See also: Hephaestus

English edit

 
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Proper noun edit

Hephæstus

  1. Archaic spelling of Hephaestus.
    • 1865, Homer, translated by Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby, Iliad, volume 1, page viii:
      I have adopted, not without hesitation, the Latin, rather than the Greek, nomenclature for the Heathen Deities. I have been induced to do so from the manifest incongruity of confounding the two; and from the fact that though English readers may be familiar with the names of Zeus, or Aphrodite, or even Poseidon, those of Hera, or Ares, or Hephæstus, or Leto, would hardly convey to them a definite signification.
    • 1921, Padraic Colum, The Golden Fleece and the Heroes who Lived before Achilles, The Macmillan company, page 83:
      Then Zeus called upon the artisan of the gods, lame Hephæstus, and he commanded him to make a being out of clay that would have the likeness of a lovely maiden. [] All strove to add a grace or a beauty to the work of Hephæstus.
    • 1930, B. Z. Goldberg, The Sacred Fire: The Story of Sex in Religion, Forgotten Books, published 2008, →ISBN, page 41, →ISBN:
      There was chaste Artemis, athletic goddess of the hunt; Hermes with his winged feet, fleet messenger of the gods; and the swart and limping Hephæstus, their mechanic, hammering out the heavy armors on his smoky forge.

Derived terms edit

References edit

  • Hephæstus” listed in the Oxford English Dictionary, second edition (1989)