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  1. Apollo speaks disparagingly to Cupid, who shoots two arrows in retaliation. The first arrow causes Apollo to fall in love, and the second arrow makes the object of his love, Daphne, flee. Apollo pursues Daphne, but she rejects him.

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  2. This battle between men and women ensues throughout the Metamorphoses, often making love a tense, complicated, or non-consensual event. As the first “love story,” Apollo and Daphne’s antagonism casts love in a negative light. By contrast, Apollo falls in love with Daphne and wants to possess her.

  3. Apollo and Daphne In Myth – A Tale Of Unrequited Love. Greek Mythology states that Apollo had been mocking the God of Love, Eros (also known as Cupid). In retaliation, Eros fired two arrows: a gold arrow that struck Apollo and made him fall in love with Daphne, and a lead arrow that made Daphne hate Apollo. Under the spell of the arrow ...

  4. Sep 21, 2024 · The significance of the myth of Apollo and Daphne lies in its exploration of unrequited love and the ultimate transformation of Daphne into a laurel tree. This transformation serves as a powerful symbol of escape and resistance against unwanted advances.

  5. 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. [1]

  6. Firstly and most obviously, it shows a contrast between lust and chastity: Apollo, normally a god of light and knowledge, is driven mad by his sexual desire, while the virginal and...

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  8. Apollo's love for Daphne results in her transformation into a laurel tree, and in a more restrained transformation within Apollo, who adapts her branches as a symbol. Zeus frequently changes himself into an animal or another form in order to facillitate his rapes, which in turn result in transformations in the women, such as Io's metamorphosis ...

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