Hesiod, the Homeric Hymns, and Homerica eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about Hesiod, the Homeric Hymns, and Homerica.

Hesiod, the Homeric Hymns, and Homerica eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about Hesiod, the Homeric Hymns, and Homerica.

(ll. 311-330) `Hear from me, all gods and goddesses, how cloud-gathering Zeus begins to dishonour me wantonly, when he has made me his true-hearted wife.  See now, apart from me he has given birth to bright-eyed Athena who is foremost among all the blessed gods.  But my son Hephaestus whom I bare was weakly among all the blessed gods and shrivelled of foot, a shame and disgrace to me in heaven, whom I myself took in my hands and cast out so that he fell in the great sea.  But silver-shod Thetis the daughter of Nereus took and cared for him with her sisters:  would that she had done other service to the blessed gods!  O wicked one and crafty!  What else will you now devise?  How dared you by yourself give birth to bright-eyed Athena?  Would not I have borne you a child —­ I, who was at least called your wife among the undying gods who hold wide heaven.  Beware now lest I devise some evil thing for you hereafter:  yes, now I will contrive that a son be born me to be foremost among the undying gods —­ and that without casting shame on the holy bond of wedlock between you and me.  And I will not come to your bed, but will consort with the blessed gods far off from you.’

(ll. 331-333) When she had so spoken, she went apart from the gods, being very angry.  Then straightway large-eyed queenly Hera prayed, striking the ground flatwise with her hand, and speaking thus: 

(ll. 334-362) `Hear now, I pray, Earth and wide Heaven above, and you Titan gods who dwell beneath the earth about great Tartarus, and from whom are sprung both gods and men!  Harken you now to me, one and all, and grant that I may bear a child apart from Zeus, no wit lesser than him in strength —­ nay, let him be as much stronger than Zeus as all-seeing Zeus than Cronos.’  Thus she cried and lashed the earth with her strong hand.  Then the life-giving earth was moved:  and when Hera saw it she was glad in heart, for she thought her prayer would be fulfilled.  And thereafter she never came to the bed of wise Zeus for a full year, not to sit in her carved chair as aforetime to plan wise counsel for him, but stayed in her temples where many pray, and delighted in her offerings, large-eyed queenly Hera.  But when the months and days were fulfilled and the seasons duly came on as the earth moved round, she bare one neither like the gods nor mortal men, fell, cruel Typhaon, to be a plague to men.  Straightway large-eyed queenly Hera took him and bringing one evil thing to another such, gave him to the dragoness; and she received him.  And this Typhaon used to work great mischief among the famous tribes of men.  Whosoever met the dragoness, the day of doom would sweep him away, until the lord Apollo, who deals death from afar, shot a strong arrow at her.  Then she, rent with bitter pangs, lay drawing great gasps for breath and rolling about that place.  An awful noise swelled up unspeakable as she writhed continually this way and that amid the wood:  and so she left her life, breathing it forth in blood.  Then Phoebus Apollo boasted over her: 

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Hesiod, the Homeric Hymns, and Homerica from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.