<h2><SPAN name="XI_THE_BROTHERS_QUARREL" id="XI_THE_BROTHERS_QUARREL"></SPAN>XI. THE BROTHERS' QUARREL.</h2>
<p>The misfortunes of Thebes had not come to an end with the banishment of
Œdipus, and fate was still against the unhappy city. The plague, it
is true, had stopped; but the two young princes were quarreling about
the possession of the throne.</p>
<p>Both wanted to reign, and neither wished to share the throne with his
brother. After much dispute, they agreed at last that each should reign
a year in turn.</p>
<p>Eteocles, the elder, was of course allowed to rule during the first
year; while Polynices went to pay a visit to A-dras´tus, King of Argos.
Here he was warmly welcomed and hospitably entertained; but when the
year was ended, he hurried back to Thebes to reign in his turn.</p>
<p>When he came to the city, however, Eteocles refused to give up the
scepter, and, calling out his guards, made use of his power to drive
Polynices out of the town. This was very wrong, for a promise should
always be kept; and it made Polynices so angry, that he said he would
return with an army, and force his brother to act fairly.</p>
<p>Polynices therefore hurried back to Argos, and soon persuaded Adrastus,
with five other kings and noted warriors, to go with him to Thebes, and
help him take the throne by force.</p>
<p>When Eteocles heard that seven kings were coming with a large army to
make him give up the throne of Thebes, he made up his mind to fight hard
to keep it. After strengthening the city walls, laying in a great<!-- Page 38 --><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</SPAN></span> stock
of provisions, and securing the help of seven brave allies, Eteocles
closed the gates of Thebes, and calmly awaited the arrival of the enemy.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the seven chiefs were marching from Argos to Thebes. They came
at last to the forest of Ne´me-a, where Hercules, the chief hero of
Argos, had once slain a terrible lion. This monster had long lived in
the forest, filling the hearts of all the people with dread; and when
Hercules came out of the forest, wearing the skin of the lion, they had
greatly rejoiced.</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-038.png" width-obs="300" height-obs="301" alt="Hercules and the Nemean Lion." title="Hercules and the Nemean Lion." /> <span class="caption">Hercules and the Nemean Lion.</span></div>
<p>In honor of Hercules' victory over the Ne´me-an lion, the seven chiefs
stopped in this spot to celebrate games, which they said should be held
in that neighborhood every three years. This festival was ever after
celebrated thus; and when the people gathered together there to see the
racing and boxing, they loved to recall the memory of the brave lion
slayer, and of the seven kings who had first celebrated the Nemean
games.</p>
<p>When Polynices and his allies came at last to Thebes, they found all the
gates closed; and although they fought bravely, and tried hard to enter
the city, they were kept at bay for seven long years. At the end of that
time the people inside the city, and those without, were<!-- Page 39 --><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</SPAN></span> equally tired
of this long siege: so it was finally agreed that the two armies should
meet on a neighboring plain and fight it out.</p>
<p>The armies were led by the two brothers, who now hated each other so
bitterly, that, instead of waiting for the signal for battle, they
rushed upon each other, and both fell before any one could interfere.</p>
<p>This terrible end of their quarrel filled the hearts of both armies with
fear, and they agreed to make a truce in order to bury their chiefs. As
it was customary at that time to burn the bodies of the dead, both
corpses were laid upon the funeral pyre side by side. When the wood was
all burned, the ashes were put into separate urns, for the Greeks used
to tell their children that these brothers hated each other so much that
even their ashes would not mingle.</p>
<p>This story of Œdipus and his family is only a myth, but it is a very
celebrated one. The Greeks wrote stories, poems, and plays about it, and
it is on that account that it should be known by every one who wishes to
study the history of Greece.</p>
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