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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0548.tlg001.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div subtype="book" type="textpart" n="3"><div subtype="chapter" type="textpart" n="7"><div subtype="section" type="textpart" n="1"><p><milestone unit="para"/>Having succeeded to the kingdom of <name type="place" key="perseus,Thebes">Thebes</name>, Creon cast out the <name type="place" key="tgn,5001993">Argive</name> dead unburied, issued a proclamation that none should bury them, and set watchmen. But Antigone, one of the daughters of Oedipus, stole the body of Polynices, and secretly buried it, and having been detected by Creon himself, she was interred alive in the grave.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Apollodorus here follows the account of Antigone's heroism and doom as they are described by Sophocles in his noble tragedy, the <title>Antigone</title>. Compare <bibl n="Aesch. Seven 1005">Aesch. Seven 1005ff.</bibl> A different version of the story is told by <bibl>Hyginus, Fab. 72</bibl>. According to him, when Antigone was caught in the act of performing funeral rites for her brother Polynices, Creon handed her over for execution to his son Haemon, to whom she had been betrothed. But Haemon, while he pretended to put her to death, smuggled her out of the way, married her, and had a son by her. In time the son grew up and came to <name type="place" key="perseus,Thebes">Thebes</name>, where Creon detected him by the bodily mark which all descendants of the Sparti or Dragon-men bore on their bodies. In vain Herakles interceded for Haemon with his angry father. Creon was inexorable; so Haemon killed himself and his wife Antigone. Some have thought that in this narrative Hyginus followed Euripides, who wrote a tragedy <title>Antigone</title>, of which a few fragments survive. See <bibl>TGF (Nauck 2nd ed.), pp. 404ff.</bibl> </note> Adrastus fled to <name type="place" key="perseus,Athens">Athens</name> <note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">As to the flight of Adrastus to <name type="place" key="perseus,Athens">Athens</name>, and the intervention of the Athenians on his behalf see <bibl n="Isoc. 4.54">Isoc. 4.54-58</bibl>; <bibl n="Isoc. 12.168">Isoc. 12.168-174</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 1.39.2">Paus. 1.39.2</bibl>; <bibl n="Plut. Thes. 29">Plut. Thes. 29</bibl>; <bibl>Statius, Theb. xii.464ff.</bibl>, (who substitutes <name type="place" key="tgn,5001993">Argive</name> matrons as suppliants instead of Adrastus). The story is treated by Euripides in his extant play <title>The Suppliants</title>, which, on the whole, Apollodorus follows. But whereas Apollodorus, like Statius, lays the scene of the supplication at the altar of Mercy in <name type="place" key="perseus,Athens">Athens</name>, Euripides lays it at the altar of Demeter in <name type="place" key="perseus,Eleusis">Eleusis</name> (<bibl n="Eur. Supp. 1">Eur. Supp. 1ff.</bibl>). In favour of the latter version it may be said that the graves of the fallen leaders were shown at <name type="place" key="perseus,Eleusis">Eleusis</name>, near the Flowery Well (<bibl n="Paus. 1.39.1">Paus. 1.39.1ff.</bibl>; <bibl n="Plut. Thes. 29">Plut. Thes. 29</bibl>); while the graves of the common soldiers were at Eleutherae, which is on the borders of <name type="place" key="tgn,7002681">Attica</name> and <name type="place" key="tgn,7002683">Boeotia</name>, on the direct road from <name type="place" key="perseus,Eleusis">Eleusis</name> to <name type="place" key="perseus,Thebes">Thebes</name> (<bibl n="Eur. Supp. 756">Eur. Supp. 756ff.</bibl>; <bibl n="Plut. Thes. 29">Plut. Thes. 29</bibl>). Tradition varied also on the question how the Athenians obtained the permission of the Thebans to bury the <name type="place" key="tgn,5001993">Argive</name> dead. Some said that Theseus led an army to <name type="place" key="perseus,Thebes">Thebes</name>, defeated the Thebans, and compelled them to give up the dead Argives for burial. This was the version adopted by Euripides, Statius, and Apollodorus. Others said that Theseus sent an embassy and by negotiations obtained the voluntary consent of the Thebans to his carrying off the dead. This version, as the less discreditable to the Thebans, was very naturally adopted by them (<bibl n="Paus. 1.39.2">Paus. 