A Story of Ancient Greece

Pholus the Centaur

Teacher and Storyteller
Stoning (Not that kind of stoning!)

This is a story that takes place over 300 years before the birth of Jesus Christ. Nothing bad happens in this tale.

The Coast, Not Far From Megara
Archonship of Euergetes, The Ninth Day of Maimakterion


To my Mother, greetings,


Your son wishes you all well at this time of the year, and I hope that you are well settled in for the approaching rains of winter. My own health has been good, although I am, as always, suffering with the colic, and you shall, as always, undoubtedly urge this or that alteration in my diet. Be assured, dear Mother, that I shall consult the pharmacologists at the Lyceum upon my return from the Peloponnese.
I do try to eat what is right, but it is, as always, the beans that prove my undoing, and my fondness for them is a thing I must temper. But, as you know, they are nourishing.

As you have asked, I have consulted old Thibron in Tanagra about the state of your investments in the Megarid, and he and I together urge you to send no more money to the Fuller’s Association in Perachora. I agree that the new process may be useful both in the fulling and cleaning of wool, but they are at odds with each other over the costs of further effort and where investments such as yours should go. I fear it will be into the purses of the less honorable among them. Execias will advise you further, and it is my thought that you should keep your silver closer to Rhodes. I see storm clouds on the horizon here in Greece, but I will speak no more without certain knowledge, lest the gods take notice.

Work, or meaningful work, at least, eludes me still. One with skill in numbers or knowledge of carting may always find employment, of course, but I do still refuse to pull a cart after all my studies. I know from my own youth, as you are undoubtedly thinking, the honest nature of the work, and I do not look down upon my father’s profession. But, Mother! I have done my part between the shafts, and with no shame, but I have not spent my years at the Lyceum for something that may as well be done by a horse! I am not a horse, however useful my resemblance to one might be to a two-legs in need of my strength.

Despite my travails and difficulties, I will not, however, shame us both by asking for your assistance. I am reasonably well-clothed, and find ways to eat and dwell cheaply, at only a very small cost to my health and appearance. The comic poets make great jests about the threadbare, traveling scholar, but, as such a figure, at least I meet with smiles, rather than crossed spears, in the course of my travels. Things are calm between the breeds. Our folk are getting along well with the two-legged populace of the regions through which I have traveled, and the Silenoi and the Satyrs seem to be managing, at least as far as I can tell. Just today I encountered an somewhat older palomino stallion, and there witnessed a portent of enough wonder to make me pause in my journeys and indite this to you.

It was a rather rocky pathway overlooking the coast, a treacherous spot, for all its beauty. One must place each hoof carefully, and not allow the splendor of the view to lure you onto the rocks, far below. I might have tried Odysseus’s measure against the Sirens, but, ha ha! Plugging my eyes with cloth and wax would produce the same result as letting my gaze wander, and sooner.

Picking my way carefully, and rejoicing in the fact that I was well shod at that time, I came to the highest part of the trail, on a promontory directly above a sheer drop to deep waters below. I paused to doff my hat and take breath, a bit lathered, for the sun had come up and warmed me before I thought to remove my cloak. Ah, the shining blue skies and seas of Greece, although our own little island, as you know, Mother, can match it in glory at its best. I thought of my long travels with Father, and as always, at such times, longed for him again with the passing melancholy we have both come to know so well.

You may thank Rhodos herself that I did not bolt over the cliff, as our silly, distant relatives might do when startled, and I must confess that I shied rather badly when the voice addressed me in what was, to be sure, a simple, polite greeting. The wind was in the wrong direction at that moment. It was another of our people, always a pleasant encounter, although I am an old enough wanderer to check a stranger for hidden weapons or companions before dropping my guard. Before I forget—please to place an order with that artisan by the docks with whom I have dealt in the past—ask the sailors for the shop of Phrynicus—for another fifty of the bolts my gastrophetes requires. I have had occasion to use the weapon, but, invoke no gods, Mother, merely in practice and demonstrations of its use and effectiveness. Perhaps I should become a merchant in them! An amusing thought, yet one, I admit, that it might do to consider. I have friends yet in Syracuse who might procure any number of them for me…

I digress, and these tablets are not infinite in size! The palomino centaur who had addressed me was perhaps a few years older than I, very heavily built, perhaps from heavy cartage in the quarries near by. We exchanged pleasantries and names—He was Hermogenes son of Chilon, and indeed, involved in the carving and transport of stones from this place north to Athens, south to the Isthmus. His pelt, though in good condition, was stained with the stone dust of the quarries, and his hands and flanks wore calluses and harness-galls. After a polite exchange of breath and an embrace, I offered him some from my wine skin, and he urged me to kneel there beside him and rest myself as we shared the last of my wine.

We passed some time together, in companionable silence, and, as you know, it is most comforting to be in the proximity of a fellow centaur when you have been long among the two-legs and other such strangers. We watched the clouds in formation over the sea for some time, together, and then I noticed a carved ball of pine, I think, in between his folded foreknees.

At my lifted eyebrow, he smiled at me and rose to his hooves.
 
“Ah, Loquacious, now you shall see a thing. Watch, if you desire a marvel.”

