Tuesday, July 26, 2005

HYPNOS



HYPNOS

Greek Name:
`UpnoV
Transliteration:Latin Spelling:
HypnosHypnus
Translation:
Sleep (hypnos)
Roman Name:
SomnusSopor
Translation:
SleepSleep





N13.1 "Leda and the Swan"Apulian Red FigureLoutrophoros C4th BCMalibu, The J. Paul GettyMuseum 86.AE.680
Detail: Hypnos drips sleep upon the head of Leda as Zeus seduces her inthe shape of a swan



HYPNOS was the DAIMON (Spirit) or god of sleep.
He made his home in Erebos, the Land of Eternal Darkness, beyond the gates of the rising sun. Each evening he rose into the sky in the train of his mother Nyx (Night).
Hypnos was depicted as a young man with wings on his shoulders or temples. His attributes included a horn of sleep-inducing opium, a poppy stem, a branch dripping water from the river Lethe (Forgetfulness), and an inverted torch.
Parents
(1a) NYX (no father) (Theogony 212, Iliad 14.250, Dionysiaca 31.103)(1b) EREBOS & NYX (Hyginus Pref, De Natura Deorum 3.17)
Offspring
THE ONEIROI x1000, MORPHEUS, IKELOS, PHANTASOS (Metamorphoses 11.630)
"And Nyx (Night) bare hateful Moros (Doom) and black Ker (Violent Death) and Thanatos (Death), and she bare Hypnos (Sleep) and the tribe of Oneiroi (Dreams). And again the goddess murky Nyx, though she lay with none, bare Momos (Blame) and painful Oizys (Misery), and the Hesperides ... Also she bare the Moirai (Fates) and the ruthless avenging Keres (Death-Fates) ... Also deadly Nyx bare Nemesis (Envy) to afflict mortal men, and after her, Apate (Deceit) and Philotes (Friendship) and hateful Geras (Old Age) and hard-hearted Eris (Strife)." - Hesiod, Theogony 211.
N13.1 "Leda and the Swan"Apulian Red FigureLoutrophoros C4th BCMalibu, The J. Paul GettyMuseum 86.AE.680
Detail: Hypnos drips sleep upon the head of Leda as Zeus seduces her inthe shape of a swan
"From Nox (Night) and Erebus [were born]: Fatum (Fate), Senectus (Old Age), Mors (Death), Letum (Dissolution), Continentia (Moderation), Somnus (Sleep) [Hypnos], Somnia (Dreams) [Oneiroi], Amor (Love) - that is Lysimeles, Epiphron (Prudence), Porphyrion, Epaphus, Discordia (Discord), Miseria (Misery), Petulantia (Wantonness), Nemesis (Envy), Euphrosyne (Good Cheer), Amicitia (Friendship), Misericordia (Compassion), Styx (Hatred); the three Parcae (Fates), namely Clotho, Lachesis and Atropos; the Hesperides." - Hyginus, Preface
"Their [Aether and Hemera's] brothers and sisters, whom the ancient genealogists name Amor (Love), Dolus (Guile), Metus (Fear), Labor (Toil), Invidentia (Envy), Fatum (Fate), Senectus (Old Age), Mors (Death), Tenebrae (Darkness), Miseria (Misery), Querella (Complaint), Gratia (Favour), Fraus (Fraud), Pertinacia (Obstinacy), the Parcae (Fates), the Hesperides, the Somnia (Sleep, Dreams) [Hypnos & the Oneiroi]: all of these are fabled to be the children of Erebus (Darkness) and Nox (Night)." - Cicero, De Natura Deorum 3.17
HYMNS TO HYPNOS
"To Hypnos (Sleep), Fumigation from Poppies. Hypnos, king of Gods, and men of mortal birth, sovereign of all, sustained by mother earth; for thy dominion is supreme alone, over all extended, and by all things known. ‘Tis thine all bodies with benignant mind in other bands than those of brass to bind. Tamer of cares, to weary toil repose, and from whom sacred solace in affliction flows. Thy pleasing gentle chains preserve the soul, and even the dreadful cares of death control; for Thanatos (Death), and Lethe (Forgetfulness) with oblivious stream, mankind thy genuine brothers justly deem. With favouring aspect to my prayer incline, and save thy mystics in their works divine." - Orphic Hymn 85 to Hypnus
HYPNOS GOD OF SLEEP
"[Nyx] carries Hypnos (Sleep) in her arms, and he is Thanatos' (Death's) brother ... And there [near the house of Nyx in the underworld] the children of gloomy Nyx have their houses. These are Hypnos and Thanatos, dread divinities. Never upon them does Helios, the shining sun, cast the light of his eye-beams, neither when he goes up the sky nor comes down from it. One of these, across the earth and the wide sea-ridges, goes his way quietly back and forth, and is kind to mortals, but the heart of the other one is iron, and brazen feelings without pity are inside his breast." - Hesiod, Theogony 758
"Soft-eyed Hypnos (Sleep) came, embracing all his limbs, as a mother on seeing her dear son after a long absence folds him with her wings to her loving breast." - Greek Lyric V Anonymous, Fragments 929g (Rainer papyrus)
"[Depicted on the chest of Cypselus dedicated at the shrine of Olympia] There is a figure of a woman holding on her right arm a white child asleep, and on her left she has a black child like one who is asleep. Each has his feet turned different ways. The inscriptions declare, as one could infer without inscriptions, that the figures are Thanatos (Death) and Hypnos (Sleep), with Nyx the nurse of both." - Pausanias, Guide to Greece 5.18.1
"But now through the wide domains [of heaven] ... rose the Titanian queen [Selene the Moon], borne upward through a silent world, and with her dewy chariot cooled and rarefied the air; now birds and beasts are hushed, and Somnus (Sleep) [Hypnos] steals o’er the greedy cares of men, and stoops and beckons from the sky, shrouding a toilsome life once more in sweet oblivion." - Statius, Thebaid 1.336
"Sopor (Sleep), driving Nox’s (Night's) coursers, met him [Hermes], and rose abashed to salute his godhead, turning aside from his celestial path." - Statius, Thebaid 2.59
"Wearied by endurance of the storm [as if] had Somnus (Sleep) poured all his horn’s bounty." - Statius, Thebaid 2.145
"When Somnus (Sleep), shrouded in the gloom of his brother Letus (Death) and dripping with Stygian dew, enfolds the doomed city [of the island of Lemnos], and from his relentless horn pours heavy drowse, and marks out the men. Wives and daughters are awake for murder ... they fall to their horrid work [murdering their husbands in their sleep]." - Statius, Thebaid 5.155
"Nox (Night) and Somnus (Sleep) with empty horn [from which he poured slumber upon the earth] were fleeing from the pale goddess’ [Eos the Dawn's] wakeful reins." - Statius, Thebaid 6.25

