Pan, the part goat son of Hermes married to Aex or Beotis. Zeus is said to have had Aigipan by her.
The god of shepherds and goat herders is Hermes. He gives favors like multiplying herds by increasing fertility and he also protects the herd from predators.
It normally grazes on the grassy fields.
Pan
A goat's favorite game is skipping in the fields.
The "marry son of Hermes" you may be referring to is Pan, the Greek god of the wild, shepherds, and flocks. He is often depicted as having the legs and horns of a goat, and he is associated with nature and rustic music. Pan is considered the son of Hermes and a nymph, often linked to the idea of merriment and revelry in the natural world.
Very, but he was not evil. On the very first day he was born he stole all of his elder brother, Apollo's, cows and tricked Apollo into thinking that the cows went the other direction using sticks and mud, and Hermes was less than a day old when he did that. It was like a prank.
Hermes was the god of animal husbandry, including cattle-herding, shepherding, goat-herding and even the breeding of horses and mules. Pan was the great god of flocks and shepherds among the Greeks; the son of Hermes.
You would be the god Pan.
You would be the god Pan.
Hermes, the messenger of the gods, was himself the god of the herds and heraldry, markets and athletics. Supplicants wishing to obtain his favor would leave gifts on one of his altars. Gifts of gold or silver were rare as only the very wealthy could afford such. Gifts of food and/or drink were much more common. It is said that Aesop left offerings of goat's milk and honeycomb to Hermes in order to gain wisdom.
owning a nanny goat in district 12 can change your life. the animals can live off of pretty much anything, the meadows a perfect feeding place, and they can give four quarts of milk a day. to drink, to make into cheese, to sell. its not even against the law. this was taken straight from the book
The birth of Pan was somewhat mysterious ... he is the son of the god Hermes and an unnamed mortal woman but Pan's countenance is not godlike or human. While the messenger god Hermes was tending the flocks of a man named Dryops, he fell in love with Dryops's daughter. Hermes seduced the young woman and Pan was born ... Pan had goat ears and horns on his head and goat-hooves for feet. When the young mother and the attending nurse saw the infant they fled in fear but Hermes was proud of his new son. Hermes wrapped the baby in the warm skins of mountain hares and showed him to Zeus and the rest of the Immortals. The gods and goddesses were delighted with the strange child ... especially Dionysos, the god of wine. They named him Pan, which literally means All, because they all adored him. When the war with the Titans erupted, Pan fought alongside Zeus because he was so appreciative of the kindly reception he received from the Immortals.