#Aphrodite hymn
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
E-Offering to Lady Aphrodite
[33] Of these three Aphrodite cannot bend or ensnare the hearts. But of all others there is nothing among the blessed gods or among mortal men that has escaped Aphrodite.
Homeric Hymn, translated by H.G.Evelyn-White.
Pictures from pinterest.
#hellenic polytheism#helpol#polytheism#deity work#<the archives of the altar>#Aphrodite#aphrodite deity#aphrodite goddess#aphrodite worship#aphrodite offering#<the love candle>#Aphrodite hymn
94 notes
·
View notes
Text
200 Followers Event!
So, yesterday, this shrine reached 200 followers, and I’ve been looking for a reason to hold an event, so I thought I’d use this little milestone as an excuse!
What’s the event?
Submit a prayer, hymn, devotional drawing, anything you create yourself dedicated to Lady Aphrodite, and you will get a free one card pull from a tarot deck!
To submit your prayer, hymn, or devotional drawing, you can make a post and tag me, send it in an ask, or dm me! Once it’s submitted, send me a dm with your question for the card pull!
RULES:
Keep it sfw, if you choose to create a devotional drawing- no nudity, you must create your submission yourself, and for your question for the card pull- I have the right to refuse any questions that make me uncomfortable.
DISCLAIMER: I am still learning tarot, this is partially a way for me to practice. I am doing my best, though!
Have fun! I hope you enjoy this event- let me know if you want more events in the future…
#beautyofaphrodite shrine#beautyofaphrodite speaks#aphrodite#helpol#hellenic community#hellenic deities#hellenic gods#hellenic pagan#hellenic polytheism#hellenic polythiest#hellenic worship#hellenic polytheistic#hellenic paganism#hellenism#aphrodite altar#aphrodite worship#aphrodite deity#aphrodite greek mythology#lady aphrodite#aphrodite goddess of love and beauty#aphrodite goddess#aphrodite prayer#aphrodite offerings#aphrodite devotion#aphrodite devotee#aphrodite art#aphrodite hymn#afroditi#pagan#paganism
23 notes
·
View notes
Text
Beautiful One
Stretched out upon the shore, Her locks adrift in white foam, She, the beautiful one, Rose from the ocean. Dripping with water and ichor, The gold and white foam mingled In rivulets upon Her skin. Newly born of spilled blood divine Seeping into salt sea waters, The sea-born beauty Set foot upon the shore of Cyprus. Emerging from the waves, She conquered men and gods alike, Overpowering their hearts With lust and love. Armed in beauty and gold, She brought even Ares, War himself, To His knees before Her. Crowned in roses and myrtle, She left passion in Her wake From the moment She rose. Call Her by Her sea-born name And pray She grants you grace And kindness in all your days. When you do, Plead for mercy and tenderness For me as well From that lovely goddess Aphrodite.
21 notes
·
View notes
Text
Stately Aphrodite, gold-crowned and beautiful… who subdues the tribes of mortal men and birds that fly in the air and all the many creatures that the dry land rears, and all the sea… in perfumed garments is clothed at all seasons, in crocus and hyacinth and flourishing violet and the rose's lovely bloom, and heavenly buds, the flowers of the narcissus and lily… diffusing the scent of cinnamon and bedewing the air with balsam… from whose cheeks shine unearthly beauty-- when men behold the awful, ever-lovely mien of Aphrodite, in fear they hide their faces and turn their eyes aside.
