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{{Short description|Story from ancient Greek mythology}} | |||
{{linkless-date|June 2006}} | |||
{{other uses}} | |||
'''Apollo and Daphne''' is a story from ancient ], retold by ] and Roman authors in the form of an amorous vignette; ] drew on those late sources in the following manner: | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2024}} | |||
] showing ] holding a sprig of laurel, while ] is perhaps dancing. It likely reflects a pre-Ovidian source.<ref name="Cordova-2021b" />]] | |||
'''Apollo and Daphne''' is an ]. No written or artistic versions survive from ancient ], so it is likely ] in origin.<ref name="Cordova-2021b">{{Cite web |last=Cordova |first=Ruben C. |date=13 February 2021 |title=Cupid's Revenge 2: Apollo and Daphne, From Ancient Greece to Airbrushed Fantasy |url=https://glasstire.com/2021/02/13/cupids-revenge-2-apollo-and-daphne-from-ancient-greece-to-airbrushed-fantasy/ |url-status=live |access-date=18 March 2023 |website=Glasstire |archive-date=19 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230319012115/https://glasstire.com/2021/02/13/cupids-revenge-2-apollo-and-daphne-from-ancient-greece-to-airbrushed-fantasy/ }}</ref> It was retold by ] authors in the form of an amorous ]. | |||
:"] was ]’s first love. It was not brought about by accident, but by the malice of ]. Apollo saw the boy playing with his bow and arrows; and being himself elated with his recent victory over ], he said to him, “What have you to do with warlike weapons, saucy boy? Leave them for hands worthy of them. Behold the conquest I have won by means of them over the vast serpent who stretched his poisonous body over acres of the plain! Be content with your torch, child, and kindle up your flames, as you call them, where you will, but presume not to meddle with my weapons.” ]’s boy heard these words, and rejoined, “Your arrows may strike all things else, Apollo, but mine shall strike you.” So saying, he took his stand on a rock of ], and drew from his quiver two arrows of different workmanship, one to excite love, the other to repel it. The former was of gold and sharp pointed, the latter blunt and tipped with lead. With the leaden shaft he struck the nymph Daphne, the daughter of the river god ], and with the golden one Apollo, through the heart. Henceforth the god was seized with love for the maiden, and she abhorred the thought of loving. Her delight was in woodland sports and in the spoils of the chase. Many sought her love, but she spurned them all, ranging the woods. Her father often said to her, “Daughter, you owe me a son-in-law; you owe me grandchildren.” She, hating the thought of marriage as a crime, with her beautiful face tinged all over with blushes, threw her arms around her father’s neck, and said, “Dearest father, grant me this favor, that I may always remain unmarried, like ].” He consented, but at the same time said, “Your own face will forbid it.” | |||
The myth purportedly explains the origin of the ] and its connection to Apollo, although "Apollo was emphatically associated with the laurel before the advent of the Daphne myth."<ref name="Cordova-2021b" /> Details vary between different versions, but the beautiful ] ] rejects the love of ] and is turned into a tree. | |||
:"Apollo longed to obtain her; and he who gives oracles to the world was not wise enough to look into his own fortunes. He saw her hair flung loose over her shoulders, and said, “If so charming in disorder, what would it be if arranged?” He saw her eyes bright as stars; he saw her lips, and was not satisfied with only seeing them. He admired her hands and arms, naked to the shoulder, and whatever was hidden from view he imagined more beautiful still. He followed her; she fled, swifter than the wind, and delayed not a moment at his entreaties. “Stay,” said he, “daughter of ]; I am not a foe. Do not fly me as a lamb flies the wolf, or a dove the hawk. It is for love I pursue you. You make me miserable, for fear you should fall and hurt yourself on these stones, and I should be the cause. Pray run slower, and I will follow slower. I am no clown, no rude peasant. ] is my father, and I am lord of Delphos and Tenedos, and know all things, present and future. I am the god of song and the lyre. My arrows fly true to the mark; but, alas! an arrow more fatal than mine has pierced my heart! I am the god of medicine, and know the virtues of all healing plants. Alas! I suffer a malady that no balm can cure! | |||
==History== | |||
