A BOOK OF MYTHS
BY JEAN LANG
(MRS. JOHN LANG)
WITH SIXTEEN ORIGINAL DRAWINGS IN COLOUR BY HELEN STRATTON
[Illustration]
THOMAS NELSON & SONS NEW YORK
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
[Illustration: "WHAT WAS HE DOING, THE GREAT GOD PAN, DOWN IN THE REEDS BY THE RIVER?" (See page 209)]
PREFACE
Just as a little child holds out its hands to catch the sunbeams, to feel and to grasp what, so its eyes tell it, is actually there, so, down through the ages, men have stretched out their hands in eager endeavour to know their God. And because only through the human was the divine knowable, the old peoples of the earth made gods of their heroes and not unfrequently endowed these gods with as many of the vices as of the virtues of their worshippers. As we read the myths of the East and the West we find ever the same story. That portion of the ancient Aryan race which poured from the central plain of Asia, through the rocky defiles of what we now call "The Frontier," to populate the fertile lowlands of India, had gods who must once have been wholly heroic, but who came in time to be more degraded than the most vicious of lustful criminals. And the Greeks, Latins, Teutons, Celts, and Slavonians, who came of the same mighty Aryan stock, did even as those with whom they owned a common ancestry. Originally they gave to their gods of their best. All that was noblest in them, all that was strongest and most selfless, all the higher instincts of their natures were their endowment. And although their worship in time became corrupt and lost its beauty, there yet remains for us, in the old tales of the gods, a wonderful humanity that strikes a vibrant chord in the hearts of those who are the descendants of their worshippers. For though creeds and forms may change, human nature never changes. We are less simple than our fathers: that is all. And, as Professor York Powell[1] most truly says: "It is not in a man's creed, but in his deeds; not in his knowledge, but in his sympathy, that there lies the essence of what is good and of what will last in human life."
The most usual habits of mind in our own day are the theoretical and analytical habits. Dissection, vivisection, analysis--those are the processes to which all things not conclusively historical and all things spiritual are bound to pass. Thus we find the old myths classified into Sun Myths and Dawn Myths, Earth Myths and Moon Myths, Fire Myths and Wind Myths, until, as one of the most sane and vigorous thinkers of the present day[2] has justly observed: "If you take the rhyme of Mary and her little lamb, and call Mary the sun and the lamb the moon, you will achieve astonishing results, both in religion and astronomy, when you find that the lamb followed Mary to school one day."
In this little collection of Myths, the stories are not presented to the student of folklore as a fresh contribution to his knowledge. Rather is the book intended for those who, in the course of their reading, frequently come across names which possess for them no meaning, and who care to read some old stories, through
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Book of Myths by Jeanie Lang
- 2: The Lord bless thee and keep thee
- 3: FOOTNOTES 1 Teutonic Heathendom
- 4: Down in the reeds by the river
- 5: Into its nostrils Eros breathed the spirit of life
- 6: To Epimethus this seemed an impossibility
- 7: Epimethus was unable to answer
- 8: For Prometheus he reserved another punishment
- 9: Then Pygmalion covered his eyes
- 10: Hopeless and unutterable Galatea
- 11: Clymene listened with grief to his complaint
- 12: And with eager gladness Phaeton set out upon his journey
- 13: And Phaeton gained his heart's desire
- 14: Over Libya the horses took him
- 15: To Phaeton the Italian Naiades reared a tomb
- 16: Yet it was sufficient to wake Endymion
- 17: ORPHEUS Orpheus with his lute made trees
- 18: In agonised suffering Eurydice died
- 19: Orpheus fearlessly pled his cause
- 20: What if there followed him not Eurydice
- 21: Orpheus returned to his own land of Thrace
- 22: APOLLO AND DAPHNE Conqueror of all conquerable earth
- 23: He knew that her cry to Peneus her father had been answered
- 24: Eros gazed upon her perfect loveliness
- 25: No mortal lover shall fair Psyche know
- 26: Illustration THUS DID PSYCHE LOSE HER FEAR
- 27: They began to ply Psyche with questions
- 28: Pitying eyes looked in those of Psyche
- 29: Now that Psyche was no longer there
- 30: Psyche began her hopeless labour
- 31: For to the black waves I thy ewer will bear
- 32: And Psyche sank down by the wayside
- 33: Meleager grew into gallant boyhood
- 34: But Atalanta had consulted an oracle
- 35: And they rushed against Atalanta
- 36: And Atalanta returned to Arcadia
- 37: Milanion was a beautiful youth
- 38: While she marvelled at the magic skill of the fair Arachne
- 39: Arachne made reply I fear not
- 40: Does Arachne have her compensations
- 41: To Evenos Apollo quickly imparted his desire
- 42: But Evenos knew that his horses
