Rhodopis was a beautiful chaste maiden who kept her hair short and loved to hunt in the forests.
Artemis, the maiden goddess of the hunt, took notice of her, and invited Rhodopis to join her in the hunt, and thus the young girl shunned marriage as well as all kinds of romantic love.
Aphrodite, the goddess of love, overheard Rhodopis swearing her oath of chastity to the goddess and immediately grew infuriated. Similarly, the young Euthynicus of
Ephesus was another deeply devoted hunter who was averse to all delights of romance just like Rhodopis. One day that Artemis was not around, Aphrodite contrived to make the game they were playing run in the same direction, and after convincing her bow-bearing son
Eros that Rhodopis and Euthynicus's chaste lifestyle was a grave insult to both him and her as deities of love and desire, commanded him to strike them both with his love-inducing arrows. Eros did as told, and the two hunters immediately fell in love with one another. Then the two withdrew to a cavern and there they broke their chastity vows. Meanwhile Artemis caught sight of Aphrodite laughing, and understood what had happened. In anger over the broken vow she metamorphosed Rhodopis into a fountain called Styx right on the spot where she had lost her virginity. For that reason, any young woman suspected of impurity was made to step into the fountain thereafter, as a testing place; if virgin as claimed, the water would only cover up to her knees, but if not it would come up all the way to her neck. Euthynicus's own fate following the incident is not touched upon. A character from the novel, Melite, is subjected to such a test. Melite and Clitophon, in spite of their vows of faithfulness to their respective partners, surrender to their urges and lie with each other. In a sense, Aphrodite and Rhodopis hide Melite's, an adulteress, affair under the waters of the spring, in a similar rite in which a sympathetic adulteress is judged innocent. == Interpretation of the myth ==