🌺🐚❤️🔥 e-offering to Aphrodite-- praise be to Her ❤️🔥🐚🌺
Dusk In The Garden, 2021 Jana Brike/Perseus Freeing Andromeda, 1611 Joachim Wtewael/The Birth of Venus, 2012 José Manuel Ballester (after Botticelli)
#text was adapted from a several different hymns#e-offering#e offering#devotional moodboard#(sort of)#hellenic devotion#aphrodite ❤️🔥#aphrodite#hellenic paganism#hellenic polytheism#hellenic community#helpol
283 notes
·
View notes
Text
i was getting ready for shepherding on mount Ida, putting my long flaxen hair into a messy bun. as i looked at my wine-dark eyes in the mirror, my dad came in. “i sold you for prancing horses of the breed that carry the immortals” he said. “come meet your new master.” i went downstairs and there he was...loud-thundering zeus
334 notes
·
View notes
Text
Just a compilation I did when I was feeling a bit bored...Gods and goddesses who are called the most beautiful:
Hera:
"I sing of golden-throned Hera whom Rhea bare. Queen of the Immortals is she, surpassing all in beauty"
– Homeric Hymn to Hera (trans. Evelyn-White)
"Hera, his sister and his wife, the grandest far in beauty among the deathless goddesses - most glorious is she whom wily Cronos with her mother Rhea did beget"
– Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite (trans. Evelyn-White)
Apollo:
"Lord Phoibos, when the goddess, lady Leto, bore you, clasping a palm tree in her slender hands, you the most beautiful of immortals, beside the wheel-round lake"
– Theognis, Elegies (trans. Andrew Miller)
"Then a youth, his brows wreathed in chaste laurel, appeared in my dream to set foot in my home. No previous age of men saw anything more beautiful than he, nor was that a human work of art."
– Lygdamus, Elegies (trans. Robert Maltby)
Apollo and Artemis:
"And Leto was joined in love with Zeus who holds the aigis, and bare Apollon and Artemis delighting in arrows, children lovely above all the sons of Heaven."
– Hesiod, Theogony (trans. Evelyn-White)
[Poseidon to Delos]: "it will be your happiness to receive my brother's twin children, fairest of the Gods"
– Lucian, Dialogues Of The Sea-gods (trans. Henry Watson Fowler)
Hebe:
"[Herakles] whose bride Hebe, the most beautiful of the goddesses, walks forever in Olympus beside her mother Hera, goddess of marriage."
– Pindar, Nemean Ode 10 (trans. Diane Arnson Svarlien)
Dionysus:
"Thy youth is not consumed by wasting time; and lo, thou art an ever-youthful boy, most beautiful of all the Gods of Heaven"
– Ovid, Metamorphoses 4 (trans. Brookes More)
Nerites:
"And they say that he was named Nerites and was the most beautiful of men and gods"
– Aelian, On Animals (trans. Scholfield)
_
Not an exhaustive list, though. I've put in only the references I've come across.
#shoutout to Hera being called the most beautiful in a hymn dedicated to Aphrodite#lol#also “children lovely above all the *sons* of heaven” being said of Artemis is funny#idk if it's to be interpreted as Artemis having boyish beauty or if Hesiod was calling only Apollo the most beautiful of all the gods#I'm liking the former reasoning better#Hera#Apollo#Artemis#Hebe#Dionysus#Nerites#mine
124 notes
·
View notes
Text
Dearest Aphroditê
Goddess of Love
Born of Seafoam
Mother to All Transgender Peoples
Today I will swim in Your ocean
Basking in the light of Lord Apollo
Whispering prayers to be carried by Lord Hermes
To your most beautiful ears
Oh great mother, Magna Māter
Be with me as I swim
Protect me from undercurrents
And allow me to feel the joy of your watery embrace
You who is all love
All beauty
All that is living
Be with me, today and all the days of my life
Du Et Des
Your loving devotee,
- Aön
Prayer to Lady Aphroditê; 07/21/2024
80 notes
·
View notes
Text
Aesta and Tui-El, but drawn as Aphrodite and Anchises :,> this was a crazy project to work on and Im so happy with how it turned out!! It's based on a translation of the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite!
