"…from her shrine the Sibyl of Cumae
sang her fearful riddling prophecies, her voice booming in the cave as she
wrapped the truth in darkness, while Apollo shook the reins upon her in her
frenzy and dug the spurs into her flanks. The madness passed. The wild words
died upon her lips…" (Aenied,
Book VI)
In this series of posts on The World of
Children of Apollo we have been through the sands and cities of Roman North
Africa, trod the marble-clad streets of Imperial Rome and wandered the lush,
ancient land of Etruria . We have met the imperial family
and had a hint of the dangers that can come of an association with them.
In this post, we set off on a slightly
different path into the realm of mystery and legend, and visit the cave of the
Cumaean Sibyl, Apollo’s ancient oracle on the Italian peninsula. It is in this
cave of the Sibyl that Lucius Metellus Anguis learns of a cryptic prophecy
concerning his future.
Cumae |
Legend has it that Cumae
was founded by ancient Greeks as early as 1050 B.C. and was, according to
Strabo, the oldest of the Greek colonies on mainland Italy
or Sicily . Cumae survived many years
of war and attack until, under the Empire, it was seen as a quiet, country town
in contrast to the very fashionable Baiae nearby. The acropolis of Cumae is a mass of rock
rising two-hundred and sixty-nine feet above the seashore which lies one
hundred yards away. The acropolis contains three levels of caves with many
branches and it is within these caves that the Cumaean Sibyl had her seat.
Cumaean Acropolis and Cave |
One can approach the rock from the
south-east. It is steep on all sides with remnants of the original Greek
fortifications. The acropolis is an ancient place, a place where myth and
legend can, if you manage to block out modernity, come alive. Within the
acropolis stood the Temple
of Apollo , God of
Prophecy. Tradition has it that Daedalus himself built the temple. This was restored
by the Romans who had great reverence for that god and the Sibyl who had
prophesied the future of Rome
to the last king, Lucius Tarquinius Superbus, in the Sibylline Books.
The Sibyl Andrea del Castagno |
As the story goes, Tarquinius would not pay
the Sibyl her extortionate price for all nine books. The Sibyl burned three and
yet he refused to pay. She burned another three and the king relented, paying
the original price for the remaining three books. A lesson there, to be sure!
The Sibylline Books were kept in the Temple
of Jupiter on the
Capitoline Hill until c. 80 B.C. when it burned down. The books were so
valuable, having been referred to in times of great crisis for Rome , that a re-collection
of Sibylline prophecies was undertaken in all corners of the Empire. Augustus finally
had the prophecies moved to the Temple
of Apollo on the Palatine
Hill where our main character, Lucius Metellus Anguis spends much time in Children of Apollo.
Entrance to the Cave |
But who was the Sibyl? Her person is
surrounded by the haze of legend. She was mortal, but she lived for a thousand
years. In the Aeneid, it was the
Sibyl who guided Aeneas to the underworld so that he could visit his dead
father, Anchises, in Hades. Her story is a sad one too. When Apollo met her,
the god offered her a wish in exchange for her virginity. The Sibyl then picked
up a handful of sand and asked that she live as many years as the number of
grains of sand she held in her palm. The old adage, ‘Careful what you wish
for,’ certainly rings true in the Sibyl’s case. Tragically, she did not wish
for eternal youth as well and as a result, over the centuries, her young,
once-beautiful body withered until all that remained was her prophetic voice.
In Children of Apollo, this is a
voice that Lucius Metellus Anguis will not soon forget.
The Sibyl's Inner Chamber |
The traditions of ancient Greece and Rome
are of full of tales of tragedy, choices wrongly-made, beauty, love, hate and
deception. The tales are heroic and terrifying, inspiring and thought-provoking.
And oftentimes, there is a physical place associated with a particular tale, a
place you can visit and hear the voices of the past. You can stand in a spot
where once a Trojan hero stood, as well as emperors and caesars, or common
soldiers. It may be a place or tale that shook the foundations of the world, of
a people, or of a solitary individual trying to find his way.
For Lucius Metellus Anguis, the Sibyl’s
cave is a place that will haunt him for a long time to come.
View to the Light from Inside |
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