Page:Myth, Ritual, and Religion (Volume 2).djvu/213

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DELOS.
199

this meaning cannot be found in the etymology of her name.[1] M. Decharme presumes that the palm tree (φοῖνιξ) originally meant the morning red, by aid of which night gives birth to the sun, and if the poet says the young god loves the mountain tops, why, so does the star of day. The moon, however, does not usually arise simultaneously with the dawn, as Artemis was born with Apollo. It is vain, in fact, to look for minute touches of solar myth in the tale, which rests on the womanly jealousy of Hera, and explains the existence of a great fane and feast of Apollo, not in one of the rich countries that refused his mother sanctuary, but in a small barren and remote island.[2]

Among the wilder myths which grouped themselves round the figure of Apollo was the fable that his mother Leto was changed into a wolf. The fable ran that Leto, in the shape of a wolf, came in twelve days from the Hyperboreans to Delos.[3] This may be explained as a volks-etymologie from the god's name, "Lycegenes," which is generally held to mean "born of light." But the presence of very many animals in the Apollo legend and in his temples, corresponding as it does to similar facts already observed in the religion of the lower races, can scarcely be due to popular etymologies alone. The Dolphin-Apollo has already been remarked. There are many traces of

  1. Preller, i. 190, note 4; Curtius, Gr. Et., 120.
  2. The French excavators in Delos found the original unhewn stone on which, in later days, the statue of the anthropomorphic god was based.
  3. Aristotle, Hist. An., vi. 35; Ælian., N. A., iv. 4; Schol. on Apol. Rhod., ii. 123.