N13.5 "Theseus abandoning Ariadne"Athenian Red Figure Kylix C5th BCTarquinia Museo Nazionale RC5291
Detail: Hypnos, flying over the head of Ariadne, holds her in slumber on the island of Naxos, while Hermes leads Theseus away. Dionysos appears in the form of a winding grape-vine

N13.3 "Theseus abandoning Ariadne"Atehnian Red Figure Lekythos C5th BCTaranto, Museo Archeologico Nazionale 4545
Detail: A tiny Hypnos, sitting crouched on the head of Ariadne, holds in her slumber on the island of Naxos, as Athene urges Theseus to abandon her for Dionysos
"Sopor (Sleep), too, who leaning forward plies for thee [Selene the Moon] thy humid chariot-reins." - Statius, Thebaid 12.300
"Luna [Selene the Moon] in her rosy chariot was climbing to the height of mid-heaven, when drowsy Somnus (Sleep) glided down with full sweep of his pinions to earth and gathered a silent world to his embrace." - Statius, Achilleid 1.619
"The sky was ablaze with fire [during the celebration of the Saturnalia at Rome], and suffered not the reign of darkness: sluggish Quies (Quiet) [Hesykhia] fled, and lazy Somnus (Sleep) betook himself to other cities at the sight." - Statius, Silvae 1.6.90
"[Prayer of an insomniac to Somnus the god of Sleep] O youthful Somnus (Sleep), gentlest of the gods, by what crime or error of mine have I deserved that I alone should lack thy bounty? Silent are all the cattle, and the wild beasts and the birds, and the curved mountain summits have the semblance of weary slumber, nor do the raging torrents roar as they were wont; the ruffled waves have sunk to rest, and the sea leans against earth’s bosom and is still. Seven times now hath the returning moon beheld my fixed and ailing eyes; so often have the lights of Oeta and Paphos [the morning & evening star] revisited me, so oft hath Tithonia [Eos goddess of the dawn] passed by my groans, and pitying sprinkled me with her cool whip [the whip with which she chases away the stars]. Ah! how may I endure? Not if I had the thousand eyes of sacred Argus, which he kept but in alternate watchfulness, nor even waked in all his frame at once. But now - ah, me! - if some lover through the long hours of night is clasping a girl’s entwining arms, and of his own will drives thee from him, come thence, O Somnus! Nor do I bid thee shower all the influence of thy wings upon my eyes - that be the prayer of happier folk! - touch me but with thy wand’s extremest tip - ‘tis enough - or pass over me with lightly hovering step." - Statius, Silvae 5.4.1
"She [Hermione when her mother Helene abandoned her] wailed, and leaning back her neck breathed Hypnos (Sleep) who walks with Thanatos (Death); for verily it was ordained that both should have all things in common and pursue the works of the elder brother: hence women, weighed down with sorrowing eyes, oft-times, while they weep, fall asleep. And wandering amid the deceits of Oneiroi (Dreams) she fancied that she saw her mother." - Colluthus, Rape of Helen 365
"Hypnos (Sleep) beating his shady wing sent all breathing nature to rest." - Nonnus, Dionysiaca 2.237
"All night long [at the marriage of Kadmos & Harmonia], the merry rout of untiring dancers were singing with clear voices beside the bridal chamber in happy romps; since ... [text-missing] [Hypnos god of sleep] anxious for a sleepless wedding night had left his familiar wand behind, because that was the rationer of sleep." - Nonnus, Dionysiaca 5.88
"While the Indians [in the war against Dionysos and his army] were running drunken on the hills, just then sweet Hypnos (Sleep) plying his vigorous wing, assaulted the wavering eyes of the persistent Indians, and put them to bed, tormented in mind by immoderate wine, doing grace to Pasithea’s father, Dionysos." - Nonnus, Dionysiaca 15.87

N13.4 "Theseus abandoning Ariadne"Apulian Red Figure Stamnos C4th BCBoston, Museum of Fine Arts 00.349a
Detail: Hypnos, standing at the head of Ariadne, drips sleep upon her head, while Athene commands Theseus to abandon her for Dionysos


