The Age of Fable eBook

Thomas Bulfinch
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,207 pages of information about The Age of Fable.

The Age of Fable eBook

Thomas Bulfinch
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,207 pages of information about The Age of Fable.

“Iphis was a young man of humble parentage, who saw and loved Anaxarete, a noble lady of the ancient family of Teucer.  He struggled long with his passion, but when he found he could not subdue it, he came a suppliant to her mansion.  First he told his passion to her nurse, and begged her as she loved her foster-child to favor his suit.  And then he tried to win her domestics to his side.  Sometimes he committed his vows to written tablets, and often hung at her door garlands which he had moistened with his tears.  He stretched himself on her threshold, and uttered his complaints to the cruel bolts and bars.  She was deafer than the surges which rise in the November gale; harder than steel from the German forges, or a rock that still clings to its native cliff.  She mocked and laughed at him, adding cruel words to her ungentle treatment, and gave not the slightest gleam of hope.

“Iphis could not any longer endure the torments of hopeless love, and, standing before her doors, he spake these last words:  ’Anaxarete, you have conquered, and shall no longer have to bear my importunities.  Enjoy your triumph!  Sing songs of joy, and bind your forehead with laurel,—­you have conquered!  I die; stony heart, rejoice!  This at least I can do to gratify you and force you to praise me; and thus shall I prove that the love of you left me but with life.  Nor will I leave it to rumor to tell you of my death.  I will come myself, and you shall see me die, and feast your eyes on the spectacle.  Yet, O ye gods, who look down on mortal woes, observe my fate!  I ask but this:  let me be remembered in coming ages, and add those years to my fame which you have reft from my life.  Thus he said, and, turning his pale face and weeping eyes towards her mansion, he fastened a rope to the gatepost, on which he had often hung garlands, and putting his head into the noose, he murmured, ’This garland at least will please you, cruel girl!’ and falling hung suspended with his neck broken.  As he fell he struck against the gate, and the sound was as the sound of a groan.  The servants opened the door and found him dead, and with exclamations of pity raised him and carried him home to his mother, for his father was not living.  She received the dead body of her son, and folded the cold form to her bosom, while she poured forth the sad words which bereaved mothers utter.  The mournful funeral passed through the town, and the pale corpse was borne on a bier to the place of the funeral pile.  By chance the home of Anaxarete was on the street where the procession passed, and the lamentations of the mourners met the ears of her whom the avenging deity had already marked for punishment.

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Project Gutenberg
The Age of Fable from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.