cooks, considered nothing fit to eat unless it were rich
pastry, or highly-seasoned meat, or spiced sweet cakes--things
which Proserpina's mother had never given her, and the smell of
which quite took away her
appetite, instead of sharpening it.
But my story must now
clamber out of King Pluto's dominions,
and see what Mother Ceres had been about, since she was bereft
of her daughter. We had a
glimpse of her, as you remember, half
hidden among the waving grain, while the four black steeds were
swiftly whirling along the
chariot, in which her beloved
Proserpina was so unwillingly borne away. You
recollect, too,
the loud
scream which Proserpina gave, just when the
chariotwas out of sight.
Of all the child's outcries, this last
shriek was the only one
that reached the ears of Mother Ceres. She had
mistaken the
rumbling of the
chariot wheels for a peal of
thunder, and
imagined that a
shower was coming up, and that it would assist
her in making the corn grow. But, at the sound of Proserpina's
shriek, she started, and looked about in every direction, not
knowingwhence it came, but feeling almost certain that it was
her daughter's voice. It seemed so unaccountable, however, that
the girl should have strayed over so many lands and seas (which
she herself could not have traversed without the aid of her
wingeddragons), that the good Ceres tried to believe that it
must be the child of some other parent, and not her own darling
Proserpina, who had uttered this
lamentable cry. Nevertheless,
it troubled her with a vast many tender fears, such as are
ready to bestir themselves in every mother's heart, when she
finds it necessary to go away from her dear children without
leaving them under the care of some
maiden aunt, or other such
faithful
guardian. So she quickly left the field in which she
had been so busy; and, as her work was not half done, the grain
looked, next day, as if it needed both sun and rain, and as if
it were blighted in the ear, and had something the matter with
its roots.
The pair of
dragons must have had very
nimble wings; for, in
less than an hour, Mother Ceres had alighted at the door of her
home, and found it empty. Knowing, however, that the child was
fond of sporting on the sea-shore, she hastened
thither as fast
as she could, and there
beheld the wet faces of the poor sea
nymphs peeping over a wave. All this while, the good creatures
had been
waiting on the bank of
sponge, and once, every half
minute or so, had popped up their four heads above water, to
see if their
playmate were yet coming back. When they saw
Mother Ceres, they sat down on the crest of the surf wave, and
let it toss them
ashore at her feet.
"Where is Proserpina?" cried Ceres. "Where is my child? Tell
me, you
naughty sea nymphs, have you enticed her under the
sea?"
"O, no, good Mother Ceres," said the
innocent sea nymphs,
tossing back their green ringlets, and looking her in the face.
"We never should dream of such a thing. Proserpina has been at
play with us, it is true; but she left us a long while ago,
meaning only to run a little way upon the dry land, and gather
some flowers for a
wreath. This was early in the day, and we
have seen nothing of her since."
Ceres scarcely waited to hear what the nymphs had to say,
before she
hurried off to make inquiries all through the
neighborhood. But nobody told her anything that would enable
the poor mother to guess what had become of Proserpina. A
fisherman, it is true, had noticed her little footprints in the
sand, as he went
homeward along the beach with a basket of
fish; a
rustic had seen the child stooping to gather flowers;
several persons had heard either the rattling of
chariotwheels, or the rumbling of distant
thunder; and one old woman,
while plucking vervain and catnip, had heard a
scream, but
supposed it to be some
childishnonsense, and
therefore did not
take the trouble to look up. The
stupid people! It took them
such a
tedious while to tell the nothing that they knew, that
it was dark night before Mother Ceres found out that she must
seek her daughter
elsewhere. So she lighted a torch, and set
forth, resolving never to come back until Proserpina was
discovered.
In her haste and trouble of mind, she quite forgot her car and
the
wingeddragons; or, it may be, she thought that she could
follow up the search more
thoroughly on foot. At all events,
this was the way in which she began her
sorrowful journey,
holding her torch before her, and looking carefully at every
object along the path. And as it happened, she had not gone far
before she found one of the
magnificent flowers which grew on
the shrub that Proserpina had pulled up.
"Ha!" thought Mother Ceres, examining it by torchlight. "Here
is
mischief in this flower! The earth did not produce it by any
help of mine, nor of its own
accord. It is the work of
enchantment, and is
thereforepoisonous; and perhaps it has
poisoned my poor child."
But she put the
poisonous flower in her bosom, not
knowingwhether she might ever find any other
memorial of Proserpina.
All night long, at the door of every
cottage and farm-house,
Ceres knocked, and called up the weary laborers to inquire if
they had seen her child; and they stood, gaping and half-
asleep, at the
threshold, and answered her pityingly, and
besought her to come in and rest. At the
portal of every
palace, too, she made so loud a summons that the menials
hurried to throw open the gate, thinking that it must be some
great king or queen, who would demand a
banquet for supper and
a
statelychamber to
repose in. And when they saw only a sad
and
anxious woman, with a torch in her hand and a
wreath of
withered poppies on her head, they spoke
rudely, and sometimes
threatened to set the dogs upon her. But nobody had seen
Proserpina, nor could give Mother Ceres the least hint which
way to seek her. Thus passed the night; and still she continued
her search without sitting down to rest, or stopping to take
food, or even remembering to put out the torch although first
the rosy dawn, and then the glad light of the morning sun, made
its red flame look thin and pale. But I wonder what sort of
stuff this torch was made of; for it burned dimly through the
day, and, at night, was as bright as ever, and never was
extinguished by the rain or wind, in all the weary days and
nights while Ceres was seeking for Proserpina.
It was not merely of human beings that she asked
tidings of her
daughter. In the woods and by the streams, she met creatures of
another nature, who used, in those old times, to haunt the
pleasant and
solitary places, and were very sociable with
persons who understood their language and customs, as Mother
Ceres did. Sometimes, for
instance, she tapped with her finger
against the knotted trunk of a
majestic oak; and immediately
its rude bark would
cleaveasunder, and forth would step a
beautiful
maiden, who was the hamadryad of the oak, dwelling
inside of it, and sharing its long life, and
rejoicing when its
green leaves sported with the
breeze. But not one of these
leafy damsels had seen Proserpina. Then, going a little
farther, Ceres would, perhaps, come to a
fountain, gushing out
of a pebbly hollow in the earth, and would dabble with her hand
in the water. Behold, up through its sandy and pebbly bed,
along with the
fountain's gush, a young woman with dripping
hair would arise, and stand gazing at Mother Ceres, half out of
the water, and undulating up and down with its ever- restless
motion. But when the mother asked whether her poor lost child
had stopped to drink out of the
fountain, the naiad, with
weeping eyes (for these water-nymphs had tears to spare for
everybody's grief, would answer "No!" in a murmuring voice,
which was just like the murmur of the stream.