art tag // commission info
#sunshan draws#alphonse mucha#aphrodite#art nouveau#dnd#homeric hymns#dungeons and dragons#character illustration#illustration#fantasy#sketch#digital art#digital painting#digital sketch#art#doodles#oc#ocs#concept art#character design#mucha#greek mythology#greek gods#anchises
242 notes
·
View notes
Text
to dionysus androgynos & aphrodite praxis — originally penned 20 july 2023
please do not repost <3
#dionysus deity#aphrodite deity#ruby tell#own worship#greek polytheist#greek polytheism#hymn#poetry#30wordy
119 notes
·
View notes
Text
Closeup details of an Ares illustration entry that I made for my Sing O Muse zine contribution last year. Ares, in my version, is often hanging out with Aphrodite and the Graces, Hera + her daughters, and Poseidon the most, either for his warrior bodyguard duty or just running casual errands in his home. Zine is out now, so you better check them out and grab them while you can since they are still piping hot from fresh printing !!!!
The temple background was that of Aphrodite Ourania in Kythera, one of the oldest structures dedicated to her located in mainland Greece dated from the 6th century BC, which was later converted into Agioi Anargyroi church (St. Cosmas & Damian) during Byzantine times.
According to legend, Aphrodite was born from the sea foam stranding to the seashores of Alvemonas Bay of Kythera first before arriving in Paphos, Cyprus. Aphrodite Ourania, as in her “heavenly love” aspect was depicted as an armed warrior goddess within this modest temple right here, and there are still fully preserved walls + niches within the current ruined building along with its Doric columns!!!!
Over on the sight of the divine couple is another chryselephantine statue of Aphrodite Ourania herself, with her foot standing on a tortoise. Made out of gold & ivory, with black stone eyes and carved by the famed Phidias who was known for the Athena Parthenos and Athena Promachos in the Parthenon, Athens; as well as the statue of Zeus of Olympia. (I knew that this statue of Aphrodite Ourania would later be transferred to Elis, in the further northern region of Arcadia, but I still loved it to be standing there, tbh.)
#ares#aphrodite#ancient greek#my art#mars#venus#greek mythology#sing o muse#homeric hymns#the olympians#olympian gods#temple of aphrodite#kythira#avlemonas bay
40 notes
·
View notes
Text
Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite
Translated by Gregory Nagy
Muse, tell me the things done by golden Aphrodite,
the one from Cyprus, who arouses sweet desire for gods
and who subdues the races of mortal humans,
and birds as well, who fly in the sky, as well as all beasts
5 —all those that grow on both dry land and the sea [pontos].
They all know the things done by the one with the beautiful garlands, the one from Kythera.
But there are three whose phrenes she cannot win over or deceive.
The first is the daughter of aegis-bearing Zeus, bright-eyed Athena.
For she takes no pleasure in the things done by golden Aphrodite.
10 What does please her is wars and what is done by Ares,
battles and fighting, as well as the preparation of splendid pieces of craftsmanship.
For she was the first to teach mortal humans to be craftsmen
in making war-chariots and other things on wheels, decorated with bronze.
And she it is who teaches maidens, tender of skin, inside the palaces,
15 the skill of making splendid pieces of craftsmanship, putting it
firmly into each one’s mind [phrên].
The second is the renowned Artemis, she of the golden shafts: never
has she been subdued in lovemaking [philotês] by Aphrodite, lover of smiles [to whom smiles are phila].
For she takes pleasure in the bow and arrows, and the killing of wild beasts in the mountains,
as well as lyres, groups of singing dancers, and high-pitched shouts of celebration.
20 Also shaded groves and the city of dikaioi men.
The third one not to take pleasure in the things done by Aphrodite is that young Maiden full of aidôs,
Hestia, who was the first-born child of Kronos, the one with the crooked mêtis,
as well as the last and youngest, through the Will [boulê] of Zeus, holder of the aegis.
She was the Lady who was wooed by Poseidon and Apollo.
25 But she was quite unwilling, and she firmly refused.
She had sworn a great oath, and what she said became what really happened.
She swore, as she touched the head of her father Zeus, the aegis-bearer,
that she would be a virgin for all days to come, that illustrious goddess.
And to her Father Zeus gave a beautiful honor, as a compensating substitute for marriage.
