Mercury (mythology)(/ˈmɜrkjʉri/; Latin: Mercurius listen (help•info)) is a major Roman god, being one of the Dii Consentes within the ancient Roman pantheon. He is the patron god of financial gain, commerce, eloquence (and thus poetry), messages/communication (including divination), travelers, boundaries, luck, trickery and thieves; he is also the guide of souls to the underworld.

Quotes

  • Paret Atlantiades dictis genitoris et inde
    summa pedum propere plantaribus inligat alis
    obnubitque comas et temperat astra galero.
    tum dextrae uirgam inseruit, qua pellere dulces
    aut suadere iterum somnos, qua nigra subire
    Tartara et exangues animare adsueuerat umbras.
    desiluit, tenuique exceptus inhorruit aura.
    nec mora, sublimes raptim per inane volatus
    carpit et ingenti designat nubila gyro.
    • Atlas' grandson obeys his sire's words and hastily thereupon binds the winged sandals on to his ankles and with his wide hat covers his locks and tempers the stars. Then he thrusts the wand in his right hand; with this he was wont to banish sweet slumber or recall it, with this to enter black Tartarus and give life to bloodless phantoms. Down he leapt and shivered as the thin air received him. No pause; he takes swift and lofty flight through the void and traces a vast arc across the clouds.
    • Statius, Thebaid, Book I, line 303 (tr. D. R. Shackleton Bailey)

See also

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