West Wind ,
Athens.|upright=1.15 Zephyrus, along with his brother Boreas, is one of the most prominent of the Anemoi; they are frequently mentioned together by poets, and along with a third brother,
Notus (the south wind) they were seen as the three useful and favourable winds (the east wind, Eurus, seen as bad omen). As they part, Aeolus gives Odysseus a bag containing all the winds, except for Zephyrus himself, who is let free to blow Odysseus's ship gently back to
Ithaca; Odysseus's crewmates foolishly open the bag, thinking it to contain treasure, and set free all the other winds, blowing the ships back to Aeolia. Many years later, right after Odysseus left
Calypso, the sea-god
Poseidon in rage unleashed all four of them to cause a storm and raise great waves in order to drown Odysseus in the sea. .|240px In the
Iliad, Zephyrus is visited by his wife Iris in his home as he dines with his wind brothers. He wishes to summon him and Boreas to blow on
Patroclus's funeral pyre following his death, as Achilles prayed for their help when the pyre failed to kindle. In the
Dionysiaca, all four live together with their father Astraeus; Zephyrus plays sweet notes with an
aulos for Demeter when she pays them a visit. In the myth of
Eros and Psyche, Zephyrus serves
Eros, the god of love, by transporting his bride-to-be, the mortal princess
Psyche with his soft breeze from the cliff (where she had been left in an oracle's suggestion) to Eros's palace. Later, he also helps rather reluctantly Psyche's two sisters transport the same way to the palace as well, when Psyche wishes to see them again. After Eros abandons Psyche over her betrayal, both sisters take advantage of the situation and each independently goes to the cliff (having both been lied to by Psyche that Eros wished to make each his new wife), calling for Eros to come and marry them, and Zephyrus to take them to the palace. But this time Zephyrus does not act when they jump, and thus they both fall to their deaths, torn limb to limb and made food for the birds of prey and wild beasts below. Zephyrus seems to have had a connection to swans; in
Philostratus the Elder's works, he joins them twice in their song, once while they are carrying the
Erotes and another when the young
Phaethon is killed driving his father
Helios's fiery chariot. This apparently symbolizes the belief that swans took to singing when the mild west wind blew.
Other myths on a red-figure vase (5th century BCE) In his most notable myth, Zephyrus fell in love with a beautiful Spartan prince named
Hyacinthus, who nevertheless rejected him and became the lover of another god,
Apollo. One day when the prince and Apollo were playing at
discus-throwing, Zephyrus deflected the course of Apollo's discus, redirecting it right onto Hyacinthus's head and fatally wounding him. Hyacinthus' blood then became a new flower, the
hyacinth. In some versions, Zephyrus is supplanted by his brother Boreas as the wind-god who bore a one-sided love for the beautiful prince. Zephyrus's role in this myth reflects his connection to flowers and springtime as the gentle west wind, who, in spite of his traditional gentleness, is nonetheless a harsh lover, like all the winds. Not every version of this tale features Zephyrus, however, and his participation is a secondary narrative; in many of them he is absent, and Hyacinthus's death stems from a genuine accident on Apollo's part. On another occasion, another beautiful youth named
Cyparissus ("cypress") and Zephyrus became lovers. The youth, wanting to preserve his beauty, fled to Mount Cassium in
Syria, where he became transformed into a cypress tree. This myth, which might be of Hellenistic origin, seems to have been modeled after that of
Apollo and Daphne. It also, along with Zephyrus's role in Hyacinthus's story, fits the pattern–also fit by his brother Boreas–of a wind god appearing in the story of the origin of a plant. In all other narratives, however, Zephyrus is absent, and the role of Cyparissus's divine partner is filled by Apollo; furthermore, Cyparissus is transformed into a cypress by Apollo at his own request after accidentally killing his own pet deer, which caused him much sorrow. Zephyrus also features in some of the dialogues by the satirical author
Lucian of
Samosata; in the
Dialogues of the Sea Gods, he appears in two dialogues with his brother Notus, the god of the south wind. In the first, they discuss the Argive princess
Io and how she was loved and got turned into a
heifer by Zeus in order to hide from his jealous wife
Hera, while in the second, Zephyrus enthusiastically recounts the scene he has just witnessed of how Zeus transformed into a bull, tricked another princess, the
Phoenician
Europa, into riding him, transported her to
Crete and then mated with her while Notus expresses his jealousy and complains of seeing nothing noteworthy. == In ancient culture ==