30 She is seated in the middle of the house, getting the richest portion.
And in all the temples of the gods she has a share in the tîmê.
Among all the mortals, she is the senior goddess.
These are the three [goddesses] that she [Aphrodite] could not persuade in their phrenes.
As for all the rest, there is nothing that has escaped Aphrodite:
35 none of the blessed gods nor any of mortal humans.
She even led astray the noos of Zeus, the one who delights in the thunder,
the one who is the very greatest and the one who has the very greatest tîmê as his share.
But even his well-formed phrenes are deceived by her, whenever she wants,
as she mates him with mortal women with the greatest of ease,
40 unbeknownst to Hera, his sister and wife,
who is the best among all the immortal goddesses in her great beauty.
She was the most glorious [kudos-filled] female to be born to Kronos, the one with the crooked mêtis,
and to her mother, Rhea. And Zeus, the one whose resources are inexhaustible [a-phthi-ta],
made her his honorable wife, one who knows the ways of affection.
45 But even upon her [Aphrodite] Zeus put sweet desire in her thûmos
—desire to make love to a mortal man, so that
not even she may go without mortal lovemaking
and get a chance to gloat at all the other gods,
with her sweet laughter, Aphrodite, lover of smiles,
50 boasting that she can make the gods sleep with mortal women,
who then bear mortal sons to immortal fathers,
and how she can make the goddesses sleep with mortal men.
And so he [Zeus] put sweet desire in her thûmos—desire for Anchises.
At that time, he [Anchises] was herding cattle at the steep peaks of Mount Ida, famous for its many springs.
55 To look at him and the way he was shaped was like looking at the immortals.
When Aphrodite, lover of smiles, saw him,
she fell in love with him. A terrible desire seized her in her phrenes.
She went to Cyprus, entering her temple fragrant with incense,
to Paphos. That is where her sacred precinct is, and her altar, fragrant with incense.
60 She went in and closed the shining doors.
Then the Kharites [‘Graces’] bathed her and anointed her with oil
—the kind that gives immortality, glistening on the complexion of the gods, who last for all time.
Immortal it was, giver of pleasures, and it had the fragrance of incense.
Then she wrapped all her beautiful clothes around her skin.
65 She was decked out in gold, Aphrodite, lover of smiles.
She rushed toward Troy, leaving behind fragrant Cyprus.
Making her way with the greatest of ease, high up among the clouds.
She arrived at Mount Ida, famous for its many springs, nurturing mother of beasts.
She went straight for the herdsmen’s homestead, up over the mountain. Following her came
70 gray wolves and lions with fierce looks, fawning on her;
bears too, and nimble leopards, who cannot have their fill of devouring deer,
came along. Seeing them, she was delighted in her thûmos, inside her phrenes,
and she put desire where their hearts were. So they all
went off in pairs and slept together in shaded nooks.
75 She in the meantime came to the well-built shelters
and found him [Anchises] left all alone at the herdsmen’s homestead,
that hero [hêrôs] Anchises, who had the beauty of the gods.
All the others [the other herdsmen] went after the herds, along the grassy pastures,
while he was left all alone at the herdsmen’s homestead,
80 pacing back and forth, playing tunes on his lyre that pierce the inside.
She stood before him, the daughter of Zeus, Aphrodite,
looking like an unwed maiden in size of length and appearance.
She did not want him to notice [verb of noos] her with his eyes and be frightened of her.
When Anchises saw her he was filled with wonder as he took note
85 of her appearance and size of length and splendid clothes.
For she wore a robe that was more resplendent than the brightness of fire.
She had twisted brooches, and shiny earrings in the shape of flowers.
Around her tender throat were the most beautiful necklaces.
It [her robe] was a thing of beauty, golden, decorated with every sort of design. Like the moon
90 it glowed all around her tender breasts, a marvel to behold.
Seized with love, Anchises said to her:
“Hail, my Lady, you who come here to this home, whichever of the blessed ones you are,
Artemis or Leto or golden Aphrodite
or Themis of noble birth or bright-eyed Athena.