HYPNOS AGENT OF THE GODDESS HERA
"There [in Lemnos] she [Hera] encountered Hypnos, the brother of Thanatos. She clung fast to his hand and spoke a word and called him by name: 'Hypnos, lord over all mortal men and all gods, if ever before now you listened to word of mine, so now also do as I ask; and all my days I shall know gratitude. Put to sleep the shining eyes of Zeus under his brows as soon as I have lain beside him in love. I will give you gifts; a lovely throne, imperishable forever, of gold. My own son, he of the strong arms, Hephaistos, shall make it with careful skill and make for your feet a footstool on which you can rest your shining feet when you take your pleasure.'Then Hypnos the still and soft spoke to her in answer: 'Hera, honoured goddess and daughter of mighty Kronos, any other one of the gods, whose race is immortal, I would lightly put to sleep, even the stream of that River Okeanos, whence is risen the seed of all the immortals. But I would not come too close to Zeus, the son of Kronos, nor put him to sleep, unless he himself were to tell me. Before now, it was a favour to you that taught me wisdom, on the day Herakles, the high-hearted son of Zeus, was sailing from Ilion, when he had utterly sacked the city of the Trojans. That time I laid to sleep the brain in Zeus of the aegis and drifted upon him still and soft, but your mind was devising evil, and you raised along the sea the blasts of the racking winds, and on these swept him away to Kos, the strong-founded, with all his friends lost, but Zeus awakened in anger and beat the gods up and down his house, looking beyond all others for me, and would have sunk me out of sight in the sea from the bright sky had not Nyx who has power over gods and men rescued me. I reached her in my flight, and Zeus let be, though he was angry, in awe of doing anything to swift Nyx' displeasure. Now you ask me to do this other impossible thing for you.'Then in turn the lady ox-eyed Hera answered him: 'Hypnos, why do you ponder this in your heart, and hesitate? Or do you think that Zeus of the wide brows, aiding the Trojans, will be angry as he was angry for his son, Herakles? Come now, do it, and I will give you one of the younger Kharites for you to marry, and she shall be called you lady; Pasithea, since all your days you have loved her forever.'So she spoke, and Hypnos was pleased and spoke to her in answer: 'Come then! Swear it to me on Styx' ineluctable water. With one hand take hold of the prospering earth, with the other take hold of the shining salt sea, so that all the undergods who gather about Kronos may be witnesses to us. Swear that you will give me one of the younger Kharites, Pasithea, the one whom all my days I have longed for.'He spoke, nor failed to persuade the goddess Hera of the white arms, and she swore as he commanded, and called by their names on all those gods who live beneath Tartaros (the Pit), and who are called Titanes.Then when she had sworn this, and made her oath a complete thing, the two went away from Lemnos, and the city of Imbros, and mantled themselves in mist, and made their way very lightly till they came to Ida with all her springs, the mother of wild beasts, to Lekton, where first they left the water, and went on over dry land, and with their feet the top of the forest was shaken. There Hypnos stayed, before a towering pine tree, the one that grew tallest at that time on Ida, and broke through the close air to the aither. In this he sat, covered over and hidden by the pine branches, in the likeness of a singing bird whom in the mountains the immortal gods call khalkis, but men call him kymindis." - Homer, Iliad 14.231
"So the father [Zeus] slept unshaken on the peak of Gargaron with his wife in his arms, when Hypnos and passion had stilled him; but gently Hypnos went on the run to the ships of the Akhaians with a message to tell him who circles the earth and shakes it, Poseidon, and stood close to him and addressed him in winged words: 'Poseidon, now with all your heart defend the Danaans and give them glory, though only for a little, while Zeus still sleeps; since I have mantled a soft slumber about him and Hera beguiled him into sleeping in love beside her.' He spoke so, and went away among the famed races of men." - Homer, Iliad 14.352
"From Okeanos then uprose Eos (Dawn) golden-reined: like a soft wind upfloated Hypnos (Sleep) to heaven, and there met Hera ... She clasped him round, and kissed him, who had been her marriage-kin since at her prayer on Ida's erest he had lulled to sleep Kronion [Zeus], when his anger burned against the Argives. Straightway Hera passed to Zeus's mansion, and Hypnos (Sleep) swiftly flew to Pasithea's couch. From slumber woke all nations of the earth." - Quintus Smyrnaeus, Fall of Troy 5.395
"[Description of an ancient Greek painting:] He [Herakles] sleeps on the soft sand [while the Pygmaioi, allies of the Libyan giant Antaios, attack him], since weariness has crept over him in wrestling; and, filled with sleep, his mouth open, he draws full breaths deep in his chest, and Hypnos (Sleep) himself stands over him in visible form, making much, I think, of his own part in the fall of Herakles [no doubt under the instruction of Hera]." - Philostratus the Elder, Imagines 2.22
"[Hera] said: 'Iris, my voice's trustiest messenger, hie quickly to the drowsy hall of Somnus [Hypnos], and bid him send a dream of Ceyx drowned to break the tidings to Alcyone.' Then Iris, in her thousand hues enrobed traced through the sky her arching bow and reached the cloud-hid palace of the drowsy king. Near the Cimmerii a cavern lies deep in the hollow of a mountainside, the home and sanctuary of lazy Somnus (Sleep), where Phoebus’ [the Sun's] beams can never reach at morn or noon or eve, but cloudy vapours rise in doubtful twilight; there no wakeful cock crows summons Aurora (the Dawn), no guarding hound the silence breaks, nor goose, a keener guard; no creature wild or tame is heard, no sound of human clamour and no rustling branch. There silence dwells: only the lazy stream of Lethe 'neath the rock with whisper low o'er pebbly shallows trickling lulls to sleep. Before the cavern's mouth lush poppies grow and countless herbs, from whose bland essences a drowsy infusion dewy Nox (Night) distils and sprinkles sleep across the darkening world. No doors are there for fear a hinge should creak, no janitor before the entrance stands, but in the midst a high-raised couch is set of ebony, sable and downy-soft, and covered with a dusky counterpane, whereon the god, relaxed in languor, lies. Around him everywhere in various guise lie empty Somnia (Dreams) [Oneiroi], countless as ears of corn at harvest time or sands cast on the shore or leaves that fall upon the forest floor. There Iris entered, brushing the Somnia (Dreams) aside, and the bright sudden radiance of her robe lit up the hallowed place; slowly the god his heavy eyelids raised, and sinking back time after time, his languid drooping head nodding upon his chest, at last he shook himself out of himself, and leaning up he recognized her and asked why she came, and she replied: 'Somnus [Hypnos], quietest of the gods, Somnus, peace of all the world, balm of the soul, who drives care away, who gives ease to weary limbs after the hard day's toil and strength renewed to meet the morrow's tasks, bid now thy Somnia (Dreams), whose perfect mimicry matches the truth, in Ceyx's likeness formed appear in Trachis to Alcyone and feign the shipwreck and her dear love drowned. So Juno [Hera] orders.' Then, her task performed, Iris departed, for she could no more endure the power of Somnus (Sleep), as drowsiness stole seeping through her frame, and fled away back o'er the arching rainbow as she came. The father Somnus chose from among his sons, his thronging thousand sons, one who in skill excelled to imitate the human form; Morpheus his name, than whom none can present more cunningly the features, gait and speech of men, their wonted clothes and turn of phrase. He mirrors only men; another forms the beasts and birds and the long sliding snakes. The gods have named him Icelos; here below the tribe of mortals call him Phobetor. A third, excelling in an art diverse, is Phantasos; he wears the cheating shapes of earth, rocks, water, trees - inanimate things. To kings and chieftains these at night display their phantom features; other dreams will roam among the people, haunting common folk. All these dream-brothers the old god passed by and chose Morpheus alone to undertake Thaumantias’ [Iris’] commands; then in sweet drowsiness on his high couch he sank his head to sleep." - Ovid, Metamorphoses 11.585

