dead
upon the ground. Some who did not see the fight
said that Meleager killed them, but I would rather
believe that they killed each other in their drunken
fury.
And now all the company started back
to the city. Some carried the boar’s huge
head, and some the different parts of his body, while
others had made biers of the green branches, and bore
upon them the dead bodies of those who had been slain.
It was indeed a strange procession.
A young man who did not like Meleager,
had run on in front and had reached the city before
the rest of the company had fairly started. Queen
Althea was standing at the door of the palace, and
when she saw him she asked what had happened in the
forest He told her at once that Meleager had killed
her brothers, for he knew that, with all their faults,
she loved them very dearly. It was terrible to
see her grief. She shrieked, and tore her hair,
and rushed wildly about from room to room. Her
senses left her, and she did not know what she was
doing.
It was the custom at that time for
people to avenge the death of their kindred, and her
only thought was how to punish the murderer of her
brothers. In her madness she forgot that Meleager
was her son. Then she thought of the three Fates
and of the unburned firebrand which she had locked
up in her chest so many years before. She ran
and got the stick and threw it into the fire that
was burning on the hearth.
It kindled at once, and she watched
it as it blazed up brightly. Then it began to
turn into ashes, and as the last spark died out, the
noble Meleager, who was walking by the side of Atalanta,
dropped to the ground dead.
When they carried the news to Althea
she said not a word, for then she knew what she had
done, and her heart was broken. She turned silently
away and went to her own room. When the king came
home a few minutes later, he found her dead.
So ended the hunt in the wood of Calydon.
V. THE RACE FOR A WIFE.
After the death of Meleager, Atalanta
went back to her old home among the mountains of Arcadia.
She was still the swift-footed huntress, and she was
never so happy as when in the green woods wandering
among the trees or chasing the wild deer. All
the world had heard about her, however; and the young
heroes in the lands nearest to Arcadia did nothing
else but talk about her beauty and her grace and her
swiftness of foot and her courage. Of course
every one of these young fellows wanted her to become
his wife; and she might have been a queen any day
if she had only said the word, for the richest king
in Greece would have been glad to marry her.
But she cared nothing for any of the young men, and
she liked the freedom of the green woods better than
all the fine things she might have had in a palace.
The young men would not take “No!”
for an answer, however. They could not believe
that she really meant it, and so they kept coming and
staying until the woods of Arcadia were full of them,
and there was no getting along with them at all.
So, when she could think of no other way to get rid
of them, Atalanta called them together and said:
“You want to marry me, do you?
Well, if any one of you would like to run a race with
me from this mountain to the bank of the river over
there, he may do so; and I will be the wife of the
one who outruns me.”
“Agreed! agreed!” cried all the young
fellows.
“But, listen!” she said.
“Whoever tries this race must also agree that
if I outrun him, he must lose his life.”
Ah, what long faces they all had then!
About half of them drew away and went home.
“But won’t you give us
the start of you a little?” asked the others.
“Oh, yes,” she answered.
“I will give you the start by a hundred paces.
But remember, if I overtake any one before he reaches
the river, he shall lose his head that very day.”
Several others now found that they
were in ill health or that business called them home;
and when they were next looked for, they were not to
be found. But a good many who had had some practice
in sprinting across the country stayed and made up
their minds to try their luck. Could a mere girl
outrun such fine fellows as they? Nonsense!
And so it happened that a race was
run almost every day. And almost every day some
poor fellow lost his head; for the fleetest-footed
sprinter in all Greece was overtaken by Atalanta long
before he could reach the river bank. But other
young men kept coming and coming, and no sooner had
one been put out of the way than another took his place.
One day there came from a distant
town a handsome, tall young man named Meilanion.
“You’d better not run
with me,” said Atalanta, “for I shall be
sure to overtake you, and that will be the end of
you.”
“We’ll see about that,” said Meilanion.
Now Meilanion, before coming to try
his chance, had talked with Venus, the queen of love,
who lived with Jupiter among the clouds on the mountain
top. And he was so handsome and gentle and wise
that Venus took pity on him, and gave him three golden
apples and told him what to do.
Well, when all was ready for the race,
Atalanta tried again to persuade Meilanion not to
run, for she also took pity on him.
“I’ll be sure to overtake you,”
she said.
“All right!” said Meilanion,
and away he sped; but he had the three golden applies
in his pocket.
Atalanta gave him a good start, and
then she followed after, as swift as an arrow shot
from the bow. Meilanion was not a very fast runner,
and it would not be hard for her to overtake him.
She thought that she would let him get almost to the
goal, for she really pitied him. He heard her
coming close behind him; he heard her quick breath
as she gained on him very fast. Then he threw
one of the golden apples over his shoulder.
Now, if there was anything in the
world that Atalanta admired, it was a bright stone
or a pretty piece of yellow gold. As the apple
fell to the ground she saw how beautiful it was, and
she stopped to pick it up; and while she was doing
this, Meilanion gained a good many paces. But
what of that? In a minute she was as close behind
him as ever. And yet, she really did pity him.
Just then Meilanion threw the second
apple over his shoulder. It was handsomer and
larger than the first, and Atalanta could not bear
the thought of allowing some one else to get it.
So she stopped to pick it up from among the long grass,
where it had fallen. It took somewhat longer
to find it than she had expected, and when she looked
up again Meilanion was a hundred feet ahead of her.
But that was no matter. She could easily overtake
him. And yet, how she did pity the foolish young
man!
Meilanion heard her speeding like
the wind behind him. He took the third apple
and threw it over to one side of the path where the
ground sloped towards the river. Atalanta’s
quick eye saw that it was far more beautiful than
either of the others. If it were not picked up
at once it would roll down into the deep water and
be lost, and that would never do. She turned
aside from her course and ran after it. It was
easy enough to overtake the apple, but while she was
doing so Meilanion gained upon her again. He
was almost to the goal. How she strained every
muscle now to overtake him! But, after all, she
felt that she did not care very much. He was
the handsomest young man that she had ever seen, and
he had given her three golden apples. It would
be a great pity if he should have to die. And
so she let him reach the goal first.
After that, of course, Atalanta became
Meilanion’s wife. And he took her with
him to his distant home, and there they lived happily
together for many, many years.