:"The nymph continued her flight, and left his plea half uttered. And even as she fled she charmed him. The wind blew her garments, and her unbound hair streamed loose behind her. The god grew impatient to find his wooings thrown away, and, sped by ], gained upon her in the race. It was like a hound pursuing a hare, with open jaws ready to seize, while the feebler animal darts forward, slipping from the very grasp. So flew the god and the virgin—he on the wings of love, and she on those of fear. The pursuer is the more rapid, however, and gains upon her, and his panting breath blows upon her hair. Her strength begins to fail, and, ready to sink, she calls upon her father, the river god: “Help me, Peneus! open the earth to enclose me, or change my form, which has brought me into this danger!” Scarcely had she spoken, when a stiffness seized all her limbs; her bosom began to be enclosed in a tender bark; her hair became leaves; her arms became branches; her foot stuck fast in the ground, as a root; her face became a tree-top, retaining nothing of its former self but its beauty. Apollo stood amazed. He touched the stem, and felt the flesh tremble under the new bark. He embraced the branches, and lavished kisses on the wood. The branches shrank from his lips. “Since you cannot be my wife,” said he, “you shall assuredly be my tree. I will wear you for my crown; I will decorate with you my harp and my quiver; and when the great Roman conquerors lead up the triumphal pomp to the ], you shall be woven into wreaths for their brows. And, as eternal youth is mine, you also shall be always green, and your leaf know no decay.” The nymph, now changed into a ] tree, bowed its head in grateful acknowledgement." | |||
The earliest known source of this myth is ], a Greek poet who lived during the 1st century BCE,<ref>J. L. Lightfoot, tr. ''Parthenius of Nicaea: the poetical fragments and the Erōtika pathēmata'' 1999, notes to XV, Περὶ Δάφνης, pp. 471ff.</ref> however, the most well-known and lyrical telling was by the ] poet ] in his '']'' (I.438–567), a collection of Greek fables first written in 8 ].<ref name="Cordova-2021a" /><ref>{{Cite web |date=29 May 2021 |title=Apollo And Daphne: A Detailed Breakdown Of The Famous Greek Myth |url=https://www.thecollector.com/apollo-and-daphne/ |access-date=25 June 2022 |website=TheCollector |language=en |archive-date=15 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220615054916/https://www.thecollector.com/apollo-and-daphne/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
== |
== Mythos == | ||
* | |||
Apollo's priestess employed the use of laurel leaves at ] and they also became the symbol of victory and achievement as laurel wreaths were given to the victors of the ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Ancient Origins of the Flower Crown |url=https://www.getty.edu/news/the-ancient-origins-of-the-flower-crown |access-date=25 June 2022 |website=www.getty.edu |language=en |archive-date=25 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220625001104/https://www.getty.edu/news/the-ancient-origins-of-the-flower-crown/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
==External links== | |||
* | |||
=== Characters === | |||
] | |||
The story generally involves three main players: | |||
* ] (''Phoebus'') – Greek god of healing, archery, music and arts, sunlight, knowledge, and ] of ]. Regarded as a great warrior and as the most beautiful of the gods.<ref name="Cordova-2021a" /> | |||
* ] (], Amor) – god of love and sex; also known for his use of bow and arrow. He was often depicted as a winged boy, beginning in the Hellenistic period.<ref name="Cordova-2021a" /> | |||
* ] – a ] (]), or huntress of ]. Her parentage varies, depending on the source, but it's generally understood that her father is a river god (either ] or ]) and her mother was either the nymph ] or ].<ref name="Cordova-2021a" /> | |||
As a Roman, Ovid called the gods by their Roman names (i.e. ] and ] instead of ] and ]). However, despite the Roman counterpart of Apollo sharing the same name, Ovid switches between calling him ''Phoebus'' and Apollo. It would seem that this reference is used when referring to Apollo in his role as sun god, since the name is an ] of his maternal grandmother Phoibe ("the bright one"), but there isn't agreement among scholars on this.<ref>{{Cite web |title=PHEBUS |url=http://www.columbia.edu/dlc/garland/deweever/PQ/phebus.htm |access-date=25 June 2022 |website=www.columbia.edu |archive-date=27 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220627010310/http://www.columbia.edu/dlc/garland/deweever/PQ/phebus.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
{{Greek-myth-stub}} | |||
=== Ovid's version === | |||
{{More citations needed section|date=February 2024}} | |||