T90.2 "The Labours of Herakles"Athenian Red Figure Volute Krater C5th BCMalibu, The J. Paul Getty Museum 84.AE.974
Detail: Hypnos, crouched in sleep, binds the Gigante Alkyoneus in his spell of slumber, while Herakles (not shown) sneaks up upon him

N13.2 "Herakles and Alkyoneus"Athenian Black Figure Lekythos C6th BCToledo Museum of Art 1952.66
Detail: Hypnos, striding over the prone form of Alkyoneus, holds him bound in slumber, as Herakles sneaks up upon him with sword drawn
"She [Juno-Hera] determines to make the Aonians [Thebans during the War of the Seven Against Thebes], sunk in the timeless bliss of slumber, a prey to death, and bids her own Iris gird herself with her wonted circles, and commits to her all her task. Obedient to command, the bright goddess leaves the pole and wings her way down her long arc to earth. Beyond the cloud-wrapt chambers of western gloom and Aethiopia’s other realm [the Aithiopians of the far South-West, as opposed to those of the South] there stands a motionless grove, impenetrable by any star; beneath it the hollow recesses of a deep and rocky cave run far into a mountain, where the slow hand of Natura (Nature) has set the halls of lazy Somnus (Sleep) and his untroubled dwelling. The threshold is guarded by shady Quies (Quiet) [Hesykhia] and dull Oblivio (Forgetfulness) [Lethe] and torpid Ignavia (Sloth) with ever drowsy countenance. Otia (Ease) and Silentia (Silence) [Hesykhia] with folded wings sit mute in the forecourt and drive the blustering winds from the roof-top, and forbid the branches to sway, and take away their warblings from the birds. No roar of the sea is here, though all the shores be sounding, nor yet of the sky; the very torrent that runs down the deep valley nigh the cave is silent among the rocks and boulders; by its side are sable herds, and sheep reclining one and all upon the ground; the fresh buds wither, and a breath from the earth makes the grasses sink and fail. Within, glowing Mulciber [Hephaistos] had carved a thousand likenesses of the god: here wreathed Voluptas (Pleasure) clings to his side, here Labor (Labour) [Ponos] drooping to repose bears him company, here he shares a couch with Bacchus [Dionysos], there with Amor (Love) [Eros], the child of Mars [Ares]. Further within, in the secret places of the palace he lies with Mors (Death) [Thanatos] also, but that dread image is seen by none. These are but pictures: he himself beneath humid caverns rests upon coverlets heaped with slumberous flowers, his garments reek, and the cushions are warm with his sluggish body, and above the bed a dark vapour rises from his breathing mouth. One hand holds up the locks that fall from his left temple, from the other drops his neglected horn. Vague Somnia (Dreams) [Oneiroi] of countless shapes stand round about him, true mixed with false, flattering with sad, the dark brood of Nox (Night), and cling to beams and doorposts, or lie on the ground. The light about the chamber is weak and fitful, and languid gleams that woo to earliest slumbers vanish as the lamps flicker and dim. Hither from the blue sky came in balanced flight the varicoloured maid [Iris the rainbow]; the forests shine out, and the shady glens smile upon the goddess, and smitten with her zones of radiance the palace stars from its sleep; but he himself, awoken neither by the bright glow nor by the sound or voice of the goddess, lay motionless as ever, till Thaumantias [Iris] shot at him all her splendours and sank deep into his drowsy vision.Hither from the blue sky came in balanced flight the varicoloured maid [Iris the rainbow]; the forests shine out, and the shady glens smile upon the goddess, and smitten with her zones of radiance the palace stars from its sleep; but he himself, awoken neither by the bright glow nor by the sound or voice of the goddess, lay motionless as ever, till Thaumantias [Iris] shot at him all her splendours and sank deep into his drowsy vision. Then thus began to speak the golden fashioner of clouds: ‘Somnus [Hypnos], gentlest of the gods, Juno [Hera] bids thee bind fast the Sidonian [Theban] leaders and the folk of ruthless Cadmus, who now, puffed up by the issue of fight, are watching in ceaseless vigil the Achaean rampart, and refuse thy sway. Grant so solemn a request - rarely is this opportunity vouchsafed, to win the favour of Jove [Zeus] with Juno [Hera] on thy side.’ She spoke, and with her hand beat upon his languid breast, and charged him again and yet again, lest her message be lost. He with his own nodding visage nods assent to the goddess’ command; o’er-weighted with the caverns’ gloom Iris goes forth, and tricks out her beams, made dim by showers of rain.Himself too he bestirred both swift progress and his wind-torn temples [he had wings on his temples], and filling his mantle’s folds with the chill dark air is borne in silent course through heaven, and from afar swoops down in might upon the Aonian fields. The wind of his coming sets birds and beasts and cattle prostrate on the ground, and, whatsoever region of the world he passes in his flight, the waves slide languidly from the rocks, more lazily cling the clouds, the forests bow their summits, and many a star drops from the loosened vault of heaven. The plain first felt the god’s presence by the sudden coming of a mist, and the countless voices and cries of men were hushed; but when he brooded with his dewy wings and entered the camp, unsubstantial as a pitchy shadow, eyes wavered and heads sank, and words were left unfinished in mid-speech. Next shining bucklers and cruel spears are dropped from their hands, their faces fall in weariness upon their breasts. And now universal silence reigns: even the horn-footed steeds refuse to stand, even the fires are quenched in sudden ashes. But slumber woos not the anxious Greeks [the Argives attacked Thebes] to same repose, and the night-wandering, persuasive deity keeps his mists from the camp hard by; on every side they stand to arms, in wrath at the hateful gloom and their foes’ proud sentinels." - Statius, Thebaid 10.80
