Even though you probably learned about
Athens as the birthplace of democracy back in junior high social studies, in
truth democracy came on the scene fairly late in Greek history, and there are
plenty of myths about the kings of Athens. These kings-and-queens stories,
recorded in the democratic era, tend to show contemporary tensions (for
example, regarding the place of aristocracy in a democratic society, or about
the meaning of being Athenian rather than foreign, or about parent-child
relationships and how whippersnappers should revere their elders) played out
allegorically by mythic characters. One great example is the story of Xuthus
and Creusa.
In Euripides’ tragedy Ion (this is an orphan-centered story about an atom that has
tragically lost one of its electrons. Wait, what?), Creusa is an Athenian
princess, whom Xuthus married to become king of Athens. Unfortunately, they’ve
been unable to have any children together. They need children to carry on their
royal line, so they go to an oracle to ask how they can have children. There’s
never any question that the king might choose a successor on the basis of
merit; rather than find the best successor available, he’s determined to choose
one who is as genetically similar to himself as possible. There’s a certain
level of irony to this, since Xuthus himself is hardly a carbon copy of the
previous king; he’s not even Athenian, and his legitimacy as king depends on
the fact that he married a princess with no brothers.
Although oracles are notorious for being
cryptic and misleading, here the oracle gives a refreshingly simple answer to
the query. The oracle orders Xuthus to walk out of the temple and greet the
first person he meets as his son. Note that the oracle doesn’t say that this
person is his son, just that Xuthus
should accept him as his son. Which is a pretty safe answer for the oracle to
give, probably; if a king comes in to an oracle demanding a son, and the oracle
advises him to adopt the first random dude he meets on the street--well, it’s
not like most people would turn down the chance to be king, right? Xuthus
cheerfully follows the instructions, and the random dude, after some initial
confusion, consents to be adopted by this distinguished stranger.
There is something laughable about Xuthus
being so delusionally desperate to have a genetically-related son that he will
accept any improbable story that yields him one. The random dude, whose name is
Ion, is an orphan and so not in a position to correct Xuthus when he rolls in
claiming to be his dad. But Ion, unlike Xuthus, harbors a healthy degree of
curiosity and skepticism about this claim that they’re related. He asks Xuthus probing
questions like, ‘So who was my mother?’ and ‘What do you mean, you don’t know
who my mother is?’ and ‘How did you father a child without even realizing it?’
and ‘Isn’t that incredibly irresponsible behavior for a king?’ and ‘What am I
doing living here, if you live in
another city?’ to which Xuthus replies with an extremely weak ‘Gee, I dunno, I guess I visited this place and got
drunk and got some girl pregnant and then left town and totally forgot about
all the floozies I might have slept with on the road.’ He is uninterested in
tracking down the boy’s mother or confirming the story in any way. He got what
he wanted: one son, full grown! And now he seems nervous about facing any
suspicions that might poke holes in the oracle’s unlikely story.
Such suspicions would be fully justified,
since the oracle actually is misleading Xuthus: Ion isn’t his son in any
genetic sense. Xuthus is not terribly bright and a lot of things get by him; he
has no idea that his wife Creusa was raped by Apollo before they were married,
and she secretly gave birth to a child. She had to abandon the child to avoid
being outcast from her family, but Apollo took care of the child and in fact
had it brought up in this same oracular shrine, ready to be adopted by Xuthus
when he had trouble having his own children. Ion is actually his stepchild or
his adopted child, but Xuthus is so fixated on his idea of having his own child
that he’s willing to fabricate memories for himself to account for a son he
doesn’t remember siring.
Creusa is even worse. She discovers
that Ion is really her son, and is overjoyed to recover him after so long a
separation. Before she learns that, though, she believes Xuthus’ story that Ion
is the product of his drunken indiscretions, and immediately becomes the wicked
stepmother, going so far as to attempt to poison her supposed stepson. When she
learns that he is really her son and not her husband’s, she abandons all plans
to kill him and welcomes him gladly. In short, she knows next to nothing about
this stranger, but she is making life-or-death decisions about him based on
information about who had sex with whom before he was born. She doesn’t care
what sort of person he is, whether he would be a good ruler, or whether he has
a personality she wants to deal with at breakfast every morning; her decisions
are based not on his own qualities or actions, but on who his ancestors are.
The most ridiculous part, I would say, is
that once Creusa learns that she is Ion’s mother, she realizes that her life
will be much easier if Xuthus never learns the truth--that she was an unwed
teenage mother before their marriage--and is allowed to persist in his happy
delusion that Ion is his son. Unlike most Greek tragedies, this one ends not in
a torrent of blood, but with everyone making up and going home, the king secure
in his willful ignorance. Because Ion is
Creusa’s son, descended from the royal line of Athens, we’re supposed to
presume that he will be a good king ever after, that he will have an innate
talent for kingship and administration and justice--but the rash actions of
Creusa, and the stolidity of the contemporary king, hardly inspire confidence
on that account.