WELCOME TO SUZY'S PLAY THERAPY TOYBOX! Many of the miniatures you will find in the store have a definition or description which includes symbolic, metaphor, and possible meanings. This is designed for you, as a therapist, to keep in mind as you listen to your client as they interpret a sand therapy scene. Some of the miniatures are unique, vintage, rare and collectible or difficult to find; some are handmade. I truly hope you enjoy the search for that special miniature or many. And I always include a freebee gift with your order!! FREE SHIPPING on Orders over $50.

Harpy
Harpy
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Harpy

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$14.00
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$14.00
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Made by Safari Mythological creature with wings.  Symbolism: mythology, a fabulous creature, probably a wind spirit. The presence of harpies as tomb figures, however, makes it possible that they were also conceived of as ghosts. In Homer’s Odyssey they were winds that carried people away. Elsewhere, they were sometimes connected with the powers of the underworld. Homer mentions one Harpy called Podarge (Swiftfoot). Hesiod mentions two, Aello and Okypete (Stormswift and Swiftwing).

These early Harpies were in no way disgusting. Later, however, especially in the legend of Jason and the Argonauts, they were represented as birds with the faces of women, horribly foul and loathsome. They were sent to punish the Thracian king Phineus for his ill-treatment of his children; the Harpies snatched the food from his table and left a disgusting smell. Calais and Zetes, the sons of Boreas, finally delivered him. Virgil imitated the episode in the Aeneid; he called the chief Harpy Celaeno (Dark).

The Harpies role as the hounds of Zeus and their task of taking the guilty to be punished by the Erinyes served as a moral reminder to those who were guilty of misdeeds that someone who isn’t virtuous or wanders too far will be punished in the long run.