"None of the slumberers [the Theban troops asleep and being slaughtered by the Argives] lifts his head or turn his gaze, so deep the shade wherewith the winged god [Somnus-Hypnos] broods over the wretched ones, and unseals their eyes but as they die." - Statius, Thebaid 10.300
"[Hera] wished to send her [Iris] swift as the wind from heaven with a message for shadowy Hypnos (Sleep). She called Iris then, and coaxed her with friendly words: ‘Iris ... hasten with stormshod foot to the home of gloomy Hypnos in the west. Seek also about seagirt Lemnos, and if you find him tell him to charm the eyes of Zeus uncharmable for one day, that I may help the Indians. But change your shape, take the ugly form of Hypnos’ mother the blackgirdled goddess Nyx (Night) ; take a false name and become darkness ... Promise him Pasithea for his bride, and let him do my need from desire of her beauty. I need not tell you that one lovesick will do anything for hope.’At these words, Iris goldenwing flew away peering through the air … seeking the wandering track of vagrant Hypnos (Sleep). She found him on the slopes of nuptial Orkhomenos [home of the Kharites]; for there he delayed again and trailed his distracted foot, a frequent visitor at the door of his beloved [the Kharis] Pasithea.Then Iris changed her shape, and all unseen she put on the look of dark Nyx unrecognisable. She came near to Hypnos, weaving guile; and in his mother’s guise uttered her deceitful speech in cajoling whispers:'My child ... O Hypnos, why are you named Allvanquisher? If it be your pleasure, pray turn your eye, and you shall perceive Kronion wakeful once again through the night in sevengate Thebes … Let me not see Zeus yet wakeful for a fourth night ... Pity the blackskin nation of earthborn Indians! Grant this boon … O Blackwing! Do not provoke Gaia (Earth), my [Nyx’s] father’s [Khaos’] agemate, from whom alone we are all sprung, we who dwell in Olympos ... Do but flap me your wings, and Zeus lies immovable on unshaken bed, so long as you command him, Hypnos! I have heard that you want one of the Kharites; then if you have in your heart an itch for her bedchamber, have a care! Do not provoke Pasithea’s mother, Hera the handmaid of wedded love! And if you dwell with Tethys by the Leukadia Rock, do help Deriades the son of Indian Hydaspes: be true to a neighbour, for resounding Okeanos your loud-voiced neighbour was an ancestor of Deriades.’With this appeal, she won his consent. Then Hypnos as one obeying a mother started up, and swore to charm the eyes of unresting Zeus even until the third dawn should come; but Iris begged him to fasten Kronion with slumber for the course of one day only. There Hypnos remained, awaiting the happy season of marriage.Then goddess Iris returned flying at speed and hastened to deliver her welcome message to her queen." - Nonnus, Dionysiaca 31.103
"[Zeus filled with desire for his Queen Hera] spoke, and assembling with a whirl golden clouds like a wall, he arched them eddying above like a round covering dome ... Thus there was natural covering for the loves of Zeus and his fairarmed bride as they mated there in the open hills, and there was the shape of a couch self-formed to serve their need ... [and after their lovemaking] Hypnos (Sleep) the servant of the Erotes (Loves) had charmed the eyes of Zeus ... Zeus slept delicately charmed among the flowers, holding his wife in his arms on that bed unseen." - Nonnus, Dionysiaca 32.95
"[Aphrodite to Pasithea:] ‘Dear girl, what trouble has changed your looks? ... Ah, I know why your cheeks are pale: shadowy Hypnos (Sleep), the vagabond, woos you as a bridegroom woos a maid! I will not compel you if you are unwilling; I will not join Hypnos the blackskin to Pasithea the lilywhite!" - Nonnus, Dionysiaca 33.4
"Zeus awoke on the peaks of Kaukasos and threw of the wing of Sleep (Hypnos),. He understood the beguiling trick of Hera the mischiefmaker when he saw the Seilenoi [of the army of Dionysos] in flight, when he saw the Bakkhante women hurrying in herds from the threeways and the walls, and behind them the Indian chieftain Deriades, cutting down Satyroi and mowing down women ... Then Zeus disclosed Hera’s mischievous contrivance, and reproached his deceitful consort with stinging words. And now indeed he would have imprisoned Hypnos (Sleep) in the darksome pit of gloom to dwell along with murky Iapetos, but for the prayers of Nyx (Night) the vanquisher of gods and men. So Zeus calmed his savage resentment with difficulty." - Nonnus, Dionysiaca 35.262
HYPNOS & THE BODY OF SARPEDON
"[Hera speaking to Zeus:] 'But after the soul and the years of his life have left him [Sarpedon], then send Thanatos (Peaceful Death) to carry him away, and Hypnos (Sleep), who is painless, until they come with him to the countryside of broad Lykia where his brothers and countrymen shall give him due burial with tomb and gravestone." - Homer, Iliad 16.453
"Then [Apollon] gave him [the body of Sarpedon] into the charge of swift messengers to carry him, of Hypnos and Thanatos, who are twin brothers, and these two presently laid him down within the rich countryside of broad Lykia." - Homer, Iliad 16.681
"But the highest god [Zeus], mighty with his thunderbolt, sent Hypnos and Thanatos from snowy Olympos to the fearless fighter Sarpedon [to carry off his body for burial]." - Greek Lyric IV Bacchylides, Frag 20E (from Oxyrhynchus Papyrus 2081)

