He was not a god. Orpheus was a mortal who went to the Underworld to find his wife. He played so sweetly on his lyre that Hades let him take his wife if he didn't turn around on the way there. He turned around and lost her forever.
After Eurydice ran into the nest of snakes and was fatally bit on the heel, Orpheus did try to retrieve her. Going to the underworld he played his music to Hades and Perephone. They allowed them to both return to earth under the condition that he would walk in front of her and not look back til they left the underworld. But on their way to the surface, Orpheus did look back out of anxiety and she disappeared forever.
Aeneas; and by the way, this isn't a 'greek myth' question. This is a latin hero.
Well in Greek Mythology the underworld was one most darkest places with Hades ruling it. But there was multiple ways of finding a loophole in that system. For example bribing the ferryman Charon. The way Orpheus did it was that he sung a lyre (greek musical instrument) and found an underground passage and kept singing the entire way. His singing calmed even the beast Cerberus and the monsters.
Eurydice was the wife of Orpheus, a wonderful musician. She was killed by a bite from a snake. Orpheus loved her so that he went to Tartarus to get her back. He made it there and Queen Persephone loved his music so much, that she talked her husband, Hades, into letting Orpheus have Eurydice back. Hades consented but told Orpheus if he looked back on his way home, Eurydice would be lost forever. He made it almost all of the way back to his house, but heard something behind him, and turned. Eurydice merly faded away, like a ghost.
Orpheus looked back because he doubted that Eurydice was following him as they made their way out of the Underworld, despite being told not to. This act of doubt and lack of faith in the instructions given to him ultimately led to him losing Eurydice forever.
He was not a god. Orpheus was a mortal who went to the Underworld to find his wife. He played so sweetly on his lyre that Hades let him take his wife if he didn't turn around on the way there. He turned around and lost her forever.
Persephone made a deal with Orpheus to allow him to bring his wife, Eurydice, back from the underworld on the condition that he not look back at her until they were both safely back in the world of the living. However, Orpheus broke this condition, causing Eurydice to be lost to him forever.
After Eurydice ran into the nest of snakes and was fatally bit on the heel, Orpheus did try to retrieve her. Going to the underworld he played his music to Hades and Perephone. They allowed them to both return to earth under the condition that he would walk in front of her and not look back til they left the underworld. But on their way to the surface, Orpheus did look back out of anxiety and she disappeared forever.
Aeneas; and by the way, this isn't a 'greek myth' question. This is a latin hero.
Well in Greek Mythology the underworld was one most darkest places with Hades ruling it. But there was multiple ways of finding a loophole in that system. For example bribing the ferryman Charon. The way Orpheus did it was that he sung a lyre (greek musical instrument) and found an underground passage and kept singing the entire way. His singing calmed even the beast Cerberus and the monsters.
Eurydice was the wife of Orpheus, a wonderful musician. She was killed by a bite from a snake. Orpheus loved her so that he went to Tartarus to get her back. He made it there and Queen Persephone loved his music so much, that she talked her husband, Hades, into letting Orpheus have Eurydice back. Hades consented but told Orpheus if he looked back on his way home, Eurydice would be lost forever. He made it almost all of the way back to his house, but heard something behind him, and turned. Eurydice merly faded away, like a ghost.
Orpheus is a great musician who is going to marry this girl, Eurydice, but she gets bitten by a snake and dies! So he goes to the underworld to get her by playing his music which was irresistible, not even Hades could refuse him. He makes a deal with Hades which is he can have her but when they are leaving he mustn't look back at her until they are out of the Underworld. He agrees and they start venturing back. Once he gets into broad daylight he looks back and she is still in the dark. She said farewell and it was over. He was forbidden to go to the Underworld unless he was actually dead. On his way back to his home to weep, he was playing his lyre, until people ran out and ripped him limb to limb.
Sisyphus asked to be returned from the underworld to earth because he wanted to see his wife and punish her for not showing him proper funeral rites. He also didn't want to accept his fate of eternal punishment in the underworld and sought a way to defy the gods.
no noone has a pic of orpheus fisherps by the way wot is ur name just search up on google images orpheus fisherps have u heard of a game online called runescape
He didn't, actually. When Eurydice had died of a snake bite, Orpheus, beside himself with grief, decided to travel to the underworld to try and get her back. He sang and played his way past Cerberus and Charon and finally stood before Hades and Persephone. At first Hades staunchly refused to let Eurydice return to land of the living, but then Orpheus sang of his love and loss so beautifully that even the god of the dead was moved. He summoned Eurydice's spirit and told Orpheus that she would follow up to the world of day and be his living wife again. However, if he looked back at her before they stood in the sunlight together, she would vanish back into the underworld and no new pleas would convince Hades to release her again. Orpheus, however, was unable to keep from making sure that she was truly following him, looked back too soon and lost her again. After his death he was reunited with her and together they dwelt forever in the gardens of Elysium, the ancient Greek version of paradise.
A Way to the Underworld - 1913 was released on: USA: 28 March 1913