In Your Myths
By Becca Menon
()
About this ebook
Part love story, part fairy tale, part novel of ideas, IN YOUR MYTHS is a romp through Greek mythology that takes some of the shine off “Shining” Apollo. Find out the real reason Apollo chased Daphne, famous for preferring tree-hood to him. But her heart – and other delectable parts – already been given to the god of play, Great Pan. Told using lively, accessible renderings of Ancient Greek meters, and chock-a-block with pictures.
Becca Menon
Known for her musical storytelling craft, Becca Menon’s works, often based in fairy tale, folklore, myth and Scripture, have been hailed internationally from the Middle East to the United Kingdom. On the other hand, this American writer began her professional life as a preschool teacher. Good thing that left its mark, too. Come listen to readings and discover other mischief at www.BeccaBooks.com.
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In Your Myths - Becca Menon
Creative Commons Image: Guillaume Coustou the Elder
INVOCATION
THEBES: I II III IV V VI VII VIII
CRETE: I II III IV V VI VII VIII
SICILY: I II III IV V VI VII VIII
DELPHI: I II III IV V VI VII VIII
The Meters
Glossary
Come, you nine old whores, recreate the old days;
Pan enjoyed you free, not that pimp, Apollo.
Yeasty Bacchus hadn’t yet sapped your beauty.
Tell us what happened.
THEBES
I
Creative Commons Image: Annibale Carracci [Public domain], via Wikimedia
Yikes! They’re scourging Pan in his sleep to extort good
game and pasture, beating his weathered image.
So the god himself gives a shout and wakes up,
Startling Daphne.
Daphne, half nymph, laughed at the god’s arousing;
Laughed, yet pity dampened amusement; and ’cause poor
Pan was pouting, Daphne relinquished garlands
Meant for her mother.
These,
she cooed, "should hang on my mother’s altar,
But they look far sweeter on you, my bleater."
Thus she comforted Pan with whom nymphs get on
Famously – mostly.
Walk with me,
Pan gladdened, then asked, inspired,
"Could the seer Tiresias call you daughter?"
Could and does; but mainly he calls me Daphne.
Pan took his pipes up.
Steam came pouring out to show all
Air were cold compared to the warmth of Pan’s breath.
Cloven-hoofed, he pranced as he played his hot tune,
Trilling the climax.
Piping down the goat-studded hills and up paths
Thick with bee-warm spring afternoon in flower,
Pan bestrayed her; willingly, Daphne followed,
Wordless, never
Humbled walking with him, the Great God, the Horned One,
Ambling near this Pan, in whose pointy footprints
Grasses, clover, buttercups sprang up swiftly.
Daphne exulted.
Dumb with joy, not once did she think of her mother.
Should she have? Not once did she think of her father.
Should she have? Forgetting herself, she stumbled –
Fortunate Daphne!
Since her ankle twisted in finding a snake-hole:
Would not hold her, Pan picked her up. Her legs wrapped
Tightly, longly, gamely around his wool-soft
Flanks. Then she rode, white
Tunic streaming. Daphne was like a new-grown
Head. She rested her chin on his curls, and humming,
Rode the garlanded god to the grove she’d never
Seen – or believed she
Had not known, though actually, she’d been born there,
Under these rare cherries that grew where Cadmus’
Men had sprung from a dragon’s dental
Legacy. Themis,
Hermes’ sometimes consort, the river Ladon’s
Daughter, famous for prophecy, nymph of Arcadia,
Pan’s own land, had dallied with young Tiresias
Here on the strong soil,
Black with dragon’s blood. She’d returned to bring forth
Daphne here. The ground had been crimson with burst fruit,
Red with labor. Daphne, the Bloody One, thus
Themis had named her.
Daphne’s hair was red, and her eyes were emerald.
Themis left the child, after adequate suckling,
Right at Dad’s door, squalling and wet on his front steps.
Dad gave her goat-milk.
Strictly speaking, goats gave her milk, besides which,
Slaves and servants reared her and taught her reading,
Writing, numbers. Dad spent his days at the temple,
Listening to sparrows,
Larks and doves. All sang with Athena’s neat tongue.
Only sea-birds scorned to reveal their knowledge.
Neither albatross, halcyon, gull nor crane
Called to the wan priest.
Nightingales whirred shyly and swallows answered.