N12.1 "The Body of Sarpedon"Athenian Red Figure Calyx Krater C6th BCNew York, Metropolitan Museum 1972.11.10
Detail: Hypnos and Thanatos, in the guise of warriors, carry off the body of Sarpedon from the battlefield of Troy, under the guidance of Hermes

N12.2 "The Body of Sarpedon"Athenian Red Figure C5th BC
Detail: Thanatos (bearded) and Hypnos (beardless) carry off the body of Sarpedon from the battlefields of Troy
THE LOVE OF HYPNOS FOR ENDYMION
Endymion was a handsome youth who fell in love with Hera or the moon-goddess Selene. As a consequence he was placed into a state of eternal slumber, becoming a constant companion of the Daimon Hypnos, Sleep.
"Likymnios of Khios says the Hypnos (Sleep) loves Endymion and does not close they eyes of his beloved boy even while he is asleep, but lulls him to rest with eyes wide open so that he may without interruption enjoy the pleasure of gazing at them. His words are ‘And Hypnos (Sleep), rejoicing in the rays of his eyes, would lull the boy to rest with eyes wide open." - Greek Lyric V Licymnius, Frag 771 (from Athenaeus, Scholars at Dinner)
HYPNOS & THE LOVES OF DIONYSOS
Hypnos (Sleep) was a friend of Dionysos the god of wine. He assisted the god in a number of his seductions.
"Slipping in the dust, she [Nikaia] was drawn unconsciously under the wing of Hypnos (Sleep) who was not far away." - Nonnus, Dionysiaca 16.260
"It was a stolen bridal [the rape by Dionysos of the sleeping Nymphe Nikaia], like bed in a dream with Hypnos (Sleep) for helper. The maiden lost her maidenhood, slumbering still; she saw Hypnos as marshal of the Erotes (Loves), and as servant of winedecieved nuptials." - Nonnus, Dionysiaca 16.281
"He [Dionysos in love] sorrowfully prayed to Hypnos (Sleep) and Eros (Love) and Aphrodite of the Evening [the star Venus], all at once, to let him see the same vision [of his love] once more, longing for the deceptive phantom of an embrace." - Nonnus, Dionysiaca 42.336
"[Ariadne abandoned on Naxos in her sleep by Theseus laments her fate:] ‘Give me again, Hypnos (Sleep), your empty boon, so pleasant; send me another delectable dream like that, so that I may know the sweet bed of love in a deceptive dream! Only linger upon my eyes, that I may know the unreal passion of married love in a dream!" - Nonnus, Dionysiaca 47.345
"The maiden [the virgin Aura] awoke ... [and] bold Hypnos (Sleep) she reproached more than all and threatening the Oneiros (Dream) [for sending her a prophetic dream in which she loses her virginity to Dionysos]." - Nonnus, Dionysiaca 48.264
"Iobakkhos [Dionysos] seeing her [Aura asleep] on the bare earth, plucking the Lethaean feather of bridal Hypnos (Sleep), he crept up noiseless, unshod, on tiptoe, and approached Aura where she lay without voice or hearing. With gentle hand he put away the girl’s neat quiver and hid the bow in a hole in the rock, that she might not shake off Hypnos' (Sleep's) wing and shoot him ... On the ground that hapless girl heavy with wine, unmoving, was wedded to Dionysos; Hypnos (Sleep) embraced the body of Aura with overshadowing wings, and he was marshal of the wedding for Bakkhos, for he also had experience of love, he is yokefellow of Selene (the Moon), he is companion of the Erotes (Loves) in nightly caresses." - Nonnus, Dionysiaca 48.621
HYPNOS SUMMONED BY THE WITCH MEDEA
"But as he [the Drakon Kolkhios] writhed he saw the maiden [Medea the witch] take her stand, and heard her in her sweet voice invoking Hypnos (Sleep), the conqueror of the gods, to charm him. She also called on the night-wandering Queen of the world below [Hekate] to countenance her efforts ... the giant snake, enchanted by her song, was soon relaxing ... Medea, chanting a spell, dipped a fresh sprig of juniper in her brew and sprinkled his eyes with her most potent drug; and as the all-pervading magic scent spread round his head, sleep fell on him." - Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica 4.146
"The Colchian [witch Medea] had stretched upward to the stars her hands that bare the wand, and pouring forth spells in barbaric rhythm was calling to thee, O father Somus (Sleep): ‘All powerful Somnus, from all the quarters of the world do I the maid of Colchis summon thee and bid thee descend upon the Dracon [that guarded the golden fleece] alone; oft with thy horn [pouring sleep] have I subdued waves and clouds and lightning brands and all that gleams in heaven; but now, now come to my aid with mightier influence, most like thy brother Letus (Death) ... ’ He [the Dracon] brooks not to leave the Aeolian gold through weariness nor to surrender his eyes, fain though he be, to permitted slumber; and when the first wafting of drowse assailed him, he shuddered and shook off from his body the beguiling sleep. But on her side the Colchian ceases not to foam with hellish poisons and to sprinkle all the silences of Lethe’s (Forgetfulness’) bough: exerting her spells she constrains his reluctant eyes, exhausting all her Stygian power of hand and tongue, until sleep gains the mastery over his blazing ire. And now the high crest sinks, now the head is nodding overpowered and the huge neck has slipped from around the fleece it guarded." - Valerius Flaccus, Argonautica 8.67
CULT & IMAGES OF HYPNOS
"[In Sikyon, Southern Greece there is] a sanctuary of Asklepios. On passing into the enclosure you see on the left a building with two rooms. In the outer room lies a figure of Hypnos (Sleep), of which nothing remains now except the head. The inner room is given over to the Apollon Karneios; into it none may enter except the priests. In the portico lies a huge bone of a sea-monster, and after it an image of Oneiros (Dream) and Hypnos (Sleep), surnamed Epidotes (Bountiful), lulling to sleep a lion [NB the healing god Asklepios was believed to visit supplicants to the shrine in their dreams]." - Pausanias, Guide to Greece 2.10.2
"Not far from the Mousai’s hall [at Troizenos, Argos] is an old altar, which also, according to report, was dedicated by Ardalos. Upon it they sacrifice to the Mousai and to Hypnos (Sleep), saying that Hypnos is the god that is dearest to the Mousai." - Pausanias, Guide to Greece 2.31.3
"[There is at Troizenos, Argos] an ancient altar ... they sacrifice on it to Hypnos and the Mousai; who they say are particular friends." - Pausanias, Guide to Greece 2.31.5
"Near the statues of Pausanias [beside the temple of Athena of the Bronze House] is an image of Aphrodite Ambologera (Postponer of Old Age), which was set up in accordance with an oracle; there are also images of Hypnos (Sleep) and of Thanatos (Death). They think them brothers, in accordance with the verses in the Iliad." - Pausanias, Guide to Greece 3.18.1

