that take advice from from the people who had the experience
Epaphos, prince of Egypt according to Ovid. However, Phaethon was the son of Helios - not Apollo.
he will leave the kindom
It was not the son of Apollo, but of Helios whose name was Phaethon.
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Epaphos, prince of Egypt according to Ovid. However, Phaethon was the son of Helios - not Apollo.
Phaethon
clymene is a goddess. She is the wife to Apollo, and the mother to Phaethon.
Phaethon was not a god, but a demigod. In some myths he is the son of Helios and Klymene, in some the son of Apollo and Clymene. I would say Apollo, because three of five sources I looked at said Apollo.
he will leave the kindom
It was not the son of Apollo, but of Helios whose name was Phaethon.
Epaphos, prince of Egypt according to Ovid. However, Phaethon was the son of Helios - not Apollo.
Boasting usually doesn't lead to good things
Clymene was the lover of Helios who had Phaethôn: Apollo is sometimes said to be the father of Phaethon, though this is a misunderstanding of Greek and Roman Mythology.
The falling action in the story of Phaethon occurs when the young boy loses control of the sun chariot and careens out of control towards the earth, resulting in chaos and destruction. This leads to the climax of the story where Zeus strikes Phaethon down with a thunderbolt to save the world.
Niobe (woman/rock with 14 children all killed by Artemis and Apollo) and Phaethon's sisters (Phaethon died) are all supposed to cry a lot. Pretty much constantly.
One moral lesson in the story of Apollo and Cassandra is the consequences of not being believed when speaking the truth. Cassandra's curse of never being believed despite being truthful teaches us about the importance of being honest and the ramifications of ignoring warning signs or advice. Additionally, the story highlights the theme of divine punishment for arrogance and disrespect towards the gods.