1.39.2</bibl>) and by the patriotic Boeotian Plutarch, who expressly rejects Euripides's account of the Theban defeat. Isocrates, with almost incredible fatuity, adopts both versions in different passages of his writings and defends himself for so doing (<bibl n="Isoc. 12.168">Isoc. 12.168-174</bibl>). Lysias, without expressly mentioning the flight of Adrastus to <name type="place" key="perseus,Athens">Athens</name>, says that the Athenians first sent heralds to the Thebans with a request for leave to bury the <name type="place" key="tgn,5001993">Argive</name> dead, and that when the request was refused, they marched against the Thebans, defeated them in battle, and carrying off the <name type="place" key="tgn,5001993">Argive</name> dead buried them at <name type="place" key="perseus,Eleusis">Eleusis</name>. See <bibl n="Lys. 2.7">Lys. 2.7-10</bibl>.</note> and took refuge at the altar of <pb n="375"/> Mercy,<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">As to the altar of Mercy at <name type="place" key="perseus,Athens">Athens</name> see above <bibl n="Apollod. 2.8.1">Apollod. 2.8.1</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 1.17.1">Paus. 1.17.1</bibl>, with my note (vol. ii. pp. 143ff.); <bibl n="Diod. 13.22.7">Diod. 13.22.7</bibl>; <bibl>Statius, Theb. xii.481-505</bibl>. It is mentioned in a late Greek inscription found at <name type="place" key="perseus,Athens">Athens</name> (<bibl>Corpus Inscriptionum Atticarum, iii.170</bibl>; <bibl>G. Kaibel, Epigrammata Graeca ex lapidibus conlecta 792</bibl>). The altar, though not mentioned by early writers, was in later times one of the most famous spots in <name type="place" key="perseus,Athens">Athens</name>. Philostratus says that the Athenians built an altar of Mercy as the thirteenth of the gods, and that they poured libations on it, not of wine, but of tears (<bibl>Philostratus, Epist. 39</bibl>). In this fancy he perhaps copied <bibl>Statius, Theb. xii.488</bibl>, “<foreign xml:lang="lat">lacrymis altaria sudant</foreign>”.</note> and laying on it the suppliant's bough<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">The branch of olive which a suppliant laid on the altar of a god in token that he sought the divine protection. See <bibl n="Andoc. 1.110">Andoc. 1.110ff.</bibl>; <bibl>Jebb on Sophocles, OT 3</bibl>.</note> he prayed that they would bury the dead. And the Athenians marched with Theseus, captured <name type="place" key="perseus,Thebes">Thebes</name>, and gave the dead to their kinsfolk to bury. And when the pyre of Capaneus was burning, his wife Evadne, the daughter of Iphis, thew herself on the pyre, and was burned with him.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">For the death of Evadne on the pyre of her husband Capaneus, see <bibl n="Eur. Supp. 1034">Eur. Supp. 1034ff.</bibl>; <bibl>Zenobius, Cent. i.30</bibl>; <bibl n="Prop. 1.15">Prop. i.15.21ff.</bibl>; <bibl n="Ov. Tr. 5.14.38">Ovid, Tristia v.14.38</bibl>; <bibl>Ovid, Pont. iii.1.111ff.</bibl>; <bibl>Hyginus, Fab. 243</bibl>; <bibl>Statius, Theb. xii.800ff.</bibl>, with the note of <bibl>Lactantius Placidus on Statius, Theb. v. 801</bibl>; <bibl>Martial iv.75.5</bibl>. Capaneus had been killed by a thunderbolt as he was mounting a ladder at the siege of <name type="place" key="perseus,Thebes">Thebes</name>. See <bibl n="Apollod. 3.6.7">Apollod. 3.6.7</bibl>. Hence his body was deemed sacred and should have been buried, not burned, and the grave fenced off; whereas the other bodies were all consumed on a single pyre. See <bibl n="Eur. Supp. 934">Eur. Supp. 934-938</bibl>, where <foreign xml:lang="grc">συμπήξας ta/fon</foreign> refers to the fencing in of the grave. So the tomb of Semele, who was also killed by lightning, seems to have stood within a sacred enclosure. See <bibl n="Eur. Ba. 6">Eur. Ba. 6-11</bibl>. Yet, inconsistently with the foregoing passage, Euripides appears afterwards to assume that the body of Capaneus was burnt on a pyre (<bibl n="Eur. Supp. 1000">Eur. Supp. 1000ff.