In Greek mythology, Helen of Sparta was the most beautiful woman on earth and ancient Greek literature likewise often attributed particular beauty to Spartan women. Yet while no other historical Spartan woman is more quoted than Gorgo, the wife and queen of Leonidas, no source attributes particular beauty to her -- leading me to suspect she was not. In the following excerpt from "A Peerless Peer" I describe Gorgo's discovery that she is not particularly pretty and what it means for the Agiad princess.
Gorgo was seven when she was confronted
by the fact that she was not considered pretty. The priestesses from the shrine
to Helen at Therapne had all the girls between the ages of seven and fourteen muster
on the Dancing Floor in order to select which ones would take part in the
Heleneia this year. The selected maidens would be garlanded in flowers and walk
in the procession, followed by flower-studded straw chariots carrying the
prettiest maiden from each of the five villages of the city, to the shrine. There
were usually twenty girls chosen as “flower girls,” and Gorgo was eagerly
looking forward to taking part now that she was at last old enough. It never
occurred to Gorgo that she might not be chosen; but when the priestesses walked
along the rows of eager and expectant girls, pointing a finger at the girls
they found worthy, they walked past her without a glance. The
look on their faces was indifferently dismissive—as if she were no more worthy
of consideration than a mule among horses. Gorgo was stunned.
She ran to the fountain house,
clambered up on the stone trough, and gazed at her reflection in the water. But
her image was shattered by the next helot girl who plunged an amphora into the
water to fill it. She ran out again, starting for home, but at the agora she
paused to look at her reflection on the burnished bronze face of a massive hoplon
hung up for sale. Her face was distorted in the hammered, convex surface, and
she ran on, frightened. She reached the Agiad royal palace by the back entrance
and scampered into the stable yard, deftly dodging the men offloading hay from
a wagon in the alley and ducking under the belly of one of her father’s chariot
horses, who was being groomed at a spot that blocked her path to the kitchen
stairway.
“You’re old enough to know better than
that!” the startled groom scolded, frightened to think what would happen if the
king’s precious child were kicked by the powerful beast. Fortunately the
stallion was dozing contentedly in the sun, only barely interested in flicking
at flies with his tail.
Meanwhile, Gorgo was already halfway up
the stairs and running (now a little breathlessly) down the corridor of the
helots’ quarters toward the inner courtyard and the private dwellings of the
royal family. “Mama! Mama!” Gorgo called as she skidded around the corner into
her mother’s chamber.
“Hush!” her mother admonished angrily.
“You’ll wake your baby brother!” Her mother, as usual, was hanging over the
cradle of her youngest child. Gorgo had lost two younger siblings already: one
when he was a toddler and the other when he was just a few weeks old. The
latter had been so sickly that everyone shook
their heads and whispered that the elders wouldn’t accept him anyway. Now there
was another baby brother in the cradle, and Gorgo found it hard to take an
interest in him. To her he did not look any different from the others, red andwrinkled and squalling all the time.
She did not really think he would live very long, either, so why should she pay
him much attention? Obedient to her mother, however, she
lowered her voice and whispered loudly, “Mama! They didn’t pick me.”
“For what? What are you babbling
about?”
“To be a flower girl!” Gorgo insisted,
utterly uncomprehending how her mother could forget something as important as
this. “For the Heleneia!”
“Oh, that! I thought I told you not to
bother? Besides, this year Demaratus will be making the sacrifice. It wouldn’t
be seemly for you to be among the maidens in the procession.”
Gorgo frowned. She understood about the
eternal rivalry between the two royal families of Sparta, and that it was
important never to suggest that the rival line had some sort of precedence over
her own house; but her mother was missing the whole point. “But mother, they didn’t even want
me!”
“Of course not; something like that is
only for pretty girls. Why, even that hussy Percalus did it.” Percalus was the
Eurypontid queen, and Gorgo’s mother hated her with a bitterness that far
exceeded the everyday rivalry between the Agiad and the Eurypontid rulers. As soon
as the name Percalus arose in connection with the flower girls, Gorgo knew she
would get no sympathy from her mother; so she gave up and ran down the hall to
her grandmother’s chamber.
She was relieved to find her
grandmother at her loom. Chilonis was an active woman and often away from
the palace during the day. “Grandmama!” Gorgo called out as she rushed to fling
herself at her grandmother, certain of a receptive hug.
Chilonis was caught a little off guard
by the unexpected arrival of her granddaughter, but she managed to open her
arms just in time. The impact of the seven-year-old was enough to almost knock
her off the stool, however, and she found herself admonishing the child, “Not
so rough! You’re too old for that!”
But Gorgo felt her grandmother’s warm
arms close around her skinny body, and she knew the older woman was not really
angry with her. She ignored the scolding, looked up into her grandmother’s square
face, and pleaded hopefully, “Grandmama, I’m not ugly, am I?”
“No, of course not,” Chilonis assured
her firmly. “Have some of the boys from the agoge been teasing you or
something?” Chilonis, confident that this was just a childhood
misunderstanding, even dropped her arms and turned back to her loom.
“It wasn’t the boys,” Gorgo told her
urgently. “It was the priestesses of the shrine of Helen. They didn’t even look
at me—for the flower girls for the Heleneia!” Gorgo’s distress, as well as her
words, drew her grandmother’s attention back to her. She was looking up at her
grandmother with wide-set eyes, and Chilonis registered that the child
understood fully the difference between the taunting of children and the
judgment of grown women. She sighed and took Gorgo back into her arms.
