Classical Mythology

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

380 THE GREEK SAGAS: GREEK LOCAL LEGENDS


Chthonius

I


r^ i
Dirce m. Lycus Nycteus

H-i
I I Zeus m. Antiope Nycteis (m. Polydorus)
Amphion m. Niobe Zethus m. Thebe
Figure 17.2. The Descendants of Chthonius

exile. They built walls for the city, whose stones were moved into place by the
music of Amphion's lyre. Amphion married Niobe (whose story is told on
p. 203), and Zethus married Thebe, in whose honor the newly walled city was
renamed Thebes.
The story of the family of Lycus repeats motifs from the story of Cadmus.
The walling of Cadmeia and its renaming is a doublet of the founding of the
city by Cadmus, and just as Cadmus and Harmonia civilized their people, so
Amphion's music demonstrated the power of harmony and beauty over the dis-
united and inanimate stones.

LAIUS
After a reign of many years Amphion and Zethus died, and Laius returned from
exile and resumed the kingship of which he had been deprived as an infant. In
exile, he had been hospitably received by Pelops, king of Elis. The ties of guest
and host were among the most sacred of human relationships, and Laius brought
upon himself and his descendants a curse by abducting Chrysippus, the son of
Pelops, with whom he had fallen in love. Apollo foretold the working out of the
curse in the first generation when Laius (now king of Thebes) consulted the Del-
phic oracle about the children who should be born to him and his wife, Jocasta.
This is the reply of the oracle (Sophocles, Argument to Oedipus Tyrannus):
I will give you a son, but you are destined to die at his hands. This is the deci-
sion of Zeus, in answer to the bitter curses of Pelops, whose son you abducted;
all this did Pelops call down upon you.

OEDIPUS, SON OF LAIUS AND JOCASTA
When a son was born, Laius attempted to avoid the fate foretold by the oracle
by ordering the infant to be exposed upon Mt. Cithaeron, with a spike driven
Free download pdf