Ovid breaks the myth out into five parts, beginning with Apollo slaying the ]<ref>{{Cite web |title=Metamorphoses (Kline) 1, the Ovid Collection, Univ. of Virginia E-Text Center |url=https://ovid.lib.virginia.edu/trans/Metamorph.htm#488381106:~:text=of%20his%20bones.-,Bk%20I:%20473-503%20Phoebus%20pursues%20Daphne,-Now%20the%20one |access-date=25 June 2022 |website=ovid.lib.virginia.edu |archive-date=27 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220627010310/https://ovid.lib.virginia.edu/trans/Metamorph.htm#488381106:~:text=of%20his%20bones.-,Bk%20I:%20473-503%20Phoebus%20pursues%20Daphne,-Now%20the%20one |url-status=live }}</ref> and ending with the creation of the Pythian Crown.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Metamorphoses (Kline) 1, the Ovid Collection, Univ. of Virginia E-Text Center |url=https://ovid.lib.virginia.edu/trans/Metamorph.htm#488381106:~:text=beauty%20was%20left.-,Bk%20I:553-567%20Phoebus%20honours%20Daphne,-Even%20like%20this |access-date=25 June 2022 |website=ovid.lib.virginia.edu |archive-date=27 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220627010310/https://ovid.lib.virginia.edu/trans/Metamorph.htm#488381106:~:text=beauty%20was%20left.-,Bk%20I:553-567%20Phoebus%20honours%20Daphne,-Even%20like%20this |url-status=live }}</ref> '''Ovid's ''Metamorphoses'', tr. Anthony S. Kline'''<ref>{{Cite web |title=Metamorphoses (Kline) 1, the Ovid Collection, Univ. of Virginia E-Text Center |url=https://ovid.lib.virginia.edu/trans/Metamorph.htm#488381106 |access-date=27 June 2022 |website=ovid.lib.virginia.edu |archive-date=27 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220627010310/https://ovid.lib.virginia.edu/trans/Metamorph.htm#488381106 |url-status=live }}</ref> version of the story translates it in the following way: | |||
] | |||
==== Defeat of Python (I:438–472) ==== | |||
Apollo and Daphne's story takes place right after the great snake that terrorized mankind is slain by Apollo. Apollo pierced the Python with 1,000 arrows and then founded the sanctuary of Delphi atop of the Python's dead body.<ref>{{Cite web |last=gdonley |date=3 August 2016 |title=Apollo the Python-Slayer |url=https://www.clevelandart.org/magazine/cleveland-art-2013-highlights/apollo-python-slayer |access-date=25 June 2022 |website=Cleveland Museum of Art |language=en |archive-date=5 July 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220705072652/https://www.clevelandart.org/magazine/cleveland-art-2013-highlights/apollo-python-slayer |url-status=live }}</ref> This sanctuary became home to the famous ], ], and the sacred ] were held to celebrate his victory. The winners were, at first, honored with oak wreaths, since the laurel did not yet exist.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Metamorphoses (Kline) 1, the Ovid Collection, Univ. of Virginia E-Text Center |url=https://ovid.lib.virginia.edu/trans/Metamorph.htm#bkone438:~:text=There%20the%20young%20winners%20in%20boxing,%20in%20foot%20and%20chariot%20racing,%20were%20honoured%20with%20oak%20wreaths. |access-date=25 June 2022 |website=ovid.lib.virginia.edu |archive-date=27 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220627010310/https://ovid.lib.virginia.edu/trans/Metamorph.htm#bkone438:~:text=There%20the%20young%20winners%20in%20boxing,%20in%20foot%20and%20chariot%20racing,%20were%20honoured%20with%20oak%20wreaths. |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Cordova-2021a" /> | |||
Afterwards, Apollo spots Eros stringing his bow and comments:<blockquote>"Impudent boy, what are you doing with a man's weapons? That one is suited to my shoulders, since I can hit wild beasts of a certainty, and wound my enemies... You should be intent on stirring the concealed fires of love with your burning brand, not laying claim to my glories!"</blockquote>Eros, angered by Apollo's implication that one god's abilities could be greater or lesser than another's, flies to the peak of ] then draws and fires two arrows: "one kindles love, the other dispels it. The one that kindles is golden with a sharp glistening point, the one that dispels is blunt with lead beneath its shaft. With the second he transfixed , but with the first he wounded Apollo piercing him to the marrow of his bones."<ref>{{Cite web |title=Gleeditions {{!}} Metamorphoses |url=https://www.gleeditions.com/metamorphoses/students/pages.asp?pg=29 |access-date=29 June 2022 |website=www.gleeditions.com |archive-date=22 July 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220722005427/https://www.gleeditions.com/metamorphoses/students/pages.asp?pg=29 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
==== Apollo sees Daphne (I:473–503) ==== | |||
{{More citations needed|date=February 2024}} | |||
Having taken after Apollo's sister, ] (]), Daphne spurned her many potential lovers, preferring instead to spend her times in the woods, exploring the forest and hunting. Due to her emulation of Artemis, she had dedicated herself to perpetual virginity. Her father, the river god ], demanded that she get married and give him grandchildren. She, however, begged her father to let her remain unmarried; he eventually complies, but tells her that her beauty makes it impossible to prevent would-be suitors from beckoning to her. | |||
As soon as Apollo spots her in the woods he falls in love. His own powers of foresight prevent him from being able to tell the ultimate outcome of his pursuit. He quickly calls and rushes to her, but she immediately flees "swifter than the lightest breath of air and resists his words calling her back again." | |||
==== Apollo pursues and begs Daphne to be with him (I:504–524) ==== | |||
