(Λίνος), the personification of a dirge or lamentation, and therefore described as a son of Apollo by a Muse (Calliope, or by Psamathe or Chalciope, Apollod. 1.3.2; Paus. 1.43.7, 2.19.7; Eustath. ad Hom. p. 1164), or of Amphimarus by Urania (Paus. 9.29.3). Re specting his mother Psamathe, the story runs thus: --When she had given birth to Linus she exposed the child. He was found by shepherds, who brought him up, but the child was afterwards torn to pieces by dogs. Psamathe's grief at the occurrence betrayed her misfortune to her father, who condemned her to death. Apollo, in his indignation at the father's cruelty, visited Argos with a plague, and when his oracle was consulted about the means of averting the plague, he answered that the Argives must propitiate Psamathe and Linus. This was attempted by means of sacrifices, and matrons and virgins sang dirges which were called λίνοι, and the month in which this solemnity was celebrated was called ἀρνειός, and the festival itself ἀρνίς, because Linus had grown up among lambs. The pestilence, however, did not cease until Crotopus quitted Argos and settled at Tripodisium, in Megaris (Conon. Narrat. 19; Paus. 1.43.7; Athen. 3.99). According to a Boeotian tradition Linus was killed by Apollo, because he had ventured upon a musical contest with the god (Paus. 9.29.3; Eustath. ad Hom. p. 1163), and near Mount Helicon his image stood in a hollow rock, formed in the shape of a grotto; and every year before sacrifices were offered to the Muses, a funeral sacrifice was offered to him, and dirges (λίνοι) were sung in his honour. His tomb was claimed both by the city of Argos and by Thebes (Paus. l.c., comp. 2.19.7); but after the battle of Chaeroneia, Philip of Macedonia was said to have carried away the remains of Linus from Thebes to Macedonia. Subsequently, however, the king was induced by a dream to send the remains back to Thebes. Chalcis in Euboea likewise boasted of possessing the tomb of Linus, the inscription of which is preserved by Diogenes Laertius (Prooem. 4; comp. Suid. s. v. Λίνος). Being regarded as a son of Apollo and a Muse, he is said to have received from his father the three-stringed lute, and is himself called the inventor of new melodies, of dirges (Δρῆνοι), and of songs in general. Hesiod (ap. Clem. Alex. Strom. i. p. 330) even calls him παντοίης σοφίης δεδαηκώς. It is probably owing to the difficulty of reconciling the different mythuses about Linus, that the Thebans (Paus. 9.29, in fin.) thought it necessary to distinguish between an earlier and later Linus; the latter is said to have instructed Heracles in music, but to have been killed by the hero (comp. Apollod. 2.4.9; Theocrit. 24.103; Diod. 3.67; Athen. 4.164). In the time of the Alexandrine grammarians people even went so far as to look upon Linus as an historical personage, and to consider him, like Musaeus, Orpheus, and others, as the author of apocryphal works (Diod. 3.66), in which he described the exploits of Dionysus; Diogenes Laertius (Prooem. 3), who calls him a son of Hermes and Urania, ascribes to him several poetical productions, such as a cosmogony on the course of the sun and moon, on the generation of animals and fruits, and the like.
The principal places in Greece which are the scenes of the legends about Linus are Argos and Thebes, and the legends themselves bear a strong resemblance to those about Hyacynthus, Narcissus, Glaucus, Adonis, Maneros, and others, all of whom are conceived as handsome and lovely youths, and either as princes or as shepherds. They are the