Four;
As the goddess of love and beauty, Venus was extremely angry when her worshipers turned from her temples to visit the beautiful mortal, Psyche. She planned firstly to make her son, Cupid, cause her to fall madly in love with the most vile and despicable creature on Earth. However, this plan did not work, as Cupid fell in love with Psyche himself. After a plot that Cupid arranged, they were married, although Psyche did not know that her mysterious husband was Cupid, the god of love- she never really saw him. However, as she was visited by her jealous sisters, they told her that she should check out who her husband truly was. She held up a lamp, and recognized his real identity, but he fled after having hot oil dropped on him. Cupid went to his mother's chamber to have his wound cared for. She was infuriated- and decided to show Psyche what happens when she displeases a goddess. Psyche, after fruitlessly praying to the other gods who would not help her, chose to offer herself as a servant to Venus to soften her displeasure. Venus' next plan was to make Psyche do a series of four 'impossible' tasks. Firstly, Psyche had to sort wheat, poppy, and millet seeds. Secondly, she had to fetch golden fleece from fierce sheep. Thirdly, she had to get a flask of water from the River Styx. Lastly, she had to get 'beauty' from Proserpine in the Underworld. She succeeded in all of these tasks, to Venus' frustration, with the help of ants, a little green reed, an eagle, and a tower, respectively. Finally, after that, Psyche (who had fallen asleep after opening the box of beauty) was awaken by Cupid. He went to Jupiter to formally marry Psyche, and she had immortality bestowed upon her. That was the end of the evil plans of Venus toward Psyche; as she had no objection to having a goddess as a daughter-in-law, and with Psyche out of the way, so to speak, she would no longer interfere with Venus' worshipers on Earth.
Aphrodite made Psyche get the gloden fleece in the tasks so to win her consent as mother in law (basically)
Pulleys reduce the force required to lift heavy objects.
Given that the punishments of wicked and evil people fell into his realm when they died, and he gave them often impossible tasks to complete, I would say he was.
Task 1: Sort the SeedsSome ants came by and offered to help Psyche sort the mixed seeds into individual piles.Task 2: Get the Golden FleeceA little green reed offered her the information she needed: wait until the sheep sleep or leave and collect it from the bushes near where they were grazing.Task 3: Get the Water From the River StyxAn eagle carries a jug and brings her the water.Task 4: Get the Beauty From ProserpineA tower gives her directions in the Underworld and tells her to bring a penny for Charon, and a cake for Cerberus.
Venus asks Psyche to perform impossible tasks to keep her away from her son, Cupid. She hopes that Psyche will fail and be punished.
Psyche had to perform three tasks for Cupid, the god of love and desire, as instructed by Venus, Cupid's mother. These tasks were given to test Psyche's love for Cupid and included sorting a pile of mixed grains, fetching a vial of water from the River Styx, and retrieving a box of beauty ointment from the underworld.
shocked/outbeaten
Psyche didn't exactly have many strengths aside from her beauty. In all of her tasks given to her by Venus, she had assistance.
From the myth 'Cupid and Psyche', the tasks that Venus made her perform in order were as follows:Sort the seedsGet the fleeceGet the water from the River StyxGet the beauty from Proserpine
Psyche angered Venus because mortals believed that she was more beautiful than even she. Venus' temples were abandoned, and all the honors that were once hers were given to a mortal girl. Venus was also angered because Psyche kept succeeding in her tasks.
To test her persistence and energy
Nobody was all the time. When Psyche undertakes the tasks given her by Venus, she gets help from the ants, and a river god, etcetera.
She did not, even though she married Cupid.
Venus tasked Psyche with sorting a heap of mixed grains, filling a flask with water from the River Styx, and collecting fleece from golden sheep. Each task was impossible to complete without divine intervention.
The five important events in the myth of Cupid and Psyche are: Psyche's marriage to an unseen lover (Cupid); her disobedience leading to Cupid's disappearance; Psyche's journey to find Cupid; her completion of impossible tasks set by Venus; and Psyche's ascension to immortality and union with Cupid.
Psyche in order to win back Cupid.