Saturday, April 8, 2017

                                          Abduction

                                       Briseis, Helen, Sita and Penelope[i]        

All are beautiful.  All except Penelope were abducted.  All except Briseis are household names, still famous today, even though their stories are thousands of years old.  Briseis was a slave while Helen, the daughter of Zeus, was married to Paris.  Sita was the wife of Rama, the hero in The Ramayana.   Penelope resembles Sita in defending her chastity, resembles Helen in her beauty, and Briseis in having to confront the possibility of an ugly future.  Briseis is much less well known, a footnote in history, known only to scholars of Homer and those who remember her from The Iliad.  Her life story is glimpsed from a few passages of the poem.  She became enslaved while she lived in the city of King Mynes.  She was married.  She was the daughter of Briseus.  Both her husband and her three full brothers were killed in a battle with Achilles, the leader of fifty ships of Myrmidons, Hellenes, and Achaeans, who sacked the town of Lyrnessos.  She is described as Briseis of the lovely hair and “golden Aphrodite”.[ii]
Briseis was beautiful enough to be considered a noteworthy prize.   She was awarded to Achilles by the Greek Army, perhaps the best prize being given to the greatest of the Greek warriors.   She is together with Achilles when The Iliad ends.  According to the poem, Achilles will soon be killed.  What happens to Briseis is unknown, to me, but it is likely that, still a slave, she would have been passed on from dead Achilles to become the concubine of whoever then led the Myrmidons.
We know much more about Helen, Sita and Penelope.  Helen is encountered in The Odyssey, an epic set later than The Iliad when Telemakhos, Odysseus’ son, visits King Menelaus in Sparta.  There is even a story, not in The Iliad, that after death she will not go to Hades, but live in The Isles of Bliss with Achilles![iii]  Another story says that Aphrodite spirited her out of Troy to have a tryst with Theseus.[iv]  Helen was once a byword for shame.  Yet another story, in defense of her tarnished reputation by the Greek dramatist Euripides, has swayed opinion. Perhaps she might really have been chaste, because it was not her, but another Helen, a kind of shadow who went to Troy.[v]   At Indian weddings, songs today are sung about Sita.  Most of her marriage to Rama was blissful but she too, like Helen, had a tarnished reputation, resulting in stories about Sita having doubles and reincarnations, one of them, Draupadi, who was so anxious for a husband that she prayed to Shiva five times and so was made wife of the five Pandavas, famous even today as heroes in The Mahabharata.[vi]  There is story that connects Penelope to an oath binding Helen’s suitors to the defense of whoever was chosen to be Helen’s husband.  This story has it that Odysseus suggests the idea of the oath to Helen’s father while asking him in return to help him marry Ikarios’ daughter, Penelope.[vii]  Penelope has become a byword for faithfulness.
Abduction was common in Classical literature.  Medea, Helen, and Sita are some famous examples, all females; Ganymede, Hylas, and Odysseus all well-known males.   While no rules appeared to govern abduction by the gods, a passage from The Mahabharata illustrates that abduction between mortals was governed by societal rules.   Just before he seizes three maidens and absconds with them in his chariot, Bhishma announces to the King of Kasi’s court that: “Of the several forms of choosing a bride, as the sages have mentioned, the noblest is that in which a maiden is acquired by force from amidst a valiant gathering such as this”.[viii]   From this, it follows that to abduct a woman in the culture of The Mahabharata, a prospective husband would first have announced his intention, then fought for the woman he desired, and by winning the fight, have been able to abduct her legally.  Bhishma’s intention when abducting the King’s daughters was to provide wives for his ward, the young king of Hastinapura.   
The Iliad centers on two abductions, Helen, taken by Paris from her husband Menelaus, and Briseis, a slave girl whom Agamemnnon took away from her master Achilles.  Helen’s abduction led to The Trojan War.   Agamemnon’s action caused Achilles’ prolonged withdrawal from the Trojan War.  Achilles was not in the position of a father whose daughter had been abducted, or a husband his wife.  The Greek army had awarded him the beautiful girl Briseis as a prize.  From hints in The Iliad, we can assume that Briseis, once abducted, was probably a victim of Stockholm Syndrome.  Her own husband and three brothers were killed by Achilles and his men when she was enslaved.[ix]   At the time, she was consoled by Patroclus, who promised her she would become Achilles’ bride.  She was fond of Patroclus, Achilles’ best friend while she was Achilles’ concubine.  The rage that Achilles felt at Agamemnon was not because of losing Briseis the woman but, as he prayed to his mother, the goddess Thetis: “Agamemnon has taken away my prize and dishonored me.”[x]  Achilles does not ask his mother to help get Briseis back.  Instead, he asks her to have Zeus wreak havoc on the Greeks until Agamemnon realizes “what a fool he’s been because he did not honor the best of all the fighting Achaeans.”[xi]  Thetis shows no sympathy for Briseis.  A slave had very little status in such cultures.
From versions of The Ramayana, we gain further insight into the importance of honor to a man in epic poetry.  Like Briseis, Sita in The Ramayana, Rama’s wife, is abducted.  The wily demon who took her, Ravana, contrived to get her husband Rama and his brother Lakshmana away from the house where Sita was left alone.  Like Paris for Helen, Ravana had been afflicted by desire for Sita, in this case, not by Aphrodite, but by his demon sister.  Luckily for Sita, Ravana believes that because of a curse he will die if he touches an unwilling woman.[xii]  Sita refuses to give him such permission and preserves her chastity.  A war will ensue that will result in the fall of Ravana’s kingdom of Lanka, just as the Trojan War will end with the destruction of Troy.   Like Helen, when Sita is re-united with her husband she realizes their relationship has been violated even if she had not.  Sattar’s version of the story provides more explicit details of Rama’s feelings for Sita who dishonored him by being abducted.  He tells her: “I have done my duty by rescuing you from the enemy…I did it to vindicate my honor and to save my noble family from disgrace…I have terrible suspicions about your character and conduct.  The sight of you is as painful to me as a lamp to a man with diseased eyes!”[xiii] 
