Greek Women by Mitchell Carroll - HTML preview

PLEASE NOTE: This is an HTML preview only and some elements such as links or page numbers may be incorrect.
Download the book in PDF, ePub, Kindle for a complete version.

worshipped her as Aphrodite Lamia.

Pythionice, the favorite of Harpalus, the friend and confidant of

Alexander the Great, partook of honors which rivalled those of Lamia.

During the most brilliant period of Harpalus's career, Pythionice was

summoned to Babylon, where she shared his honors and bore the title of a

queen of Babylon. A letter from the historian Theopompus to Alexander is

extant, in which he speaks of the passionate devotion of Harpalus to his

favorite, and thus alludes to her: "To this Pythionice, a slave of the

flute player Bacchis, who in turn was a slave of the hetaera Sinope,

Harpalus erected two monuments, one at Athens and one at Babylon, at a

cost of more than two hundred talents, which seemed cheap to that

spend-thrift; and, in addition, he had a precinct and a sanctuary

dedicated to her, which he named the temple and altar of Aphrodite

Pythionice. She bore him a daughter, and died before the sudden change

which came in his fortunes."

Another favorite of Harpalus, and later of the celebrated deformed comic

poet Menander, was Glycera, the daughter of Thalassis.

She was a native

of Athens, and passed most of her time in the company of litterateurs

and philosophers. The Megarian philosopher Stilpo once accused her, at a

banquet, of misleading the youth through her seductive art. She made the

reply: "Stilpo, we are in this under like condemnation.

It is said of

you that you impart to your pupils profitless and eristic sophisms, of

me that I teach them erotic sophisms." Some of Glycera's letters to her

poet lover Menander, still extant, show how warm a sympathy existed

between the two, and how delicate a sentiment could characterize such a

union.

One of the names of hetaerae famous in both ancient and modern times is

that of Lais, which belonged to two Greek women celebrated for their

extraordinary beauty, who are differentiated by being known as Lais the

Elder and Lais the Younger.

The elder and indisputably more famous of the two was the daughter of

that hetaera, Timandra, who remained faithful to Alcibiades in his evil

fortunes. As a seven-year-old maiden, Lais was taken captive by the

Athenians during the sack of her birthplace, Hyccara in Sicily, and was

brought as a slave to Corinth. Here she was early initiated into the

arts of gallantry and was given a thorough training in the culture of

the day.

The physical charms of Lais developed into a beauty rarely witnessed.

Her bosom was of such indescribable perfection that sculptors and

painters took it as a model in their creations of the ideal female

form. She was regarded as surpassing not only all her contemporaries,

but also all the famous beauties of earlier times; and later ages

regarded her as the prototype of womanly beauty, and delighted in giving

lengthy and minute descriptions of her charms, as, for example, that by

the sophist Aristaenetus in the first of his fifty erotic epistles.

Soon after her first appearance, Lais was talked of, was celebrated, was

deified, in all Hellenic lands. It was considered good fortune, as a

Greek poet expressed it, that Lais, the most beautiful of her sex,

adopted the hetaera life; for were she not accessible to all, there would

have been in Greece a conflict comparable only to that over Argive

Helen.

The reputation of her beauty occasioned in a short time a formidable

immigration to Corinth of the most wealthy and distinguished men, partly

to enjoy her favor, partly to gaze in wonder at her charms, and partly

to study this paragon of female beauty for imitation in works of art.

From the homage that she received, and especially the wealth that was

poured at her feet by her lovers, she was soon rendered so proud and

selfish that she secluded herself from all except the richest. Her proud

heart, however, was not entirely closed to emotions of love. She took a

fancy to the Cynic philosopher Diogenes, in spite of his filth and

brusqueness; and AElian tells the story of her inclination for a young

athlete, Eubatas of Cyrene, who had come to Corinth for the games,

leaving behind a most beautiful and beloved wife. "When Lais became

acquainted with Eubatas of Cyrene," says AElian, "she was so enamored of

him that she made a proposal of marriage. In order not to bring down on

himself the vengeance of the powerful hetaera, he became betrothed to

her, but yet continued to live a continent life. At the conclusion of

the games, he had to fulfil his promise. But after he had been declared

victor, in order to avoid the appearance of breaking faith with the

courtesan, he had a picture of Lais painted, and took it with him to

Cyrene, affirming that he had not broken his promise, but had brought

Lais home with him. As a reward for his fidelity, his virtuous wife in

Cyrene had a statue erected in his honor."

