viii. 450 ff : Phaethon says, "Hot diggity!"

. . . Louder than all trumpets sounds his voice alone, and at that sound fall helm and sword, the charioteer from his rocking car and bolts from gates of walls by night; nor might the helm of Mars [Ares] and the tresses of the Furiai (Furies) [Erinyes], nor the dismal Gorgon from on high spread such terror, nor with phantoms so dire sweep an army in headlong rout. Philostratus the Elder, Imagines 1.

[1.7] HERMES & ORNEIOS (Scholiast ad Theocritus 1.3), [1.1] THE PANES x12 (Dionysiaca 14.67) : Suidas s.v. "She [Aura after being raped by Dionysos in her sleep] killed the goatherds, killed their whole flocks of goats, in agony of heart, because she had seen Pan the dangerous lover with a face like some shaggy goat; for she felt quite sure that shepherd Pan tormented with desire for Ekho (Echo) had violated her asleep.
One river god isn't present: Inachus, who is worried sick about his daughter, Io. Vellacott) (Greek tragedy C5th B.C.) In Greek mythology, the god Pan represents the vital prin- ", Valerius Flaccus, Argonautica 3. In thee a refuge from our fears we find, those fears peculiar to humankind.

[4.1] EURYMEDON (Statius Thebaid 11.32) .

", Ovid, Fasti 1. 67 ff (trans. [there is a] place they name Melpeia, saying that here Pan discovered the music of the pipes.

"[The army of the Seven Against Thebes is routed and the Thebans pursue :] Eurymedon pursues, with armour rustic and uncouth and rustic weapons in his hand and native skill to arouse panic terrors--his sire was Pan. Lucanian Red Figure Vase Painting C4th B.C. Eventually, however, Jupiter decides that enough is enough. Eventually, in her wanderings, she reached the river of Inachus, her father. The various epithets which are given him by the poets refer either to his singular appearance, or are derived from the names of the places in which he was worshipped. 10 (trans. ", Apuleius, The Golden Ass 5. Taylor) (Greek hymns C3rd B.C. Rouse) (Greek epic C5th A.D.) : Epaphus is the same age as Phaethon, the son of the god of the Sun. non … Then the tearful reunion is cut short by Argus, who drives Io away to other pastures. Plus there was no war or strife of any kind and the steams were full of milk and honey. Yep. Campbell, Vol. l. c.) From his being a grandson or great grandson of Cronos, he is called Kronios.

two aspects of the god Pan--Hunter and Shepherd], the sons of Hermes, who divided his love between two Nymphai (Nymphs); for one he visited the bed of Sose, the highland prophetess, and begat a son inspired with the divine voice of prophecy, Agreus (Hunter), well versed in the beast-slaying sport of the hunt; the other was Nomios (Shepherd), whom the pasturing sheep loved well, one practised in the shepherd's pipe, for whom Hermes sought the bed of Penelope the country Nymphe. Suda On Line) (Byzantine Greek lexicon C10th A.D.) : [N.B. ii. Presumably Pan was the father. Mozley) (Roman poetry C1st A.D.) : Suidas s.v. The Romans identified with Pan their own god Inuus, and sometimes also Faunus. ", Nonnus, Dionysiaca 14. Page, Vol. "[Description of an ancient Greek painting :] [Country Nymphai (Nymphs) have captured Pan. And a third, Ekho (Echo), was cursed to fade away for spurning the god, leaving behind just a voice to repeat his mountain cries. Jones) (Greek travelogue C2nd A.D.) : SYRINX, an Arcadian nymph, who being pursued by Pan, fled into the river Ladon. Rouse) (Greek epic C5th A.D.) : Virgil, Georgics 3. But then Deucalion says he's figured out what the goddess was saying: "The great mother is the earth; her bones are rocks. Source: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. Goddess [Pales], placate for us the Springs and Fountain Spirits [Naiades], placate the gods dispersed through every grove. "The bays and pastures of Apulia [in Italy], there he had seen a grotto deep in shade, of forest trees, hidden by slender reeds, the home of half-goat Pan, though once the Nymphae lived there. 67 ff (trans. The other, made of lead, has a blunt tip; whoever. Actaeon flees. Phaëthon there asks his presumed father Phoebus to give him a token to prove his paternity. ", Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. Pan's animals were the goat and the tortoise. He explains how in the land of Arcadia there lived a nymph named Syrinx who looked very similar to the huntress goddess, Diana. Nicht nur einmal hatte sie mit Satyrn, die ihr nachstellten, und was es sonst an Göttern in den schattigen Wäldern und auf dem fruchtbaren Land gab, ihr Spiel getrieben; sie selbst diente mit ihren Leidenschaften und ihrer Jungfräulichkeit der Göttin Ortygia (Beiname der Göttin Diana wegen deren Heimat Delos=Ortygia). Guess which age comes next?

Grant) (Roman mythographer C2nd A.D.) : Ovid, Metamorphoses 11. The unwearied waters of the rolling sea, profoundly spreading, yield to thy decree. Pan, like other gods who dwelt in forests, was dreaded by travellers to whom he sometimes appeared, and whom he startled with a sudden awe or terror. said : ‘I am a rustic herdsman.’", Nonnus, Dionysiaca 14.

