He plays to him on his lyre.
Hera kidnapped Io and left Argus as the watchmen. Zeus ordered Hermes to rescues Io and the only way to do it is by killing Argus.
Most fiction now depicts vampires burning up in sunlight, either slowly or instantly, and sunlight is always lethal. However, this was started in 1922 in the German movie Nosferatu. In the original folklore and stories of vampires, sunlight did not kill a vampire. In fact they did not really fear the sun. It was, at best, an inconvenience. Bats come out at night, and sleep during the day, does sunlight kill them? Same as vampires, they were just nocturnal creatures, and came out at night. It was a fear thing as part of the myths. Arabian vampires came out during the day and slept at night, but see, deserts were more feared during the day, where the heat could kill you in a few hours. Any fear in the folklore that vampires had of the sun, was because this was when they were most vulnerable to death. They were asleep. Try using a hammer and a stake to kill a vampire that is awake and moving, they move so fast, are so strong, can turn into mist, shapeshift, control your mind, it was impossible to do. But when they were asleep, you could stake it in the heart, no fight. In fact the old folklore, the only way to kill a vampire was not as take, that only stopped it from moving, you had to take off its arms and legs, and burn the entire thing to actually kill it. Bram Stokers Dracula, he did not die in sunlight either. He was weaker in sunlight, did not have access to all of his abilities, but he could move freely in sunlight and not die. The fear of the sun we see in fiction now is just a modern interpretation, a modern trope added to vampires. Original vampires had little to fear of the sun, it was the fear of sleeping, being able to be killed, during this time.
No, they can only kill during a full moon when they are transformed into a werewolf. Unless they are a serial killer. Then they can kill whenever they please.
something bad
kill yourself
He plays to him on his lyre.
He plays to him on his lyre.
Argus
Zeus had commanded the god Hermes to kill Argus, who was guarding Io.
Hera kidnapped Io and left Argus as the watchmen. Zeus ordered Hermes to rescues Io and the only way to do it is by killing Argus.
He tried to lull the him to sleep disguised a a shepherd, but when that didn't work he started talking in a really monotonous voice and it was so boring that he fell asleep. Then Hermes chopped off his head and had it for dinner.
Argus Panoptes is killed by Hermes while guarding Zeus' love Io so he does not cheat on Hera. Zeus sends Hermes to kill Argus and retrive Io. Later Hera takes Argus' eyes and in honor of him adds them to her favorite bird, the peacock.
Usually he does not need one. On one occasion, though, he used a sword to kill Argus.
Hera favoured her servant Argos, so when Zeus had Hermes kill Argos, Hera was moved by compassion and transformed the dying Argos into a Peacock. The shapes on the Peacock's many tail feathers were remind Hera of her loyal servant, the Peacock later became a holy symbol to Hera
because they liked the taste of them.
parents cant protect their kids in their dreams (unless they fall asleep next to them) so freddy loves to kill their
you did not kill him?