While Selene was driving her milky horses across the sky one evening, her soft gaze fell on the shepherd Endymion. He was taking a nap among all his sheep, and he was one of those guys that is just SOOO cute when he's asleep. So Selene got this huge crush on him. She couldn't get him out of her head. That night Selene went to Zeus and asked if Endymion could be granted eternal youth and eternal life. She remembered her sister Eos' bad luck with mortal's and eternal life, and had no wish to be left with a grasshopper. Zeus granted Selene's wish, and Endymion slept on for eternity, smiling in his sleep. And no wonder. He dreamed that he held the moon in his arms, but it was more than a dream, because Selene bore fifty daughters to Endymion - all beautiful, pale, and sleepy.
Midas was never a greek god. He was a friend of Dionysus who was granted a wish. His name is the same in Roman and Greek mythology.
Ariadne is the immortal wife of Dionysos; her name means "Most Holy". She was considered to be a goddess by some but merely a companion for Dionysus by others. Now her name connotated her position as, "the lady of the labrynth." This implied numerous things including the fact that she may have been considered a lady of the intertwined (weaving). This has led some scholars to believe she was granted divinity over weaving.
Long ago, there was a royal wedding in Olympus, home of the gods. Weddings up there were held in the highest honor, and to not be invited meant that you were not considered important. Now, basically everyone in Olympus was invited to this wedding, except one-- Eris, the goddess of discord... because really, do you want the goddess of discord at a happy place like a wedding? Anyway, Eris was not pleased when she discovered this, so she decided to get revenge on the partygoers. Around the time of the party after the wedding, she snuck in and tossed a golden apple into the middle of the festivities labled "For the Fairest". At a mortal wedding, many people would politely assume that this apple was meant for the bride. However, this was a royal, godly wedding, so the three most beautiful goddess immediately leapt for the apple -- Athena, goddess of wisdom; Hera, goddess of marriage; and Aphrodite, goddess of love and lust. They first turned to Zeus to decide which one of them was the fairest. However, Zeus did not wish to be scorned by any of them, so he quickly turned the task over to a poor, innocent mortal by the name of Paris. Each of the goddesses bribed the young man -- Athena said that if he chose her, he would have all the wisdom in the world. Hera offered to give him all the land in the world if she was chosen. And Aphrodite made the final offer -- the most beautiful woman in the world. Naturally, being a very foolish young man, he chose Aphrodite's offer and was thus granted Helen of Sparta. When Helen was abducted from her home and taken to Troy (Paris' homeland) her father, the king of Sparta, grew furious and started the Trojan war.
According to Greek myth, Cassandra was a mortal. She was the daughter of King Priam and Queen Hecuba of Troy. The god Apollo fell in love with her and granted her the gift of prophecy. When she did not return his love, since he could not take back the gift, he placed a curse on her so that no one would ever believe her prophecies. In some versions, this drove her mad.
In Greek mythology, Arachne was a talented weaver who challenged the goddess Athena to a weaving contest and ultimately won. Angered by her arrogance, Athena turned Arachne into a spider as punishment, allowing her to continue weaving beautiful tapestries but forever as a spider.
In Greek mythology, Tiresias was blinded by the goddess Athena as a punishment for seeing her bathing. Tiresias was later granted the gift of prophecy by the gods to compensate for his loss of sight.
Dionysus
Midas
Aurora - the goddess of the Dawn - begged Jove to grant her mortal lover Tithonus the gift of eternal life. Jove granted the request, but Aurora had not asked for the gift of eternal youth. Tithonus got older and older, but could never die: weak, crippled, and blind his life became a painful burden to him. Tennyson's poem reminds us that the gift of youth is for the young alone, and that this is how it has always been, and even how it should be.
A goddess comes to him and grants him a child because he begged for a child to that goddess for many times
She helped slay a Minotaur and was granted immortality by Artemis.
While Selene was driving her milky horses across the sky one evening, her soft gaze fell on the shepherd Endymion. He was taking a nap among all his sheep, and he was one of those guys that is just SOOO cute when he's asleep. So Selene got this huge crush on him. She couldn't get him out of her head. That night Selene went to Zeus and asked if Endymion could be granted eternal youth and eternal life. She remembered her sister Eos' bad luck with mortal's and eternal life, and had no wish to be left with a grasshopper. Zeus granted Selene's wish, and Endymion slept on for eternity, smiling in his sleep. And no wonder. He dreamed that he held the moon in his arms, but it was more than a dream, because Selene bore fifty daughters to Endymion - all beautiful, pale, and sleepy.
Midas was never a greek god. He was a friend of Dionysus who was granted a wish. His name is the same in Roman and Greek mythology.
Artemis was the goddess of the hunt and moon.Selene was Titan moon-goddess before her.Phoebe was the first Titan moon goddess.Pan was the god of shepherds and flocks, of mountain wilds, hunting, and rustic music.There is no male god of the moon, however Endymion when Selene fell in love with him and granted him a eternal sleep in which he was forever youthful, was associated then remotely with Selene (Moon) for though he was mortal he would not die so long as he slept.
Belief in Jesus Christ and acceptance of his sacrifice for our sins are what excuses us from eternal punishment. Christians believe that through faith in Jesus, our sins are forgiven and we are granted eternal life.
She drank a magical elixir that granted her eternal youth.