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    THE THEOGONY
    Hesiod


    From the Heliconian Muses let us begin to sing, who
    hold the great and holy mount of Helicon, and dance on soft feet
    about the deep-blue spring and the altar of the almighty son of
    Cronos, and, when they have washed their tender bodies in
    Permessus or in the Horse's Spring or Olmeius, make their fair,
    lovely dances upon highest Helicon and move with vigorous feet.
    Thence they arise and go abroad by night, veiled in thick mist,
    and utter their song with lovely voice, praising Zeus the aegis-
    holder and queenly Hera of Argos who walks on golden sandals and
    the daughter of Zeus the aegis-holder bright-eyed Athene, and
    Phoebus Apollo, and Artemis who delights in arrows, and Poseidon
    the earth-holder who shakes the earth, and reverend Themis and

      

    quick-glancing Aphrodite, and Hebe with the crown of gold,
    and fair Dione, Leto, Iapetus, and Cronos the crafty counsellor,
    Eos and great Helius and bright Selene, Earth too, and great
    Oceanus, and dark Night, and the holy race of all the other
    deathless ones that are for ever.

    And one day they taught Hesiod
    glorious song while he was shepherding his lambs under holy
    Helicon, and this word first the goddesses said to me -- the
    Muses of Olympus, daughters of Zeus who holds the aegis:

    `Shepherds of the wilderness, wretched things of
    shame, mere bellies, we know how to speak many false things as
    though they were true; but we know, when we will, to utter true things.'
     
    So said the ready-voiced daughters of great Zeus, and
    they plucked and gave me a rod, a shoot of sturdy laurel, a
    marvellous thing, and breathed into me a divine voice to
    celebrate things that shall be and things there were aforetime;
    and they bade me sing of the race of the blessed gods that are
    eternally, but ever to sing of themselves both first and last.
    But why all this about oak or stone?

    Come thou, let us begin with the Muses who gladden
    the great spirit of their father Zeus in Olympus with their
    songs, telling of things that are and that shall be and that were
    aforetime with consenting voice. Unwearying flows the sweet
    sound from their lips, and the house of their father Zeus the
    loud-thunderer is glad at the lily-like voice of the goddesses as
    it spread abroad, and the peaks of snowy Olympus resound, and the
    homes of the immortals.

    And they uttering their immortal voice,
    celebrate in song first of all the reverend race of the gods from
    the beginning, those whom Earth and wide Heaven begot, and the
    gods sprung of these, givers of good things. Then, next, the
    goddesses sing of Zeus, the father of gods and men, as they begin
    and end their strain, how much he is the most excellent among the
    gods and supreme in power. And again, they chant the race of men
    and strong giants, and gladden the heart of Zeus within Olympus,
    -- the Olympian Muses, daughters of Zeus the aegis-holder.

    Them in Pieria did Mnemosyne, who reigns
    over the hills of Eleuther, bear of union with the father, the
    son of Cronos, a forgetting of ills and a rest from sorrow. For
    nine nights did wise Zeus lie with her, entering her holy bed
    remote from the immortals. And when a year was passed and the
    seasons came round as the months waned, and many days were
    accomplished, she bare nine daughters, all of one mind, whose
    hearts are set upon song and their spirit free from care, a
    little way from the topmost peak of snowy Olympus. There are
    their bright dancing-places and beautiful homes, and beside them
    the Graces and Himerus live in delight.

    And they,
    uttering through their lips a lovely voice, sing the laws of all
    and the goodly ways of the immortals, uttering their lovely
    voice. Then went they to Olympus, delighting in their sweet
    voice, with heavenly song, and the dark earth resounded about
    them as they chanted, and a lovely sound rose up beneath their
    feet as they went to their father. And he was reigning in
    heaven, himself holding the lightning and glowing thunderbolt,
    when he had overcome by might his father Cronos; and he
    distributed fairly to the immortals their portions and declared
    their privileges.

