Friday 13 September 2019

Euripides, Ion; Apollo's son


Today, I'm listening to The Irish and Celtic Music Podcast while I'm typing. So, I'm just jamming away to these great tunes! My Husband and I have been into Celtic music for a few years now, going right back to our uni days where a penny whistle was a cheap and available instrument for a poor student to afford. I tend to prefer listening to tunes and performing songs. Tunes being music only and songs having lyrics. We were, for a while, regularly going to a session, or Celtic music gathering, one evening a week but life has since got in the way. In saying that, my Husband has just started practicing his Mandolin again, so maybe we will get back to it in the nearish future.

The Story
Ion opens with Hermes giving the background to the story we are about to see. Apollo has visited a woman, Creusa, and raped her. She becomes pregnant, which she manages to hide, and gives birth to a boy, who she abandons in a cradle in the place where she was raped. Hermes is then dispatched by Apollo to collect the infant and take him to the temple of Apollo at Delphi. Here, he is raised at the temple, not knowing mother or father. Creusa and Xuthus, King of Athens, arrive in Delphi to consult the oracle as they have been childless. Creusa arrives first and discusses with Ion his lack of parents and her own loss. Creusa leaves and Xuthus consults with the Oracle. Xuthus is told that Ion is his son. So, he leaves the oracle with gladness and approaches Ion who is a bit taken aback by this development and asks many questions about the life he is to be thrust into. Creusa hears of this and plans to kill Ion who, at this point, she believes is her step son. This is mainly due to him inheriting instead of any of the children she hopes to have later. An omen from Apollo causes Ion to pour out the wine on the floor that Creusa has had poisoned for him, birds come and drink the wine, and the one that drinks his wine falls down dead. The servants tell him who did the poisoning, who wanted him dead, and finds out it is Creusa. He then chases he to the alter, which she clings to for protection. As he threatens to kill her, the oracle comes in and tries to talk him out of it, saying that it will make him unclean. Ion is confused by this, as to kill one who tries to kill him is justified. The oracle then brings out the basket and clothes he was found in. Ion is distracted for a bit, thinking of how this might lead to his mother, when Creusa speaks up declaring he is her son. After quizzing her about the contents of the basket (which she has not seen) he accepts her as his mother, asks about his birth, and why he was abandoned. She explains that Apollo is his father. At first he disbelieves, as the oracle has just said Xuthus is his father. Then Athene arrives and convinces him of his birth, Apollo's plan to give him to the king of Athens, and that he could be with his mother. Also, telling him that he had kept them from killing each other. It is agreed that Xuthus can not know his true heritage.

Reflections
Creusa spends most of the play angry at Apollo. First, for her rape and then, for her infertility. She feels that she has given up her best to Apollo and believes he did not save his son. Because of this, she treats Apollo with despondency. Until she finds out that Ion is that very son, then she changes her tune and praises him for his foresight.
It is interesting that Ion is unnamed until Xuthus gives him a name, showing how seriously the Greek took naming by the father. It is also worth noting that although he has no name he is named in the text as Ion throughout the entire play, the author clearly thinks that the players are aware of the story's end before it starts.
Apollo is both the villain in this piece as well as the hero. He causes all the problems, the pregnancy, the abandonment, and the infertility. Yet, he is also what brings about the reunion and keeps mother and son from killing each other before they know the truth.

Comparisons
Ion is like Iphignia in Tauris and Alcsetis , starting with a god addressing the crowd, but unlike them, the god does not give a summary of the whole play but rather lays out the backstory before the play starts. These plays all taking place in one location, so there is no need for a scene change, as we would do in modern theater.
The play differs to the other pieces of Euripides. So far, we also end the play with a dialogue with a god too, explaining things happening away from stage. Though, surprisingly, it is not Apollo but Athene, on behalf of Apollo. We are also starting to see a trend in Euripides for writing both tragedy and general drama.

Have you read Ion? If so what did you think of it?
Want to read Ion but haven't? Hopefully this inspires you to take the time to do so.
Get a copy of Ion.

No comments:

Post a Comment

No longer content to be just a science major

Beginnings This all started in 2014 when, in a fit of frustration at my lack of knowledge, understanding and general grasp of western cultu...