- 43: Marpessa not as mere mortal loves do I love thee
- 44: From man to god passed the eyes of Marpessa
- 45: Watering at the fountain of Arethusa
- 46: Yet ever Alpheus gained upon her
- 47: Once upon a time there reigned a king called Acrisius
- 48: And the crafty eyes of old Polydectes
- 49: Gazed in the bold eyes of Polydectes
- 50: Perseus had dreamed of gallant
- 51: There is the Garden of the Hesperides
- 52: And as Perseus flew before them
- 53: And Andromeda gave a piteous cry
- 54: Then did Perseus and Andromeda
- 55: So did Acrisius fall and lie prone
- 56: And when Niobe heard it she laughed in scorn
- 57: Am I not queenly as Latona herself
- 58: Hyacinthus was a Spartan youth
- 59: Hyacinthus made a valiant throw
- 60: The gods had indeed bestowed upon Gordias
- 61: And Midas quickly put to proof the words of Bacchus
- 62: And the fair nymphs and dryads
- 63: Henceforth shall Midas have ass's ears
- 64: There reigned a king whose name was Ceyx
- 65: And to bid him send to Halcyone a vision
- 66: When he had winged his way to Trachine
- 67: She stretched out her arms and cried aloud O Ceyx
- 68: The gods were angry with Aristaeus
- 69: The voice was that of Aristaeus
- 70: Yet still Aristaeus held the chains
- 71: ' low she cries Persephone Persephone
- 72: The fragrant flowers spoke to her only of Persephone
- 73: Unwillingly Zeus granted the request of Demeter
- 74: Latona went to the edge of the pond
- 75: From their throats there would come only the Krroak
- 76: A maimed nymph indeed was Echo then
- 77: And implored her to punish Narcissus
- 78: When Narcissus smiled at her in rapture
- 79: Equalled Daedalus in his inventive power
- 80: Then did there come to Daedalus
- 81: In his dreams that night Icarus flew
- 82: Like a wounded bird Icarus fluttered
- 83: The fragrance of the heliotrope is
- 84: THE CRANES OF IBYCUS For murder
- 85: There were none who did not think of Ibycus
- 86: And Syrinx listened with a smile
- 87: So did Syrinx the huntress stand
- 88: As Aphrodite sported one day with Eros
- 89: The soul of Adonis passed away
- 90: We know that Adonis has returned from his exile
- 91: When Dryope first looked on her child
- 92: But neither Pan nor Pitys had remembrance of Boreas
- 93: Work and weave in endless motion
- 94: And there was a darkness all over the earth Thamus
- 95: Sie kaemmt es mit gold'nem Kamme
- 96: Is the river maiden of the Rhine the Lorelei
- 97: It is ein Maerchen aus alten Zeiten a legend of long ago
- 98: She was the protectress of those who sailed the seas
- 99: He quitted Asgard in furious wrath
- 100: Freya gently moved the couch upon which he lay
- 101: Baldur lived in Asgard with his wife Nanna
- 102: The daughter of Loki and of Angrbotha
- 103: And sought the blind god Hodur
- 104: How to Heaven may Baldur be restored
- 105: Beowulfesby Bowlby seems a quite easy transition
- 106: And when Scyld Scefing felt that death drew near
- 107: Terrible indeed was the grief of Hrothgar
- 108: Floated down to the coast of Gothland
- 109: Beowulf will grapple with the mighty foe
- 110: Still in his grasp Beowulf held the limb
- 111: Half woman the mother of Grendel
- 112: Beowulf saw a very terrible horror the body of the Grendel
- 113: Beowulf once again was chosen King
- 114: And Wiglaf hastened into the cave
- 115: Such was the passing of Beowulf
- 116: A very wily emir was Blancandrin
- 117: Not for a moment did Roland hesitate
- 118: He sat and took counsel with his Douzeperes
- 119: Ganelon accompanied the Saracens back to Saragossa
- 120: And to his Douzeperes he turned
- 121: The war cry of the soldiers of France Montjoie
- 122: Only Gautier and Turpin and Roland now remained
- 123: Until they all lay around Turpin
- 124: But Durendala remained unharmed
- 125: When Ireland was ruled by the Dedannans
- 126: Bodb said to Lir Behold my three daughters
- 127: And the children said farewell to Lir
- 128: Terrible were the words of Lir
- 129: Who succeeded the Dedannans in Erin
- 130: When the swans strove to rise from the rock of Carricknarone
- 131: And Kemoc made his home on Inis Glora
- 132: And Kemoc answered It is truth
- 133: Went to a feast in the house of one called Felim
- 134: Then seeing Cathbad hang his head
- 135: Lavarcam strayed away from her charge
- 136: And Lavarcam made answer These are Naoise
- 137: Even as Lavarcam had told her was Naoise
- 138: Then said Naoise Although harm should come
- 139: Borrach shall have warning of thy coming
- 140: And when Fergus stood before Deirdre and Naoise
- 141: When the sun struck on Gleneitche
- 142: For when Lavarcam had gone forth
- 143: And Naoise and Ainle played chess
- 144: Brave and chivalrous Ultonians
- 145: 17 Dale of the Waterfall now Dalness
- 146: A Book of Myths by Jeanie Lang
- 147: 153Champions of the Red Branch
- 148: A Book of Myths by Jeanie Lang
- 149: A Book of Myths by Jeanie Lang
- 150: A Book of Myths by Jeanie Lang
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- 156: Page 304 Kemoc amended to Larguen Then Larguen