Aristippus, the founder of the Cyrenaic school of philosophy, tried in

vain to win the love of this beautiful hetaera, though, of all her

lovers, he passed the most time in her society, and on her lavished

considerable sums of money.

Lais gained much knowledge from intercourse with this learned

philosopher, so that she ranked not only as the most beautiful, but also

as one of the most brilliant women of her time. She allied herself with

the Cyrenaic school, whose system of philosophy appealed to her much

more naturally than did the gross system of her favorite, Diogenes, who

on his side sought in every way to win the celebrated beauty to

Cynicism. Lais had nothing but contempt, however, for the moral claims

of philosophy. "I do not understand," she said, "what is meant by the

austerity of philosophers; for they of this fine name are as much in my

power as the rest of the citizens."

The charms of Lais, though so unapproachable in their bloom, yet proved

transient, and pitiable was the metamorphosis which the brilliancy of

the famous beauty underwent with their fading. Wealthy admirers became

fewer and fewer, and finally they ceased to appear, and with them her

resources failed. The once proud beauty became the plaything of every

man. She sought to drown her sorrow in the wine cup--a practice

altogether too common among Greek women of disreputable life. At this

sad period of her career, Lais dedicated her mirror, as being an

unpleasant reminder of her lost beauty, to the goddess to whose service

she had devoted her life. In her later years, she followed the vile

trade of a procuress.

After her death, the Corinthians remembered what a reputation it had

given their city to be the abiding place of so famous a woman, and they

erected to her a mausoleum at Craneion, a cypress grove near the city,

on which a lioness tearing a kid in pieces symbolized the rapacity of

the deceased hetaera.

Lais the Younger was a contemporary of the orator Demosthenes and the

painter Apelles, and flourished nearly a century after her more

celebrated namesake. She too lived at Corinth, and was famous for her

beauty and her association with distinguished men. She was born out of

wedlock, and the names of both her father and mother are unknown. As she

grew up, a waif in the dissolute city, Apelles, the celebrated painter,

is said to have been the first to have noticed her budding beauty and to

have educated her. According to the prevailing tradition, Apelles saw

her when, as a young girl, she was drawing water from the fountain

Pirene, and was at once so captivated by her beauty that he took her

with him to a banquet whither he was going. When his friends jestingly

reproached him because, instead of bringing a hetaera, as was usual, he

had brought a child to the feast, he rejoined: "Be not surprised. I will

show her again to you before three years have passed; you can then see

how beautiful and vivacious she has become."

Before this period had passed, Lais became the most celebrated hetaera of

the city. Her name was on everyone's lips, in the baths, in the

theatres, and on the streets and public squares. Her fame spread

throughout Hellas, and the richest men of Hellas flocked to Corinth.

She was surpassed in the number and prominence of her lovers only by her

contemporary, Phryne of Athens.

When at the height of her triumph, this celebrated and petted hetaera,

"who inflamed all Hellas with love, and for whose favors two seas

contended," suddenly disappeared from the scene of her conquests. A

Thessalian, by name Hippolochus, had taught her the meaning of true

love. She fled with him from the company of her other lovers, and lived

in honorable marriage in Thessaly. Her beauty, however, caused a sad

ending to this pleasing romance. From envy and jealousy, the Thessalian

women enticed her into the temple of Aphrodite and there stoned her to

death. Some historians relate that she had many Thessalian lovers; this

aroused the jealousy of the women, and they took her life at a festival

of Aphrodite at which no men were present. After her murder, a

pestilence is said to have broken out in Thessaly, which did not end

until in expiation a temple had been erected to Aphrodite.

