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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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THE NATURE OF THE GODS 143<br />

Yet there are parts of the myth that perhaps may be true. Despite chronological<br />

problems, Solon could have met Croesus, although not at the time<br />

Herodotus imagines; 10 Croesus may have had a son who died young. But the<br />

mythographer and historian Herodotus could never be satisfied with this prosaic<br />

truth alone. His stories (wrought with exquisite art) must illustrate a different<br />

level of emotional and spiritual truth that illuminates character and elu-<br />

OTHER LEGENDARY FOLKTALES IN HERODOTUS:<br />

GYGES, ARION, AND POLYCRATES<br />

There are many other important and entertaining mythical legends, with folktale motifs,<br />

in Herodotus' History; although the choice is difficult, we single out three other<br />

examples.<br />

Candaules, king of Ly<strong>dia</strong>, continually boasted that his wife was the most beautiful<br />

woman in the world. He wanted to convince his favorite bodyguard, Gyges, that this<br />

claim was no exaggeration and so he arranged that Gyges should see his wife naked,<br />

without her knowledge. She, however, became aware of the great insult (it is most<br />

shameful among the Ly<strong>dia</strong>ns for even a man to be seen naked). In revenge, she plotted<br />

with Gyges, who was forced to kill Candaules and win the throne and the queen<br />

for himself (1. 10-13). 11<br />

Arion, a lyre-player and poet, was credited with the introduction of the dithyramb,<br />

a choral song associated with the god Dionysus. His story is not unlike that of Dionysus<br />

and the pirates (p. 296); he was threatened by robbers in a boat and was rescued<br />

from death in the sea by a dolphin, on whose back he was conveyed safely to land<br />

(1. 23-24).<br />

Finally, an episode in the life of Polycrates, tyrant of Samos, echoes dramatically<br />

the Herodotean philosophy found in the legend of Solon and Croesus. Polycrates, like<br />

Croesus, continued to attain vast wealth and great power. His friend, king Amasis of<br />

Egypt, expressed troubled concern to Polycrates that his unbridled successes might<br />

eventually lead to disaster, since divinity is jealous of prosperity untempered by misfortune.<br />

He advised the tyrant to cast far away his most valued and prized possession,<br />

so that it might never appear again among human beings. Polycrates chose a<br />

beloved work of art, a precious gold ring with an emerald. He himself in a boat threw<br />

it way out into the sea and went home to weep at his loss. Five or six days later, a<br />

fisherman came proudly to the palace and presented to the tyrant a magnificent fish<br />

that he had caught. As the fish was being prepared for dinner, the ring of Polycrates<br />

was found in its belly. When Amasis learned what had happened to Polycrates he<br />

realized that one cannot help another avoid what is fated and that Polycrates' life<br />

would not end well because he had found what he had tried to cast away forever.<br />

Indeed, Polycrates ultimately was murdered by a villainous Persian named Oroetes<br />

(3. 39-40ff ).

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