Tactless cuckoos, too, flew into the temple,
Rudely yodeling, just like the one that Pan heard
As he was mounting
Daphne. Bravo! Blood in the grove again; lewd
Song of the virgin’s passage, her aching pleasure.
Pan, his tongue accustomed to nectar, licked bright
Blood from her soreness.
Ah, indeed. So that’s revelation,
Daphne
Sighed. I’m hungry.
So, to oblige his new
Love, Pan caused cherries to drop to Daphne’s
Ripe, somewhat buss-buffed
Lips. She rolled red fruits in her mouth, and biting,
Kissed her god, who greedily sucked the wet stones,
Moaned, and swallowed, swelling where seeds grow.
Dozens of mouthfuls
Passed between them, juices distilling, dribbling
Down vermillion chins while the pits slid firmly
Through contracting throats till they sank to their bellies,
Lying like words there:
Hard and heady knots. Then the sated pair lay
Quietly entwining their glances. "Eros,"
Pan declared, I owe you for this.
And me, too,
Daphne assured him.
Drowsily, she wondered how the gods paid
Favors back. Present one another offerings?
Gently stroking the place on his tummy where flesh
Yielded to curl-kinked
Fur, she found no navel. Perhaps it was hidden.
Probing fingers found nothing to speak of, but stirred up
Something not for speaking. This time the dear god
Liked being woken.
Bruised by overuse, she began to whimper.
Pan desisted. Merciful god! The spent day
Threw down shadows, teasing and mottling their faces,
Darting through branches.
Placid Pan pipes eulogies praising departing
Time’s discoveries, mourning its passing. But Daphne
Clutched her stomach. Cherry pits caused her discomfort.
Ugh,
was her comment.
Creative Commons Image: By Python [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Pits were dragon eggs in her mind, her entrails:
Filling with lizards. Oh my gods,
she whispered,
Dragons gnaw my innards!
She saw them swim, swarm,
Slash her with bright scales,
Burnished crimson. Each made a claim to a different
Organ. One took her liver, another, lungs;
One, his arrow tail in his teeth, his claws spiked,
Crouched in her cramped heart.
Silly,
Pan scoffed, "nothing like that should happen.
Look how birds flock, gobbling the cherries as we did,
Pits and all. The grove is the gift of Pallas.
That’s how the brave birds
Know her secrets."
"Oh, so will we be prophets,
Too," she queried.
"Maybe. My first prediction:
You’ll succumb to goat-footed love again, kid.
Starting tomorrow?"
What did Pan care whether he knew the future
More than this, so long as the rhythms, hills, sky,
Smells and naps he loved were unshaken by time’s winds?
Pan had no time-map.
Nor did empires, cities and kings that seers read
Mean much. Daphne, oracular bones in her mortal
Body, cared. She anxiously feared the mantle.
Awk,
said the birds. Tweep,
Cheep,
so rudely forced as they vied for choice limbs;
Twirp,
turoo,
competing for bedtime branches.
Through the squawked, cacophonous vespers, a message
Broke, tossing fragments
Into twilight… Phoebus… a crown… Omphalos…
Time to go,
urged Pan with a shudder, brushing
Leaves from Daphne’s hair. She was trembling, exhausted.
Pan said he’d walk her
All the way to Thebes. Her new crotch made riding
Worse than footfall. Pan couldn’t cure a wound caused
By his own deed. Still, he had healed her ankle.
Dove-breasted dusk dropped
Earthward, gently felled by the night-driven moon’s shafts.
One late herder stopped to salute the perfect
Goat who gamboled next to a gingerly treading
Girl. But ecstatic
Ewes and kids fairly purred to approach their pastor.
Rooted, they stood long after the god had frisked past.
Bucks in mangers shouted huzzahs and mated,
All in his honor.
Then the idle god had an urge to grab green
Acorns off their branches. He tossed them skywards
One by one. He seemed so absorbed, she asked him,
What are you doing?
Nothing: want to play?
She had no idea how.
Games that have no goal and no purpose aren’t human.
Pan adapted. "Here are some nuts. I’ll throw one
Up, and then you try
Hitting that with yours. I won’t throw mine too high."
Daphne’s marksmanship was atrocious. Pan did
Better, but not much. She was secretly saddened.
Gods should be perfect.
Aimless, aren’t we?
Pan was an awful punster.