Sources:
Homer, The Iliad - Greek Epic C9th-8th BC
Hesiod, Theogony - Greek Epic C8th-7th BC
Greek Lyric IV Bacchylides, Fragments - Greek Lyric C5th BC
Greek Lyric V Licymnius, Fragments - Greek Lyric BC
Greek Lyric V Anonymous, Fragments - Greek Lyric BC
Apollonius Rhodius, The Argonautica - Greek Epic C3rd BC
The Orphic Hymns - Greek Hymns BC
Quintus Smyrnaeus, Fall of Troy - Greek Epic C4th AD
Pausanias, Guide to Greece - Greek Geography C2nd AD
Philostratus the Elder, Imagines - Greek Art History C3rd AD
Hyginus, Fabulae - Latin Mythography C2nd AD
Virgil, Aeneid - Latin Epic C1st BC
Ovid, Metamorphoses - Latin Epic C1st BC - C1st AD
Cicero, De Natura Deorum - Latin Philosophy C1st BC
Valerius Flaccus, The Argonautica - Latin Epic C1st AD
Statius, Thebaid - Latin Epic C1st AD
Statius, Achilleid - Latin Epic C1st AD
Statius, Silvae - Latin Epic C1st AD
Colluthus, The Rape of Helen - Greek Epic C5th-6th AD
Nonnos, Dionysiaca - Greek Epic C5th AD








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Greek Mythology Link




Greek Mythology Link - by Carlos Parada, author of Genealogical Guide to Greek Mythology


