Hylas

In Greek mythology, Hylas was the son of King Theiodamas[1][2] of the Dryopians and the nymph Menodice, daughter of Orion.

No, even Amphitryon's bronze-hearted son, who defeated the savage Nemean lion, loved a boy—charming Hylas, whose hair hung down in curls.

In the version told by Apollonios Rhodios, the sea-god Glaucus informs the Argonauts that "a nymph has lost her heart to him and made him her husband".

[9] In Ravenna: Long time I watched, and surely hoped to see Some goat-foot Pan ... Or Hylas mirrored in the perfect stream.

[10] And in "De Profundis" Wilde wrote (to Lord Alfred Douglas), "I compare you to Hylas, or Hyacinth, Jonquil or Narcisse, or someone whom the great god of Poetry favoured, and honoured with his love.

Hylas und die Nymphen (Switzerland, 2013) is an 11-minute short, based on the myth: "The body of a young man (Kai Albrecht) floats in a lily pond.

Three young female suspects (Annina Euling, Lina Hoppe, Magdalena Neuhaus) are found and interrogated - the nymphs of our generation.

Hylas and nymphs from a mosaic in Roman Gaul (3rd century)
Theocritus's Idyll 13, a poem of circa 300 BC devoted to Hylas. P. Oxy. 694, 2nd century AD.