From Bulfinch's Mythology: Perseus and Medusa - anthology.
Publié le 12/05/2013
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The Sea-monster
Perseus, continuing his flight, arrived at the country of the Æthiopians, of which Cepheus was king.
Cassiopeia his queen, proud of her beauty, had dared to compareherself to the Sea-Nymphs, which roused their indignation to such a degree that they sent a prodigious sea-monster to ravage the coast.
To appease the deities,Cepheus was directed by the oracle to expose his daughter Andromeda to be devoured by the monster.
As Perseus looked down from his aerial height he beheld thevirgin chained to a rock, and waiting the approach of the serpent.
She was so pale and motionless that if it had not been for her flowing tears and her hair that movedin the breeze, he would have taken her for a marble statue.
He was so startled at the sight that he almost forgot to wave his wings.
As he hovered over her he said, 'Ovirgin, undeserving of those chains, but rather of such as bind fond lovers together, tell me, I beseech you, your name, and the name of your country, and why you arethus bound.' At first she was silent from modesty, and, if she could, would have hid her face with her hands; but when he repeated his questions, for fear she might bethought guilty of some fault which she dared not tell, she disclosed her name and that of her country, and her mother's pride of beauty.
Before she had done speaking,a sound was heard off upon the water, and the sea-monster appeared, with his head raised above the surface, cleaving the waves with his broad breast.
The virginshrieked, the father and mother who had now arrived at the scene, wretched both, but the mother more justly so, stood by, not able to afford protection, but only topour forth lamentations and to embrace the victim.
Then spoke Perseus: 'There will be time enough for tears; this hour is all we have for rescue.
My rank as the sonof Jove and my renown as the slayer of the Gorgon might make me acceptable as a suitor; but I will try to win her by services rendered, if the gods will only bepropitious.
If she be rescued by my valour, I demand that she be my reward.' The parents consent (how could they hesitate?) and promise a royal dowry with her.
And now the monster was within the range of a stone thrown by a skilful slinger, when with a sudden bound the youth soared into the air.
As an eagle, when from hislofty flight he sees a serpent basking in the sun, pounces upon him and seizes him by the neck to prevent him from turning his head round and using his fangs, so theyouth darted down upon the back of the monster and plunged his sword into its shoulder.
Irritated by the wound, the monster raised himself into the air, then plungedinto the depth; then, like a wild boar surrounded by a pack of barking dogs, turned swiftly from side to side, while the youth eluded its attacks by means of his wings.Wherever he can find a passage for his sword between the scales he makes a wound, piercing now the side, now the flank, as it slopes towards the tail.
The brutespouts from his nostrils water mixed with blood.
The wings of the hero are wet with it, and he dares no longer trust to them.
Alighting on a rock which rose above thewaves, and holding on by a projecting fragment, as the monster floated near he gave him a death stroke.
The people who had gathered on the shore shouted so that thehills reëchoed with the sound.
The parents, transported with joy, embraced their future son-in-law, calling him their deliverer and the saviour of their house, and thevirgin, both cause and reward of the contest, descended from the rock.
Cassiopeia was an Æthiopian, and consequently, in spite of her boasted beauty, black; at least so Milton seems to have thought, who alludes to this story in his'Penseroso,' where he addresses Melancholy as the '…goddess, sage and holy, Whose saintly visage is too brightTo hit the sense of human sight,And, therefore, to our weaker view,O'erlaid with black, staid Wisdom's hue.Black, but such as in esteemPrince Memnon's sister might beseem,Or that starred Æthiop queen that stroveTo set her beauty's praise aboveThe sea-nymphs, and their powers offended.'
Cassiopeia is called 'the starred Æthiop queen' because after her death she was placed among the stars, forming the constellation of that name.
Though she attainedthis honour, yet the Sea-Nymphs, her old enemies, prevailed so far as to cause her to be placed in that part of the heaven near the pole, where every night she is halfthe time held with her head downward, to give her a lesson of humility.
Memnon was an Æthiopian prince, of whom we shall tell in a future chapter.
The Wedding Feast
The joyful parents, with Perseus and Andromeda, repaired to the palace, where a banquet was spread for them, and all was joy and festivity.
But suddenly a noisewas heard of warlike clamour, and Phineus, the betrothed of the virgin, with a party of his adherents, burst in, demanding the maiden as his own.
It was in vain thatCepheus remonstrated—'You should have claimed her when she lay bound to the rock, the monster's victim.
The sentence of the gods dooming her to such a fatedissolved all engagements, as death itself would have done.' Phineus made no reply, but hurled his javelin at Perseus, but it missed its mark and fell harmless.
Perseuswould have thrown his in turn, but the cowardly assailant ran and took shelter behind the altar.
But his act was a signal for an onset by his band upon the guests ofCepheus.
They defended themselves and a general conflict ensued, the old king retreating from the scene after fruitless expostulations, calling the gods to witness thathe was guiltless of this outrage on the rights of hospitality..
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