Gorgo understood that, too. It meant it
was true: she was ugly. She clung to her grandmother in fright. She knew it was
terrible for a girl to be ugly. Hadn’t her mother become queen because she was
the prettiest maiden in Sparta at the time? And the same was said of Queen
Percalus—that she was the prettiest maiden of the next “crop,” so pretty that
King Demaratus had taken her without a dowry.
Chilonis could read Gorgo’s thoughts,
and she freed one hand to ruffle the top of Gorgo’s head of unruly bright-red
hair. “It’s all my fault, Little One. You take after me.”
Gorgo frowned and looked up in
indignation. “But you’re not
ugly!”
Chilonis smiled faintly. “Thank you,
but that’s not what your grandfather thought. Your grandfather would not have
been half so reluctant to take me to wife if he had found me more attractive.
And had I been a beauty like your mother or Percalus, then he would no doubt
have visited my bed more often—no matter how difficult his first wife, Taygete,
made life for him at home. No, my child, there is no point denying it: I was
never considered a beauty, and you seem to have taken after me rather than your
own lovely mother.”
Gorgo, still frowning, thought about
that. She had never thought of her grandmother as in any way deficient. She
certainly wasn’t ugly the way some
old women were. She was not pock-marked, she had all her teeth, and she had no
warts or birthmarks or other deformities. She had a pleasant face and hair the
color of bay horses, now streaked with gray. Gorgo did not think it was so bad
taking after her grandmother, if it meant she was like her in other ways as
well. “Am I as clever as you are, too, Grandmama?”
Chilonis laughed at that and ruffled
her hair again. “You are twice as clever as I ever was, child.”
Gorgo broke free of her grandmother’s
arms, but only in order to be able to face her more firmly. “Don’t make fun of
me!” she demanded, frowning more fiercely than ever. “Papa says you
can write poetry and do geometry and read the language of
the Egyptians!”
Chilonis laughed again. “I tried to
learn hieroglyphics from an Egyptian merchant one winter, but without much
success, I fear. And I can teach you geometry if you like, but it was my
mother who was really clever
at mathematics. She was a student of the great scholar Pythagoras.”
“Daddy says all his brains come from
your side of the family,” Gorgo insisted, still trying to come to terms with
not being pretty, talking herself into being proud that she took after her
not-pretty grandmother.
Chilonis understood, and so she did not
contradict this statement. Instead, she suggested that Gorgo and she go out for
an excursion. Gorgo eagerly agreed.
It was a hot, sunny day and the air
over the city was laden with fine dust: stirred up by the supply wagons
trundling through the narrow lanes, kicked up by the herds of boys at play, and
blown in desultory clouds from the drill fields across the river. Chilonis
turned the chariot away from the river and headed north, past the ball field surrounded
by its moat and plane trees. She took the northwest road leading gently up into
the narrows of the Eurotas valley. As Chilonis drove she explained to her
granddaughter, who had fallen silent and appeared to be brooding again, “The
fate of pretty women is not always pretty. Take the most famous of all Spartan princesses,
Helen. When she was still a girl, she was abducted by Theseus and had to be
rescued by her brothers. Then she was coveted by so many men that her father
held a contest among her suitors to auction her off to the one who found his
favor. Because of her irresistible beauty she was abducted yet again, this time
by a foolish foreign prince, and held captive for ten years in Asia. Even if
she was, as some say, seduced rather than abducted, she must still have
suffered to see the horrible war she caused.
"In contrast, her less attractive cousin, Penelope, was courted by and married to the good Odysseus, the man of her own choice. You see,” Chilonis continued, as she drew up the chariot before a small and ancient monument showing a woman wrapped in a himation, “it is said that on this very spot Penelope pulled her shawl up over her head to indicate to her pursuing father that she went willingly with Odysseus.”
"In contrast, her less attractive cousin, Penelope, was courted by and married to the good Odysseus, the man of her own choice. You see,” Chilonis continued, as she drew up the chariot before a small and ancient monument showing a woman wrapped in a himation, “it is said that on this very spot Penelope pulled her shawl up over her head to indicate to her pursuing father that she went willingly with Odysseus.”
Gorgo stared with new interest at the
ancient statue in the shade of the simple Doric temple. “Is that how our custom
of stealing brides started?” she wanted to know.
Chilonis smiled, pleased by the notion.
“Yes, maybe. I don’t think anyone knows, but it could go back to Penelope.
After all, Helen was given to the man of her father’s choice and then turned adulterous—whether
by force or free will. Penelope married the man of her own
choice and was true to him—a much more Spartan pattern.”
This said, she clicked her tongue to the team, and they continued on their way
out of the city into the surrounding well-cultivated countryside. …
Gorgo seemed to consider everything
very carefully, her brows drawn together in concentration. Then she nodded
solemnly. “You don’t act unhappy. And
I cannot change it, can I?” She looked up as if hoping for one last promise of
things getting better.
Chilonis shook her head and laid a hand
on her granddaughter’s fragile shoulder. “No, you cannot change the color of
your hair or your eyes, nor can you make your mouth small and full and red. You
will never be a great beauty; but if you have the sense to know that a woman is
more than a façade and that her value is not in the beauty of her exterior but
in the soundness of her mind, body, and character, then you will discover that
men who share these qualities—like the good Odysseus—will recognize those
qualities in you.”