95 Or perhaps you are one of the Kharites, you who have come here. They are the ones
who keep company with all the gods and are called immortal.
Or you are one of those Nymphs who range over beautiful groves,
or one of those Nymphs who inhabit this beautiful mountain,
and the fountainheads of rivers and grassy meadows.
100 For you, on some high peak, in a spot with a view going all round,
I will set up an altar, and I will perform for you beautiful sacrifices
every year as the season [hôrâ] comes round. And I wish that you in turn may have a kindly-disposed thûmos towards me.
Grant that I become a man who is distinguished among the Trojans.
Make the genealogy that comes after me become a flourishing one. And make me
105 live a very long life and see the light of the sun,
blessed [olbios] in the midst of the people. And let me arrive at the threshold of old age.”
Then Aphrodite, daughter of Zeus, answered him:
“Anchises, most glorious of earth-born men!
I am no goddess. Why do you liken me to the female immortals?
110 No, I am a mortal. The mother that bore me was a woman.
My father is Otreus, famed for his name. Maybe you have heard of him.
He rules over all of Phrygia, with its strong-walled fortresses.
But I know your language as well as my own.
The nursemaid who brought me up in the palace was a Trojan. Ever since I was a small child,
115 she brought me up, having taken me from my philê mother.
That is why I know your language as well as my own.
But then, the one with the golden wand, the Argos-killer [Hermes], abducted me,
taking me from a festival of song and dance in honor of Artemis, the one with the golden arrows.
There were many of us nymphs there, maidens worth many cattle as bride-price.
120 We were having a good time, and a crowd so large that you couldn’t count them was standing around us in a circle.
Then it was that the one with the golden wand, the Argos-killer, abducted me.
He carried me over many fields of mortal humans
and over vast stretches of land unclaimed and unsettled, where wild beasts,
eaters of raw flesh, roam about, in and out of their shaded lairs.
125 I thought that my feet would never again touch the earth, grower of grain.
And he [Hermes] said that I, in your bed, the bed of Anchises, would be called your
lawfully-wedded wife, and that I would give you splendid children.
But once he [Hermes] pointed this out and made note of it, straightaway
he went back, that powerful Argos-killer, to that separate group, the immortals.
130 I in the meantime reached you here, and there is an overpowering compulsion that I have in me.
In the name of Zeus, in the name of your parents, I appeal to you as I touch your knees.
Your parents must be noble, for base ones could never have conceived such a one as you.[12]
Take me, virgin that I am, inexperienced in making love [philotês ],
and show me to your father and to your caring mother
135 and to your brothers, those born from the same parents.
I will not be an unseemly in-law for them, but a seemly one indeed.
And send a messenger quickly to the Phrygians, trainers of swift horses,
to tell my father and my mother, however much she grieves.
They will send you plenty of gold, and woven clothing as well.
140 Take these abundant and splendid things as dowry.
After you have done so, prepare a lovely wedding-feast
that gives tîmê to both humans and immortals.”
After she said these things, she put sweet desire in his thûmos,
and Anchises was seized with love. He said these words, calling out to her:
145 “If you are mortal, and if a woman was the mother who gave birth to you,
and if Otreus is your father, famed for his name, as you say he is,
and if you have come here because of the Immortal Conductor [of psûkhai],
Hermes, and if you are to be called my wife for all days to come,
then it is impossible for any god or any mortal human
150 to hold me back, right here, from joining with you in making love [philotês],
right now, on the spot—not even if the one who shoots from afar, Apollo himself,
takes aim from his silver bow and shoots his arrows that bring misery.
Then, O lady who looks like the gods, I would willingly,
once I have been in your bed, go down into the palace of Hades below.”
155 So saying, he took her by the hand. And Aphrodite, lover of smiles,
went along, with her face turned away and her eyes downcast,
towards the bed, all nicely made, which had already been arranged for the lord,[13]
all nicely made with soft covers.[14] And on top lay skins of
bears and lions, who roar with their deep voices,
160 which he himself had killed on the lofty mountainsides.
