|
Psyche
he personification of the human soul. In the well-known fable of the Roman
writer Apuleius (ca. 125 - ca. 180), Psyche is the youngest of three daughters.
She was of such extraordinary beauty that Aphrodite herself became jealous
of her. The goddess then sent her son Eros to make Psyche fall in love with
an ugly man. However, the god himself fell in love with the girl and visited her
every night, but forbade her to see his face, so she did not know who her lover
was. On her sisters' instigation she tried to discover the true identity of her
beloved. When he lay asleep in her bed, she lit an oil lamp but when she bent
over to see Eros' face, a drop of oil from her lamp fell on him and he
awakened. When he noticed her intent, he left her. Psyche wandered the earth
in search of her lover, until she was finally reunited with him.
On ancient Greek vases, Psyche is portrayed in the shape of a bird with a
human head, sometimes with a beard. Later she is shown in the shape of a
cock, butterfly, or a small human figure. As the beloved of Eros she is a fair
maiden, often with butterfly wings.
|