Please read tonight:
Envious
and jealous of the beauty of a mortal girl named Psyche, Venus asks her son
Cupid (known to the Greeks as Eros) to use his golden arrows while Psyche
sleeps, so that when she awakens, Venus (Aphrodite in the Greek tradition)
would place a vile creature for her to fall in love with. Cupid finally agrees
to her commands after a long debate. As he flies to Psyche's room at night, he
becomes invisible so no one can see him fly in through her window. He takes
pity on her, for she was born too beautiful for her own safety. As he slowly
approaches, careful not to make a sound, he readies one of his golden arrows.
He leans over Psyche while she is asleep and before he can pierce her shoulder
with the tip of his arrow, she awakens, startling him, for she looks right into
his eyes, despite his invisibility. This causes him to scratch himself with his
arrow and fall deeply in love with her. He cannot continue his mission, for
every passing second he finds her more appealing. He reports back to Venus shortly
after and the news enrages her. Venus places a curse on Psyche that prevents
her from meeting a suitable husband. Cupid is greatly upset, and decides that,
as long as Psyche remains cursed, he will no longer shoot arrows, which will
cause the temple of Venus to fall.
After months of no one — man or animal — falling in love, marrying, or mating,
the Earth starts to grow old, which causes concern to Venus, for nobody praises
her for Cupid's actions. Finally, she agrees to listen to Cupid's demands,
allowing him his one desire, which is Psyche. Venus, upset, agrees to his
demands only if he begins work immediately. He accepts the offer and takes off,
shooting his golden arrows as fast as he can, restoring everything to the way
it should be. People again fall in love and marry, animals far and wide mate,
and the Earth begins to look young once again.
When all continue to admire and praise Psyche's beauty, but none desire her as
a wife, Psyche's parents consult an oracle, which tells them to abandon their
daughter on the nearest mountain, for her beauty is so great that she is not
meant for mortal men. Terrified, they have no choice but to follow the oracle's
instructions. But then Zephyrus, the west wind, carries Psyche away to a fair
valley and a magnificent palace where she is attended by invisible servants
until nightfall, and in the darkness of night the promised bridegroom arrives
and the marriage is consummated. Cupid visits her every night to sleep with
her, but demands that she never light any lamps, since he does not want her to
know who he is until the time is right.
Statue of Cupido and Psyche kissing,
2nd century AD. Room E of the House of Cupid and Psyche. Ostia Antica, Latium,
Italy
Cupid allows Zephyrus to take Psyche back to her sisters and bring all three
down to the palace during the day, but warns that Psyche should not listen to
any argument that she should try to discover his true form. The two jealous
sisters tell Psyche, then pregnant with Cupid's child, that rumour is that she had
married a great and terrible serpent who would devour her and her unborn child
when the time came for it to be fed. They urge Psyche to conceal a knife and
oil lamp in the bedchamber, to wait till her husband is asleep, and then to
light the lamp and slay him at once if it is as they said. Psyche sadly follows
their advice. In the light of the lamp Psyche recognizes the fair form on the
bed as the god Cupid himself. However, she accidentally pricks herself with one
of his arrows, and is consumed with desire for her husband. She starts to kiss
him, but after a while, a drop of oil falls from her lamp onto Cupid's shoulder
and wakes him. She watches him fly away, and she falls from the window to the
ground, sick at heart.
Psyche then finds herself in the city
where one of her jealous elder sisters lives. She tells her what had happened,
then tricks her sister into believing that Cupid has chosen her as a wife on
the mountaintop. Psyche later meets her other sister and deceives her likewise.
Each sister goes to the top of the peak and jumps down eagerly, but Zephyrus
does not bear them and they fall to their deaths at the base of the
mountain.
Psyche searches far and wide for her lover, finally stumbling into
a temple where everything is in slovenly disarray. As Psyche is sorting and
clearing the mess, Ceres (Demeter to the Greeks) appears, but refuses any help
beyond advising Psyche that she must call directly on Venus, who caused all the
problems in the first place. Psyche next calls on Juno (Hera to the Greeks) in
her temple, but Juno gives her the same advice. So Psyche finds a temple to
Venus and enters it. Venus then orders Psyche to separate all the grains in a
large basket of mixed kinds before nightfall. An ant takes pity on Psyche, and
with its ant companions, separates the grains for her.
Venus is outraged at her success and tells her to go to a field where golden
sheep graze and to retrieve some golden wool. A river-god tells Psyche that the
sheep are vicious and strong and will kill her, but if she waits until
noontime, the sheep will go to the shade on the other side of the field and
sleep; she can then pick the wool that sticks to the branches and bark of the
trees. Venus next asks for water flowing from a cleft that is impossible for a
mortal to attain and is also guarded by great serpents. This time an eagle
performs the task for Psyche.
Venus, furious at Psyche's survival, claims that the stress of caring for her
son, made depressed and ill as a result of Psyche's lack of faith, has caused
her to lose some of her beauty. Psyche is to go to the Underworld and ask the
queen of the Underworld, Proserpina (Persephone to the Greeks), to place a bit
of her beauty in a box that Venus had given to Psyche. Psyche decides that the
quickest way to the Underworld is to throw herself off some high place and die,
and so she climbs to the top of a tower. But the tower itself speaks to Psyche
and tells her the route that will allow her to enter the Underworld alive and
return again, as well as telling her how to get past Cerberus (by giving the
three-headed dog a small cake); how to avoid other dangers on the way there and
back; and most importantly, to eat nothing but coarse bread in the underworld,
as eating anything else would trap her there forever. Psyche follows the orders
precisely, rejecting all but bread while beneath the Earth.
However, once Psyche has left the Underworld, she decides to open the box and
take a little bit of the beauty for herself. Inside, she can see no beauty;
instead an infernal sleep arises from the box and overcomes her. Cupid (Eros),
who had forgiven Psyche, flies to her, wipes the sleep from her face, puts it
back in the box, and sends her back on her way. Then Cupid flies to Mount
Olympus and begs Jupiter (Zeus) to aid them. Jupiter calls a full and formal
council of the gods and declares that it is his will that Cupid marry Psyche.
Jupiter then has Psyche fetched to Mount Olympus, and gives her a drink made
from ambrosia, granting her immortality. Begrudgingly, Venus and Psyche forgive
each other.
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