And when they went up into the sturdy bed,
he first took off the jewelry shining on the surface of her body
—the twisted brooches and the shiny earrings in the shape of flowers.
Then he undid her girdle and her resplendent garments.
165 He stripped them off and put them on a silver-studded stool,
Anchises did. And then, by the will of the gods and by fate [aisa],
he lay next to the immortal female, mortal male that he was. He did not know what he was really doing.
But when the time comes for herdsmen to drive back to the fold
their cattle and sturdy sheep, back from the flowery pastures,
170 then it was that she [Aphrodite] poured sweet sleep over Anchises,
sweet and pleasurable. She in the meantime put back on her beautiful clothes, which covered again the surface of her body.
Now that her skin was again beautifully covered over, the resplendent goddess
stood by the bed, and the well-built roof-beam
—her head reached that high up.[15] And beauty shone forth from her cheeks
175 —an immortal beauty, the kind that marks the one with the beautiful garlands, the goddess from Kythera.
Then she woke him from his sleep and called out to him, saying:
“Rise up, son of Dardanos! Why do you sleep such a sleep without awakening?
See if I look like
what you noticed [verb of noos] when you first saw me with your eyes.”
180 So she spoke, and he, fresh out of his sleep, straightaway heeded her word.
As soon as he saw the neck and the beautiful eyes of Aphrodite,
he was filled with fright and he turned his eyes away, in another direction.
Then he hid his beautiful face with a cloak [khlaina],
and, praying to her, addressed her with winged words:
185 “The first time I ever laid eyes on you, goddess,
I knew you were a god. But you did not speak to me accurately.
Now I appeal to you by touching your knees, in the name of Zeus the holder of the aegis,
don’t let me become disabled [without menos],[16] don’t let me live on like that among humans!
Please, take pity! I know that no man is full of life, able,[17]
190 if he sleeps with immortal goddesses.”
He was answered by the daughter of Zeus, Aphrodite:
“Anchises, most glorious of mortal humans!
Take heart, and do not be too afraid in your phrenes.
You should have no fear of that I would do any kind of bad thing to you,
195 or that any of the the other blessed ones would. For you are philos indeed to the gods.
And you will have a philos son, who will be king among the Trojans.
And following him will be generations after generations for all time to come.
His name will be Aineias [Aeneas], since it was an unspeakable [ainos][18] akhos that took hold of me—grief that I had fallen into the bed of a mortal man.
200 And yet, of all mortal humans, the closest to the gods by far
are those who come from your family line,[19] both in looks and in constitution.[20]
Why, there was blond Ganymede, whom Zeus the master of mêtis
abducted on account of his beauty, so that he may be together with the immortal ones,
as wine-pourer for the gods in the palace of Zeus,[21]
205 a wonder to behold, given his share of tîmê by all the immortals,
pouring red nectar from a golden mixing-bowl.
Tros [Ganymede’s father] was gripped in his phrenes by a penthos that is beyond forgetting. He did not know
where the miraculous gust of wind took his philos son, abducting him.
He [Tros] mourned him [Ganymede] without pause, for all days,
210 and Zeus took pity on him: he gave him a compensation for his son,
a set of high-stepping horses whom the gods use for their travels.
These horses he [Zeus] gave him [Tros] as a gift to keep. And he [Tros] was told all the details of what happened,
at the behest of Zeus, by the Argos-killer, the Conductor [of psûkhai].
He was told that he [Ganymede] would be immortal and ageless, just like the gods.
215 And when he [Tros] heard the message of Zeus,
he no longer lamented but was happy within his phrenes,
and merrily did he ride around, in a chariot drawn by horses with feet swift as a gust of wind,
In much the same way was Tithonos abducted by Eos [the Dawn Goddess], she of the golden embroidery.
He too belonged to your family line, looking like the immortal ones.
