Juno, now reconciled to him, gave him her daughter Hebe in marriage.
The poet Schiller, in one of his pieces called the “Ideal and Life,” illustrates the contrast between the practical and the imaginative in some beautiful stanzas, of which the last two may be thus translated:
“Deep degraded to a coward’s
slave,
Endless contests bore Alcides
brave,
Through the thorny path of
suffering led;
Slew the Hydra, crushed the
lion’s might,
Threw himself, to bring his
friend to light,
Living, in the skiff that
bears the dead.
All the torments, every toil
of earth
Juno’s hatred on him
could impose,
Well he bore them, from his
fated birth
To life’s grandly mournful
close.
“Till the god, the earthly
part forsaken,
From the man in flames asunder
taken,
Drank the heavenly ether’s
purer breath.
Joyous in the new unwonted
lightness,
Soared he upwards to celestial
brightness,
Earth’s dark heavy burden
lost in death.
High Olympus gives harmonious
greeting
To the hall where reigns his
sire adored;
Youth’s bright goddess,
with a blush at meeting,
Gives the nectar to her lord.”
—S. G. B.
HEBE AND GANYMEDE
Hebe, the daughter of Juno, and goddess of youth, was cup-bearer to the gods. The usual story is that she resigned her office on becoming the wife of Hercules. But there is another statement which our countryman Crawford, the sculptor, has adopted in his group of Hebe and Ganymede, now in the Athenaeum gallery. According to this, Hebe was dismissed from her office in consequence of a fall which she met with one day when in attendance on the gods. Her successor was Ganymede, a Trojan boy, whom Jupiter, in the disguise of an eagle, seized and carried off from the midst of his playfellows on Mount Ida, bore up to heaven, and installed in the vacant place.
Tennyson, in his “Palace of Art,” describes among the decorations on the walls a picture representing this legend:
“There, too, flushed Ganymede,
his rosy thigh
Half buried in
the eagle’s down,
Sole as a flying star shot
through the sky
Above the pillared
town.”