Hypnos


Hypnos

"... whenever in his imagination a man sees delights, straightaway the vision, slipping through his arms, is gone, winging its flight along the paths of Sleep." [Argive Elders. Aeschylus, Agamemnon 420]
"... almighty Sleep releases the fettered sleeper, and does not hold him in a perpetual grasp." [Ajax 1. Sophocles, Ajax 675]
"What presumption of man, can match your power, Zeus, who are no subject to Sleep or Time or Age, living forever in bright Olympus?" [Theban Elders. Sophocles, Antigone 605]
"Divine Sleep, god who knows no pain, Sleep, stranger to anguish, come in favor to us, come happy, and giving happiness, great King! ... come with power to heal!" [Sailors of Neoptolemus' crew. Sophocles, Philoctetes 830]
"O Sleep, rest of all things, mildest of the gods, balm of the soul ..." [Iris 1 to Hypnos. Ovid, Metamorphoses 1.623]
"Sleep is a death, O make me tryBy sleeping, what it is to die,And as gently lay my headOn my grave, as now my bed." [Sir Thomas Browne 1605-82, Religio Medici II.12]
Sancho: "...sólo entiendo que en tanto que duermo, ni tengo temor, ni esperanza, ni trabajo, ni gloria; y bien haya el que inventó el sueño, capa que cubre todos los humanos pensamientos, manjar que quita la hambre, agua que ahuyenta la sed, fuego que calienta el frío, frío que templa el ardor, y, finalmente, moneda general con que todas las cosas se compran, balanza y peso que iguala al pastor con el rey y al simple con el discreto. Sola una cosa tiene mala el sueño según he oído decir, y es que se parece a la muerte, pues de un dormido a un muerto hay muy poca diferencia."
[Miguel de Cervantes, Don Quijote de la Mancha, Segunda Parte, Capítulo LXVIII]
Sancho: "... but this I very well know, that while I am asleep, I feel neither hope nor despair; I am free from pain and insensible of glory. Now blessings light on him that first invented this same sleep: it covers a man all over, thoughts and all, like a cloak; it is meat for the hungry, drink for the thirsty, heat for the cold, and cold for the hot. It is the current coin that purchases all the pleasures of the world cheap; and the balance that sets the king and the shepherd, the fool and the wise man even. There is only one thing, which somebody once put into my head, that I dislike in sleep; it is that it resembles death; there is very little difference between a man in his first sleep, and a man in his last sleep."
[Miguel de Cervantes, Don Quixote, Part II, Chapter LXVIII]
Hypnos, who some say is the god that is dearest to the MUSES, is Sleep and Dream. He is the younger brother of Thanatos (Death), and Nyx (Night) is the nurse of both.
Sleep resembles Death
It has been ordained that Hypnos and Thanatos should have all things in common. Hypnos, the younger, imitates the other in everything. He had been surnamed 'the Bountiful', for this is the god who puts cares to flight, and soothes the bodies of both mortals and immortals. He can fashion shapes that seem to be true forms, and in his art he receives help from his sons.
The abode of Hypnos
Hypnos, they say, has his abode within a hollow mountain in Cimmeria, which is to the north of the Black Sea. In this place, silence and twilight shadows reign, and from the bottom of the cave there flows the stream of Lethe (Oblivion), whose murmuring waves invite to slumber. Before the entrance, where poppies bloom, there are also countless herbs which cause somnolence. Hypnos himself lies with heavy eyelids on a high couch of ebony in the cavern's central space, surrounded by empty dream-shapes, which mimick many forms.
Sons of Hypnos
Morpheus is a cunning imitator of the human form, skilled in representing the features and the speech of men in dreams, as well as the clothing and the accustomed words of each he represents. Phobetor is the one who represents the forms of beasts, or birds, or serpents, in men's dreams; and Phantasus is in charge of putting deceptive shapes of earth, rocks, water, trees, or other lifeless things in the dreams of men.
Hypnos' wife
Hera promised Hypnos to give him Pasithea 2 (one of the CHARITES) as a bride if he would help her to let Zeus fall asleep. This he did in spite of his fears; for once before he performed a similar task, also at Hera's request. But Zeus woke up in anger and sought Hypnos everywhere, and the god would have hurled him from heaven into the deep, had Nyx not saved him. For also Nyx is a powefurl goddess, who prevails over both gods and men.
Iris 1 asks for service
Also Iris 1 came to Hypnos, sent by Hera, to ask him fashion a shape resembling Ceyx, which appearing before Ceyx's wife Alcyone 2, whould inform her of her husband's death.
Oniros
Oniros
But Oniros (Dream), child of Nyx, comes also to men in their sleep through any of the two Gates of Sleep. Through the Gate of Horn come forth those dreams which bring true issues to pass, but through the Gate of Ivory come those dreams which deceive men, bringing words that find no fulfilment.
So when for example, Zeus wished to vindicate Achilles for what King Agamemnon had done to him, he decided to send Agamemnon a false dream in the shape of Nestor, the king's trusted councillor, so that Agamemnon would believe that the hour of victory was at hand, and that he would soon take the city of Troy, which was utterly false.


Oniros (Dream), in the likeness of Nestor, visits Agamemnon in his sleep.
Family
Parentage [two versions]
Mates
Offspring
Notes
Nyx.-
(By herself)
Erebus & Nyx
Erebus is the Darkness of the Underworld.
Pasithea 2
Morpheus
Phobetor
Phantasus
Pasithea 2 is the elder of the CHARITES.

SourcesAbbreviations
Col.366; Hes.The.213; Hom.Il.14.231, 14.265ff.; Hyg.Pre; Nonn.2.237, 14.88, 16.261, 16.282, 16.284; Ov.Met.11.635; Pau.9.35.4; QS.5.403; Stat.Theb.5.199; Val.8.70.

Hypnos in GROUPS
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HEAD OF HYPNOS (Hypnos in the British Museum) + text



THE LAWRENCE OF ARABIA FACTFILE
T. E. Lawrence
Centenary Exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery, London, 1988-9
click on an image to move forward through the exhibition, or use the links at the foot of the page


39. HEAD OF HYPNOS
Replica of Greco-Roman sculpture
(4th century BC)
Lawrence returned to England form his 1909 walking tour in Syria on board the RMS Ottoway. He was by this time keenly interested in classical and medieval sculpture, and when the ship called in at Naples he took the opportunity to see the bronze collection in the National Museum. Afterwards he visited a local foundry which produced replicas. Most were too expensive, but he managed to buy a slightly imperfect cast of Hypnos, the god of sleep. It was a freehand copy of the Hypnos in the British Museum, itself a Roman copy of a Greek work dating from the fourth century BC.
Lawrence took the bronze back to Oxford and gave it a place of honour in the bay window of his study in the bungalow. He later wrote: 'I would rather possess a fine piece of sculpture than anything in the world.'1
The whereabouts of Lawrence’s copy is unrecorded.
British Museum Shop (by courtesy of the Trustees)
1. T. E. Lawrence to his family, 16.3.1916, HL p. 315.
33 x 39 x 21.5
Contents Section list Previous Next Factfile
From the catalogue to the T. E. Lawrence Centenary Exhibitionheld at the National Portrait Gallery, London, 1988-9Printed edition (National Portrait Gallery Publications, 1988) Copyright © N. Helari Ltd 1988Web edition Copyright © J & N Wilson 1998About this site: copyright, privacy, contact http://www.telawrence.info/



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