Never mind. She was grateful to have a friend who’d
Walk her home in the dark. And she liked his style.
No one was like him.
Hand in hand they waded Athena’s knife-chill
Stream. They paused midway for a kiss. Delicious.
Pointy-eared Pan pricked up his channels, Listen.
Aieee...!
cried a baby.
Cleaving, Pan and Daphne discerned the infant
Rage made rigid, hunger and cold made bitter.
Barely born, he lay on a distant hill whose
Yews gave the flocks shade.
Maybe herders would find the abandoned baby
Dead tomorrow. Riveted, still in Athena’s
Water, Pan and Tiresias’ daughter shivered,
Gasping with pity.
"What do you see that your breath grows hotter than Etna’s?"
Blind as a bone, Thebes stumbles and breaks into brotherly battle.
What do you hear in the child’s cries?
"Innocent murder and incest.
Oh, that The Fates’ too steady hands could sever this fresh thread!"
Chills and chattering teeth overcame her. "Take me
Home," she wept. Pan lifted her up in his human
Arms. His eyes asked, Leaving the child?
Because what
Good could she do him?
Feed him, warm him, hold and postpone his sorrow?
All the world would say that the boy was Tiresias’ grandson.
Daphne buried her face in the god’s broad chest.
Gently, sublimely
Borne to bed, she slept until violent Phoebus’
Rays disturbed her. Shyly, she thought of the dragon’s
Grove and giggled, wondering how to fulfill Pan’s
Pleasant prediction.
II
Tiresias – who bit his nails – now nipped or drummed
Raw fingers on his breastbone.
Stone-faced, he paced the courtyard
Outside his daughter’s window; shuffled, minced, paused.
She watched him grope along, one oratory style
Arm outstretched to guide his awkward
To and fro. No shadow
Dogged him. Noon already?
Why would he be home so late?
She threw her tunic on and hurried to escape
To Pan before her father made her lose the day
Doing boring things for him.
No such luck! He heard a hasty brush
Electrify her hair. So there you are,
he turned
And called. "Come here, my girl. You’re more elusive than
Justice, more furtive than some
Startled crab. Come here so I can touch
Your dimpled cheek, child."
Coming, father.
So, she went. And had she really
Wanted to rejoin priapic Pan?
Relief dispersed itself from limb
To loin, from brow to solar plexus. Pan was too
Potent, too ecstatic, too divine.
A sudden pang brought back the stream… too keen….
She fairly called recalling, not the scene, but what
Was sharper: seeing. Still, she took her father’s arm.
Here I am.
He stroked her face.
There you are,
he patted, "you’ve become
A woman lately, haven’t you, my crowning prize?"
By the horns of Pan, could Daddy tell?
Have I?
she attempted, noting
With dismay that spots of blood beflecked
Her tunic hem. But surely he did not
See them, did not know? A seer,
He frequently lamented, could not peer in things
Which most concerned him: blind to fate of flesh and blood.
"Are you coming down with something, child?
Something’s odd about your voice."
Is there?
she croaked unwillingly.
"Yes. But let’s go in before the sun
Smites us or is smitten
By your fairness. You resemble
Shade-loving, Themis, Daphne."
Then she led him to his favorite
Bench, asking for the thousandth
Time to hear how Themis found him
Half-dead, a serpent’s tooth stuck
Thorn-like in his swollen thumb.
She’d sucked the broken fang and poison from his flesh.
Then Themis nursed wiry young Tiresias
Tenderly for days among
The dappled shadows cast by sacred trees, their fruits
A fertile pharmacopeia of vigor – and
Of love. The tale stopped. The teller dropped one
Sentimental tear from one stone eye.
This familiar pause seemed fresh to her.
Deflowered Daphne wondered newly why her Mom
And Dad would not continue meeting every so
Often…. After all, she noticed now,
Dad was rather trim and handsome still.
Also, as that male protagonist
Resumed his story, Daphne realized that the grove
Had been the dragon bower. Now she knew the joy
Of her engendering. Something else she knew:
How, leaving, he had crossed the cold
Pellucid water Pallas loved; was there ordained
To see his eyes violate the goddess,
Stumbling on the naked truth
Of her ablutions. Daphne’d seen calamity
In swaddling clothes. Tiresias had looked on what
Held higher terror: perfect
Wisdom without stain, unveiled, incarnate.
"My senses failed. My disbelieving mind went blank.
