<h2><SPAN name="V_STORY_OF_DAEDALUS_AND_ICARUS" id="V_STORY_OF_DAEDALUS_AND_ICARUS"></SPAN>V. STORY OF DÆDALUS AND ICARUS.</h2>
<p>Hellen, Deucalion's second son, finding Thessaly too small to give homes
to all the people, went southward with a band of hardy followers, and
settled in another part of the country which we call Greece, but which
was then, in honor of him, called Hellas, while his people were called
Hel-le´nes, or subjects of Hellen.</p>
<p>When Hellen died, he left his kingdom to his three sons, Do´rus,
Æ´o-lus, and Xu´thus. Instead of dividing their father's lands fairly,
the eldest two sons quarreled with the youngest, and finally drove him
away. Homeless and poor, Xuthus now went to Athens, where he was warmly
welcomed by the king, who not only treated him very kindly, but also
gave him his daughter in marriage, and promised that he should inherit
the throne.</p>
<p>This promise was duly kept, and Xuthus the exile ruled over Athens. When
he died, he left the crown to his sons, I´on and A-chæ´us.</p>
<p>As the A-the´ni-ans had gradually increased in number until their
territory was too small to afford a living to all the inhabitants, Ion
and Achæus, even in their father's lifetime, led some of their followers
along the Isthmus of Corinth, and down into the peninsula, where they
founded two flourishing states, called, after them, A-cha´ia and
I-o´ni-a. Thus, while northern Greece was pretty equally divided between
the Do´ri-ans and Æ-o´li-ans, descendants and subjects of Dorus and
Æolus, the peninsula was almost entirely in the hands of the I-o´ni-ans
and A-chæ´ans, who built towns, cultivated the soil, and<!-- Page 22 --><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</SPAN></span> became bold
navigators. They ventured farther and farther out at sea, until they
were familiar with all the neighboring bays and islands.</p>
<p>Sailing thus from place to place, the Hellenes came at last to Crete, a
large island south of Greece. This island was then governed by a very
wise king called Mi´nos. The laws of this monarch were so just that all
the Greeks admired them very much. When he died, they even declared that
the gods had called him away to judge the dead in Ha´des, and to decide
what punishments and rewards the spirits deserved.</p>
<p>Although Minos was very wise, he had a subject named Dæd´a-lus who was
even wiser than he. This man not only invented the saw and the potter's
wheel, but also taught the people how to rig sails for their vessels.</p>
<p>As nothing but oars and paddles had hitherto been used to propel ships,
this last invention seemed very wonderful; and, to compliment Dædalus,
the people declared that he had given their vessels wings, and had thus
enabled them to fly over the seas.</p>
<p>Many years after, when sails were so common that they ceased to excite
any wonder, the people, forgetting that these were the wings which
Dædalus had made, invented a wonderful story, which runs as follows.</p>
<p>Minos, King of Crete, once sent for Dædalus, and bade him build a maze,
or labyrinth, with so many rooms and winding halls, that no one, once in
it, could ever find his way out again.</p>
<p>Dædalus set to work and built a maze so intricate that neither he nor
his son Ic´a-rus, who was with him, <!-- Page 24 --><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</SPAN></span><!-- Page 23 --><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</SPAN></span>could get out. Not willing to
remain there a prisoner, Dædalus soon contrived a means of escape.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-0296-1.jpg" width-obs="504" height-obs="862" alt="Dædalus and Icarus." title="Dædalus and Icarus." /> <span class="caption">Dædalus and Icarus.</span></div>
<p>He and Icarus first gathered together a large quantity of feathers, out
of which Dædalus cleverly made two pairs of wings. When these were
fastened to their shoulders by means of wax, father and son rose up like
birds and flew away. In spite of his father's cautions, Icarus rose
higher and higher, until the heat of the sun melted the wax, so that his
wings dropped off, and he fell into the sea and was drowned. His father,
more prudent than he, flew low, and reached Greece in safety. There he
went on inventing useful things, often gazing out sadly over the waters
in which Icarus had perished, and which, in honor of the drowned youth,
were long known as the I-ca´ri-an Sea.</p>
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