R. E. Francillon
Gods and Heroes; or, The Kingdom of Jupiter
Published by Good Press, 2021
EAN 4057664607485
Table of Contents
PART I.—THE GODS AND THE GIANTS.
PART II.—THE FIRST MAN; OR, THE STORY OF PROMETHEUS AND PANDORA.
PART III.—THE GREAT FLOOD; OR, THE STORY OF DEUCALION.
PART I.—THE STORIES OF LATONA AND NIOBE.
PART II.—THE FLAYED PIPER; OR, THE STORY OF MARSYAS.
PART III.—TOO MUCH GOLD; OR, THE FIRST STORY OF MIDAS.
PART IV.—THE CRITIC; OR, THE SECOND STORY OF MIDAS.
PART VI.—PRESUMPTION; OR, THE STORY OF PHAËTHON.
DIANA; AND THE STORY OF ORION.
PART II.—LOVE AND THE SOUL; OR, THE STORY OF CUPID AND PSYCHE.
PART I.—THE KING AND QUEEN OF THE DEAD.
PART III.—ORPHEUS AND EURYDICE.
PART IV.—THE MAN WHO NEVER DIED.
PART II.—HIS FIRST LABOR: THE LION.
PART III.—HIS SECOND LABOR: THE HYDRA.
PART IV.—HIS THIRD LABOR: THE STAG.
PART V.—HIS FOURTH LABOR: THE BOAR.
PART VI.—HIS FIFTH LABOR: THE AUGEAN STABLE.
PART VII.—MORE LABORS: AND THE CATTLE OF GERYON.
PART VIII.—HIS ELEVENTH LABOR: THE GARDEN OF THE HESPERIDES.
PART IX.—HIS TWELFTH LABOR: THE DESCENT INTO HADES.
PART X.—THE CHOICE OF HERCULES.
PRONOUNCING VOCABULARY OF PROPER NAMES.
PREFACE.
THESE stories will, I trust, explain their own purpose; but a few words touching their form are due to critical readers.
It will be seen that the Mythology adopted throughout is strictly of the old-fashioned kind which goes to Ovid as its leading authority, and ignores the difference between the gods of Greece and the gods of Rome. I have deliberately followed this plan because, while there is not the remotest fear—quite the contrary—that young people, when or if they become scholars, will not be duly initiated into the mysteries of scientific and comparative mythology, there is considerable danger that the stories of the gods and heroes which have saturated literature, and have become essential portions of the thought and life of ages, may become explained away only too thoroughly. It is easy for my readers to acquire the science of the subject hereafter; but where mythology is concerned, the poetry must come before the prose, and