11 |
548 |
| JOINED: |
Jan 2025 |
| STATUS: |
OFFLINE
|

11-04-2025, 11:05 AM
This post was last modified: 11-04-2025, 11:07 AM by Bootless. 
(11-04-2025, 10:24 AM)quintessentone Wrote: Why the hell did Eros have to drag Daphne into their stupid quarrel?
It has been speculated that men back then wore laurel leaf wreaths upon their heads to cover up balding. May be true, may not be true.
I'm not an expert on Eros, but I think he may be an imaginary character invented to account for inherited human tendencies.
We should be aware of certain things; like Hesiod wrote to win poetry contests, and Ovid wrote
Metamorphoses because he had been exiled by Augustus and figured if he dedicated a fine book to him it may result in his recall. So ulterior motives may cloud the veracity of some stories.
But here's a bit about the story from
Daphne:
Quote:Parthenius [ probably oldest account was Phylarchus (about 215 BC) ]
A version of the attempt on Daphne's sworn virginity that has been less familiar since the Renaissance was narrated by the Hellenistic poet Parthenius, in his Erotica Pathemata, "The Sorrows of Love", which he attributes to Hellenistic historian Phylarchus. In this, which is the earliest written account, Daphne is a mortal girl, daughter of Amyclas, fond of hunting and determined to remain a virgin; she is pursued by the boy Leucippus ("white stallion"), who disguises himself in a girl's outfit in order to join her band of huntresses. He is also successful in gaining her innocent affection. This makes Apollo angry and he puts it into the girl's mind to stop to bathe in the river Ladon; there, as all strip naked, the ruse is revealed, as in the myth of Callisto, and the affronted huntresses plunge their spears into Leucippus. At this moment Apollo's attention becomes engaged, and he begins his own pursuit. Daphne, fleeing to escape Apollo's advances, prays to Zeus to help. Zeus turns her into laurel tree. Parthenius' modern editor remarks on the rather awkward transition, linking two narratives.
I've not heard of laurels to cover baldness speculation before.
There's a reason you separate military and the police. One fights the enemies of the state, the other serves and protects the people. When the military becomes both, then the enemies of the state tend to become the people. - Commander William Adama