220 Then she went with a request to the Son of Kronos [Zeus], him of the dark clouds,
asking that he [Tithonos] become immortal and live for all days to come.
Zeus nodded yes to her and brought to fulfillment the words of her wish.
Too bad that her thinking was disconnected! The Lady Eos did not notice [verb of noos] in her phrenes
that she should have asked for adolescence [hêbê] and a stripping away of baneful old age.
225 Well, for a while he [Tithonos] held on to adolescence [hêbê] ,
enjoying Eos, the one with the gold embroidery, the one early-born.
He lived at the streams of the Okeanos, and the ends of the earth.
But when the first strands of gray hair started growing
from his beautiful head and his noble chin,
230 then the Lady Eos stopped coming to his bed.
But she nourished him, keeping him in her palace,
with grain and ambrosia. And she gave him beautiful clothes.
But when hateful old age was pressing hard on him, with all its might,
and he couldn’t move his limbs, much less lift them up,
235 then in her thûmos she thought up this plan, a very good one indeed:
she put him in her chamber, and she closed the shining doors over him.
From there his voice pours out—it seems never to end—and he has no strength at all,
the kind he used to have in his limbs when they could still bend.
I would not choose that you [Anchises] be that way, amongst the immortal ones,
240 immortal and living for all days to come.[25]
If you could only stay the way you are, in looks and constitution,
staying alive as my lawfully-wedded husband,
then akhos would not have to envelop me and my sturdy phrenes.
But now wretched old age will envelop you,
245 pitilessly, just as it catches up with every man.
It is baneful, it wears you down, and even the gods shrink back from it.
As for me, I will have a great disgrace [oneidos], in the eyes of the immortal ones,
a disgrace that will last for all days to come, without end, all on account of you.
My trysts and stratagems [mêtis pl.] with which I used to get all
250 the immortal gods mated with mortal women,
used to be feared by them [the gods]. For my power of noos used to subdue all of them.
But now my mouth can never again boast
about this among the immortals. I have gone very far off the track,
in a wretched and inexcusable way. I have strayed from my noos.
255 I got myself a child beneath my girdle, having slept with a male mortal.
As for him [the child], the moment he sees the light of the sun,
Nymphs, living in the mountains and wearing low-slung girdles, will raise him
—Nymphs that live on this great and fertile mountain.
They associate neither with mortals nor with immortals,
260 they live for a long time, and they eat immortal food.
They put on a beautiful song and dance, even by the standards of the immortals.
They mate with Seilênoi or with the sharp-sighted Argos-killer,
making love [philotês] in the recesses of lovely caves.
When they are born, firs and oaks with lofty boughs
265 spring out of the earth, that nurturer of men.
Beautiful trees, flourishing on high mountains,
they stand there pointing to the sky, and people call them the sacred places
of the immortal ones. Mortals may not cut them down with iron.
But when the fate [moira] of death is at hand for them,
270 these beautiful trees become dry, to start with,
and then their bark wastes away, and then the branches drop off,
and, at the same time, the psûkhê goes out of them, as it leaves the light of the sun.
These [the Nymphs] will raise my son, keeping him in their company.
And when adolescence [hêbê], full of loveliness, first takes hold of him,
275 the goddesses [the Nymphs] will take him here to you and show you your child.
As for you, in order that I may tell you in the proper order everything that I have in my phrenes,
I too will come back to you as the fifth anniversary approaches, bringing you your son.
And the moment you see this young seedling [Aineias/Aeneas] with your eyes,
you will be happy to look at him. For he will be very godlike.
280 And straightaway you shall take him to windy Ilion.
And if any mortal human asks you
what mother got your philos son beneath her girdle,
keep in mind [root mnê-] to tell him as I command you.
Say that he is the offspring of one of the flower-faced Nymphs
285 who live on this beautiful mountain, shaded over by forests.
But if you say out loud and boast, with a thûmos bereft of phrenes,
that you made love [philotês] to the Lady of Kythera, the one with the beautiful garlands,
then Zeus in his anger will smite you with a smoking thunderbolt.