: ], For MORE information on Demeter's search see DEMETER MYTHS 1. ad Aen. With these were two other Panes, the sons of Hermes [i.e. He walks into their bodies, with the serpent towering proudly over them. Pan was sometimes identified with the goat-fish god Aigipan (Aegipan) who assisted Zeus in his battles with the monster Typhoeus. 196 & 257 ff (trans. Walsh) (Roman novel C2nd A.D.) : "Pan, whom the rustic dweller [his oracular prophet] in wave-beat Pisa hears nightly beneath the Lycaonian shades. The waters pull back, and the world is revealed again. 10 :

. . Greek Lyric II) (Greek lyric C6th B.C.) The Fury chases Io all over the place, until she eventually comes to the Nile. Jupiter meets Io when she is out walking, and taking a fancy to her, offers to lead her safely through the hazards of the forest – a pretext for abduction and rape. He demands that she prove to him that the Sun was his father. § 2; Virg. ", For MORE information on this giant see TYPHOEUS Campbell) (Greek lyric B.C.) [Pan] is rightly called goat-herd (aipolos), being the double-natured son of Hermes, smooth in his upper parts, rough and goat-like in his lower parts. Apulian Red Figure Vase Painting C4th B.C. "He [Pan] courses through the glistening high mountains, and often on the shouldering hills he speeds along slaying wild beasts, this keen-eyed god. As the wind blows, so those reeds emit plaintive music – the origin of reed pipes. Ovid explains that Pan chased Syrinx until she came to the banks of a river. 24.

"The Korykian (Corycian) cave [associated with the oracle of Delphoi (Delphi), in Phokis] . 289 ff (trans.
. 32. in fin. He is thus said to have loved the poet Pindar, and to have sung and danced his lyric songs, in return for which Pindar erected to him a sanctuary in front of his house. 11 (trans. 689 ff (trans. They're not. He was at the same time believed to be possessed of prophetic powers, and to have even instructed Apollo in this art. ", Orphic Hymn 11 to Pan (trans.

Maid Ekho (Echo) had to swim with unpractised hands, and she felt a new fear for that old maiden zone--Pan she had escaped, but she might be caught by Poseidon! ", Nonnus, Dionysiaca 16.

vi.

Furiously he chased away Pan and the oxhorned Satyroi (Satyrs), despising the heralds of Dionysos when he was gently.

", Castorion of Soli, Fragment 310 (from Athenaeus, Scholars at Dinner) (trans. Met. At the right, just about to run straight into them, is Actaeon with one of his hunting dogs. &c.; comp. 3. Actaeon inadvertently enters the wood and, guided by the Fates, stumbles across Diana, naked in the pool. They go to the shrine of the goddess Themis and ask her what to do. Just when Apollo is about to catch her, however, Daphne prays to her father, the river god Peneus, for help. With speedy steps Diana [Artemis] approached, as she ranges the seven hills and tracks the flight of a deer on Aventine; the goddess was vexed to see it, and turning to her trusty comrades: ‘Shall I never keep this unseemly, wanton brood from lustful rapine? 25 ff (trans. Iynx (trans. Pan, the god of woods and shepherds, chased after Syrinx. ", Ovid, Heroides 5. It is said in days of old this god also gave oracles, and that the Nymphe Erato became his prophetess, she who wedded Arkas (Arcas), the son of Kallisto (Callisto). Rouse) (Greek epic C5th A.D.) : § 1.) Catast. "Hollower than the pipes of Pan. . . the two aspects of Pan--Hunter and Shepherd], who divided his love between two Nymphai (Nymphs); for one he visited the bed of Sose, the highland prophetess, and begat a son inspired with the divine voice of prophecy, Agreus (Hunter), well versed in the beast-slaying sport of the hunt; the other was Nomios (Shepherd), whom the pasturing sheep loved well, one practised in the shepherd's pipe, for whom Hermes sought the bed of Penelope the country Nymphe. Sure enough, he got treated terribly everywhere he went. Now that he had gotten everything on the right shelves, so to speak, it was time to put them in order.

ad Lycoph. Syrinx escaped from Pan's marriage and left him without a bride, and now [i.e. Recognising her imminent fate, Daphne calls on her father, a river god, to save her. ", Propertius, Elegies 3. "[Ostensibly a description of an ancient Greek painting at Neapolis (Naples) :] Pan, the Nymphai (Nymphs) say, dances badly and goes beyond bounds in his leaping, leaping up and jumping aloft after the manner of sportive goats; and they say that they would teach him a different kind of dancing, or a more delightful character; when he, however, pays no heed to them but, his garment extended, tries to make love to them they set upon him at noon, when Pan is said to abandon the hunt and go to sleep.

He therefore calls Mercury to murder Argus. . Not yet had his words ended, when goatherd Pan cried out : ‘. "[Pan] Agreus (Hunter), well versed in the beast-slaying sport of the hunt. She had just reached a cave with her favourite pool where her companion nymphs could help her bathe. Jones) (Greek travelogue C2nd A.D.) :