Hello Deborah,
Thank you for all support and your kindness my good friend. Zeus showed me his anger today because Eris the goddess of quarrel tryed to destroy my forum.
When I started to post a reply to you. It rained cats and dogs the thunderbolts and the blitzes made power down several times. Now I am going through because I am ready to share my shining week with you by connecting you to DEBORAH>MELISSA and the Amaltheian Horn, or cornucopia (Latin) means "horn of plenty."
There are two stories about this horn, which bestows upon the owner an endless bounty. Zeus, in his secluded infancy on Crete, was nursed by a goat named Amalthea, which was also the name of the goddess of plenty. One of the horns of this goat was broken off and became the first cornucopia. The horn of plenty is also associated with Hercules. In order to win Deianira as his bride, he had to defeat the horned river-god Achelous. In the struggle, Hercules broke off one of the horns of the river-god but after his victory returned the horn and received as recompense the horn of Amaltheia. Ovid, however, relates that the horn of Achelous became a second horn of plenty. Today the cornucopia is a sign of nature's abundance, and the word comes to mean a plenteous bounty.
Make a visit The horn of plenty-The Amaltheian Horn
Best Regards
Georgios
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