“Queer things were said to go on in the little glen called Goat Valley ...”
Boris Dolgov (1910–1958), illustration to “Roman Remains” by Algernon Blackwood
from ‘Weird Tales’ Vol. 40 #3, March 1948
source

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“Queer things were said to go on in the little glen called Goat Valley ...”
Boris Dolgov (1910–1958), illustration to “Roman Remains” by Algernon Blackwood
from ‘Weird Tales’ Vol. 40 #3, March 1948
source
Source
Todd Yeager • Sandpiper Pan
Gold stater (diameter=18 mm; weight=9.09 g) from the ancient Greek city of Panticapaeum, a Milesian colony on the Black Sea. The obverse bears the head of the god Pan, shown in three-quarter view and crowned with ivy. The reverse depicts a griffin with a spear in its mouth, standing on an ear of grain (the Black Sea region was an important center of grain production for the ancient Mediterranean world). Around the griffin are the Greek letters ΠΑΝ. Now in the Münzkabinett der Staatlichen Museen, Altes Museum, Berlin. Photo credits: ArchaiOptix/Wikimedia Commons.
Mythical Satyr by Mark H Dixon
Diogenes, the lantern bearer, tells us
That clever Hermes taught frustrated Pan.
Pan in his mercy taught the shepherd boys,
And now they dance the wild and calming dance.
Renewed, they sleep, their arms and legs entangled.
According to Euphorion, Pan was a son of Odysseus & Penelope instead of Penelope & Hermes(or the suitors or Apollo)
Which is kinda funny to think about. Odysseus has to raise a saytr god. Bro has already been through enough, and now u wanna make him take care of a GOD.