Thus Psyche became at last united to Cupid, and in due time they had a daughter born to them whose name was Pleasure.
The fable of Cupid and Psyche is usually considered allegorical. The Greek name for a butterfly is Psyche, and the same word means the soul. There is no illustration of the immortality of the soul so striking and beautiful as the butterfly, bursting on brilliant wings from the tomb in which it has lain, after a dull, grovelling, caterpillar existence, to flutter in the blaze of day and feed on the most fragrant and delicate productions of the spring. Psyche, then, is the human soul, which is purified by sufferings and misfortunes, and is thus prepared for the enjoyment of true and pure happiness.
In works of art Psyche is represented as a maiden with the wings of a butterfly, along with Cupid, in the different situations described in the allegory.
Milton alludes to the story of Cupid and Psyche in the conclusion of his “Comus”:
“Celestial Cupid, her
famed son, advanced,
Holds his dear Psyche
sweet entranced,
After her wandering
labors long,
Till free consent the
gods among
Make her his eternal
bride;
And from her fair unspotted
side
Two blissful twins are
to be born,
Youth and Joy; so Jove
hath sworn.”
The allegory of the story of Cupid and Psyche is well presented in the beautiful lines of T. K. Harvey:
“They wove bright fables
in the days of old,
When reason
borrowed fancy’s painted wings;
When truth’s clear
river flowed o’er sands of gold,
And told
in song its high and mystic things!
And such the sweet and
solemn tale of her
The pilgrim
heart, to whom a dream was given,
That led her through
the world,—Love’s worshipper,—
To seek
on earth for him whose home was heaven!
“In the full city,—by
the haunted fount,—
Through
the dim grotto’s tracery of spars,—
’Mid the pine
temples, on the moonlit mount,
Where silence
sits to listen to the stars;
In the deep glade where
dwells the brooding dove,
The painted
valley, and the scented air,
She heard far echoes
of the voice of Love,
And found
his footsteps’ traces everywhere.
“But nevermore they
met since doubts and fears,
Those phantom
shapes that haunt and blight the earth,
Had come ’twixt
her, a child of sin and tears,
And that
bright spirit of immortal birth;
Until her pining soul
and weeping eyes
Had learned to seek
him only in the skies;
Till wings unto the
weary heart were given,
And she became Love’s
angel bride in heaven!”
The story of Cupid and Psyche first appears in the works of Apuleius, a writer of the second century of our era. It is therefore of much more recent date than most of the legends of the Age of Fable. It is this that Keats alludes to in his “Ode to Psyche”: