Tag: Daphne

Apollo and Hyacinth

Apollo and Hyacinth

A sports accident? Or a rival’s jealousy?

In an earlier story we followed Apollo — one of the twelve Olympian gods, and the god of music and the sun — in his unsuccessful pursuit of the nymph Daphne, who escaped him by transforming into a laurel tree. That painful experience did not, however, discourage the god from seeking love elsewhere. Ancient sources credit Apollo with numerous affairs — among them one with a young man: Hyacinth, a beautiful prince from Sparta.

Apollo and Hyacinth spent their days together. Apollo taught him to play the lyre, they went hunting, and they competed in sports, enjoying themselves with discus throwing. Apollo was passionately fond of this young man. Whether their relationship was platonic, or whether the two were lovers rather than simply close companions, is left to our imagination.

As with the story of Daphne, the Roman poet Ovid tells the tale of Hyacinth in his Metamorphoses, composed in the first century AD. Each episode of the story was later illustrated by painters, sculptors, and illuminators across the centuries.

  1. Apollo and Hyacinth
  2. Throwing the discus
  3. A sports accident…
  4. …or a rival’s jealousy?
  5. Turning into a flower

Let us follow it from beginning to end.

1. Apollo and Hyacinth

This engraving by Giovanni Jacopo Caraglio (c.1527) belongs to a celebrated series on the Loves of the Gods. It captures the moment when Apollo, crowned with laurel and lyre at his side, is drawing the beautiful Spartan prince Hyacinth close to him — not aware yet of the tragic end of their story. In the background, a naughty Cupid seems to be entertaining himself, very much in the spirit of the scene.

The eight-line poem beneath the image is a first-person confession by Apollo himself. To understand it, a small step back is needed. Apollo had previously fallen desperately in love with the nymph Daphne — but she fled from him and was transformed into a laurel tree just as he was about to catch her. A painful experience, even for a god. Don’t blame me, Apollo says, for loving a boy — look what a woman did to me.

Don’t blame me for treasuring
my boy’s cheeks above jewels and gold;
not after love proved so cruel and faithless
in the one who made the green laurel grow.
I have turned my back on that desire,
I burn and grow pale for this one alone,
and his young body pleases me so greatly
that I grant him the highest honour of all.

2. Throwing the discus

The ancient Greeks took their athletics seriously. The discus throw was one of the five disciplines of the pentathlon, alongside running, jumping, javelin throwing and wrestling, and it featured in the Olympic Games from at least 708 BC. It was considered not merely a test of strength but of grace and technique — a combination of physical power and elegant form.

The famous bronze Discobolus by the Greek sculptor Myron (c.450 BC), known to us through Roman marble copies from the first two centuries, captures precisely that moment of coiled energy just before the throw.

It is in this athletic world that Ovid sets the story of Apollo and Hyacinth. The two are not watching from the sidelines — they are competing, as equals, naked, oiled and ready:

One day, when the sun stands roughly halfway between the coming and the departing night, equally distant from both, they undress and rub themselves gleaming with the oil of smooth olives, ready to compete with the discus. Apollo was the first to swing the disc around and hurl it away, breaking through the blanket of clouds; only after a long time did the heavy thing feel solid ground again — proof of Apollo’s skill and strength.

Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book X, (261-274)

It is a vivid scene — a god and a mortal, side by side, playing sport together in the sunshine. What could possibly go wrong?

3. A sports accident

What could go wrong, went wrong. Ovid tells it simply and brutally:

Reckless and fired up by the game, Hyacinthus immediately rushed forward to pick up the discus. But it was thrown back up by the hard ground and flew straight into his face.

The god himself turned as pale as the boy who lay limp upon the earth… Apollo lifts Hyacinth into his lap, holds him close, dabs the terrible wound and tries to save the life ebbing away with the help of healing herbs. No medicine avails — the wound can no longer be cured.

Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book X (274-284)

The accident is over in a few lines — sudden, irreversible. A moment of impatience, a bouncing disc, and a god is left cradling a dying boy, powerless again to change the outcome.

Peter Paul Rubens captured this moment of helpless grief in a small but intense sketch, now in the Prado in Madrid. Despite its modest size (15x14cm), the painting is remarkable in its emotional directness — Apollo’s anguish is unmistakable as he touches the head of Hyacinth, the discus still visible as a reminder of what just happened. Rubens strips the scene down to its emotional core: a god who cannot save the person he loves most.

“Now you are dying, Hyacinthus, robbed of your first bloom!”

so Apollo cries out…

“I see the wound that accuses me; the grief I feel for you I have brought upon myself! I am the cause of your dying! And yet — where does my guilt lie? Unless the discus game must bear the blame, or we are guilty because we were lovers? Oh, if only I could give my life for yours! Or die with you!"

Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book X (294-303)

Giovanni Battista Tiepolo’s large canvas (287x232cm), now in the Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza in Madrid, takes a very different approach. Tiepolo took considerable liberties with the original story — most strikingly in his choice of weapon. Rather than a discus, the painting shows tennis balls and a racquet lying beside the stricken Hyacinth, with a third ball having rolled across the tiled floor. This was no careless mistake: Tiepolo based his composition on a 1561 Italian translation of Ovid’s Metamorphoses by Giovanni Andrea dell’Anguillara, in which the discus is replaced by a tennis ball. This game, known at the time as pallacorda (or jeu de paume), was fashionable among the nobility and gave the ancient myth a contemporary aristocratic setting. In the right-hand corner of the painting, almost as an afterthought, Tiepolo includes a clump of flowers — the first hint of the transformation to come.

4. …or a rival’s jealousy?

But was it really an accident? Not everyone in antiquity was convinced. An older and darker version of the story points the finger not at bad luck or Hyacinth’s own impatience, but at a third party: Zephyrus, the god of the West Wind.

In this version, Zephyrus was himself in love with Hyacinth — and consumed with jealousy at the sight of the Spartan prince choosing Apollo’s company over his. When Apollo threw the discus, Zephyrus seized his moment. With a well-aimed gust of wind he deflected the disc mid-flight, driving it straight into Hyacinth’s face. What looked like a tragic accident was in fact a murder — committed by a lovesick god who could not bear to lose.

This version of the story is at least as old as the accident version. A Greek bell-krater — a wide-mouthed wine-mixing bowl — dating to around 430 BC, shows Zephyrus actively pursuing Hyacinth. The image predates Ovid by four centuries and is a reminder that the jealousy narrative was not a later invention but ran alongside the accident story from very early on.

5. Turning into a flower

Apollo’s grief did not end with Hyacinth’s death. Unable to reverse what had happened, the god did the only thing left to him: he transformed his beloved into a flower, ensuring that Hyacinth would live on in a different form — fragile, beautiful, and returning every spring. Ovid lets Apollo speak with tenderness:

"Hyacinth, your name will stay upon my lips; when I play my lyre, my songs will sing of you! You will become a new flower!”

Hardly had Apollo let his prophetic words sound, when — look — the blood of Hyacinth that had streamed to the ground and stained the grass was blood no more: more brilliant than purple, a flower grew up that resembled lilies, except that lilies are silvery white and this one was purple.

Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book X (306-319)

The flower that bears Hyacinth’s name has puzzled botanists and scholars for centuries. The modern hyacinth is almost certainly not the flower Ovid had in mind. The description of a purple bloom shaped like a lily points more convincingly to either a larkspur (Delphinium species, Dutch: ridderspoor) or a dark lily. The larkspur in particular has long been associated with the myth, see the beautiful botanical illustration by Maria Sibylla Merian from 1679.

The medieval illustrators of the Ovide Moralisé — a lavishly illuminated French manuscript from around 1325 — told the story in two consecutive images. In the first (f.251r), Apollo cradles the dying Hyacinth in his arms. In the second (f.267r), Apollo points at the flower that has sprung from the ground — a French lily in this case, reflecting the illustrator’s own botanical world rather than the Greek original. In both images, Apollo wears a crown instead of his classical laurel wreath. This detail reveals how medieval artists filtered the ancient gods through a contemporary visual language, where divine or royal status meant a crown, not classical attributes.

The transformation is also the subject of a graceful painting by Nicolas-René Jollain (c.1768), ordered by Louis XV for the Châteaux de Versailles and still in situ. Where Rubens and Tiepolo focused on the violence and grief of the death scene, Jollain chose the gentler aftermath: Hyacinth already becoming a bed of flowers, the tragedy softened into something almost peaceful. It is a fitting image with which to close — the myth ending not in death, but in perpetual renewal.

As Ovid himself put it:

Apollo would have settled you in heaven, Hyacinthus, if grim fate had given him sufficient time. Still, you are immortal, for every time spring drives off winter, you rise and blossom once more.

Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book X

A final word of caution: be careful when throwing a discus — or when watching someone throw one! Though given that the sport survives mainly at the Olympic Games, the rest of us are probably safe. But when someone suggests a game of frisbee, think twice!

Apollo and Daphne

Apollo and Daphne

Birth of the Laurel Tree

In the Galleria Borghese in Rome stands a statue by Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598 – 1680) that is widely regarded as one of the masterpieces of marble sculpture in the Western world. Executed from 1622 to 1625, Bernini captured the moment Daphne escapes Apollo and transforms into a laurel tree. Her fingers are already becoming laurel leaves, her skin already becoming bark. Apollo has caught her at the exact instant she escapes him forever. Bernini is transforming cold stone into something that seems to breathe, to move, to cry out.

Daphne and Apollo (1625), Gian Lorenzo Bernini (Italian, 1598 – 1680), detail, Galleria Borghese, Rome.

Crucially, in the story of Apollo and Daphne neither of the two central figures acts entirely by free will. Both Apollo and Daphne are moved by forces beyond themselves — arrows loosed in revenge by the child-god Cupid — and yet the consequences fall almost entirely upon Daphne. This tension gives the myth a startling relevance to our own age, resonating powerfully with the questions raised by the #MeToo movement: Who is responsible when power is abused? What does consent mean when one party is overwhelmed by forces they did not choose?

In the first book of his Metamorphoses, composed in the first century AD, the Roman poet Ovid tells the tale of Apollo and Daphne. The story unfolds in six movements, each preserved in Ovid’s verse, and each illustrated by painters, sculptors, and illuminators. Let us follow it from beginning to end:

  1. Apollo kills Python
  2. The dispute between Apollo and Cupid
  3. Cupid’s revenge: the two arrows and Apollo goes after Daphne
  4. Daphne begs her father for help
  5. Daphne turns into a Laurel Tree
  6. The Evergreen Tree and the Laurel Wreath

1. Apollo kills Python

The story begins not with love but with slaughter. Apollo killed Python, the great snake that terrorized mankind. As an allegory, Python represents the fogs and clouds of mist that arise from ponds and marshes, and evaporate when the rays of the sun appear — Apollo being the sun-god, and his arrows the rays of sunshine.

The archer god, with lethal shafts that he had only used before on fleeing deer, destroyed the creature with a thousand arrows, almost emptying his quiver, the venom running out from Python's black wounds.

Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book I (643-648)

2. The dispute between Apollo and Cupid

Flushed with triumph, Apollo encounters Cupid — the small, winged god of love. Apollo, in his pride, cannot resist mockery. Why, Apollo demands, does this little boy need weapons suited for war? The bow belongs to mighty gods like himself, to those who hunt and fight and conquer monsters. Let Cupid content himself with his love-torch and leave glory to those who have earned it.

Cupid’s reply is dangerously calm. Your arrow may pierce all things, he tells Apollo, but my arrow will pierce you.

Apollo, proud of his recent conquest of the snake, saw Cupid flexing his bow, pulling back the string, and said to him: Boy, what are you doing with strong weapons? Those arrows and bow are fitting for my shoulders — I who can shoot wild beasts and never miss, and wound my enemies, I who with my countless arrows has just killed that Python. You, be satisfied to stir up some love affair with your torch, and do not lay claim to my praises!

Cupid then replied to him: Oh Apollo, your arrow may strike all things, but mine can strike at you.


Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book I (665-677)

Here is a divine comedy playing out with tragic consequences for a mortal — or rather, for a nymph. Apollo’s arrogance triggers Cupid’s revenge, and that revenge will be visited not merely on Apollo himself, but on an entirely innocent third party: Daphne, daughter of the river god Peneus, who has never wronged either of them and is simply going about her life in the forests she loves.

3. Cupid’s revenge: the two arrows and Apollo goes after Daphne

Ovid then describes Cupid’s vengeance with great precision. He tells us that the little god flies to the top of Mount Parnassus and takes two arrows — arrows of entirely opposite powers. The first is golden with a razor-sharp head: it kindles love. The second is blunt-tipped, leaded: it repels love and makes its victim flee from even the name of it. He shoots the golden one at Apollo and the leaden one at Daphne.

Apollo sees Daphne and is immediately consumed by burning love. Daphne is equally consumed by burning aversion, running from the very idea of love. Both are robbed of choice. Both are puppets of a Cupid’s arrows and revenge. Yet it is Daphne who pays the higher price.

Cupid pulled out two arrows, each with a different force. The arrow which arouses love is gold with a sharp, glittering head, while the arrow which inhibits love is blunt and has lead below the shaft. With this second arrow Cupid hit Daphne, the daughter of Peneus, but with the first he struck Apollo’s bones, piercing right through them, into the marrow.