{{More citations needed|date=February 2024}} | |||
Despite her not yet knowing who pursues her, Apollo seems to know exactly who she is, calling, "Wait nymph, daughter of Peneus, I beg you! I who am chasing you am not your enemy." He comments that she is running from him as prey would from a predator, but tells her that he is spurred on by love and a desire to be with her, not destroy her, so she should have pity on him. He then says that he is worried that she will be injured in the chase and cause him guilt, so if she slows down he will too, but she continues. | |||
He goes on to finally reveal to her who he is—stating that he's not just some random farmer or shepherd, but rather "Delphi's lands are mine, ] and ], and ] acknowledges me king. Jupiter is my father. Through me what was, what is, and what will be, are revealed. Through me strings sound in harmony, to song." He mentions that, even though he is a master archer and patron of medicine, "an arrow truer than mine, has wounded my free heart! ... But love cannot be healed by any herb..." | |||
]'s '']''.|left]] | |||
==== Daphne becomes the laurel (I:525–552) ==== | |||
{{More citations needed|date=February 2024}} | |||
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, urging Apollo on until he is at full speed. He reaches out to grab her, but she manages to escape his grasp and quicken her pace. Eros further assists Apollo by giving him wings, then hangs onto Daphne's shoulders in an attempt to slow her gait. | |||
They were soon within sight of her father's waters. Exhausted, overcome by the efforts of her escape, and sensing that she was about to be caught, she ran toward the banks and cried out, "Help me father! If your streams have divine powers change me, destroy this beauty that pleases too well!" No sooner than the cry left her mouth she felt "a heavy numbness seized her limbs, thin bark closed over her breast, her hair turned into leaves, her arms into branches, her feet so swift a moment ago stuck fast in slow-growing roots, her face was lost in the canopy." She had become the ] tree. | |||
====(19/08) Apollo honors the laurel (I:553–567) ==== | |||
{{More citations needed|date=February 2024}} | |||
Even in this state, Apollo could not help but love her. He touched the trunk of the tree and could feel her heartbeat. He tried to kiss the bark, but the wood shrank away from him still. In spite of Daphne's clear terror and fervent insistence that he leave her be, Apollo vowed to honor her forever, "We kiss before we burn. You shall be treasured forever as my now precious tree." He says that he will wear her leaves in his hair, will use her wood to make his bow and ], and that a ] made of her branches will adorn the heads of royalty and champions of game and battle. | |||
Apollo also used his powers of eternal youth and immortality to render Daphne evergreen, "you also will wear the beauty of undying leaves." The laurel bowed her branches, her leaves seemingly shuddered in surrender. She does not wish to burn with him. | |||
==Apollo and Daphne in art== | |||
], 1st century]] | |||
Two stone dishes from present-day Pakistan (the ancient region of ]) in the ] have been associated with the Apollo and Daphne myth. Their dating is controversial, with the most recent publication using the date 1st century B.C.<ref name="Cordova-2021b" /> | |||
Like the Apollo and Daphne frescoes from ] (such as the one illustrated above), the Gandharan dishes do not depict "the kind of full-blown, full-flight transformational image based on Ovid that is so familiar from Renaissance, Baroque, and later art," because they reflect earlier sources.<ref name="Cordova-2021b" /> | |||
On the basis of surviving Roman frescoes in which Apollo serenades a woman, Peter E. Knox believes there was a lost version of the myth in which “Apollo first attempts to woo the maiden with song before he becomes violent.”<ref name="Cordova-2021b" /> Ovid's version of the myth is the earliest one to include Cupid, and he probably invented the arrow that makes Daphne despise Apollo. Instead of a chase concluding with a transformation initiated by a paternal water god, pre-Ovidian versions might have used a substitution, with Daphne swallowed up by the earth (her mother Gaia).<ref name="Cordova-2021b" /> | |||
The Daphne Ewer, a gilded glass vessel, probably from ], c. 175–225, (], Corning, New York) has Greek letters that identify the protagonists of the scene, which point to an Eastern literary source.<ref name="Cordova-2021b" /> | |||
Apollo and Daphne, a 5th–6th century A.D. ivory relief from Egypt (Ravenna, Italy, National Museum) features a musical Apollo who is serenading Daphne. Thus it also seems to reflect Knox's “Song of Apollo,” the lost literary account. At the same time, it is also a Christianized version of the myth.<ref name="Cordova-2021b" /> | |||
]'' attributed to ]]] | |||