</bibl>). The rule that a person killed by a thunderbolt should be buried, not burnt, is stated by <bibl>Pliny, Nat. Hist. ii.145</bibl> and alluded to by <bibl>Tertullian, Apologeticus 48</bibl>. An ancient Roman law, attributed to Numa, forbade the celebration of the usual obsequies for a man who had been killed by lightning. See <bibl>Festus, s.v. “Occisum,” p. 178, ed. C. O. Müller</bibl>. It is true that these passages refer to the Roman usage, but the words of <bibl n="Eur. Supp. 934">Eur. Supp. 934-938</bibl> seem to imply that the Greek practice was similar, and this is confirmed by Artemidorus, who says that the bodies of persons killed by lightning were not removed but buried on the spot (<bibl>Artemidorus, Onirocrit. ii.9</bibl>). The same writer tells us that a man struck by lightning was not deemed to be disgraced, nay, he was honoured as a god; even slaves killed by lightning were approached with respect, as honoured by Zeus, and their dead bodies were wrapt in fine garments. Such customs are to some extent explained by the belief that Zeus himself descended in the flash of lightning; hence whatever the lightning struck was naturally regarded as holy. Places struck by lightning were sacred to Zeus the Descender (<foreign xml:lang="grc">Ζεὺς καταιβάτης</foreign> ) and were enclosed by a fence. Inscriptions marking such spots have been found in various parts of <name type="place" key="tgn,1000074">Greece</name>. See <bibl>Pollux ix.41</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 5.14.10">Paus. 5.14.10</bibl>, with (<bibl>Frazer, Paus. vol. iii. p. 565, vol. v. p. 614</bibl>). Compare <bibl>E. Rohde, <title>Psyche</title>(3), i.320ff.</bibl>; <bibl>H. Useher, “Keraunos,” <title>Kleine Schriften</title>, iv.477ff.</bibl>, (who quotes from Clemens Romanus and Cyrillus more evidence of the worship of persons killed by lightning); <bibl>Chr. Blinkenberg, <title>The Thunder-weapon in Religion and Folklore</title> (Cambridge, 1911), pp. 110ff.</bibl> Among the Ossetes of the <name type="place" key="tgn,1108814">Caucasus</name> a man who has been killed by lightning is deemed very lucky, for they believe that he has been taken by St. Elias to himself. So the survivors raise cries of joy and sing and dance about him. His relations think it their duty to join in these dances and rejoicings, for any appearance of sorrow would be regarded as a sin against St. Elias and therefore punishable. The festival lasts eight days. The deceased is dressed in new clothes and laid on a pillow in the exact attitude in which he was struck and in the same place where he died. At the end of the celebrations he is buried with much festivity and feasting, a high cairn is erected on his grave, and beside it they set up a tall pole with the skin of a black he-goat attached to it, and another pole, on which hang the best clothes of the deceased. The grave becomes a place of pilgrimage. See <bibl>Julius von Klaproth, <title>Reise in den Kaukasus und nach Georgien</title> (Halle and Berlin, 1814), ii.606</bibl>; <bibl>A. von Haxthausen, <title>Transkaukasia</title> (Leipsig, 1856), ii.21ff.</bibl> Similarly the Kafirs of <name type="place" key="tgn,1000193">South Africa</name> “have strange notions respecting the lightning. They consider that it is governed by the <foreign>umshologu</foreign>, or ghost, of the greatest and most renowned of their departed chiefs, and who is emphatically styled the <foreign>inkosi</foreign>; but they are not at all clear as to which of their ancestors is intended by this designation. Hence they allow of no lamentation being made for a person killed by lightning, as they say that it would be a sign of disloyalty to lament for one whom the <foreign>inkosi</foreign> had sent for, and whose services he consequently needed; and it would cause him to punish them, by making the lightning again to descend and do them another injury.” Further, rites of purification have to be performed by a priest at the kraal where the accident took place; and till these have been performed, none of the inhabitants may leave the kraal or have intercourse with other people. Meantime their heads are shaved and they must abstain from drinking milk. The rites include a sacrifice and the inoculation of the people with powdered charcoal. See <bibl>“Mr. Warner's Notes,” in Col. Maclean's <title>Compendium of Kafir Laws and Customs</title> (Cape Town, 1866), pp. 82-84</bibl>. Sometimes, however, the ghosts of persons who have been killed by lightning are deemed to be dangerous. Hence the Omahas used to slit the soles of the feet of such corpses to prevent their ghosts from walking about. See <bibl>J. Owen Dorsey, “A Study of Siouan Cults,” <title>Eleventh Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology</title> (Washington, 1894), p. 420</bibl>. For more evidence of special treatment accorded to the bodies of persons struck dead by lightning, see <bibl>A. B. Ellis, <title>The Ewe-speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast</title> (London, 1890), p. 39ff.