With his harebrained schemes
and asinine dealings with the gods, King Midas ruled the ancient kingdom
of Phrygia with an uneven hand. He was known in Greek mythology
as a rogue ruler whose antics bemused his people
and distracted the gods. Midas spent his days
in a stupor of splendor, spoiling himself and his beloved daughter
and gorging himself on feasts and wine. Unsurprisingly, he felt
an affinity with Dionysus, god of wine, carnival, and performance. One day, Midas discovered a satyr dozing in his rose garden and drunk
on more than the scent of flowers. Midas recognized the satyr
as one of Dionysus’s followers and let him nurse
his hangover at the palace. Pleased with the king’s hospitality,
Dionysus offered to grant him one wish. Midas cast a greedy eye
over his surroundings. Despite the luxury in which he lived, no amount of precious jewels, finest silk
or splendid decor felt like enough. His life, he thought, was lacking luster;
what he needed was more gold. The god sent the power to turn anything
the king touched to gold surging through Midas. Ecstatic, he turned to his possessions. At his lightest touch,
the palace walls transformed, stone statues shone, and goblets glittered. He galloped through his home in a frenzy, handling each item until
it took on a lustrous sheen. Soon the palace heaved with gold, and Midas’s delirious
laughter echoed off the walls. Exhausted and hungry from his rampage, Midas picked up a bunch of grapes from
his newly gilded fruit bowl. But he nearly shattered his teeth, for the fruit had turned
to metal in his mouth. When he picked up a loaf of bread,
the crumbs hardened in his hand. Flinging himself onto
his bed in frustration, Midas discovered his plush pillows
had morphed into solid gold. Hearing his cries of frustration,
his daughter entered the room. But when Midas reached out to her, he saw with horror that he had frozen her
into a golden statue. Horrified at what he had done, Midas begged the gods
to rid him of his power. Taking pity on the foolish king, Dionysus told Midas to wash
his hands in the River Pactolus. When Midas reached into the river,
the gold drained from his fingertips. Midas returned home
to find his daughter alive and his palace back to normal,
and he rejoiced. You’d think he would’ve learned
his lesson, but just a few weeks later,
Midas blundered again, insulting the music and sun god Apollo
when he declared Pan a greater musician. Apollo scornfully declared that the king
must have the ears of an ass to make such a misjudgment,
and transformed Midas accordingly. Once again regretting his behavior, Midas kept his hairy ears
hidden in public. They were seen only by his barber, who was sworn to secrecy during
a very awkward grooming session. The barber stifled his laughter
and fought the desire to tell someone, yet the secret consumed him. One day, he walked outside the city
and dug a hole in the ground. Plunging his head into the earth, the desperate barber whispered,
“Midas has ass’s ears.” Soon after, a clump of reeds sprang up in the spot where the barber
had buried his words. When the wind blew, they carried the
echoes of his whisper through the breeze: "Midas has ass’s ears." At the sound, donkeys in the fields raised
their heads in recognition and people chuckled to themselves
at the follies of their king. With his golden touch and ass’s ears,
Midas was not the most respected ruler. And where other leaders were honored
through statues and temples, his people remembered him
a little differently: in the depths of the glittering river
and the rustle of the Phrygian wind.