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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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MYTHS OF LOCAL HEROES AND HEROINES 613<br />

became the god Palaemon (see note 3 on p. 304). Melicertes' body was brought<br />

ashore on the Isthmus of Corinth by a dolphin. Sisyphus found and buried it, instituting<br />

the Isthmian Games in the child's honor. At first the games were mainly<br />

religious and ritualistic; Theseus is said to have founded them a second time and<br />

thus given them the athletic character that they acquired in historical times.<br />

The legends of Sisyphus are less concerned with him as king than as the<br />

craftiest of men. One story makes him the father of Odysseus, whose mother,<br />

Anticlea, he seduced before she married Laertes. Anticlea's father was the master<br />

thief Autolycus, son of Hermes, who gave him the power to steal whatever<br />

he wished undetected. For a long time he was in the habit of stealing Sisyphus'<br />

cattle until Sisyphus branded the animals on their hooves and so easily recognized<br />

and recovered those that Autolycus had stolen. The two heroes became<br />

friends, and Autolycus allowed Sisyphus to lie with Anticlea. Thus (in this version)<br />

Sisyphus, not Laertes, was really the father of Odysseus.<br />

Sisyphus' greatest exploit was outwitting Death (Thanatos) himself. In its<br />

simplest form it is alluded to by the seventh-century poet Alcaeus of Lesbos<br />

(frag. 110. 5-10):<br />

¥ For<br />

Sisyphus also, the son of Aeolus, thought that he was the cleverest of men<br />

to overpower Death. Yet, although he was crafty and crossed swirling Acheron<br />

twice (avoiding his destiny), the King [Zeus], son of Cronus, devised labor for<br />

him beneath the black earth.<br />

Sisyphus aroused the anger of Zeus by telling the river-god Asopus that Zeus<br />

had carried off his daughter Aegina, and Zeus sent Death to carry Sisyphus off.<br />

Sisyphus chained Death, and as long as he was bound, no mortals could die.<br />

Eventually Ares freed Death and handed Sisyphus over to him, but before he<br />

went down to the Underworld, Sisyphus left instructions with his wife, Merope,<br />

not to make the customary sacrifices after his death. When Hades found that no<br />

sacrifices were being made, he sent Sisyphus back to remonstrate with Merope.<br />

So he returned to Corinth and stayed there until he died in advanced old age. It<br />

was for his revelation of Zeus's secret that he was punished in the Underworld<br />

by having to roll a huge rock uphill only to have it roll down again (see p. 333).<br />

Sisyphus, therefore, combines a number of heroic and folktale elements in<br />

his legend. He is the founder of a city and of games and rituals in honor of a<br />

god. But he is also the trickster, peer of the master-thief Autolycus, and deceiver<br />

of Death itself.<br />

BELLEROPHON<br />

The greatest of Corinthian heroes was Bellerophon, grandson of Sisyphus. His<br />

legend is told in Homer by the Lycian leader Glaucus, when he meets Diomedes<br />

in battle. It is set both in the Argolid and in Asia Minor. Bellerophon may even<br />

have been introduced into Greek legend from the East.

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