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From Bulfinch's Mythology: Apollo and Hyacinthus - anthology.

Publié le 06/12/2021

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From Bulfinch's Mythology: Apollo and Hyacinthus - anthology.
Hyacinthia was an important Spartan festival named for the mythological figure Hyacinthus, a Spartan youth who was a favorite of the Greek god Apollo. In the
following account of the tragic story of Apollo and Hyacinthus, 19th-century American mythologist and writer Thomas Bulfinch quoted from poems by the 17th-century
English poet John Milton and the 19th-century English romantic poet John Keats. One of Apollo's other names, used in the following account, was Phoebus, which
derived from the Greek phoibos, meaning radiant, or sun.

From Bulfinch's Mythology: Apollo and Hyacinthus
By Thomas Bulfinch

Apollo was passionately fond of a youth named Hyacinthus. He accompanied him in his sports, carried the nets when he went fishing, led the dogs when he went to
hunt, followed him in his excursions in the mountains, and neglected for him his lyre and his arrows. One day they played a game of quoits together, and Apollo,
heaving aloft the discus, with strength mingled with skill, sent it high and far. Hyacinthus watched it as it flew, and excited with the sport ran forward to seize it,
eager to make his throw, when the quoit bounded from the earth and struck him in the forehead. He fainted and fell. The god, as pale as himself, raised him and tried
all his art to stanch the wound and retain the flitting life, but all in vain; the hurt was past the power of medicine. As when one has broken the stem of a lily in the
garden it hangs its head and turns its flowers to the earth, so the head of the dying boy, as if too heavy for his neck, fell over on his shoulder. 'Thou diest, Hyacinth,' so
spoke Phoebus, 'robbed of thy youth by me. Thine is the suffering, mine the crime. Would that I could die for thee! But since that may not be, thou shalt live with me
in memory and in song. My lyre shall celebrate thee, my song shall tell thy fate, and thou shalt become a flower inscribed with my regrets.' While Apollo spoke,
behold the blood which had flowed on the ground and stained the herbage ceased to be blood; but a flower of hue more beautiful than the Tyrian sprang up,
resembling the lily, if it were not that this is purple and that silvery white. And this was not enough for Phoebus; but to confer still greater honour, he marked the
petals with his sorrow, and inscribed 'Ah! ah!' upon them, as we see to this day. The flower bears the name of Hyacinthus, and with every returning spring revives the
memory of his fate.

It was said that Zephyrus (the West wind), who was also fond of Hyacinthus and jealous of his preference of Apollo, blew the quoit out of its course to make it strike
Hyacinthus. Keats alludes to this in his 'Endymion,' where he describes the lookers-on at the game of quoits:

'Or they might watch the quoit-pitchers, intent
On either side, pitying the sad death
Of Hyacinthus, when the cruel breath
Of Zephyr slew him; Zephyr penitent,
Who now ere Phoebus mounts the firmament,
Fondles the flower amid the sobbing rain.'

An allusion to Hyacinthus will also be recognized in Milton's 'Lycidas':

'Like to that sanguine flower inscribed with woe.'

Source: Bulfinch, Thomas. Bulfinch's Mythology: The Age of Fable, The Age of Chivalry, Legends of Charlemagne. New York: Random House.

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