    These things, then, the Muses sang who dwell on
    Olympus, nine daughters begotten by great Zeus, Cleio and
    Euterpe, Thaleia, Melpomene and Terpsichore, and Erato and
    Polyhymnia and Urania and Calliope, who is the chiefest of
    them all, for she attends on worshipful princes: whomsoever of
    heaven-nourished princes the daughters of great Zeus honour, and
    behold him at his birth, they pour sweet dew upon his tongue, and
    from his lips flow gracious words.

    All the people look towards
    him while he settles causes with true judgements: and he,
    speaking surely, would soon make wise end even of a great
    quarrel; for therefore are there princes wise in heart, because
    when the people are being misguided in their assembly, they set
    right the matter again with ease, persuading them with gentle
    words. And when he passes through a gathering, they greet him as
    a god with gentle reverence, and he is conspicuous amongst the
    assembled: such is the holy gift of the Muses to men.

    For it is
    through the Muses and far-shooting Apollo that there are singers
    and harpers upon the earth; but princes are of Zeus, and happy is
    he whom the Muses love: sweet flows speech from his mouth. For
    though a man have sorrow and grief in his newly-troubled soul and
    live in dread because his heart is distressed, yet, when a
    singer, the servant of the Muses, chants the glorious deeds of
    men of old and the blessed gods who inhabit Olympus, at once he
    forgets his heaviness and remembers not his sorrows at all; but
    the gifts of the goddesses soon turn him away from these.

    Hail, children of Zeus! Grant lovely song and
    celebrate the holy race of the deathless gods who are for ever,
    those that were born of Earth and starry Heaven and gloomy Night
    and them that briny Sea did rear. Tell how at the first gods and
    earth came to be, and rivers, and the boundless sea with its
    raging swell, and the gleaming stars, and the wide heaven above,
    and the gods who were born of them, givers of good things, and
    how they divided their wealth, and how they shared their honours
    amongst them, and also how at the first they took many-folded
    Olympus.

    These things declare to me from the beginning, ye Muses
    who dwell in the house of Olympus, and tell me which of them
    first came to be.

    Verily at the first Chaos came to be, but next
    wide-bosomed Earth, the ever-sure foundations of all the
    deathless ones who hold the peaks of snowy Olympus, and dim
    Tartarus in the depth of the wide-pathed Earth, and Eros,
    fairest among the deathless gods, who unnerves the limbs and
    overcomes the mind and wise counsels of all gods and all men
    within them.

    From Chaos came forth Erebus and black Night; but
    of Night were born Aether and Day, whom she conceived and
    bare from union in love with Erebus. And Earth first bare starry
    Heaven, equal to herself, to cover her on every side, and to be
    an ever-sure abiding-place for the blessed gods. And she brought
    forth long Hills, graceful haunts of the goddess-Nymphs who dwell
    amongst the glens of the hills.

    She bare also the fruitless deep
    with his raging swell, Pontus, without sweet union of love. But
    afterwards she lay with Heaven and bare deep-swirling Oceanus,
    Coeus and Crius and Hyperion and Iapetus, Theia and Rhea, Themis
    and Mnemosyne and gold-crowned Phoebe and lovely Tethys. After
    them was born Cronos the wily, youngest and most terrible of her
    children, and he hated his lusty sire.

    And again, she bare the Cyclopes, overbearing in
    spirit, Brontes, and Steropes and stubborn-hearted Arges, who
    gave Zeus the thunder and made the thunderbolt: in all else they
    were like the gods, but one eye only was set in the midst of
    their fore-heads. And they were surnamed Cyclopes
    because one orbed eye was set in their foreheads. Strength and
    might and craft were in their works.

    And again, three other sons were born of Earth and
    Heaven, great and doughty beyond telling, Cottus and Briareos and
    Gyes, presumptuous children. From their shoulders sprang an
    hundred arms, not to be approached, and each had fifty heads upon
    his shoulders on their strong limbs, and irresistible was the
    stubborn strength that was in their great forms. For of all the
    children that were born of Earth and Heaven, these were the most
    terrible, and they were hated by their own father from the first.

