The Most Pleasant and Delectable Tale of the Cupid and Psyche
By Apuleius and Dorothy Mullock
()
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The Most Pleasant and Delectable Tale of the Cupid and Psyche is a classic from The Golden Ass, complete with illustrations.
Apuleius
Apuleius (124 – AD 170), also credited as Apuleius of Madaurensis was a prose writer and philosopher formally educated at Carthage, Athens and Rome. He studied the works of Plato as well as religion, becoming inundated with several cults. He was fascinated by the mystical arts, which led to public criticism and a charge of sorcery. Apuleius was eventually acquitted but his interest in magic continued to influence his writing. His most notable achievement is the novel, The Golden Ass, also known as the Metamorphoses of Apuleius, which highlights the dangers of spells and the supernatural.
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The Most Pleasant and Delectable Tale of the Cupid and Psyche - Apuleius
THE MOST PLEASANT AND DELECTABLE TALE OF THE CUPID AND PSYCHE
………………
Apuleius
Translated by William Adlington
PAPHOS PUBLISHERS
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This book is a work of fiction; its contents are wholly imagined.
All rights reserved. Aside from brief quotations for media coverage and reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced or distributed in any form without the author’s permission. Thank you for supporting authors and a diverse, creative culture by purchasing this book and complying with copyright laws.
Copyright © 2015 by Apuleius
Interior design by Pronoun
Distribution by Pronoun
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introductory Note
Cupid and Psyche
Part I
Part II
Part III.
Part IV.
Part V
Part VI.
Part VII.
Part VIII
THE MOST PLEASANT AND DELECTABLE Tale of the Cupid and Psyche
By Apuleius
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]
C:\Users\User\OneDrive\Documents\pentacene - ivan\gutenberg books\01 the most pleasant and delectable tale of the marriage of cupid and psyche_files\02.jpgPsyche Carried to Heaven
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 of Adlington’s version. It would be out of place to deal with the matter at any length here; but the salient points may be indicated. Whilst the tale as a whole is essentially Greek in its delicacy and charm, nor can a like sequence of incidents be found elsewhere, it has been compounded of elements which are of great antiquity and often bear the stamp of a primitive age. Chief amongst these are: (1) the mysterious husband; (2) the forbidden privilege; (3) the impossible tasks; and (4) the helpful beasts.
(1) The most familiar type of the Mysterious Husband appears in the tale of Beauty and the Beast, in which a maiden is wedded to a serpent or some horrible monster, who afterwards proves to be a prince bewitched. It is clear from the hints and suggestions of Psyche’s sisters that the legend may originally have contained this element, or at least that it was known to those who told the tale. But in the Greek story, Cupid’s concealment is assigned to a more natural cause—a desire to hide his love from Aphrodite, his offended mother.
(2) In many of the tales of this type, the bride is forbidden to see her husband, or to ask his name; sometimes when the bride is one of a superior race, such as a fairy, the husband is not to see her at certain seasons, or unclad, or to mention a particular word or name in her presence, or to speak words of reproach to her. The incident of the burning lamp is almost exactly reproduced in East of the Sun and West of the Moon, where the husband is a White Bear by day, and only resumes his true shape at night. These incidents are really part of a larger subject, which includes prohibitions of all sorts, particularly (as in Bluebeard) the Forbidden Room; and they seem to embody to some extent a test of obedience and a moral lesson. Strange enough they may seem to the reader, yet there is no doubt that they represent social customs which once existed. The classical student will remember how the Spartan bridegroom for some time was not allowed to visit his wife except by stealth. Indeed such customs do still exist amongst savages, who often impose the strictest etiquette upon new-married couples. In some parts Africa, a bridegroom often is not allowed to see his bride at all, or not during the day; and similar restrictions are