Phryne was the most beautiful woman of all antiquity.

She was born at

Thespiae in Boeotia, but flourished at Athens toward the latter part of

the fourth century before our era. The name Phryne belongs essentially

to the history of Greek art, for all her life was associated with the

activities of the most eminent painters and sculptors.

In her youth she

was loved by the sculptor Praxiteles. Pausanias tells a story how "once

when Phryne asked for the most beautiful of his works, Praxiteles,

lover-like, promised to give it to her, but would not tell which he

thought the most beautiful. So a servant of Phryne ran in, declaring

that the sculptor's studio had caught fire, and that most, but not all,

of his works had perished. Praxiteles at once ran for the door,

protesting that all his labor was lost if the flames had reached the

_Satyr_ and the _Love_. But Phryne bade him stay and be of good cheer,

telling him that he had suffered no loss, but had only been entrapped

into saying which were the most beautiful of his works.

So she chose the

_Love_."

Either this or a similar statue of Eros was dedicated by Phryne in

Thespiae, the city of her birth. Later, Praxiteles made of her a statue

of gold, which was set up at Delphi between those of two kings. She also

served as his model for the celebrated Aphrodite of Cnidos, which Pliny

describes as "the finest statue, not only by Praxiteles, but in the

whole world." The inhabitants of Cnidos placed the image, which they

believed had been made under the direct inspiration of the goddess of

love herself, in a beautiful shrine surrounded by myrtle trees, so

arranged that the figure might be seen from many different points of

view; "and from all sides," adds Pliny, "it was equally admired." Hither

came Greeks from all parts of the world merely to behold the statue and

to worship at the shrine of the goddess. King Nicomedes of Bithynia, in

his eagerness to possess the statue, offered to pay for it the whole

public debt of the island, which was enormous; but the Cnidians

preferred to suffer anything rather than give up their treasure; and

with good reason, "for by that statue Praxiteles made Cnidos famous."

Writers of epigrams were fond of extolling the statue; and many of the

extant statues of Venus are but replicas or adaptations of this great

prototype, modelled after the form of Phryne. The most celebrated copy

of the Cnidian statue is in the Vatican, disfigured, however, by false

drapery. The statue gives us some idea of the superlative beauty of

Phryne. It is very pure, very unconscious of its charms, and captivates

the beholder by its simple grace and naturalness.

Lucian, the aesthetic

critic, in the construction of his ideal statue selected for description

the head of the Aphrodite of Cnidos. He particularly admired the finely

pencilled telling him that he had suffered no loss, but had only been

entrapped into saying which were the most beautiful of his works. So she

chose the _Love_."

Either this or a similar statue of Eros was dedicated by Phryne in

Thespiae, the city of her birth. Later, Praxiteles made of her a statue

of gold, which was set up at Delphi between those of two kings. She also

served as his model for the celebrated Aphrodite of Cnidos, which Pliny

describes as "the finest statue, not only by Praxiteles, but in the

whole world." The inhabitants of Cnidos placed the image, which they

believed had been made under the direct inspiration of the goddess of

love herself, in a beautiful shrine surrounded by myrtle trees, so

arranged that the figure might be seen from many different points of

view; "and from all sides," adds Pliny, "it was equally admired." Hither

came Greeks from all parts of the world merely to behold the statue and

to worship at the shrine of the goddess. King Nicomedes of Bithynia, in

his eagerness to possess the statue, offered to pay for it the whole

public debt of the island, which was enormous; but the Cnidians

preferred to suffer anything rather than give up their treasure; and

with good reason, "for by that statue Praxiteles made Cnidos famous."

Writers of epigrams were fond of extolling the statue; and many of the

extant statues of Venus are but replicas or adaptations of this great

prototype, modelled after the form of Phryne. The most celebrated copy

of the Cnidian statue is in the Vatican, disfigured, however, by false

drapery. The statue gives us some idea of the superlative beauty of

Phryne. It is very pure, very unconscious of its charms, and captivates

the beholder by its simple grace and naturalness.

