Demeter
Earth Goddess
Demeter is the Greek goddess of the grains, agriculture, and
fertility. She is the daughter of the
Titans Cronus and Rhea. She is an
Olympian.
Demeter is so prevalent in the Greek myths that she is even
responsible for the changing of the seasons.
In Homer’s Hymn to Demeter, he relates the tale. Demeter, whom Homer describes as a stately
goddess, has a child with Zeus named Persephone. Unbeknown to Demeter, Zeus has planned with
Hades to ensnare the young Persephone so that Hades would have a wife and
therefore a queen of the Underworld.
Zeus cunningly brought forth the brightly colored narcissus flower in an
attempt to lure Persephone away while she was at play in the fields.
As Persephone set about gathering a bouquet of lovely
irises, roses, hyacinths, violets, and crocuses, she caught sight of the most
magnificent flower in the field – the narcissus. Persephone, stunned by the flower’s beauty,
reached out with both hands to pick it for her bouquet. As she did, the Earth opened wide, and Hades,
riding upon his golden chariot led by immortal horses, snatched the beautiful
Persephone and took her with him into the Underworld. Persephone cried out for her father to save
her. Her cries echoed across the
countryside, yet no one except Demeter heard her.
Demeter searched the Earth for nine days, grieving so
desperately that she touched not a single drop of drink or bite of food. On the tenth day, at the crack of dawn,
Hecate spoke with Demeter. She sent
Demeter to speak with Helios, the sun god. Demeter begged Helios to tell her
who had taken her beloved daughter.
Helios replied that it was Zeus himself and explained the role of Hades
in the plot.
Demter was furious and grief stricken. She left Olympus and wandered to Eleusis. For
a year she stilled the Earth from fruitfulness.
In her grief, the flowers no longer bloomed and the gardens withered and
died. The earth was barren. Zeus sent Iris to try and persuade Demeter to
come home, but Demeter would not budge.
One by one, each of the gods tried to talk Demeter into returning to
Olympus. She refused them all, saying that she would never return until she
could lay eyes again on her beloved daughter.
Zeus, upon hearing this, sent Hermes to speak with hades and
attempt to cajole him into releasing Persephone. Hades agreed and asked only that Persephone
keep him in her heart fondly. With that
he tricked her into eating three pomegranate seeds, thereby assuring that she
had to return to him. Persephone happily
ate the seeds and went on her way back to her mother. When Demeter was greeted
by the sight of her daughter, the Earth was once again fruitful and the people
rejoiced. Afraid, Demeter asked her daughter if she had eaten anything while in
the Underworld, to which Persephone replied that she had eaten the seeds of the
pomegranate. Demeter explained that she
must live in the Underworld for one third of each year. She swore that while Persephone was on the
Earth, she would hold it in bloom for her daughter’s pleasure, but that while
Persephone was in the Underworld, it would be barren and cold. Thus, the seasons were born.
Demeter, with her somewhat ironic sense of humor, placed the
poppy in the corn and barley fields. She
put all of her sweetness into the fig, which grows alongside wild herbs. As the
poppy and the fig grow around the base of her more substantial foodstuffs, they
represent the dark side of Demeter. The
dark side is the side that holds the life and death of mortals in her hands and
carries the seeds of each in her womb.
Demeter represents both hunger and abundance.
In one myth, Demeter condemns a man to eternal hunger for
daring to attempt to chop down her sacred grove to make a roof for his hall
from the wood. The man subsequently eats
until there is only one thing left to eat – himself. He devours his own limbs.
Demeter was also a goddess of fertility and, in one myth,
coupled with a human in the field. The
pairing produced a child. Soon after,
Demeter became known as a goddess who guarded marriage and was included in
ancient marriage rites. Concubines and
the like were condemned to her stone gardens, where no plants could ripen and
bloom. Demeter’s festival, held in late
autumn, was celebrated by legitimate wives and included a ritual sowing of the
field. It was conducted with the hope of
a harvest of beautiful children, a bounty borne from human seed.
Sullivan, Tammy. Elemental Witch. 1. Woodbury, MN:
Llewellyn, 2006. 55-58. Print.
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