As a scholar, I am always desirous, as well you know, Mother, of seeing and learning that which is new, and so I stood with him and waited in respectful attention. From the other side of his lower body he drew a rather large stone, roughly rounded. I thought that perhaps he had brought it up from the lands below, for I noticed, Mother, that it was not the same as those upon which we stood.

You know, as I have mentioned to you, that Anaximander of Miletus has remarked upon finding the bones of fish in the stone of the mountains, and I found myself looking about for some of these rarities as I stood next to Hermogenes, waiting, my mind already on the subject of the earth’s bones. I saw none—they are most often found in the softer whitish rocks so prized by the lime burners. It is more pious to recall the story of Deucalion and Pyrrha when you have seen such things, and the great flood out of Zeus’s anger, but the gods gave centaurs and the other breeds curiousity. I do not think that they wish us to leave it idle, and so I do persist in wondering... Hermogenes threw this stone into the waters below, with an easy motion of his tanned and powerful arms.

The noise of the fall and the splash, in that quiet spot, was quite pronounced, and I leaned over a bit to watch the spreading circles of the waves on the waters far below us. Hermogenes himself merely smiled, and seemed to be counting for a long while before throwing the wooden ball I had noticed after the stone. I could hear the softer sound of its impact upon the sea, and looked to see it bobbing in the water below. There seemed to be little or no currents or undertow in that place, a good landing for even a ship, had there been beach or access to the mainland.

As you know, it is always difficult for me to hold my tongue, but the mason standing next to me had the air of one who is sharing a great and cherished secret, and there was neither the look nor scent of madness in his grey eyes or in the air around him. I found my tail twitching in expectation, but I kept my peace, and indeed, as he had promised, I did behold a wonder. The ball came sailing back OUT of the sea into the air above us, where Hermogenes caught it with a clearly practiced hand.

“What?” I snorted with amazement, but he smiled and motioned me again to silence. I noticed that he himself rather obviously forebore looking down into the sea below us, but bounced the ball a little bit in his hands to shake the water off of it. After a pause, counting again, it seemed, he threw the ball a second time. And once more, it sailed back out of the sea and into the centaur’s hand. And again, he bounced, threw, and caught it. And again.

This continued, by my own reckoning, for an hour.

I realized that whatever it was had ended when Hermogenes carefully put the now-soaked and waterlogged ball into the large bag slung behind his withers. That done, with a polite gesture he invited me to accompany him, with words offering me a meal and a bed with his own family in his village down below. Our hooves echoed in the returning silence as we worked our way down the trail, and at a pause, I could not restrain my questions.

“Some nymph, perhaps? An oread? Possibly a triton? Is there some legend of this place?’

“No. Nothing I’ve heard. It was a pine cone.”

“A pine cone?”

“My hoof struck it when I was carrying salt back from Megara. It came back out of the sea. I learned to come here, throw the stone, and a joiner made the ball for me in the village.”

“But… Why? What is the purpose of this? Is it a rite? What is the source? What throws back the ball?”

Hermogenes smiled at me, his brow not the least bit creased. I saw a look in his eyes and his face that made me, for a moment, doubt the worth of my own inquiries and much of what I had devoted so much of my life to acquiring.

“I don’t know. It is fun. I imagine it is fun for what throws back the ball.”

He slapped my upper back, and continued on, his tail swishing cheerfully.

“Fun,” I muttered to myself, and followed after, shaking my head. Fun. Yet, is that not of worth, also, my Mother? I have seen so many seek less joy with more effort.

I shall send this by the regular packet soon after my arrival at Athens, perhaps with more letters if there is anything of value or interest to report to you. Please accept your son’s dutiful love and thanks for your past gestures of concern, and if you must invoke the gods, ask Hephaestus to find work for my brain as well as my back and hands, and Helios to bring me home to you and Rhodes safely as soon as that might best be. My best to Peneleos, Ophis at the shrine, and Euphantus, if you see them, and to my sisters and their offspring, my usual avuncular regards.

With invocations to Zeus and Hermes for this letter’s safe arrival,

Your foal,

Loquacious
 
I see what you're doing. Not only have you provided us with an Easter egg regarding Baukis and Philemon, but now you also give a shout-out to the sub-Christian small-g gods who granted them the gift of everlasting togetherness AND ministry.

Hey! I only belatedly spotted your seamless insertion of the correct skeletal structure {"upper back"} in a hexapedal sapient.
 
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Revisiting this thread weeks later, I see more than the first viewing revealed.

I have an advantage: I have known Pholus in the real world, in his actual human identity, for around eighteen years. He has long relished mythology, with Mister Lewis' insightful attitude on the subject. A longer-standing friend, one whom I never met, urged him to make Centaurs his most-used subject. {Think of General Oreius, who was invented for the L.W.W. movie, but who fitted in very well.} Thus, his fiction, as you see here, sets up a specialized parallel world.

YouTube often carries parallel-history videos, like "What if Navy SEALs showed up to defend the Trojans against the Greeks?" or "What if the USS Enterprise brought Confucius on board so he could talk philosophy with Mister Spock?" Precisely in this manner, Pholus here is pretending that Centaurs casually dwelt among humans in the era when Rome had not yet become an empire.
 
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