Renaissance artists such as ] and his brother ] drew inspiration from Greek mythology in a number of their works.<ref>{{Cite web |title=del Pollaiuolo, Antonio, c.1432–1498 {{!}} Art UK |url=https://artuk.org/discover/artists/del-pollaiuolo-antonio-c-14321498 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220122113908/https://artuk.org/discover/artists/del-pollaiuolo-antonio-c-14321498 |archive-date=22 January 2022 |access-date=29 June 2022 |website=artuk.org |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Antonio Pollaiuolo |url=https://biography.yourdictionary.com/antonio-pollaiuolo |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220629125707/https://biography.yourdictionary.com/antonio-pollaiuolo |archive-date=29 June 2022 |access-date=29 June 2022 |website=biography.yourdictionary.com |language=en}}</ref> In Piero Pollaiolo's painting ''Apollo and Daphne'' ]), both protagonists are shown dressed in ] garments, endowing this version of the theme with a courtly character. Here again, the myth has been Christianized: as Daphne turns into the laurel tree, virtue and chastity triumph.<ref name="Cordova-2021a">{{Cite web |last=Cordova |first=Ruben C. |date=6 February 2021 |title=Apollo and Daphne: A Tale of Cupid's Revenge Told by Ovid and Bernini |url=https://glasstire.com/2021/02/08/cupids-revenge-apollo-and-daphne-by-ovid-and-bernini/ |url-status=live |access-date=18 March 2023 |website=Glasstire |archive-date=19 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230319005300/https://glasstire.com/2021/02/08/cupids-revenge-apollo-and-daphne-by-ovid-and-bernini/ }}</ref><ref name="Impeluso" /> | |||
The Mannerist artist Andrea Meldolla, called ], made a strange Apollo and Daphne etching (c. 1538–40, Metropolitan Museum of Art) in which one of Daphne's legs sprouts roots directly from her father's body. In a small painting by Schiavone from c. 1542–44 (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna), Daphne has both of her feet on her father’s body (though they are not sprouting roots).<ref name="Cordova-2021a" /> | |||
Between 1622 and 1625, ] helped to inaugurate the age of ] sculpture with his life-sized marble statue ] (Borghese Museum), which is arguably the most remarkable, influential, and impressive version of this theme. Apollo clutches Daphne's hip, catching her in flight, just as her father answers Daphne's pleas to save her from her pursuer. Apollo wears a laurel crown, while Daphne begins her metamorphosis into the laurel tree. Her flowing hair and her extended fingers sprout twigs and leaves that are so thinly carved that they have astonished visitors since the sculpture was first unveiled. Meanwhile, roots descend from her toes and a tree trunk begins to sheath her torso.<ref name="Cordova-2021a" /><ref name="Impeluso">{{cite book|last=Impeluso|first=Lucia|title=Gods and Heroes in Art|year=2003|publisher=Getty Publications|location=Los Angeles|author2=Stefano Zuffi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Apollo and Daphne |url=https://www.arthistoryperspectives.com/posts/apollo-and-daphne |access-date=29 June 2022 |website=Art History Perspectives |language=en-US |archive-date=15 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220615054914/https://www.arthistoryperspectives.com/posts/apollo-and-daphne |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
The ] painter ] also produced more than one ], most of which have meditative, solemn characteristics. This is especially true of the 1625 version of the painting (], Munich) which compresses the entire story into one scene''.''<ref name="Cordova-2021a" /> Sculptor ] drew from Bernini's masterpiece to create a smaller, ] version of the pair in {{Circa|1700|lk=no}} (], ], Ohio).<ref>{{Cite web |last=Anonymous |date=31 October 2018 |title=Apollo and Daphne |url=https://www.clevelandart.org/art/1992.230 |access-date=29 June 2022 |website=Cleveland Museum of Art |language=en |archive-date=1 August 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210801005941/https://www.clevelandart.org/art/1992.230 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
The ] artist ] made a chalk drawing of Apollo and Daphne (c. 1730s, private collection) in which one of her feet rests on her father's body as her arms blossom into branches and leaves.<ref name="Cordova-2021a" /> ] did two oil versions of this subject (] Museum, 1741, and ], Washington D.C., c. 1755–60). In both paintings, Cupid hides beneath Daphne's garments while her hands sprout leaves.<ref name="Cordova-2022">{{Cite web |last=Cordova |first=Ruben C. |date=14 February 2022 |title=Cupid's Revenge III: Apollo and Daphne Revisited |url=https://glasstire.com/2022/02/14/cupids-revenge-iii-apollo-and-daphne-revisited/ |url-status=live |access-date=19 March 2023 |website=Glasstire |archive-date=19 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230319182108/https://glasstire.com/2022/02/14/cupids-revenge-iii-apollo-and-daphne-revisited/ }}</ref> | |||
