Nephelae/Nephele/Nephelai-The Okeanid-nymphs of clouds and rain
In Greek mythology the Nephelae were the Oceanid-nymphs of clouds and rain. They arose from the earth-encircling river Oceanus bearing water

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Nephelae/Nephele/Nephelai-The Okeanid-nymphs of clouds and rain
In Greek mythology the Nephelae were the Oceanid-nymphs of clouds and rain. They arose from the earth-encircling river Oceanus bearing water
NYMPHS
Nephelae | the nymphs of rain clouds
greek mythology | modern goddesses
I love rain, I love greek mythology
I also love my nephelae gal riding the winds to gather more water so she can keep the weather cycle going.
The nephelae were cloud nymphs that carried vases filled with rain for nourishing the earth.
from THEOI
Source
THE NEPHELAI (Nephelae) were the Okeanid-nymphs of clouds and rain. They arose from the earth-encircling river Okeanos (Oceanus) bearing water in cloudy pitchers. Nephelai fed the streams of their River-God brothers with rain and nourished the earth.
They were depicted as beautiful, young women pouring water from pitchers--like their Naiad sisters--or as women flitting across the sky in billowing robes.
Greek Mythology: Nephelai - the nymphs of the clouds
Clouds come floating into my life, no longer to carry rain or usher storm, but to add color to my sunset sky.
Nephelai
The Nephelai were nymphs of clouds and rain. They rose up from Okeanus and poured carried water back up to the heavens in pitchers made of clouds. The Nephelai are often depicted as being beautiful,young women pouring water from pitchers, much like their sisters the Naiades (fresh water nymphs), or simply floating across the sky in billowy robes. Normally they are depicted as being the youngest of the Okeanids, which is why many of them are part of the sixty nymph followers of Artemis (Goddess of the hunt). Hyale, Nephele (the third one), Phiale (some sources say she's a Naias[spring nymph] instead), Psekas, and Rhanis are all Nephelai in the service of Artemis. Their parents are either Okeanus (Titan and protogenos), Tethys (Titaness of fresh water), or Aether (protogenos of Light). In Aeschylus' Prometheus Bound they appear before Atlas (Titan of endurance) in order to listen to his story of how he became bound and forced to hold up the sky. However later on in the story Hermes (God and Zeus' messenger) warns them that they have to run away since Zeus has heard what was going on and was about to strike them with lightning for being sympathetic to Atlas. At first they say they'll stay and suffer with Atlas, but after it begins to thunder they run away. Aristophanes claims that they are the greatest of the gods in his play Clouds. In this Sokrates (Socrates, ancient philosopher) claims that they are the greatest goddesses for the lazy, and that they gave men thoughts, speeches, trickery, roguery, boasting, lies, sagacity (sound judgement and mental acuteness). Occasionally in myths the gods, usually Zeus had them take on the shape of other women, either god or mortal, in order to test or trick men. In one instance he had one of them look like Hera (Queen of the gods) because Ixion (mortal son of Ares and King of the Lapiths) attempted to rape her. To test him he had the Nephelai lie beside him, and when he awoke to see her he bragged that he had slept with Hera. As punishment Zeus turned him into a wheel and the winds blew him throughout the clouds. Another account says that one of the Nephelai took the shape of Helen so that Hermes could take her away from Paris and bring her Egypt, while Paris went to Troy with the Nephelai.