</bibl>; <bibl>A. B. Ellis, <title>The Yoruba-speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast</title> (London, 1894), p. 49</bibl>; <bibl>Rev. J. H. Weeks, “Notes on some customs of the Lower Congo people,” <title>Folk-Lore</title>, xx. (1909), p. 475</bibl>; <bibl>Rendel Harris, <title>Boanerges</title> (Cambridge, 1913), p. 97</bibl>; <bibl>A. L. Kitching, <title>On the backwaters of the Nile</title> (London, 1912), pp. 264ff.</bibl> Among the Barundi of Central Africa, a man or woman who has been struck, but not killed, by lightning becomes thereby a priest or priestess of the god Kiranga, whose name he or she henceforth bears and of whom he or she is deemed a bodily representative. And any place that has been struck by lightning is enclosed, and the trunk of a banana-tree or a young fig-tree is set up in it to serve as the temporary abode of the deity who manifested himself in the lightning. See <bibl>H. Meyer, <title>Die Barundi</title> (Leipsig, 1916), pp. 123, 135</bibl>.</note> <pb n="377"/> </p></div><div subtype="section" type="textpart" n="2"><p><milestone unit="para"/>Ten years afterwards the sons of the fallen, called the Epigoni, purposed to march against <name type="place" key="perseus,Thebes">Thebes</name> to <pb n="379"/>avenge the death of their fathers;<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">The war of the Epigoni against <name type="place" key="perseus,Thebes">Thebes</name> is narrated very similarly by <bibl>Diod. 4.66</bibl>. Compare <bibl n="Paus. 9.5.10">Paus. 9.5.10ff.</bibl>, <bibl n="Paus. 9.8.6">Paus. 9.8.6</bibl>, <bibl n="Paus. 9.9.4">Paus. 9.9.4ff.</bibl>; <bibl>Hyginus, Fab. 70</bibl>. There was an epic poem on the subject, called <title>Epigoni</title>, which some people ascribed to Homer (<bibl n="Hdt. 4.32">Hdt. 4.32</bibl>; <bibl>Biographi Graeci, ed. A. Westermann, pp. 42ff.</bibl>), but others attributed it to Antimachus (<bibl>Scholiast on Aristoph. Peace 1270</bibl>). Compare <bibl>Epicorum Graecorum Fragmenta, ed. G. Kinkel, pp. 13ff.</bibl> Aeschylus and Sophocles both wrote tragedies on the same subject and with the same title, <title>Epigoni</title>. See <bibl>TGF (Nauck 2nd ed.), pp. 19, 173ff.</bibl>; <bibl><title>The Fragments of Sophocles</title>, ed. A. C. Pearson, i.129ff.</bibl> </note> and when they consulted the oracle, the god predicted victory under the leadership of Alcmaeon. So Alcmaeon joined the expedition, though he was loath to lead the army till he had punished his mother; for Eriphyle had received the robe from Thersander, son of Polynices, and had persuaded her sons also<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">The sons of Eriphyle were Alcmaeon and Amphilochus, as we learn immediately. The giddy and treacherous mother persuaded them, as she had formerly persuaded her husband Amphiaraus, to go to the war, the bauble of a necklace and the gewgaw of a robe being more precious in her sight than the lives of her kinsfolk. See above, <bibl n="Apollod. 3.6.2">Apollod. 3.6.2</bibl>; and as to the necklace and robe, see <bibl n="Apollod. 3.4.2">Apollod. 3.4.2</bibl>; <bibl n="Apollod. 3.6.1">Apollod. 3.6.1-2</bibl>; <bibl>Diod. 4.66.3</bibl>.</note> to go to the war. Having chosen Alcmaeon as their leader, they made war on <name type="place" key="perseus,Thebes">Thebes</name>. The men who took part in the expedition were these: Alcmaeon and Amphilochus, sons of Amphiaraus; Aegialeus, son of Adrastus; Diomedes, son of Tydeus; Promachus, son of Parthenopaeus; Sthenelus, son of Capaneus; Thersander, son of Polynices; and Euryalus, son of Mecisteus. </p></div><div subtype="section" type="textpart" n="3"><p> They first laid waste the surrounding villages; then, when the Thebans advanced against them, led <pb n="381"/>by Laodamas, son of Eteocles, they fought bravely,<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">The battle was fought at a place called <name type="place" key="perseus,Glisas">Glisas</name>, where the graves of the <name type="place" key="tgn,5001993">Argive</name> lords were shown down to the time of Pausanias. See <bibl n="Paus. 9.5.13">Paus. 9.5.13</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 9.8.6">Paus. 9.8.6</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 9.9.4">Paus. 9.9.4</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 9.19.2">Paus. 9.19.2</bibl>; <bibl>Scholiast on Pind. P. 8.48(68)</bibl>, who refers to Hellanicus as his authority.