Lucian, the aesthetic

critic, in the construction of his ideal statue selected for description

the head of the Aphrodite of Cnidos. He particularly admired the finely

pencilled eyebrows and the melting gaze of the eyes, with their sweet,

joyous expression.

Phryne, with a modesty one would not expect in a woman of her class, was

very careful to keep her beautiful figure concealed, avoiding the public

baths and having her body always enveloped in a long and graceful tunic.

But on two occasions the beauty-loving Greeks had displayed to them the

charms of her person. The first was at the solemn assembly at Eleusis,

on the feast of the Poseidonia. Having loosened her beautiful hair and

let fall her drapery, Phryne plunged into the sea in the sight of all

the assembled Greeks. Apelles, the painter, transported with admiration

at the sight, retired at once to his studio and transferred to canvas

the mental image which was indelibly impressed upon his fancy; and the

resulting picture was the _Aphrodite Anadyomene_, the most celebrated of

his paintings.

The second exhibition was before the austere court of the Heliasts.

Phryne had been cited to appear before the tribunal on the charge of

profaning the Eleusinian mysteries, and Hyperides, the brilliant young

orator, was her advocate. Failing to move the judges by his arguments,

he tore the tunic from her bosom and revealed to them the perfection of

her figure. The judges, beholding as it were the goddess of love

incarnate, and moved by a superstitious fear, could not dare to condemn

to death "a prophetess and priestess of Aphrodite." They saw and they

pardoned, and, amid the applause of the people, Phryne was carried in

triumph to the temple of Aphrodite. To us in this day such a scene

appears highly theatrical, but Aphrodite is no longer esteemed among

men, and the Greek worship of beauty is something not understood in this

material age.

Phryne's life was by no means free from blame, and as the result of her

popularity she acquired great riches. She is said to have offered to

rebuild the walls of Thebes, which had been torn down by Alexander, on

condition that she might place on them the inscription: _Alexander

destroyed Thebes; but Phryne, the hetaera, rebuilt it;_

but the offer was

rejected, showing that though the times were corrupt, yet shame had not

altogether departed from men.

One cannot emphasize in too trenchant terms the demoralizing influences

of hetairism on the social life of the Greeks, or fail to see in the

gross immorality of the sexes one of the paramount causes of the

downfall of the Greek peoples.

Yet it is a truism that feminine shamelessness was most advantageous for

the arts of sculpture and painting. Sensuousness is close akin to

sensuality, and from their passion for these

"priestesses of Aphrodite"

the Greek artists, without doubt, derived much of their inspiration,

while the opportunities which hetairism offered for the study of the

female form enabled Praxiteles and his contemporaries and successors to

produce masterpieces which equalled in idealism the works of aesthetic

art produced in the preceding century.

To become the ideal for the painter and the sculptor was the greatest

ambition of the beautiful and cultivated hetaera. In permitting the

artist to portray her charms she not only performed a lasting service

for art, but she also rendered herself celebrated and immortal. The fame

of her beauty was spread throughout all Hellenic lands, and the national

devotion to the goddess Aphrodite was at once extended to her earthly

counterpart. If she united intellectual brilliancy with beauty, fortune

at once cast its most precious gifts at her feet. The most celebrated

men of every city contested for her favors, poets made her the theme of

their verses, artists portrayed her charms with chisel and with brush,

and the wealthy filled her coffers with gold and precious stones.

XI

THE WOMAN QUESTION IN ANCIENT ATHENS

Anyone who makes a careful perusal of the philosophical literature of

Athens in the fourth century before our era will be struck with the

amount of attention that has been paid to the question of the social and

domestic position of woman. If he trace the subject back, he will

observe that in the dramatic literature of the latter part of the

previous century the same problems received the consideration of

Euripides and Aristophanes. And the conviction will be forced upon him

that this agitation was rooted in a sociological movement of great

import, and that the dramatic and philosophical writers merely gave a

literary form to the debates which profoundly stirred Athenian society

in the fifth century.

