Amalthea (Ἀμάλθεια) (Amáltheia) was known as a nymph in Greek myths and legends. Also, she was represented as a goat.
Helios and Tethys were Amalthea's parents.
She fed baby Zeus with goat's milk.
Amalthea had a cornucopia.
Amalthea (Ἀμάλθεια) (Amáltheia) was known as a nymph in Greek myths and legends. Also, she was represented as a goat.
Helios and Tethys were Amalthea's parents.
She fed baby Zeus with goat's milk.
Amalthea had a cornucopia.
Hello to everyone who is reading these lines now. This is Sophie speaking, I think you remember me. I want to share with you an incident that I overheard in a café.
"Mom, are we going to live in another village soon?" some girl asked her mother.
"Yes, tomorrow we will go there by train" the woman answered.
"I hope it will be much better these than here." the girl said.
"I hope so, too" the mother said.
I hear this lot. Supposedly, other places are paradise. But I'm skeptical. It's just that I've been a tourist in a few places before, and expectations and reality don't always match.
I said what I thought.
Source of image:
https://www.shutterstock.com/ru/image-vector/mother-daughter-sitting-table-cafe-on-593851058?trackingId=d687df9a-6c8b-4a5f-a289-761e73108c69&listId=searchResults
Cubism is an art movement. It appeared at the beginning of the XX century.
Cubism is found in painting, literature, architecture, and sculpture.
Pablo Picasso painted some of his paints in this style.
Modernism, surrealism, avant-garde have something in common with Cubism.
Source of image:
https://www.shutterstock.com/ru/image-vector/set-abstract-face-portraits-shapes-doodle-2484618193?trackingId=380d1375-a2be-4753-848c-eabb3bb993b0&listId=searchResults
Urania (Οὐρανία) (Ouranía) was the Muse of astronomy in Greek mythology. The globe was the symbol of this goddess.
Zeus was her father and Mnemosyne was Urania's mother.
Also, she had several siblings: Polyhymnia, Euterpe, Calliope, Clio, Erato, Thalia, and etc.
Apollo (Ἀπόλλων) (Apollōn), Hermes (Ἑρμῆς), and Amphimarus (Ἀμφίμαρος) were Urania's husbands.
Linus (Λῖνος) (Linos) and Hymen (Ὑμήν) (Humḗn) were their sons.