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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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608 THE GREEK SAGAS: GREEK LOCAL LEGENDS<br />

her. Another of the lovers of Helius, the Oceanid Clytië, jealous because Helius<br />

preferred Leucothoë to her, told Leucothoë's father of the affair. Orchamus<br />

buried Leucothoë and Helius was too late to save her. He shed drops of nectar<br />

on her corpse, which grew into a frankincense tree. Clytië could not persuade<br />

Helius to forgive her nor could she recover his love. She sat, following the Sun's<br />

progress with her eyes until she turned into a sunflower, which forever turns<br />

its face toward the sun.<br />

TROPHONIUS<br />

The famous oracle of Trophonius was situated at Lebadeia in northern Boeotia.<br />

He is a chthonic hero (his name means "he who fosters growth") and he was<br />

therefore consulted in a subterranean setting with an awesome ritual. His legend<br />

is similar to the story of the Egyptian Pharaoh Rhampsinitus (Rameses),<br />

which Herodotus tells (2. 121). Trophonius and his brother Agamedes were<br />

skilled builders, sons of Erginus of Orchomenus. They built for King Augeas of<br />

Elis (or, as some say, the Boeotian king Hyrieus) a treasury with a movable stone,<br />

which they used to steal the king's treasure. In time the king set a trap for the<br />

unknown thief, and Agamedes was caught. At his own suggestion his head was<br />

cut off by Trophonius, who then escaped carrying the head. He fled to Lebadeia,<br />

where he was swallowed up by the earth and thereafter worshiped as a god.<br />

Pindar (frags. 2-3), however, has a different story of the brothers' death, one<br />

very similar to Herodotus' story of the Argives Cleobis and Biton (see pp. 136-<br />

137). In this version, Trophonius and Agamedes built the temple of Apollo at<br />

Delphi. 8 When they asked the god for their wages, he said he would pay them<br />

on the seventh day. On that day they fell asleep, never to wake.<br />

AETOLIA<br />

THE CALYDONIAN BOAR HUNT<br />

Among the descendants of Aeolus was Oeneus, king of Calydon and father of<br />

Heracles' wife De'ianira; his son was Meleager. Shortly after the birth of Meleager,<br />

the Fates (Moirai) appeared before his mother, Althaea, and told her that Meleager<br />

would die when a log, which was burning on the hearth, had burned out.<br />

Althaea snatched up the log, extinguished it, and kept it in a chest. Years later,<br />

when Meleager was a young man, Oeneus offended Artemis by failing to sacrifice<br />

her share of the first fruits, and she sent a huge boar to ravage Calydon.<br />

Meleager gathered many of the noblest Greek heroes to hunt the boar, and<br />

with them came Atalanta, daughter of the Boeotian king Schoeneus. In the hunt,<br />

after several heroes had been killed, Atalanta was the first to wound the boar.<br />

Meleager gave it the coup de grâce and therefore received the boar's skin, which<br />

he presented to Atalanta. His uncles, the brothers of Althaea, were insulted at

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