It has been argued that '']'' by ] is a painting symbolic of the kissing of Daphne by Apollo at the moment she is transformed into a laurel tree,<ref>{{cite book|last=Vives Chillida|first=Julio|title=El beso (los enamorados) de Gustav Klimt. Un ensayo de iconografía|year=2008|publisher=Lulu|isbn=978-1-4092-0530-2}}</ref> though Klimt's own biographers make no mention of this story being an inspiration for the work.<ref>{{Cite web |title=10 Facts You Don't Know about "The Kiss" by Gustav Klimt |url=https://www.gustav-klimt.com/The-Kiss.jsp |access-date=29 June 2022 |website=www.gustav-klimt.com |archive-date=29 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220629125712/https://www.gustav-klimt.com/The-Kiss.jsp |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
]'s ] style Apollo and Daphne, 1908 (private collection), features a Daphne in the guise of one of his typical ''femme fatales''.<ref name="Cordova-2022" /> | |||
]'s Daphne and Apollo (1943, Lukas Moeschelin collection, Basel) has both Daphne and Apollo undergoing a metamorphosis, which reflects the artist's interest in androgyny.<ref name="Cordova-2021b" /> | |||
], a Yugoslavian immigrant to the U.S., set his Apollo and Daphne (1969, ] Museum, Providence'')'' in New York's ].<ref name="Cordova-2021b" /> | |||
], the Peruvian-born fantasy painter, based his Daphne and Apollo (1989, private collection) on ] and ], the warrior queen Valeria from the film '']'' (1982).<ref name="Cordova-2021b" /> | |||
Ivan Bubentcov, a Russian painter influenced by ], made a queer version of the Apollo and Daphne myth by synthesizing it with the ] story.<ref name="Cordova-2021b" /> | |||
The Apollo and Daphne theme has appeared in many forms within popular culture, including tattoos, cake icing, and jewelry. Heather Roblin's “Daphne & Apollo fingertips” (2013) permit any woman to sprout leaves from her fingertips.<ref name="Cordova-2022" /> | |||
== References == | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
== External links == | |||
* {{commons category-inline|Apollo and Daphne}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 22:30, 25 September 2024
Story from ancient Greek mythology For other uses, see Apollo and Daphne (disambiguation).
Apollo and Daphne is an Ancient Greek transformation or metamorphosis myth. No written or artistic versions survive from ancient Greek mythology, so it is likely Hellenistic in origin. It was retold by Roman authors in the form of an amorous vignette.
The myth purportedly explains the origin of the laurel tree and its connection to Apollo, although "Apollo was emphatically associated with the laurel before the advent of the Daphne myth." Details vary between different versions, but the beautiful nymph Daphne rejects the love of Apollo and is turned into a tree.
History
The earliest known source of this myth is Parthenius, a Greek poet who lived during the 1st century BCE, however, the most well-known and lyrical telling was by the Roman poet Ovid in his Metamorphoses (I.438–567), a collection of Greek fables first written in 8 CE.
Mythos
Apollo's priestess employed the use of laurel leaves at Delphi and they also became the symbol of victory and achievement as laurel wreaths were given to the victors of the Pythian Games.
Characters
The story generally involves three main players:
- Apollo (Phoebus) – Greek god of healing, archery, music and arts, sunlight, knowledge, and patron of Delphi. Regarded as a great warrior and as the most beautiful of the gods.
- Eros (Cupid, Amor) – god of love and sex; also known for his use of bow and arrow. He was often depicted as a winged boy, beginning in the Hellenistic period.
- Daphne – a naiad (nymph), or huntress of Artemis. Her parentage varies, depending on the source, but it's generally understood that her father is a river god (either Peneus or Ladon) and her mother was either the nymph Creusa or Gaia.
As a Roman, Ovid called the gods by their Roman names (i.e. Jupiter and Juno instead of Zeus and Hera). However, despite the Roman counterpart of Apollo sharing the same name, Ovid switches between calling him Phoebus and Apollo. It would seem that this reference is used when referring to Apollo in his role as sun god, since the name is an epithet of his maternal grandmother Phoibe ("the bright one"), but there isn't agreement among scholars on this.
Ovid's version
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Ovid breaks the myth out into five parts, beginning with Apollo slaying the Python and ending with the creation of the Pythian Crown. Ovid's Metamorphoses, tr. Anthony S. Kline version of the story translates it in the following way:
Defeat of Python (I:438–472)
Apollo and Daphne's story takes place right after the great snake that terrorized mankind is slain by Apollo. Apollo pierced the Python with 1,000 arrows and then founded the sanctuary of Delphi atop of the Python's dead body. This sanctuary became home to the famous oracle, Pythia, and the sacred Pythian Games were held to celebrate his victory. The winners were, at first, honored with oak wreaths, since the laurel did not yet exist.
