50
HE SLIPPED A
POMEGRANATE,
SWEET AS HONEY,
INTO HER HAND
THE ABDUCTION OF PERSEPHONE
O
ne of classical Greece’s
Homeric Hymns refers to
Demeter as the “sacred
goddess with the glorious hair”—
her thick and lustrous golden
tresses were emblematic of the
abundance of the harvest. Demeter
was the goddess of the harvest,
charged with ensuring that the
fields were rich and fertile. Before
tragedy struck, there was no
winter, cold, or decay.
Demeter’s despair
One day, Demeter’s beloved
daughter Persephone was out
with some nymphs in one of Sicily’s
prettiest vales, picking flowers.
Persephone marveled at the “roses,
crocuses, lovely violets ... irises,
hyacinths, and narcissi,” exulting
in the beautiful colors and heady
fragrances of the scene.
When Persephone pulled a
narcissus from the ground, the
earth split and opened up beneath
her. A huge chariot thundered forth,
drawn by sable-black horses. As her
companions fled, Persephone stood
transfixed. A tall, shadowy figure
leaned down from the chariot and
scooped her up. Persephone’s uncle,
Hades, had come up from the
Underworld to take her as his bride.
Hades kidnaps Persephone in a
field of daffodils in British artist Walter
Crane’s The Fate of Persephone (1877).
The horses rear up between a sunlit
world and ominous darkness.
IN BRIEF
THEME
Life, death, and the
seasons
SOURCES
Theogony, Hesiod, ca. 700 bce;
Hymn to Demeter, Homer,
ca. 600 bce; Description of
Greece, Pausanias, ca. 150 ce.
SETTING
Sicily; the Underworld.
KEY FIGURES
Demeter Goddess of the
harvest, sister of Zeus
and Hades.
Persephone Demeter’s
daughter, who became the
queen of the Underworld.
Hades God of the Underworld
and Demeter’s brother.
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See also: The Olympian gods 24–31 ■ Hades and the Underworld 48–49 ■
Cupid and Psyche 112–13
ANCIENT GREECE
Persephone struggled and wept,
crying out for her father, Zeus. But
her pleas went unanswered. Some
versions of the myth suggest that
Zeus himself had played a part in
the abduction by conspiring with
his brother. Hades took Persephone
with him down into the gloomy
Underworld. He promised that she
would be queen of his subterranean
kingdom, revered and beloved by
all—but she was inconsolable.
Demeter’s despair
Persephone’s mother, Demeter,
was equally distraught. Frantically
combing the forests, fields, and
hills in search of her daughter, she
called out Persephone’s name over
and over again—but received no
reply. In her grief, Demeter blighted
the countryside, causing the crops
to die and all the leaves to turn
brown. It seemed as if the entire
earth had died. Eventually, the sun
god, Helios, told Demeter that her
brother Hades had snatched her
daughter and spirited her off to
his dismal realm. At this news,
Demeter was filled with rage, and
wrought yet more destruction upon
the earth. Hades’s abduction of
Persephone had set all of creation
askew. At last, Zeus was forced to
intervene in the quarrel between
his siblings. He ruled that, so long
as Persephone had not taken food
or drink since she arrived in the
Underworld, Hades must agree to
release her.
A seasonal solution
Unfortunately, Persephone had
eaten something in the Underworld.
Hades had given her a pomegranate,
the fruit of the dead, and she had
consumed several of the sweet
seeds. This resulted in a fresh
judgment from Zeus, who decided
that Persephone could return to the
world above—but she would have
to go back down to the Underworld
and reside with Hades for three
months of every year.
Persephone’s sentence
explained why, with the onset of
winter, the world appears to fade
and die, as Demeter mourns her
daughter’s absence. Then, as
spring approaches and Persephone
returns to the surface of the earth,
its fields and forests once again
come into bloom. ■
Eleusian mysteries
Priests at the shrine of Eleusis,
a settlement near Athens in
the region of Attica, developed
an elaborate set of ceremonies
based on the story of the
abduction of Persephone. The
“Eleusinian Mysteries” are
among the oldest and best
known of the secret religious
rites of the ancient Greeks.
By the Greek classical period
(5th–4th century bce), the
Eleusinian Mysteries were
already ancient. The cult
spread to Athens soon after
the annexation of Eleusis in
600 bce. As with similar rituals
in other early societies, the
Eleusinian cult strove to
assert a sense of control
over the growing cycle and
the seasons.
The highpoint of the
Eleusinian calendar came
toward the end of winter,
with ceremonies designed to
ensure the return of the sun
and the renewal of the earth.
The ceremonies involved rites
of personal purification,
animal sacrifices, libations (the
ritual pouring of wine onto the
earth), fasting, and feasting.
The priests of Eleusia honor
Demeter, Kybele, and Persephone
on this altar from Chalandri, Attica,
ca. 360 ce. The man is Iakhos,
leader of the Eleusinian Mysteries.
Hades dragged
Persephone into his
speeding chariot
and she screamed
out loud.
Hymn to Demeter
Stealthily, though, Hades
slipped a pomegranate,
sweet as honey, into
Persephone’s hand.
Hymn to Demeter
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