Recently, in reviewing my blogposts I noticed many
posts on similar topics. I hope my research is building on itself rather
than circling endlessly around the same two posts. So I wrote my friend
Maya for help. I believe she is brilliant and having read everything I
have written she might have some insights on my work. Maya suggested:
Meleager, The Lack of Herclidae in the Trojan War and Otus & Ephialtes.
So, here is Part IIa; Meleager, The Non-PanHellenic
Hero. I am suggesting here that we cannot judge Meleager’s myth by Modern
standards, Homeric standards even by the standards of the Theban Cycle but
rather in terms of the local epic cycle.
So much of the study on Meleager is contrasting Meleager/Cleopatra
and Achilles/Patroclus. There are two versions of his
story. One is told by Phoenix trying to compare Achilles to
Meleager, hence the above research. In that version he his killed by
his relatives the mysterious Curetes. The other is a version where his soul is
tied with a magical piece of firewood, which is burned by his mother during the
battle above. She is a Curetes. We could try to combine
to two myths. But why? In both he is killed by one of the Curetes
and in both the cause of this trouble is, to Quote Ajax, “All this for one
girl, just one girl.” Atalanta specifically, the Argonaut Meleager
and Atalanta participated in the Calydonian Boar Hunt with his mother’s relatives
the Curetes. (Books have been written about who the Curetes are.) after
several fatalities, the boar is slain and prizes passed out. Thanks to
Meleager’s gallantry Atalanta receives an inappropriate prize and war breaks
out.
“Then
the goddess set the Kouretes and the Aetolians fighting furiously about the
head and skin of the boar.[550] So long as Meleagros, dear [philos] to Arēs,
was fighting in the war, 551 things went badly for the Kouretes [of the city of
Pleuron], and they could not 552 put up a resistance against the
Aetolians] outside the city walls [of Pleuron, the city of the Kouretes], even
though they [= the Kouretes] had a multitude of fighters. 553 But as soon as
anger [kholos] entered Meleagros—the kind of anger that affects also others,
554 making their thinking [noos] swell to the point of bursting inside their
chest even if at other times they have sound thoughts [phroneîn], [555] [then
things changed:] he [= Meleagros] was angry [khōomenos] in his heart at his
dear mother Althaea,” book nine
Pseudo-Hyginus, Fabulae
174 (trans. Grant) (Roman mythographer C2nd A.D.) :
"The wrath of Diana [Artemis] sent a boar of huge size to lay waste the district of Calydon, because Oeneus had not made yearly offerings to her. Meleager, with the help of chosen youths of Greece, killed it, and gave the hide to the virgin Atalanta because of her valor. Ideus, Plexippus, Lynceus . . . brothers of Althaea, wished to take if from her. When she asked the help of Meleager, he intervened, and putting love before family relationship, killed his uncles. When Althaea, the mother, heard that her son had dared to commit such a crime, remembering the warning of the Parcae, she brought out the brand from the chest and threw it on the fire. Thus, in desiring to avenge the death of her brothers, she killed her son."
"The wrath of Diana [Artemis] sent a boar of huge size to lay waste the district of Calydon, because Oeneus had not made yearly offerings to her. Meleager, with the help of chosen youths of Greece, killed it, and gave the hide to the virgin Atalanta because of her valor. Ideus, Plexippus, Lynceus . . . brothers of Althaea, wished to take if from her. When she asked the help of Meleager, he intervened, and putting love before family relationship, killed his uncles. When Althaea, the mother, heard that her son had dared to commit such a crime, remembering the warning of the Parcae, she brought out the brand from the chest and threw it on the fire. Thus, in desiring to avenge the death of her brothers, she killed her son."
Without getting into the whole issue of who the
Curetes are, I would suggest that are a type of people (Lutherans. Moose Club
members, Kosmonauts) rather than a race of people.
There is a flaw in Phoenix argument comparing Achilles
to Meleager, What occurs to me is that while Achilles grieves for
loss of his kLEos at the hands of Agamemnon, Meleager is suffering from a
broken heart at his mother’s betrayal. Just as the return of the untouched
Briseis cannot ease Achilles pain, no kind words from his cruel mother can now
unbreak his heart. These are two different stories
S.C.R. Swain suggests that Meleager’s story is part of
the earliest and pre-Homeric cycle in Greek myth; the Aetolian-Elean-Plyian
Cycle. (followed by the Iolcus Cycle, Theban and Trojan). The Trojan Cycle at
least the Homeric portion was all about unfailing glory, the Theban revenge,
why would we assume we know the motivations of the characters of
the Aetolian-Elean-Plyian Cycle matched them. So if we discount our
preconceived ideas about epic and the forced parallels with Achilles from
Phoenix and Homer we end up with a character more in tune with the
family-focused tragedies of the Athenian playwrights. Maybe we should
study Meleager from those paradigms.
Bill,
ReplyDeleteNice analysis! I see now more parallels between Achilles and Meleager:
- The fathers of both have done a major transgression (the forgotten sacrifice vs. the killing of Phocus).
- Both heroes have an intimate relationship with their very powerful mothers who influence their fate.
- In some versions of both myths, death is a shadow projected by a "horcrux" put into the fireplace when the hero was a baby (Thetis put into the fire Achilles and his brothers while Althaea took out the log).
Which source says that the battle shirked by Meleager was in front of the city of the Curetes? In the Iliad translations known to me, the battle is in front of Meleager's city which is besieged by the Curetes. This is why Cleopatra begged him to fight. I don't think any woman save Eriphile would beg her husband to risk his life to plunder other people's cities.
Maya,
ReplyDeleteI thought I replied to this already. Hmm. Anyway, the war started the moment Meleager gave Atalanta the hide of the boar, it proceeded, progressed all the way to the gates of the Curetes' city walls where Meleage had them pinned it. His mother found out he had killed her brothers and started bad-mouthing her son, he got his feeling hurt and went to his room in a huff. The rest you know.