The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

53


See also: Hades and the Underworld 48–49 ■ The abduction of Persephone
50 –51 ■ The descent of Inanna 182–87 ■ Osiris and the Underworld 276–83

G


reek mythology’s great
bard, Orpheus, was born of
the relationship between
Calliope, the Muse of poetry, and
Oeagrus, a Thracian river god.
Orpheus’s most heartfelt verses
were dedicated to Eurydice, who
became his wife—only to be killed
by a snakebite on her wedding day.

Lyrical lamentation
Wandering through the woods,
Orpheus mourned Eurydice in
impassioned song, which surpassed
anything he had ever composed.
The music was so moving that the
nymphs and gods wept to hear it.
Eventually, Orpheus decided to
travel to the Underworld to beg
Hades and his queen to take mercy
on him and return Eurydice to life.
In the Underworld, Orpheus
played for Hades and Persephone.
The queen was so touched by the
music that she begged her husband
to break the rules of the Underworld
and release Eurydice. Hades agreed,
on the condition that Orpheus not
lay eyes on Eurydice while she
remained in the Underworld.

Orpheus led his bride through the
caverns of darkness and despair,
slowly winding upward toward the
earth’s surface. Eurydice followed
after him at a distance, so that he
would not look upon her.
At last, Orpheus caught a
glimpse of daylight up ahead.
Happily, he glanced back at his
wife, only to realize even as he
saw her that she was lost to him—
pulled back down, despairing, into
the realms of death. ■

ANCIENT GREECE


TURNING ’ROUND, HE


CAUGHT A GLIMPSE OF


HIS WIFE AND SHE HAD


TO RETURN BELOW


ORPHEUS AND EURYDICE


IN BRIEF


THEME
The finality of death

SOURCES
Argonautica, Apollonius of
Rhodes, ca. 250 bce; Library,
Pseudo-Apollodorus, ca. 10 0 ce.

SETTING
Greece and the Underworld.

KEY FIGURES
Orpheus A renowned
musician; the son of Calliope
and Oeagrus.

Eurydice The bride of
Orpheus; killed on her
wedding day.

Hades The king of the
Underworld.

Persephone The young
wife of Hades and queen
of the Underworld. Orpheus plays his lyre in a
3rd-century ce Roman mosaic
from Antakya, Turkey. The bard is
surrounded by wild animals that
are entranced by his sublime music.

US_052-053_Dionysus_and_Orpheus.indd 53 30/11/17 4:55 pm

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