Afterwards, Apollo spots Eros stringing his bow and comments:
"Impudent boy, what are you doing with a man's weapons? That one is suited to my shoulders, since I can hit wild beasts of a certainty, and wound my enemies... You should be intent on stirring the concealed fires of love with your burning brand, not laying claim to my glories!"
Eros, angered by Apollo's implication that one god's abilities could be greater or lesser than another's, flies to the peak of Mount Parnassus then draws and fires two arrows: "one kindles love, the other dispels it. The one that kindles is golden with a sharp glistening point, the one that dispels is blunt with lead beneath its shaft. With the second he transfixed , but with the first he wounded Apollo piercing him to the marrow of his bones."
Apollo sees Daphne (I:473–503)
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Having taken after Apollo's sister, Artemis (Diana), Daphne spurned her many potential lovers, preferring instead to spend her times in the woods, exploring the forest and hunting. Due to her emulation 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 complies, but tells her that her beauty makes it impossible to prevent would-be suitors from beckoning to her.
As soon as Apollo spots her in the woods he falls in love. His own powers of foresight prevent him from being able to tell the ultimate outcome of his pursuit. He quickly calls and rushes to her, but she immediately flees "swifter than the lightest breath of air and resists his words calling her back again."
Apollo pursues and begs Daphne to be with him (I:504–524)
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Despite her not yet knowing who pursues her, Apollo seems to know exactly who she is, calling, "Wait nymph, daughter of Peneus, I beg you! I who am chasing you am not your enemy." He comments that she is running from him as prey would from a predator, but tells her that he is spurred on by love and a desire to be with her, not destroy her, so she should have pity on him. He then says that he is worried that she will be injured in the chase and cause him guilt, so if she slows down he will too, but she continues.
He goes on to finally reveal to her who he is—stating that he's not just some random farmer or shepherd, but rather "Delphi's lands are mine, Claros and Tenedos, and Patara acknowledges me king. Jupiter is my father. Through me what was, what is, and what will be, are revealed. Through me strings sound in harmony, to song." He mentions that, even though he is a master archer and patron of medicine, "an arrow truer than mine, has wounded my free heart! ... But love cannot be healed by any herb..."
Daphne becomes the laurel (I:525–552)
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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, urging Apollo on until he is at full speed. He reaches out to grab her, but she manages to escape his grasp and quicken her pace. Eros further assists Apollo by giving him wings, then hangs onto Daphne's shoulders in an attempt to slow her gait.
They were soon within sight of her father's waters. Exhausted, overcome by the efforts of her escape, and sensing that she was about to be caught, she ran toward the banks and cried out, "Help me father! If your streams have divine powers change me, destroy this beauty that pleases too well!" No sooner than the cry left her mouth she felt "a heavy numbness seized her limbs, thin bark closed over her breast, her hair turned into leaves, her arms into branches, her feet so swift a moment ago stuck fast in slow-growing roots, her face was lost in the canopy." She had become the laurel tree.
(19/08) Apollo honors the laurel (I:553–567)
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Even in this state, Apollo could not help but love her. He touched the trunk of the tree and could feel her heartbeat. He tried to kiss the bark, but the wood shrank away from him still. In spite of Daphne's clear terror and fervent insistence that he leave her be, Apollo vowed to honor her forever, "We kiss before we burn. You shall be treasured forever as my now precious tree." He says that he will wear her leaves in his hair, will use her wood to make his bow and lyre, and that a crown made of her branches will adorn the heads of royalty and champions of game and battle.
Apollo also used his powers of eternal youth and immortality to render Daphne evergreen, "you also will wear the beauty of undying leaves." The laurel bowed her branches, her leaves seemingly shuddered in surrender. She does not wish to burn with him.
Apollo and Daphne in art
Two stone dishes from present-day Pakistan (the ancient region of Gandhara) in the Metropolitan Museum of Art have been associated with the Apollo and Daphne myth. Their dating is controversial, with the most recent publication using the date 1st century B.C.
Like the Apollo and Daphne frescoes from Pompeii (such as the one illustrated above), the Gandharan dishes do not depict "the kind of full-blown, full-flight transformational image based on Ovid that is so familiar from Renaissance, Baroque, and later art," because they reflect earlier sources.