</note> and though Laodamas killed Aegialeus, he was himself killed by Alcmaeon,<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">According to a different account, King Laodamas did not fall in the battle, but after his defeat led a portion of the Thebans away to the Illyrian tribe of the Encheleans, the same people among whom his ancestors Cadmus and Harmonia had found their last home. See <bibl n="Hdt. 5.61">Hdt. 5.61</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 9.5.13">Paus. 9.5.13</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 9.8.6">Paus. 9.8.6</bibl>. As to Cadmus and Harmonia in <name type="place" key="tgn,7016683">Illyria</name>, see above, <bibl n="Apollod. 3.5.4">Apollod. 3.5.4</bibl>.</note> and after his death the Thebans fled in a body within the walls. But as Tiresias told them to send a herald to treat with the Argives, and themselves to take to flight, they did send a herald to the enemy, and, mounting their children and women on the wagons, themselves fled from the city. When they had come by night to the spring called Tilphussa, Tiresias drank of it and expired.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">See <bibl n="Paus. 9.33.1">Paus. 9.33.1</bibl>, who says that the grave of Tiresias was at the spring. But there was also a cenotaph of the seer on the road from <name type="place" key="perseus,Thebes">Thebes</name> to <name type="place" key="perseus,Chalcis">Chalcis</name> (<bibl n="Paus. 9.18.4">Paus. 9.18.4</bibl>). <bibl>Diod. 4.67.1</bibl> agrees with Pausanias and Apollodorus in placing the death of Tiresias at Mount Tilphusium, which was beside the spring Tilphussa, in the territory of Haliartus.</note> After travelling far the Thebans built the city of Hestiaea and took up their abode there. </p></div><div subtype="section" type="textpart" n="4"><p> But the Argives, on learning afterwards the flight of the Thebans, entered the city and collected the booty, and pulled down the walls. But they sent a portion of the booty to Apollo at <name type="place" key="perseus,Delphi">Delphi</name> and with it Manto, daughter of Tiresias; for they had vowed that, if they took <name type="place" key="perseus,Thebes">Thebes</name>, they would dedicate to him the fairest of the spoils.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Compare <bibl>Diod. 4.66.6</bibl> (who gives the name of Tiresias's daughter as Daphne, not Manto); <bibl n="Paus. 7.3.3">Paus. 7.3.3</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 9.33.2">Paus. 9.33.2</bibl>; <bibl>Scholiast on Ap. Rhod., Argon. i.308</bibl>.</note> </p></div><div subtype="section" type="textpart" n="5"><p><milestone unit="para"/>After the capture of <name type="place" key="perseus,Thebes">Thebes</name>, when Alcmaeon learned that his mother Eriphyle had been bribed <pb n="383"/>to his undoing also,<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">That is, as well as to the undoing of his father Amphiaraus. See above, <bibl n="Apollod. 3.6.2">Apollod. 3.6.2</bibl>.</note> he was more incensed than ever, and in accordance with an oracle given to him by Apollo he killed his mother.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Compare <bibl n="Thuc. 2.102.7">Thuc. 2.102.7ff.</bibl>; <bibl>Diod. 4.65.7</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 8.24.7">Paus. 8.24.7ff.</bibl>; <bibl n="Ov. Met. 9.407">Ov. Met. 9.407ff.</bibl>; <bibl>Hyginus, Fab. 73</bibl>. Sophocles and Euripides both wrote tragedies called <title>Alcmaeon</title>, or rather <title>Alcmeon</title>, for that appears to be the more correct spelling of the name. See <bibl>TGF (Nauck 2nd ed.), pp. 153ff., 379ff.</bibl>; <bibl><title>The Fragments of Sophocles</title>, ed. A. C. Pearson, vol. i. pp. 68ff.</bibl> </note> Some say that he killed her in conjunction with his brother Amphilochus, others that he did it alone. But Alcmaeon was visited by the Fury of his mother's murder, and going mad he first repaired to Oicles<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Oicles was the father of Amphiaraus, and therefore the grandfather of Alcmaeon. See <bibl n="Apollod. 