As with Achilles, honor is worth more to Rama than his relationship with a woman.  Sita must throw herself on a burning funeral pyre to be vindicated by the Sun God and presented back to Rama, before he will accept her again as his wife.   In Sattar’s version, Sita is subsequently exiled to live under the sage Valmiki’s protection because Rama hears that there is unseemly gossip about Sita and Ravana among his people.  Sita is pregnant and people assume that Sita could not have been so long under Ravana’s power without losing her chastity.  “Now we shall have to do the same thing with our wives”, people are saying, “in a similar situation…subjects must do as their king does!”[xiv]  In contrast with Rama, Odysseus clearly trusts his wife Penelope even though they have been separated for twenty years.   For some of that time she has been besieged by suitors wanting to marry her.  When Odysseus returns, disposes of those that were disloyal in his household and kills all the suitors, he accepts his wife without reservation, although, in an unusual demonstration of female power in classical literature, she subjects him to a final test, before she will accept that he truly is her long-lost husband.  Only her husband would know the details of their marriage bed and how it was constructed to incorporate an olive tree.  Odysseus passes the test.[xv] 
Physical beauty is often, of itself, a motivator for abduction.  From sources other than The Iliad, we know that, before Helen was married to Menelaus, she had once been abducted by Theseus and Peirithoös when she was ten, only to be rescued by her brothers Castor and Pollux, still a virgin.[xvi]  Theseus and Peirithoös are also known to have attempted to abduct Persephone from Hades.[xvii]  They are the two heroes Odysseus regretted he was unable to meet before being chased out of the land of the dead by Persephone herself.[xviii]   There is no full description of Helen’s abduction from Greece in either The Iliad or The Odyssey, presumably because such details were told in tales that have since been lost.  Unlike Sita, Helen, who was familiar with the excitement of abduction may have been thrilled to abscond with Paris, no doubt further encouraged by Aphrodite.[xix]  But it seems clear from these epics that when Paris abducted Helen, Paris did not abide by time-honored convention.  Instead, like Ravana, he committed a crime against custom. An example of the correct procedure can be found in Draupadi’s Bridegroom Choice (352-354), a section of The Mahabharata.  Arjuna does not have to abduct Draupadi because Draupadi self-selects him once he has accomplished a necessary feat with a bow.  But Arjuna’s intrusion into the competition does resemble an abduction in that it follows the pattern of publicly announcing an intention to carry off a bride, fighting for her, and winning.  That he had to fight off angry suitors even after being selected by Draupadi in open contest gives further credence to the legitimacy of his prize.  The Trojan war might have been prevented if Paris, instead of snatching Helen away in secret, had come to blows with Menelaus, her husband, or at least some of Helen’s bodyguard, and won in combat the prize with whom he absconded.
The Odyssey, also has many abductions.  Odysseus’ loyal servant, Eumaios, the swineherd was abducted as a child and sold into slavery.[xx]  When Odysseus returns to Ithaca he invents a story that he himself was abducted (the second Cretan lie) to forge a common bond with his loyal servant who has not yet recognized his master.  Odysseus is abducted, first by Circe who fails in the attempt, then by Polyphemus the Cyclops from whom Odysseus is only able to escape due to his guile, and then by Calypso.  Circe’s attempt to abduct him and change him into a pig, was thwarted by Hermes.[xxi]  The Odyssey does not explain what brought Hermes to Circe’s island.  Circe like Calypso invites Odysseus to bed. She subsequently entertained him and his crew for a year before his crew grew restless and she helped him leave.  Calypso will abduct Odysseus for seven years and he will sleep with her at night while pining for Penelope during the day.[xxii]   
In the meantime, Penelope, Odysseus’ faithful wife has been besieged by suitors.  Having kept them at bay for several years they are now pressing her to proceed with a marriage.  They are essentially waiting for a swayamwara, a Sanskrit word given to an event where a bride makes a “self-choice”.  Normally, such an event would be hosted by a King to marry off his daughter.  Penelope is unusual, again, in that she organizes a bow competition on her own, perhaps complicit with her husband who has returned to Ithaca disguised as a beggar.  It does not occur to the suitors during their long waiting period that any one of them could abduct Penelope, presumably by fighting off all the others.  Could this be the reason for Penelope’s lavish, hospitality?   She does not forbid the continual feasting on valuable livestock.  Having finished weaving Laertes’ death shroud, she was desperate not to be forced into making a marriage decision.  She was still playing for time.  When Odysseus is reunited with his wife he tells Penelope he will replenish the flocks the suitors depleted by going on raids.[xxiii]  Slaves like cattle had value because their productivity could increase a family’s wealth.  Slaves had no legal status and their abduction probably carried no penalty.  We can speculate that it was by raiding his distant neighbors and abducting their livestock and their women that Odysseus would have gone about replenishing his household staff as well as his flocks.
Meanwhile, we can expect that Briseis is twenty years older and is either still a beautiful slave plucking wool for a loom or now lingers among the throngs of dead in Hades.  Perhaps in Hades she was re-united with her husband.  She is not totally forgotten by poets.  In a 1929 article published in The Criterion IX, Ezra Pound recalled her as part of the “old story of Briseis and Achilles”.[xxiv]





