Psyche
Psyche
In Greek and Roman mythology, Psyche was a princess of such stunning beauty that people came from near and far to admire her. In turning their adoration toward Psyche, however, they neglected to worship the goddess Aphrodite*. Jealous that so much praise was flowing to a mortal girl, Aphrodite decided to punish Psyche.
The goddess summoned her son Eros (also known as Cupid), the god of love, and told him to make Psyche fall in love with some ugly, mean, and unworthy creature. Eros prepared to obey his mother's wishes, but when he laid eyes on the beautiful Psyche, he fell in love with her.
Eros asked Apollo* to send an oracle to Psyche's father, telling him to prepare his daughter for marriage. He was to send her to a lonely mountain, where an ugly monster would meet her and take her for his wife. Full of sorrow for his daughter but afraid of making the gods angry, Psyche's father obeyed.
While Psyche stood on the mountain, Zephyrus, the god of the west wind, sent a breeze to pick her up and carry her to a beautiful palace in a valley. When Psyche entered the palace, a friendly voice guided her around, and invisible attendants waited upon her and fulfilled her every need.
That night and on the nights that followed, Eros came to Psyche in the darkness of her bedroom and made love to her. Psyche could not see Eros in the darkness, but he told her that he was her husband. He also warned Psyche not to ask his identity and never to look at him. Psyche grew to love her unseen husband, but she felt very lonely.
When she asked if her sisters might visit, Eros reluctantly agreed. Her sisters admired her palace and life of luxury, but when they discovered that Psyche had never seen her husband, they told her that he must be a monster and might kill her. They convinced her to take a knife and lamp to bed with her.
When Eros fell asleep that night, Psyche lit the lamp and prepared to stab her husband. But instead of a monster, she saw the handsome god of love. Startled, she let a drop of hot oil from the lamp fall on Eros. He awoke, realized that Psyche knew his identity, and flew away. Psyche fainted. When she awoke, the palace had vanished, and she found herself alone in a strange country.
oracle priest or priestess or other creature through whom a god is believed to speak; also the location (such as a shrine) where such words are spoken
underworld land of the dead
Psyche wandered the countryside searching for Eros. Finally she asked Aphrodite for help, and the goddess gave her a set of seemingly impossible tasks. With the help of other gods, however, Psyche managed to sort a roomful of grain in one night and gather golden fleeces from a flock of sheep. For the final task, Aphrodite told Psyche to go the underworld and bring back a sealed box from Persephone*. Psyche retrieved the box and on her way back, overcome by curiosity, peeked inside it. The box released a deep sleep, which overpowered her.
* See Names and Places at the end of this volume for further information.
immortal able to live forever
By this time Eros, could not bear to be without Psyche. He flew to where she lay sleeping, woke her, and took her to Olympus*, where Zeus* commanded that the punishment of Psyche cease and gave permission for the lovers to marry. Zeus then gave Psyche a cup of ambrosia, the food of the gods, which made her immortal.
See also Aphrodite;
Eros;
Greek Mythology.
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Preview: Telly to kill your social life; Hearts of Gold is a bitter sweet story starring Kate Jarman and Jeremy Sheffield. Based on the Catrin Collier book and set in the 1930s it is a classic period love story across the class divide in a small mining community in South Wales.(Features)
Newspaper article from: Western Mail (Cardiff, Wales); 7/5/2003; 700+ words
; ...appears alongside veterans Jeremy Sheffield and Geraldine James...based on the book by Catrin Collier. The 23yearold, from Pontyclun...photograph is now on the cover of Collier's novel, which has been...raving about the series of Collier's books for years. But she...
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; ...leading professionals attended Colliers CRE's Beer & Balti...event and director of retail at Colliers CRE in Birmingham said...Hemmind and Richard Bidwell (Colliers CRE) Join the Post People...Graham Ryall (Colliers CRE)' Jeremy Johnson, Stuart Rose and Jon...
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Business Wire; 9/26/2005; 700+ words
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Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 2/21/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...ladies on the stage. One dissident, Jeremy Collier, penned a notorious treatise in...lambasting the drama of the day. Collier's "Short View of the Immorality...of a potentially outdated play. Jeremy Collier, who struggled so vehemently...
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"LUCK BE A LADY TONIGHT," OR AT LEAST MAKE ME A GENTLEMAN: ECONOMIC ANXIETY IN CENTLIVRE'S THE GAMESTER.
Magazine article from: Studies in the Literary Imagination; 9/22/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...in a 1704 response to yet another of Jeremy Collier's attacks on the immorality of the stage, criticizes Collier for neglecting to discuss what he sees...therefore more serious vice: But how does [Collier] propose to himself, to bring [reform...
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ESTEVEZ BRINGS THE PAIN OF 'NAM TO TEXAS.(L.A. LIFE)
Newspaper article from: Daily News (Los Angeles, CA); 11/22/1996; 700+ words
; ...and plays the central character. Jeremy Collier is a Texas youth who has come back...forbidden him to dodge the draft. As Jeremy (Estevez) mopes around the house...way he feels about his country. Jeremy needs professional help, but for...
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Censorship and Generic Change: The Case of Satire on the Early Eighteenth-Century London Stage.
Magazine article from: Philological Quarterly; 6/22/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...the more "humane" satire of Farquhar; and Jeremy Collier's Short View of the Immorality and Profaneness...the stage. The pamphlets that constitute the Collier controversy reveal that Collier, his allies, and even his enemies believed...
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"A greater gust": generating the body in Absalom and Achitophel.
Magazine article from: Papers on Language & Literature; 3/22/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...Buckingham, and perhaps most notably Jeremy Collier, who, as Dryden rightly complained...Bawdy" (Poems 1462). (3) Collier had misrepresented Dryden in describing...equivalent of what Dryden describes as Collier's efforts and that, in her discussion...
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Boutique offices.
News Wire article from: Australasian Business Intelligence; 4/6/2003; 542 words
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Jeremy Collier
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Jeremy Collier 1650-1726, English clergyman. Collier was imprisoned as one of the nonjurors , who refused to...ordained a nonjuring bishop. Bibliography: See A. Rose, The Jeremy Collier Stage Controversy (1966).
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Collier, Jeremy
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Collier, Jeremy (1650–1726), became a non-juring bishop in 1713. He...fined, and several of the poets replied, though not very effectively. Collier contributed towards the climate that produced the ‘reformed...
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William Congreve
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...upon repartee and brisk and witty dialogue. In 1698 Jeremy Collier attacked the immorality of situation and indecency of...following year he launched an unsuccessful counterattack on Collier's charges against the stage. But by 1700 the taste...
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Sir John Vanbrugh
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
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Vanbrugh, Sir John
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
...unfinished and C. Cibber completed and brought out in 1728. He, together with Congreve , was specially attacked by Jeremy Collier in his Short View . Vanbrugh's first building was Castle Howard, 1699–1726. This already shows the...
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