1.8.2">Apollod. 1.8.2</bibl>.</note> in <name type="place" key="tgn,7002735">Arcadia</name>, and thence to Phegeus at <name type="place" key="perseus,Psophis">Psophis</name>. And having been purified by him he married Arsinoe, daughter of Phegeus,<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified"><bibl n="Paus. 8.24.8">Paus. 8.24.8</bibl> and <bibl n="Prop. 1.15">Prop. i.15.19</bibl> call her Alphesiboea.</note> and gave her the necklace and the robe. But afterwards the ground became barren on his account,<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">So <name type="place" key="tgn,1000074">Greece</name> is said to have been afflicted with a dearth on account of a treacherous murder committed by Pelops. See below, <bibl n="Apollod. 3.12.6">Apollod. 3.12.6</bibl>. Similarly the land of <name type="place" key="perseus,Thebes">Thebes</name> was supposed to be visited with barrenness of the soil, of cattle, and of women because of the presence of Oedipus, who had slain his father and married his mother. See <bibl n="Soph. OT 22">Soph. OT 22ff.</bibl>; <bibl n="Soph. OT 96">Soph. OT 96ff.</bibl>; <bibl>Hyginus, Fab. 67</bibl>. The notion that the shedding of blood, especially the blood of a kinsman, is an offence to the earth, which consequently refuses to bear crops, seems to have been held by the ancient Hebrews, as it is still apparently held by some African peoples. See <bibl><title>Folk-Lore in the Old Testament</title>, i.82ff.</bibl> </note> and the god bade him in an oracle to depart to Achelous and to stand another trial on the river bank.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">The text is here uncertain. See the Critical Note.</note> At first he repaired to Oeneus at Calydon and was entertained by him; then he went to the Thesprotians, but was driven away from the country; and finally he went to the springs of Achelous, and was purified by him,<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Achelous here seems to be conceived partly as a river and partly as a man, or rather a god.</note> and <pb n="385"/>received Callirrhoe, his daughter, to wife. Moreover he colonized the land which the Achelous had formed by its silt, and he took up his abode there.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Compare <bibl n="Thuc. 2.102.7">Thuc. 2.102.7ff.</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 8.24.8">Paus. 8.24.8ff.</bibl> As to the formation of new land by the deposit of alluvial soil at the mouth of the Achelous, compare <bibl n="Hdt. 2.10">Hdt. 2.10</bibl>.</note> But afterwards Callirrhoe coveted the necklace and robe, and said she would not live with him if she did not get them. So away Alcmaeon hied to <name type="place" key="perseus,Psophis">Psophis</name> and told Phegeus how it had been predicted that he should be rid of his madness when he had brought the necklace and the robe to <name type="place" key="perseus,Delphi">Delphi</name> and dedicated them.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">According to Ephorus, or his son Demophilus, this oracle was really given to Alcmaeon at <name type="place" key="perseus,Delphi">Delphi</name>. See <bibl>Athenaeus vi.22, p. 232 DF</bibl>, where the words of the oracle are quoted.</note> Phegeus believed him and gave them to him. But a servant having let out that he was taking the things to Callirrhoe, Phegeus commanded his sons, and they lay in wait and killed him.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">His grave was overshadowed by tall cypresses, called the Maidens, in the bleak upland valley of <name type="place" key="perseus,Psophis">Psophis</name>. See <bibl n="Paus. 8.24.7">Paus. 8.24.7</bibl>. A quiet resting-place for the matricide among the solemn Arcadian mountains after the long fever of the brain and the long weary wanderings. The valley, which I have visited, somewhat resembles a <name type="place" key="tgn,7008171">Yorkshire</name> dale, but is far wilder and more solitary.</note> When Arsinoe upbraided them, the sons of Phegeus clapped her into a chest and carried her to <name type="place" key="perseus,Tegea">Tegea</name> and gave her as a slave to Agapenor, falsely accusing her of Alcmaeon's murder. </p></div><div subtype="section" type="textpart" n="6"><p> Being apprized of Alcmaeon's untimely end and courted by Zeus, Callirrhoe requested that the sons she had by Alcmaeon might be full grown in order to avenge their father's murder. And being suddenly full-grown, the sons went forth to right their father's wrong.