References





[i] All in epic poetry, Briseis and Helen in The Iliad, Penelope and Helen in The Odyssey, and Sita in The Ramayana.  This paper credits Stephanie W. Jamison's paper: Draupadi on the Walls of Troy. 
[ii] Gantz, T.  Early Greek Myth, Volume 2, 596; Iliad, Lombardo, 190; Iliad, Lattimore, 69 and 94.
[iii] Gantz, T.  Early Greek Myth, Volume 1, 135.
[iv] Gantz, T.  Early Greek Myth, Volume 2, 596.
[v] Gantz, T.  Early Greek Myth, Volume 2, 664.
[vi] Levaniouk, class handout, March 7th. 2017
[vii] Gantz, T.  Early Greek Myth, Volume 2, 566.
[viii] Mahabharata, Narayan, 4.
[ix] Iliad, Lombardo, 382-383, book XIX, 300-322.
[x] ibid, book I, 369-370.
[xi] ibid, 430-431.
[xii] Ramayana, Narayan 87.
[xiii] Ramayana, Sattar, 633.
[xiv] ibid, 662.
[xv] Odyssey, Fitzgerald, page 435, book XXIII 202-230.
[xvi] Gantz, T.  Early Greek Myth, Volume I 288-291. 
[xvii] Ibid 291-295
[xviii] Odyssey, Fitzgerald, page 205-206, book XI 749-754.
[xix] Gantz, T.  Early Greek Myth, Volume 1, 288-91.
[xx] Odyssey, Fitzgerald, page 280-283, book XV 475-586.
[xxi] ibid, Fitzgerald, page 173-175, book XV 475-586.
[xxii] ibid, Fitzgerald, page 82-85, book X 305-390.
[xxiii] ibid, Fitzgerald, page 440, book XXIII, 401-405.
[xxiv] Pound, Horace, The Criterion IX, 1929-1930, 181.

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