This discussion of woman's rights is a subject of perennial interest,

and the underlying currents in such movements are usually the same in

every age. They take their rise, too, not in the efforts of

philanthropic men who recognize that the status of woman is not what it

should be, but in the efforts of the members of the sex themselves, who

are sufficiently intelligent to see that they, while having an abundant

share of the burdens, have not a fair share of the emoluments of life,

and consequently endeavor to better the conditions which environ

themselves and their sisters.

In this chapter we shall make a study of the dramatists and philosophers

of Athens, in so far as they give insight into the social life of the

city in its most important epoch, and outline what they contribute to

our knowledge of Greek woman and the ever-present Woman Question.

For the early part of this brilliant period we must rely on the ideal

pictures of tragedy for the higher side, and the ribald travesties of

comedy for the lower side of feminine life, AEschylus flourished just

before and during the glorious period following the Persian War,--the

good days before the influx of foreigners and the new education

corrupted the life and undermined the faith of the citizens. In his

seven extant plays he has presented to us only three feminine characters

of any importance,--Clytemnestra, Electra, and Cassandra,--all belonging

to the cycle of tragedies treating of the fate of King Agamemnon and his

royal house at Mycenae. The dramatist's pictures of home life show his

high conception of the ability and the importance of women and of the

large part they play in human history. His Clytemnestra is a ruling

queen exercising all the functions of royalty, but her powerful nature

has been debased by grief and sin. She identifies herself with the

"ancient bitter Alastor," who visits on Agamemnon the curse of his

house. She is self-sufficingness, adamantine purpose, studied craft, and

cold disdain incarnate. With fulsome speech and consummate flattery she

welcomes her husband home; and when the deed is done and he lies dead by

her hand, in exultant tones she rejoices in the blood upon her robe as

"a cornfield in the dews of spring." Truly she is the most powerful

portrait of feminine guilt that dramatic literature affords us. AEschylus

drew his scenery and his characters largely from the conditions of the

Heroic Age as pictured by Homer, and was little affected by the current

of everyday life about him.

As AEschylus has given us Clytemnestra for an ideal type of feminine

power and wickedness, so Sophocles has presented two immortal heroines,

Antigone and Electra, who are statuesque in the beauty and grandeur of

their characters. In Antigone we observe two fundamental qualities,--enthusiasm in the performance of duty, and intensity of

domestic affection, as seen in her efforts to reconcile her brothers,

Polynices and Eteocles, her desire to shield her sister Ismene, her

self-sacrifice for the sake of her brother Polynices, and her filial

devotion to her aged father. Electra also is an ideal type of sisterly

love. Ill-treated by her unnatural mother, abused by the cowardly and

brutal tyrant who had usurped her father's place, only one ray of hope

was left her, that her brother Orestes would return to avenge their

wrongs upon the guilty pair. When the deed is done, and Orestes is

pursued by the Furies, she proves herself a devoted and unselfish

sister. In these two characters we have sublime conceptions of heroic

devotion to duty, but the more human womanly traits have been lost in

the poet's delineation of them as the embodiment of lofty ideals.

Mahaffy finds in these two heroines something hard and masculine, traits

which would not stir the sympathies of the reader or hearer and lead to

emulation. He prefers Sophocles's Deianira and Tecmessa as being "truly

'female women,' as Homer would say, gentle and loving, not above

jealousy, and for that reason a finer and clearer contrast to the heroes

than are the coarser and more dominant heroines." ...

"If these

criticisms be just," he adds, "they will show that, in the most perfect

and exclusive Athenian society--that is to say, among Thucydides's and

Sophocles's set, the ideal of female character had degenerated; that to

these men, whose affections were centred on very different objects, the

notion of a true heroine was no longer natural, but was supplanted by a

hard and masculine type. The old free, noble woman, whom AEschylus had,

in early days, still known, was banished from their city life to make

way for the domestic slave of the Attic household, called 'mistress,'