Apollo is immediately in love, but she runs away, swifter than a soft breeze, and does not stop when he calls her. With increasing speed, he chases after her. That’s how the god and virgin race away, he driven on by hope and she by fear. Daphne grows pale as her strength fails, exhausted by the strain of running away so fast.

Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book I (680-801)

4. Daphne begs her father for help

With Apollo almost upon her, Daphne turns to the one source of help available. She calls on her father, the river god Peneus, whose waters flow through the valley. It is a cry for transformation, for escape from the body that has become a trap:

Gazing at the waters of Peneus, she cries out: 'Father, help me! If your streams have heavenly power, change me! Destroy my beauty which has brought too much delight!'


Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book I (803-805)

Daphne does not ask to be saved so that she can go on living as herself. She asks to be unmade. She asks for her beauty — the very quality that drew both Cupid’s arrow and Apollo’s eye — to be destroyed. In a world where she cannot control the effect her appearance has on those around her, the only freedom available is to stop being what she is. Her father Peneus, the great river God, complies. And the transformation begins.

5. Daphne turns into a Laurel Tree

Then Ovid gets to the core of the story, Daphne’s transformation. It happens mid-stride, at the moment Apollo’s hands almost reach her:

Scarcely has she made this plea, when she feels a heavy numbness move across her limbs, her soft breasts are enclosed by slender bark, her hair is changed to leaves, her arms to branches, her feet, so swift a moment before, stick fast in sluggish roots, a covering of foliage spreads across her face. All that remains of her is her shining beauty.


Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book I (806-810)

The transformation is complete — and yet not complete, for what persists is beauty itself. Daphne has changed form, but not vanished. And Apollo, reaching the tree, still reaches for her:

Apollo loved her in this form, as well. He placed his hand on her trunk, where he felt her heart still beating under the new bark. He hugged the branches as though they were still human limbs and he kissed the wood.


Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book I (813-818)

Apollo’s love does not end with the transformation. The god who could not accept refusal from a living woman, now declares his love for a tree:

Apollo spoke: 'Since you cannot be my bride, you will certainly be my tree. My hair will always be decorated with your leaves. You will accompany the Roman emperors, when joyful voices acclaim their triumph. And just as my head with its golden hair is always young, so you also will wear the beauty of evergreen leaves.'


Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book I (820-831)

At the heart of Apollo’s speech is a promise: as his hair is always young — as the god of light — so the laurel will bear the beauty of evergreen leaves throughout winter. This is the mythological explanation for a natural fact: the laurel (Laurus nobilis) is indeed an evergreen, its aromatic leaves glossy and dark throughout the year. In the ancient world, evergreens were associated with immortality, with the persistence of life beyond ordinary death. The laurel thus became the perfect symbol of Apollo — the god of undying light, the sun that does not permanently fail even in midwinter.

Apollo turns his loss into an enduring program, although it is quite a self-glorifying solution. Daphne will adorn Apollo’s hair and his lyre. Daphne will stand at the doors of emperors. Daphne will crown the victorious and the powerful. Apollo claims her, even in her transformation — even in what was meant to be her escape.

6. The Evergreen Tree and the Laurel Wreath

The story ends when the laurel tree bends its new branches, in what Ovid calls a nod — a tree’s equivalent of consent, as Apollo certainly will understand it.

The laurel bowed her newly made branches, nodding in agreement, and seemed to shake her leafy crown like a head giving consent.


Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book I (832-833)

But perhaps it was only the wind that moved the leaves?

The final image of Ovid’s story is the laurel bowing its branches — or seeming to. Daphne, who asked to be unmade, who prayed for her own transformation, has become permanent. She is the tree that does not die. She is in Apollo’s hair and she is on the heads of emperors and generals. She is in the hand of every poet and laureate who ever received a wreath.

Every time you see a laurel wreath — in a painting, on a coin, at a graduation ceremony, above a doorway — you are seeing Daphne. The girl who ran. The nymph who asked to be dissolved and was instead immortalised. The body that fled possession and was possessed anyway, in a form that cannot speak, cannot run, cannot refuse.

The myth is two thousand years old. The laurel is on every door. Daphne is everywhere.

The laurel wreath, then, is not only a symbol of triumph. It is also a reminder — worn at every moment of victory, present at every crowning — that somewhere behind glory there may be a story of someone who ran, and who ran in vain.