it was apollo who gave orpheus his firdt instument.
Orpheus made the critical mistake of looking back at his wife, Eurydice, as they were leaving the Underworld. Despite being warned not to glance back until they reached the surface, his doubt and longing overwhelmed him, causing her to be lost to him forever. This moment underscores the themes of trust and the consequences of human frailty in his tragic story.
Orpheus is a great musician who is going to marry this girl, Eurydice, but she gets bitten by a snake and dies! So he goes to the underworld to get her by playing his music which was irresistible, not even Hades could refuse him. He makes a deal with Hades which is he can have her but when they are leaving he mustn't look back at her until they are out of the Underworld. He agrees and they start venturing back. Once he gets into broad daylight he looks back and she is still in the dark. She said farewell and it was over. He was forbidden to go to the Underworld unless he was actually dead. On his way back to his home to weep, he was playing his lyre, until people ran out and ripped him limb to limb.
There used to live a man name Orpheus in the valley of
Thrace
In the Greek myth, Orpheus's wife Eurydice dies, and he made a promise with Hades that if he brought Eurydice back, he is to never look back (at her). But Orpheus looks back and his wife was sent to the underworld again. In the story, A Few Notes For Orpheus, at the end of the story, it says his father did not look back. There's a new mentions of the names Eurydice and Orpheus throughout the story too.
Orpheus, out of Greek mythology.
Orpheus turned to look back upon Eurydice to be sure Hades had kept his word (when Hades had told him not to do so).
he was not to look back at her until he returned out of the Underworld
In the story of Orpheus, the main conflict arises when Orpheus's wife, Eurydice, dies and Orpheus travels to the Underworld to try and bring her back to the land of the living. The conflict intensifies as Orpheus must convince Hades to allow Eurydice to return with him while following the condition not to look back at her until they have both reached the surface. Ultimately, Orpheus fails to resist the temptation and loses Eurydice forever.
Eurydice is the wife of Orpheus. when Eurydice died, Orpheus went to the underworld to save her and bring her back home. Hades and his wife, Persephone, let him take Eurydice, but on one condition. Once they give her to him he must walk in front of her and must not look back at all to look at her until they leave the underworld or Eurydice will return immediately to the underworld forever, and Orpheus will fall to pieces. "Don't look back." Eurydice told him. But Orpheus turned around just to check if she was still there. Then Eurydice shed a tear and immediately returned to the underworld. "Goodbye forever" she says. Depressed, Orpheus walked away, shed a tear and fell to pieces.
Orpheus went to the underworld to bring his dead wife back. In the underworld, he stroke his lyre, which took the madness of all creatures. Hades permitted him to take his wife back but in one condition, that while he and his wife ascend above, he must never look back down to his wife or he'll lose her forever. So as they went up, Orpheus was afraid that Eurydice wasn't with him and he had to look back to his wife to see if she was there, but she was and he lost her forever.
Orpheus wasn't a god. His story was that his wife died and he wanted her back, so he went to the Underworld to get her back. He almost succeeded, but when Alecto (a Fate) led her out of the Underworld , she walked behind Orpheus, and he was instructed NOT to look back, he must trust that Alecto really was leading his wife out of the Underworld. Of course, he looked back, and it really was his wife. They both died happily ever after.
After Eurydice ran into the nest of snakes and was fatally bit on the heel, Orpheus did try to retrieve her. Going to the underworld he played his music to Hades and Perephone. They allowed them to both return to earth under the condition that he would walk in front of her and not look back til they left the underworld. But on their way to the surface, Orpheus did look back out of anxiety and she disappeared forever.
Orpheus, son of the Muse Calliope, married Eurydice. He was a brilliant magician. On their wedding day, Eurydice was bitten by a snake and died. Orpheus traveled to the Underworld to get her back, playing music so that Cerberus, the three-headed dog who guarded the Underworld, would let him past. His music also swayed Persephone, Queen of the Dead, who persuaded her husband Hades to let Eurydice go back with Orpheus. Hades agreed, but only if Orpheus would not look back at her until they reached the surface. Orpheus agreed, but he looked back when they were almost there, and Eurydice was taken back to the Underworld. Orpheus grieved, and he was eventually killed by a band of Maenads, female followers of Dionysus who were often drunk and insane.
Persephone made a deal with Orpheus to allow him to bring his wife, Eurydice, back from the underworld on the condition that he not look back at her until they were both safely back in the world of the living. However, Orpheus broke this condition, causing Eurydice to be lost to him forever.
Orpheus