On the basis of surviving Roman frescoes in which Apollo serenades a woman, Peter E. Knox believes there was a lost version of the myth in which “Apollo first attempts to woo the maiden with song before he becomes violent.” Ovid's version of the myth is the earliest one to include Cupid, and he probably invented the arrow that makes Daphne despise Apollo. Instead of a chase concluding with a transformation initiated by a paternal water god, pre-Ovidian versions might have used a substitution, with Daphne swallowed up by the earth (her mother Gaia).
The Daphne Ewer, a gilded glass vessel, probably from Antioch, c. 175–225, (Corning Museum Of Glass, Corning, New York) has Greek letters that identify the protagonists of the scene, which point to an Eastern literary source.
Apollo and Daphne, a 5th–6th century A.D. ivory relief from Egypt (Ravenna, Italy, National Museum) features a musical Apollo who is serenading Daphne. Thus it also seems to reflect Knox's “Song of Apollo,” the lost literary account. At the same time, it is also a Christianized version of the myth.
Renaissance artists such as Antonio del Pollaiuolo and his brother Piero drew inspiration from Greek mythology in a number of their works. In Piero Pollaiolo's painting Apollo and Daphne (National Gallery, London), both protagonists are shown dressed in Renaissance garments, endowing this version of the theme with a courtly character. Here again, the myth has been Christianized: as Daphne turns into the laurel tree, virtue and chastity triumph.
The Mannerist artist Andrea Meldolla, called Schiavone, made a strange Apollo and Daphne etching (c. 1538–40, Metropolitan Museum of Art) in which one of Daphne's legs sprouts roots directly from her father's body. In a small painting by Schiavone from c. 1542–44 (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna), Daphne has both of her feet on her father’s body (though they are not sprouting roots).
Between 1622 and 1625, Gian Lorenzo Bernini helped to inaugurate the age of Baroque sculpture with his life-sized marble statue Apollo and Daphne (Borghese Museum), which is arguably the most remarkable, influential, and impressive version of this theme. Apollo clutches Daphne's hip, catching her in flight, just as her father answers Daphne's pleas to save her from her pursuer. Apollo wears a laurel crown, while Daphne begins her metamorphosis into the laurel tree. Her flowing hair and her extended fingers sprout twigs and leaves that are so thinly carved that they have astonished visitors since the sculpture was first unveiled. Meanwhile, roots descend from her toes and a tree trunk begins to sheath her torso.
The Baroque painter Nicolas Poussin also produced more than one work on the subject, most of which have meditative, solemn characteristics. This is especially true of the 1625 version of the painting (Alte Pinakothek, Munich) which compresses the entire story into one scene. Sculptor Massimiliano Soldani Benzi drew from Bernini's masterpiece to create a smaller, terracotta version of the pair in c. 1700 (Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio).
The Rococo artist François Boucher made a chalk drawing of Apollo and Daphne (c. 1730s, private collection) in which one of her feet rests on her father's body as her arms blossom into branches and leaves. Giovanni Battista Tiepolo did two oil versions of this subject (Louvre Museum, 1741, and National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C., c. 1755–60). In both paintings, Cupid hides beneath Daphne's garments while her hands sprout leaves.
It has been argued that The Kiss by Gustav Klimt is a painting symbolic of the kissing of Daphne by Apollo at the moment she is transformed into a laurel tree, though Klimt's own biographers make no mention of this story being an inspiration for the work.
John William Waterhouse's Pre-Raphaelite style Apollo and Daphne, 1908 (private collection), features a Daphne in the guise of one of his typical femme fatales.
Meret Oppenheim's Daphne and Apollo (1943, Lukas Moeschelin collection, Basel) has both Daphne and Apollo undergoing a metamorphosis, which reflects the artist's interest in androgyny.
Milet Andrejevic, a Yugoslavian immigrant to the U.S., set his Apollo and Daphne (1969, Rhode Island School of Design Museum, Providence) in New York's Central Park.
Boris Vallejo, the Peruvian-born fantasy painter, based his Daphne and Apollo (1989, private collection) on Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sandahl Bergman, the warrior queen Valeria from the film Conan the Barbarian (1982).
Ivan Bubentcov, a Russian painter influenced by Tom of Finland, made a queer version of the Apollo and Daphne myth by synthesizing it with the Pygmalion story.
The Apollo and Daphne theme has appeared in many forms within popular culture, including tattoos, cake icing, and jewelry. Heather Roblin's “Daphne & Apollo fingertips” (2013) permit any woman to sprout leaves from her fingertips.
References
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- Vives Chillida, Julio (2008). El beso (los enamorados) de Gustav Klimt. Un ensayo de iconografía. Lulu. ISBN 978-1-4092-0530-2.
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External links
- Media related to Apollo and Daphne at Wikimedia Commons