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Hecate


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Tee hee hee!!! I will kill you all!!! Your soul shall be mine in the underworld!!!
The goddess of witchcraft, who helps the three witches work their mischief on Macbeth. Hecate's appearence in Macbeth was added to the play after it was originally written in 1606, but before it was published in 1623.
(NOTE: The following description was offered to me by a fellow obsessed human. If you are the sadistic type and strongly wish to know about the Hecate of mythology, read the following.)
Hecate, also called Agriope ('savage face'), was the daughter of the Titan Perses and of Asteria, although sometimes it is said that Zeus himself fathered her, and she is the mother of Scylla. It is thought that she was also known as the dark side of the goddesses, Artemis, Selene, or Diana. She was said to have three faces, symbolizing her power over the underworld, earth, & air, thus she is sometimes depicted with a three heads, that of a dog, a horse, and a lion. Sometimes she is also portrayed with a torch or with a back of hounds. She was only worshipped at night by torchlight and dogs and black lambs were sacrificed to her.
Hecate is goddess of the underworld, of chthonic rites, and of black magic as well as goddess of night and darkness. She may also have been a moon goddess representing its terror and darkness just as Diana represented the moonlight splendor. Medea was her priestess to whom she taught the art of magic.
According to the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, Hades abducted Persephone, the daughter of Zeus & Demeter, & forced her to live with him in the underworld. During Demeter's search for her daugher, she met Hecate, who admitted she too had heard Persephone's cries for help but didn't know who abducted her. Helios told Demeter that Hades was Persephone's abductor, & that Zeus had given him permission to do that. Demeter grew angry at this & protested by preventing all grain from growing until her daughter was given back to her. Hades propositoned Persephone to stay with him, & before she left, secretly gave her some pomegranate seed, so that she could never permanently stay in the light. Demeter was horrified at this action, and entrusted Persephone to Hecate:
'Then bright-coiffed Hecate came near to them, and often did she embrace the daughter of holy Demeter: and from that time the lady Hecate was minister and companion to Persephone.'
Macbeth