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was angry and did them hurt because Oeneus had not offered her his<br />

harvest first-­‐fruits. <strong>The</strong> other gods had all been feasted with hecatombs,<br />

but to the daughter of great Jove alone he had made no sacrifice.<br />

He had <strong>for</strong>gotten her, or somehow or other it had escaped him, and<br />

this was a grievous sin. <strong>The</strong>reon the archer goddess in her displeasure<br />

sent a prodigious creature against him-­‐ a savage wild boar with great<br />

white tusks that did much harm to his orchard lands, uprooting apple-­‐trees<br />

in full bloom and throwing them to the ground. But Meleager son of<br />

Oeneus got huntsmen and hounds from many cities and killed it-­‐ <strong>for</strong><br />

it was so monstrous that not a few were needed, and many a man did<br />

it stretch upon his funeral pyre. On this the goddess set the Curetes<br />

and the Aetolians fighting furiously about the head and skin of the<br />

boar.<br />

"So long as Meleager was in the field things went badly with the Curetes,<br />

and <strong>for</strong> all their numbers they could not hold their ground under the<br />

city walls; but in the course of time Meleager was angered as even<br />

a wise man will sometimes be. He was incensed with his mother Althaea,<br />

and there<strong>for</strong>e stayed at home with his wedded wife fair Cleopatra,<br />

who was daughter of Marpessa daughter of Euenus, and of Ides the man<br />

then living. He it was who took his bow and faced King Apollo himself<br />

<strong>for</strong> fair Marpessa's sake; her father and mother then named her Alcyone,<br />

because her mother had mourned with the plaintive strains of the halcyon-­‐bird<br />

when Phoebus Apollo had carried her off. Meleager, then, stayed at<br />

home with Cleopatra, nursing the anger which he felt <strong>by</strong> reason of<br />

his mother's curses. His mother, grieving <strong>for</strong> the death of her brother,<br />

prayed the gods, and beat the earth with her hands, calling upon Hades<br />

and on awful Proserpine; she went down upon her knees and her bosom

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