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Apollo and Daphne

Apollo, the Greek god of music, poetry, art, the sun and a great warrior, mocked the god of love, Eros , for his use of bow and arrow, as Apollo is also patron of archery. “What are you doing with powerful weapons, naughty boy?” he said. "That equipment of yours is fitting of our shoulders, which are able to give certain wounds to wild animals, and to enemies, I who recently killed the swollen Python, who was pressing down so many acres with his disease-bearing belly, with countless arrows! You will be content to provoke some loves by your fire, not to lay claim to my honors.” This is the context behind the story.

The insulted Eros then prepared two arrows: one of gold and one of lead. He shot Apollo with the gold arrow, instilling in the god a passionate love for the river nymph Daphne. He shot Daphne with the lead arrow, instilling in her a hatred for Apollo. Having taken after Apollo’s sister, Artemis (Diana), Daphne had spurned her many potential lovers, preferring instead woodland sports and exploring the forest. Due to her identity as an “aemula Phoebes” (female rival or emulator of Artemis), she had dedicated herself to perpetual virginity. Her father, the river god Peneus, demanded that she get married and give him grandchildren. She, however, begged her father to let her remain unmarried; he eventually complied.

Apollo continually followed her, begging her to stay, but the nymph continued to reject him. They were evenly matched in the race until Eros intervened, helping Apollo catch up to Daphne. Seeing that Apollo was bound to reach her, she called upon her father, "Help me, Peneus! Open the earth to enclose me, or change my form, which has brought me into this danger! Let me be free of this man from this moment forward!" And with that, Peneus answered her plea and “a heavy numbness seizes her limbs; her soft breasts are surrounded by a thin bark, her hair changes into foliage, her arms change into branches; her foot, just now swift, now clings to sluggish roots.” She turned into a laurel tree.

Apollo and Daphne Stamp Collection

Apollo and Daphne sculpture by Gian Lore
Italy 1980  Apollo and Daphne 
Apollo-and-Daphne--by-Gianlorenzo-Bernin
Ajman 1972  Apollo and Daphne 
Apollo and Daphne is a life-sized Baroque marble sculpture by Italian artist Gian Lorenzo Bernini, executed between 1622 and 1625. Housed in the Galleria Borghese in Rome, the work depicts the climax of the story of Apollo and Daphne (Phoebus and Daphne) in Ovid's Metamorphoses.  Apollo Belvedere probably used as a model.
Apollo and Daphne, a Naiad nymph who was
Greece 1958  Apollo and the laurel (Laurus nobilis) 
Premodern-ceramic-plate.jpg
Malta 2006  A sicily plate with Apollo and Daphne (18th cent)
Apollo-and-Daphne.jpg
Ajman 1972  Apollo and Diana after the killing of Python the house of Vetti ,  Pompeii (block)
Apollo, Daphne and Peneus.jpg
Cyprus 1989  A mosaic from Paphos. House of dionysos , Paphos Archaeological Park
3rd century .
Apollo-and-Daphne house of vetti pompei.jpg
Ajman 1972  Apollo and Diana after the killing of Python the house of Vetti ,  Pompeii (stamp)
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