Definition of Orphius
Orpheus, in the Greek mythology son of Apollo and the Muse Calliopë,
famed for his skill on the lyre, from which the strains were such as not
only calmed and swayed the rude soul of nature, but persuaded even the
inexorable Pluto to relent; for one day when his wife Eurydice was taken
away from him, he descended with his lyre to the lower world and
prevailed on the nether king by the spell he wielded to allow her to
accompany him back, but on the condition that he must not, as she
followed him, turn round and look; this condition he failed to fulfil,
and he lost her again, but this time for ever; whereupon, as the story
goes, he gave himself up to unappeasable lamentings, which attracted
round him a crowd of upbraiding Mænades, who in their indignation took up
stones to stone him and mangled him to death, only his lyre as it floated
down the river seaward kept sounding "Eurydice! Eurydice!" till it was
caught up by Zeus and placed in memorial of him among the stars of the
sky.
- Wikipedia
Or"phe*us (?), n. [L. Orpheus,
Gr. &?;.] (Gr. Myth.) The famous mythic Thracian poet,
son of the Muse Calliope, and husband of Eurydice. He is reputed to
have had power to entrance beasts and inanimate objects by the music
of his lyre.
- Webster's Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
- A Thracian musician and poet; failed to retrieve his wife from Hades
- The Nuttall Encyclopedia
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