Demeter exercised great
severity towards those who incurred her displeasure. We find examples of this
in the stories of Stellio and Eresicthon. Stellio was a youth who ridiculed the
goddess for the eagerness with which she was eating a bowl of porridge, when
weary and faint in the vain search for her daughter. Resolved that he should
never again have an opportunity of thus offending, she angrily threw into his
face the remainder of the food, and changed him into a spotted lizard.
Eresicthon, son of Triopas, had
drawn upon himself the anger of Demeter by cutting down her sacred groves,
for which she punished him with a constant and insatiable hunger. He sold
all his possessions in order to satisfy his cravings, and was forced at last
to devour his own limbs. His daughter Metra, who was devotedly attached
to him, possessed the power of transforming herself into a
variety of different animals. By this means she contrived to support her father,
who sold her again and again each time she assumed a different form, and
thus he dragged on a pitiful existence. {58}