creation

the hero

goddesses

gods

tricksters

afterlife

love

Apollo

Hera in her jealousy (of Zeus' affairs) pursued Apollo's mother, Leto, so that no place on earth could be found for his birth. Finally he was born on the floating island of Delos, which shows us in what tenuous ways the light of "consciousness" first comes into the world…

Apollo killed the Python of Delphi and took over that oracle, so he is vanquisher of unconscious terrors. He is golden-haired like the sun; he is an archer who shoots arrows of insight and/or death; he is a god of music and the lyre. Healing belongs to his realm: he was the father of Asclepius, the god of medicine. The Muses are part of his retinue, so that music, history, dreams, poetry, dance, all belong to him. The Muses are those we call on when we evoke creative imagination to give us helpful images…

Apollo and Daphne Apollo has his ominous aspects, too. Marsyas, who dared challenge him to a music contest, was flayed after he lost, signifying the stripping power of light. His arrows can symbolize the rays of the sun that bring light and insight - but they also can bring death. The Iliad begins with a terrible pestilence that Apollo brought down upon the Greeks because they dishonored one of his priests. Apollo's arrows of death struck again when Queen Niobe, who was excessively proud of her seven sons and seven daughters, disparaged Apollo's mother, Leto, for having only two children (Apollo and Artemis)…"

The Tragic Story of Apollo and Daphne

The beautiful river nymph, Daphne (meaning laurel and pictured above) was Apollo's first love. How this love for Daphne was said to come about is that Apollo, thought to be the second most powerful of the Olympian gods, had been making fun of the young god Eros (son of Aphrodite) and bragging about how very weak and puny little Eros was.

Wounding of Eros - Cupid

Known to most of us by his Roman name Cupid, in this version of the story, the Greek god Eros was the youngest of the gods. Unlike Apollo who shot arrows of light and insight, Cupid had two very different types of arrows (gold tipped and lead tipped) with which he pierced the hearts of both mortals and gods. Cupid's gold tipped arrows evoked irrational desire and irresistible attraction, while his lead tipped arrows filled the mortal or god with irrational disgust and repulsion. To the mortal or god wounded in the heart with Cupid's special arrows, it was a wounding of desire (gold) or disgust (lead) which suddenly, seemingly came from "out of the blue." The mortal or god struck was then destined (and under the compulsion) to live out this wounding of the heart, often behaving in irrational ways and committing mad, irrational acts of passion.