No image stayed imprinted on my mortal mind,
As if the accidental act of looking proved
Corrosive. All her features, every contour fell
Apart, dissolved. Can I say I’ve seen her?
Yes. Blindness keeps her vivid.
That’s her gift. Daughter, now I know
All eyes are empty which do
Not behold her, always present,
Ever there before them. Still I
Struggle after something definite,
A form, a face, a residue, a smaller thing
Than blindness’ realm; some part to grasp, to shape the bare
Boundless void in which I wander since.
From time to time, a figure seems emerging out
Of light. It’s always Themis, gorgeous Themis, whose
Beauty is conceivable – whom
You resemble – not Athena. No."
Happily, her father could not see
Her smile, or smirk, as she imagined her contrasting
Pan, in all his naked glory, pure
In native ease, the pipes his only ornament.
She, for one, could never love a god she feared,
A god the sight of whom belittled all
Else, eclipsing every earth-begotten joy.
She wished she could be with her god this afternoon
To nudge him amorously from the nap he must
Be taking even as they spoke. But yesterday…
Daphne sighed. Her father sighed.
Chaerias the servant entered,
"Begging pardon, but the message
Master’s been on pins for’s come,
And eke another." There he held, awaiting some
Signal such as, Well, what does it say?
Silence. So Chaerias cleared his throat,
"Beg your patience, but the boy
Who helps, er, get about has squashed a foot nor could
Not come so sent his little brother, but the tyke
Sucks his thumb and squalls until
I leave him taste some honey. Off he falls in sleep."
"Daphne, you will have to lead me.
Run, put on your finest garment.
Laius and Jocasta summon me
To soothe the grief of their posterity. Their harsh
Heredity, preserved in dire perversity
Now wails for all the world to pity, fear, abhor.
What deeds this infant must perform, I cannot say –
Nor silent abject hopes I might not live to see
Such prodigies of fate. Shall I rebuke the king
For siring such an heir? The queen for bearing him?
The pair for saying, it’s as gods have chosen,
so the newborn must be left exposed?
My counsel was to live in quasi-abstinence.
The compromise I thought a kindness turns the blame
On me, imperfect and unhappy seer."
Daphne scarcely listened –
Too excited now.
Wait till she told Pan about
Going to the palace!
Well, she reconsidered, hurrying
To change to something more immaculate, and bind
Her hair, perhaps irreverent Pan
Wouldn’t think so much of Cadmus’ house.
At least she’d get to meet the queen.
Jocasta’s sixteen years ran only one
Ahead of Daphne’s own.
Young queen, poor thing, already given birth?
Must have been a hard one? That’s what Dad
Had rambled on about? The royal couple must
Have been expecting for a while, and yet,
Come to think of it, she’d never
Heard the populace should wish the palace joy.
Daphne donned a golden chain
To cinch her waist, then rejoined
Tiresias. He took her arm,
Full of gloom, while Daphne’s cheeks
Dimpled pleasantly.
Silence gnawed their slow
Steps until – by chance it seemed at first –
Shrieks and shouts broke out
From across the marketplace just
As Daphne’s foot touched to start their crossing.
A goat had broken loose.
Panic reigned. The beast, amuck,
Upset the carts, people, baskets, vats, jugs
And sundry stuffs. Horses shied, and pots smashed;
Grain spilled, and sheep quivered; pigs squealed, and olives,
Oiled, loudly rolled, twirled like beads beneath slick
Shoes, flailing feet. Help!
My wine!
It’s mine!
Ouch!
Oof!
Gods!
Get that goat!
Ejaculations bobbed above the din
As, monstrous, big and black, the buck
Dashed, awnings crashing, colors
Clashing, new wine splashing,
In his wake – and dribbling down
His dark goatee. From here to there, he’d halt,
Smack his lips, and look extremely
Pleased. People hurled shrill threats from
Safe distances. But children
Laughed, applauding. Daphne, on the hard
Cusp, not yet mature,
Not young, described the riot
To tense Tiresias while trembling half with fear,
Soon with mirth. She burst out
Laughing – at which moment
The goat came charging right between her legs and swept
Her off her feet. Fast and far away Pan
Galloped, Daphne riding happily,
Horns in hand, exhilarated –
She, unlike Europa, never even turned,
Never once looked back.
III
Daphne astride, the god jumped into a lake and