Pyramus and Thisbe, from Edith Hamilton, Mythology.
Once upon a time the deep red berries of the mulberry tree
were as white as snow. The change in color came about strangely and sadly. The
death of the two young lovers was the
cause.
Pyramus and Thisbe, he the most beautiful youth and she the
loveliest maiden of all the East, lived in Babylon, the city of Queen
Semiramis, in houses so close together that one wall was common to both.
Growing up thus side by side they learned to love each other. They longed to
marry, but their parents forbade. Love, however, cannot be forbidden. The more
that flame is covered up, the hotter it burns. Also love can always find a way.
It was impossible that those two whose hearts were on fire should be kept
apart.
In the wall both houses shared there was a little chink. No
one before had noticed it, but there is nothing a lover does not notice. Our
two young people discovered it and through it they were able to whisper sweetly back and forth. Thisbe on the side,
Pyramus on the other. The hateful wall that separated them had become their
means of reaching each other. “But for you we could touch, kiss,” they would
say. “But at least you let us speak together. You give a passage for loving
words to reach loving ears. We are not ungrateful.” So they would talk, and as
night came on and they must part, each would press on the wall kisses that
could not go through to the lips on the other side.
Every morning when the dawn had put out the stars, and the
sun’s rays had dried the hoarfrost on the grass, they would steal to the crack
and, standing there, now utter words of burning love and now lament their hard
fate, but always in softest whispers. Finally, a day came when they could
endure no longer. They decided that that very night they would try to slip away
and steal out through the city into the open country where at last they could
be together in freedom. They agreed to meet at a well-known place, the Tomb of
Ninus, under a tree there, a tall mulberry full of snow-white berries, near
which a cool spring bubbled up. The plan pleased them and it seemed to seem the
day would never end.
At last, the sun sank into the sea and night arose. In the
darkness, Thisbe crept out and made her way in all secrecy to the tomb. Pyramus
had not come; still she waited for him, her love making her bold. But of a
sudden, she saw by the light of a moon, a lioness. The fierce beast had made a
kill; her jaws were bloody and she was coming to slake her thirst in the
spring. She was still far away from Thisbe to escape, but as she fled she
dropped her cloak. The lioness came upon it on her way back to her lair and she
mouthed it and tore it before disappearing into the woods. That is what Pyramus
saw when he appeared a few minutes later. Before him, lay the bloodstained shreds
of the cloak and clear in the dust were the tracks of the lioness. The
conclusion was inevitable. He never doubted that he knew all. Thisbe was dead.
He had let his love, a tender maiden, come alone to a place full of danger, and
not been there first to protect her. “It is I who had killed you,” he said.
He lifted up from the trampled dust what
was left of the cloak and kissing it again and again carried it to the mulberry
tree. “Now,” he said, “you shall drink my blood too.” He drew his sword and
plunged it into his side. The blood spurted up over the berries and dyed them
dark red.
Thisbe, although terrified of the lioness , was still more
afraid to fail her lover. She ventured to go back to the tree of the tryst, the
mulberry with the shining white fruit. She could not find it. A tree was there,
but not one gleam of white was on its branches. As she stared at it, something
moved on the ground beneath. She started back shuddering. But in a moment,
peering through the shadows, she saw what was there. It was Pyramus, bathed in
blood and dying. She flew to him and threw her arms around him. She kissed his
cold lips and begged him to look at her, to speak to her. “It is I, your
Thisbe, your dearest,” she cried to him. At the sound of her name he opened his
heavy eyes for one look. Then death closed them.
She saw his sword fallen from his hand and beside it her
cloak stained and torn. She understood all. Your own hand killed you,” she
said, “and your love for me. I too can be brave. I too can love. Only death
would have had the power to separate us. It shall not have that power now.” She
plunged into her heart the sword that was still wet with his life’s blood.
The gods were pitiful at the end and the lover’s parents
too. The deep red fruit of the mulberry is the everlasting memorial of these
true lovers, and one urn holds, the ashes of the two whom not even death could
part.
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