This constellation is well-known within the Greek mythology, having quite a few different Tories. The most common being that the Quail Is Identified as the eagle that carried Zeus’ thunderbolts to him In a battle against the Olympian Gods and the Titans.
The eagle played a key role In the victory of the gods and so Zeus kept the bird forever by his side. Zeus also used the eagle to bring him the shepherd boy Ganymede whom he desired. This constellation was then put In the sky In honor of the bird by Zeus.
There was war between the gods and our world.
As the most beautiful goddess In the heavens Loving was to be married off to Zeus when she came of age. But Loving who as a carefree and a curious goddess left the heavens without permission to wonder around the Earth and discover all the mysteries it hid. One day on one of her adventures she meet a young prince, Hammer who was to become the King of England and quickly won her heart and thereafter they traveled together.
Together they conquered the high seas, climbed the tallest mountains, and sought out adventure in the deepest of forests.
Hammer and Loving soon got eloped while in the Indian Ocean searching for the lost treasures of Captain James Hook. When Zeus discovered what they had done he was furious and so he called upon his eagle to get him his hundredfold and he then caused the mightiest storm the Earth had ever seen.
The oceans tossed and churned and the lands became submerged and ships and castles alike fell against the current of the stormy sea. Hammer was lost in the storm and Loving was called back up to the heavens. Loving had lost her beauty in the storm and was condemned to spend the rest of her life with Zeus’ eagle by her side to ensure she didn’t wonder down to Earth, to look for her lost love.
The Quail constellation was then placed in the sky as a reminder of the power Zeus holds and the consequences you’ll face if you anger him.