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Compare <bibl n="Ov. Met. 9.413">Ov. Met. 9.413ff.</bibl> </note> Now Pronous and Agenor, the sons of Phegeus,<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified"><bibl n="Paus. 8.24.10">Paus. 8.24.10</bibl> calls them Temenus and Axion.</note> carrying the necklace and robe to <name type="place" key="perseus,Delphi">Delphi</name> to dedicate them, turned in at the house of Agapenor at the same time as Amphoterus and <pb n="387"/> Acarnan, the sons of Alcmaeon; and the sons of Alcmaeon killed their father's murderers, and going to <name type="place" key="perseus,Psophis">Psophis</name> and entering the palace they slew both Phegeus and his wife. They were pursued as far as <name type="place" key="perseus,Tegea">Tegea</name>, but saved by the intervention of the Tegeans and some Argives, and the Psophidians took to flight. </p></div><div subtype="section" type="textpart" n="7"><p> Having acquainted their mother with these things, they went to <name type="place" key="perseus,Delphi">Delphi</name> and dedicated the necklace and robe<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">According to <bibl n="Paus. 8.24.10">Paus. 8.24.10</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 9.41.2">Paus. 9.41.2</bibl>, it was the sons of Phegeus, not the sons of Alcmaeon, who dedicated the necklace at <name type="place" key="perseus,Delphi">Delphi</name>. The necklace, or what passed for it, was preserved at <name type="place" key="perseus,Delphi">Delphi</name> in the sanctuary of Forethought Athena as late as the Sacred War in the fourth century B.C., when it was carried off, with much more of the sacred treasures, by the unscrupulous Phocian leader, Phayllus. See <bibl>Parthenius, Narrat. 25</bibl> (who quotes Phylarchus as his authority); <bibl>Athenaeus vi.22, p. 232 DE</bibl> (who quotes the thirtieth book of the history of Ephorus as his authority).</note> according to the injunction of Achelous. Then they journeyed to <name type="place" key="tgn,7002705">Epirus</name>, collected settlers, and colonized <name type="place" key="tgn,7002679">Acarnania</name>.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">Compare <bibl n="Thuc. 2.102.9">Thuc. 2.102.9</bibl>; <bibl n="Paus. 8.24.9">Paus. 8.24.9</bibl>, who similarly derive the name of <name type="place" key="tgn,7002679">Acarnania</name> from Acarnan, son of Alcmaeon. Pausanias says that formerly the people were called Curetes.</note> <milestone unit="para"/>But Euripides says<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified">The reference is no doubt to one of the two lost tragedies which Euripides composed under the title <title>Alcmaeon</title>. See <bibl>TGF (Nauck 2nd ed.), pp. 479ff.</bibl> </note> that in the time of his madness Alcmaeon begat two children, Amphilochus and a daughter Tisiphone, by Manto, daughter of Tiresias, and that he brought the babes to <name type="place" key="perseus,Corinth">Corinth</name> and gave them to Creon, king of <name type="place" key="perseus,Corinth">Corinth</name>, to bring up; and that on account of her extraordinary comeliness Tisiphone was sold as a slave by Creon's spouse, who feared that Creon might make her his wedded wife. But Alcmaeon bought her and kept her as a handmaid, not knowing that she was his daughter, and coming to <name type="place" key="perseus,Corinth">Corinth</name> to get back his children he recovered his son also. And Amphilochus colonized <pb n="389"/> <name type="place" key="perseus,Amphilochian Argos">Amphilochian Argos</name> in obedience to oracles of Apollo.<note anchored="true" resp="ed" place="unspecified"><name type="place" key="perseus,Amphilochian Argos">Amphilochian Argos</name> was a city of <name type="place" key="tgn,7002678">Aetolia</name>, situated on the Ambracian Gulf. See <bibl n="Thuc. 2.68.3">Thuc. 2.68.3</bibl>, who represents the founder Amphilochus as the son of Amphiaraus, and therefore as the brother, not the son, of Alcmaeon. As to Amphilochus, son of Amphiaraus, see above, <bibl n="Apollod. 3.7.2">Apollod. 3.7.2</bibl>.</note> </p></div></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>