Now then, everything has been said to you. You take note [verb of noos] in your phrenes.
290 And refrain from naming me. Avoid the mênis of the gods.”
So saying, she bolted away towards the windy sky.
I wish you kharis [‘I wish you pleasure and happiness from our relationship, starting now’], goddess, you who rule over beautifully-colonized Cyprus.
Having started with you, I will now go on to the rest of my performance.
#beautyofaphrodite shrine#helpol#aphrodite#hellenic community#hellenic deities#hellenic gods#hellenic pagan#hellenic polytheism#hellenic polythiest#hellenic worship#homeric epics#homeric poems#homeric hymns#homeric hymn#homeric hymn to aphrodite#aphrodite greek mythology#aphrodite altar#aphrodite worship#aphrodite deity#aphrodite art#aphrodite goddess of love and beauty#lady aphrodite#aphrodite goddess#aphrodite devotion#aphrodite devotee#aphrodite offerings#hellenic paganism#hellenic polytheistic#hellenism#hellenic devotion
102 notes
·
View notes
Text
For The Honor Of
Hymn to Aphrodite written 6-1-24
I think I see,
A secret there,
Hidden in Your eyes
And I wish,
To look within,
And see the light of You
Oh great Goddess,
Sculpt me,
With Your strength
Lift me up,
Connect within me,
The darkness and the light
Oh great Goddess,
Sing the song,
Transform me as I move
You are beautiful,
With Your crooked smile,
And graceful, dancing feet
Oh great Goddess,
Play within me,
And let Your games bring joy
For I am sore,
And the light grows dim,
My sword has grown heavy
Oh great Goddess,
Sometimes I get lost,
But I can always find You
Art: Odilon Redon, “The Bath Of Venus”, (1908-1913)
#spiritual#spirituality#mystical#mysticism#religion#pagan#paganism#poem#magick#poems on tumblr#original poem#poetry#love#devotional#hymn#aphrodite#venus#magic#ceremonial magic#ceremonial magick#witch#witchcraft#goddess
20 notes
·
View notes
Text
From my sketchbook
Border hand drawn by me, as well as the text hand written.
This has been done in devotion to Aphrodite 🩷
#hellenic pagan#pagan#hellenic polytheism#aphrodite#aphrodite worship#pagan altar#orphic hymn#orpheus#poetry#sketchbook#venus#venus worship#drawing
19 notes
·
View notes
Note
the Homeric hymn to Aphrodite calls Hera the most beautiful of all the goddesses so this why Hera should’ve won the golden apple
I remember someone else mentioning that the hymn states that Hera is the most beautiful to show just how powerful Aphrodite is, how the husband of the most beautiful woman in the world still cheats on her bc that’s just how powerful “love” and lust is.
#greek mythology#ancient greek mythology#greek pantheon#hera#greek goddess#hera goddess#hera deity#hera greek mythology#zeus#hera x zeus#anti zeus#zeus greek mythology#zeus deity#aphrodite greek mythology#aphrodite goddess#aphrodite#homeric hymns#hymn to Aphrodite
24 notes
·
View notes
Text
another day getting into arguments in the epic tradition. everyone keeps asking me if they can rise above their mortal lot and fuck the goddesses. buddy, they wont even let me fuck the goddesses
427 notes
·
View notes
Text
Wikipedia edit history can be a funny place sometimes
#what makes this funnier is that#other than Paris giving her the apple (which was more or less due to bribery)#I don't think Aphrodite was called the most beautiful#Hera is the one that's called the most beautiful#even the Homeric hymn to Aphrodite calls Hera the most beautiful#anyway#this was a long time back and iirc#originally on the wikipedia page the sentence was “he is considered to be the most beautiful god”#and this person kept changing it to “he is considered to be the most beautiful male god”#even though yknow... “god” literally shows that it is a male#it wasn't a big deal either way but both the editors were feeling a bit petty I guess lol#Paris#Aphrodite#mine
48 notes
·
View notes