Why Hades isn't that bad???
Before Romeo
and Juliet, there was Hades and Persephone. A classic love story….!!!
Now, I do not
claim to say that everything written below is owned by me, as it is a
mythology. However, I do say that I tried my best to deliver this eternal love
story. Hades, as far
as I have read have been depicted as the bad god of the underworld who abducted
Persephone. Not many have written about his true, faithful love for his only
wife. How he happened to fall in love with her, how he took care of her, &
how he remained to be the only god in the Greek Mythology who can be termed as ‘loyal’
or ‘faithful.’
So, following
the introduction, the eternal love story of HADES & PERSEPHONE goes
something like this:
The first living visitor to the Underworld, though an unwilling
one, was the goddess Persephone. The only daughter of Zeus and Demeter (the
goddess of grain, agriculture, and fertility), Persephone was an innocent
maiden, a virgin who loved to play in the fields where eternal springtime
reigned.
Hades, god of the Underworld, fell in love with Persephone and
wanted her as his bride. His brother Zeus consented to the marriage—or at least
refused to oppose it. Yet he warned Hades that Demeter would never approve this
coupling, for she would not want her daughter spirited off to a sunless world.
At Zeus's suggestion—or with his tacit understanding—Hades resolved to abduct
the maiden.
Persephone was gathering flowers one day on a plain in Sicily. Hades suddenly appeared, thundering across the plain in his four-horse chariot. The god swooped down upon Persephone, scooped her up with one arm, & took her with him. The appearance, abduction, and disappearance happened so swiftly that none of Persephone's companions witnessed this. The earth opened up before Hades' chariot and the god drove the jet-black horses down into the chasm. As Hades and Persephone disappeared into the depths, the hole closed up behind them.
Demeter soon came to collect her daughter, but could not find a
trace of Persephone. Distraught and desperate, Demeter searched high and low
for her daughter. She traveled to the farthest corners of the earth, searching
for nine full days and nights without ever stopping to eat, drink, bathe, or
rest. Demeter was in a fury. She destroyed lands, crops, and livestock as she
bewailed the loss of her daughter.
She threatened to make the earth barren forever and thus destroy
all of humankind if she did not find Persephone.
Finally, on the tenth day, the goddess Hecate told Demeter that
Persephone had been carried away, but she did not know by whom. The two
goddesses went to Helius, the god of the sun, who saw everything that happened
on Earth. Helius did tell her what had happened, but also tried to persuade
Demeter that Hades—as Zeus's brother and ruler of one third of the universe—was
not an unfit husband for Persephone.
Demeter refused to accept Hades as a suitable mate for her
precious daughter. Enraged by the news of Persephone's abduction (and Zeus's
possible complicity), she refused to return to Mount Olympus. Instead she
roamed the earth in the guise of a mortal, forbidding the trees to bear fruit
and the earth to nurture vegetables and herbs.
After a full year of famine had plagued the earth, Zeus realized
that if he allowed Demeter to persist, all of humankind would starve—leaving no
one to honor and make offerings to the gods. Zeus sent a parade of gods and
goddesses to Demeter to beg her to come back to Olympus and to restore
fertility to the earth.
But Demeter refused to budge until her daughter stood by her
side. Zeus had no choice: He relented, promising to bring Persephone back to
her mother.
Hermes, summoned by Zeus, raced down to Hades to fetch
Persephone. Hades shrugged compliantly and agreed to let her go only if she
wished to go. He went to tell his wife the whole story happening on earth.
Persephone was in tears; apparently it came to his notice that she had fallen
for him. She was in love with him but wished to see her mother as well. Persephone
had not eaten a single thing—whether from sorrow, loss of appetite, or
stubbornness—since her arrival in the Underworld. But before she left, Hades
urged Persephone to appease her terrible hunger by eating a single pomegranate
seed and promised her that everything will fall place. Sadly, this apparent act
of kindness was a trick: Anyone who tastes the food of Hades must remain in the
Underworld.
The deed having been done, Rhea—the mother of Zeus, Demeter, and
Hades—proposed a compromise that her children reluctantly accepted: Since
Persephone had eaten there; she had to dwell at least part of every year in the
Underworld. Rhea suggested that Persephone spend six months (or, according to
some, three or four months) as Queen of the Underworld and the rest of the year
with Demeter.
After agreeing to the deal, Demeter restored Earth's fertility
and returned to Olympus with Persephone. But when the time came for Persephone
to return to the Underworld, the earth became colder and less fertile until her
reemergence months later.
Since the abduction of Persephone, spring and summer have given
way to autumn and winter, and the earth's fertility has followed the
progression of seasons. In the fall, seeds—like Persephone herself—were buried
underground. But in the spring, Persephone and the earth's crops came out into
the sun once more.
Although she spent only half of her life in the Underworld,
little is known of Persephone's life above ground after her abduction. Below
ground, however, she was dreaded forever afterward as the goddess of the
Underworld. So feared was she that mortals often invoked her name in curses.
Despite her forbidding
image, Queen Persephone did sometimes show a capacity for mercy. When Alcestis
offered her own life in place of her dying husband's, Persephone sent her back
from the Underworld and spared them both. Persephone also exhibited strong
maternal feelings when Aphrodite entrusted her with safeguarding the infant
Adonis. Indeed, she became so enamored of the baby that she refused to give him
back. (Zeus ultimately ruled that Adonis would spend one third of his life with
Persephone, one third with Aphrodite, and one third with whomever he wished.)
Persephone had no children by Hades, but she remained faithful
to him—and saw that he remained faithful to her. When Hades attempted to seduce
Minthe, Persephone transformed the nymph into a fragrant mint plant. Hades apologized
for his act and realized Persephone’s love for him.
p.s. Everything is
fair in Love!!!!! True love wins all!!!!
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