Untitled : Title Page Introductory Note CUPID AND PSYCHE Part I Part II Part III Part IV Part V Part VI Part VII Part VIII
Cupid And Psyche. Part Vi : Cupid Rebuked PART VI. Psyche had scantly finished her tale, but her sister, pierced with the prick of carnal desire and wicked envy, ran home, and, feigning to her husband that she had heard of the death of her parents, took shipping and came to the mountain. And although there blew a contrary...
Cupid And Psyche. Part V : Pan and Psyche PART V Then Pan, the rustical God, sitting on the riverside, embracing and teaching the Goddess Canna to tune her songs and pipes, by whom were feeding the young and tender goats, after that he perceived Psyche in so sorrowful case, not ignorant, I know not by what means, of her...
Cupid And Psyche. Part Vii : Psyche Awakened PART VII. But Cupid being now healed of his wound and malady, not able to endure the absence of Psyche, got him secretly out at a window of the chamber where he was enclosed, and, receiving his wings, took his flight towards his loving wife; whom when he had found he wiped away...
Cupid And Psyche. Part Ii : Psyche on the Rock PART II Thus poor Psyche being left alone weeping and trembling on the top of the rock, was blown by the gentle air and of shrilling Zephyrus, and carried from the hill with a meek wind, which retained her garments up, and by little and little brought her down into a deep valley...
Cupid And Psyche. Part Iii : Zephyrus Wafts the Sisters PART III. After long search made, the sisters of Psyche came unto the hill where she was set on the rock, and cried with a loud voice, in such sort that the stones answered again: And when they called their sister by her name, that their lamentable cries came unto her...
Title Page. Part 1 : THE MOST PLEASANT AND DELECTABLE TALE OF THE MARRIAGE OF CUPID AND PSYCHE By Apuleius. Translated By William Adlington. Introductory Note By W. H. D. Rouse Illustrations By Dorothy Mullock Published By Chatto And Windus, London [1914] Scanned And Redacted By Phillip Brown. Additional Formatting...
Cupid And Psyche. Part Viii : The Marriage Feast PART VIII Incontinently after, Jupiter commanded Mercury to bring up Psyche, the spouse of Cupid, into the palace of heaven. And then he took a pot of immortality, and said: "Hold, Psyche, and drink to the end thou mayst be immortal, and that Cupid may be thine everlasting...
Cupid And Psyche. Part Iv : Cupid on the Cypress Tree PART IV. The God being burned in this sort, and perceiving that promise and faith was broken, he fled away without utterance of any word, from the eyes and hands of his most unhappy wife. But Psyche fortuned to catch him, as he was rising, by the right thigh, and held him...
Title Page : INTRODUCTORY NOTE THE legend of Cupid and Psyche has been the subject of a learned work by Rohde, called "Psyche"; it has been examined by W. A. Clouston in his "Popular Tales and Fictions" (i. 205), and in a lighter vein by A. Lang in "Custom and Myth", and in his preface to the reprint...
Cupid And Psyche. Part I : CUPID AND PSYCHE PART I THERE was sometimes a certain King, inhabiting in the west parts, who had to wife a noble Dame, by whom he had three daughters exceeding fair: of whom the two elder were of such comely shape and beauty, as they did excel and pass all other women living; whereby they were...