    And he used to hide them all away in a secret place of Earth so
    soon as each was born, and would not suffer them to come up into
    the light: and Heaven rejoiced in his evil doing. But vast Earth
    groaned within, being straitened, and she made the element of
    grey flint and shaped a great sickle, and told her plan to her
    dear sons. And she spoke, cheering them, while she was vexed in
    her dear heart:

    `My children, gotten of a sinful father, if you
    will obey me, we should punish the vile outrage of your father;
    for he first thought of doing shameful things.'

    So she said; but fear seized them all, and none of
    them uttered a word. But great Cronos the wily took courage and
    answered his dear mother:

    `Mother, I will undertake to do this deed, for I
    reverence not our father of evil name, for he first thought of
    doing shameful things.'

    So he said: and vast Earth rejoiced greatly in
    spirit, and set and hid him in an ambush, and put in his hands a
    jagged sickle, and revealed to him the whole plot.

    And Heaven came, bringing on night and longing for
    love, and he lay about Earth spreading himself full upon her.

    Then the son from his ambush stretched forth his left hand and in
    his right took the great long sickle with jagged teeth, and
    swiftly lopped off his own father's members and cast them away to
    fall behind him.

    And not vainly did they fall from his hand; for
    all the bloody drops that gushed forth Earth received, and as the
    seasons moved round she bare the strong Erinyes and the great
    Giants with gleaming armour, holding long spears in their hands
    and the Nymphs whom they call Meliae all over the boundless
    earth. And so soon as he had cut off the members with flint and
    cast them from the land into the surging sea, they were swept
    away over the main a long time: and a white foam spread around
    them from the immortal flesh, and in it there grew a maiden.
     

    First she drew near holy Cythera, and from there, afterwards, she
    came to sea-girt Cyprus, and came forth an awful and lovely
    goddess, and grass grew up about her beneath her shapely feet.
    Her gods and men call Aphrodite, and the foam-born goddess and
    rich-crowned Cytherea, because she grew amid the foam, and
    Cytherea because she reached Cythera, and Cyprogenes because she
    was born in billowy Cyprus, and Philommedes because sprang
    from the members. And with her went Eros, and comely Desire
    followed her at her birth at the first and as she went into the
    assembly of the gods.

    This honour she has from the beginning,
    and this is the portion allotted to her amongst men and undying
    gods, -- the whisperings of maidens and smiles and deceits with
    sweet delight and love and graciousness.

    But these sons whom be begot himself great Heaven
    used to call Titans in reproach, for he said that
    they strained and did presumptuously a fearful deed, and that
    vengeance for it would come afterwards.

    And Night bare hateful Doom and black Fate and
    Death, and she bare Sleep and the tribe of Dreams. And again the
    goddess murky Night, though she lay with none, bare Blame and
    painful Woe, and the Hesperides who guard the rich, golden apples
    and the trees bearing fruit beyond glorious Ocean. Also she bare
    the Destinies and ruthless avenging Fates, Clotho and Lachesis
    and Atropos, who give men at their birth both evil and good
    to have, and they pursue the transgressions of men and of gods:
    and these goddesses never cease from their dread anger until they
    punish the sinner with a sore penalty. Also deadly Night bare
    Nemesis to afflict mortal men, and after her,
    Deceit and Friendship and hateful Age and hard-hearted Strife.

    But abhorred Strife bare painful Toil and
    Forgetfulness and Famine and tearful Sorrows, Fightings also,
    Battles, Murders, Manslaughters, Quarrels, Lying Words, Disputes,
    Lawlessness and Ruin, all of one nature, and Oath who most
    troubles men upon earth when anyone wilfully swears a false oath.

    And Sea begat Nereus, the eldest of his children,
    who is true and lies not: and men call him the Old Man because he
    is trusty and gentle and does not forget the laws of
    righteousness, but thinks just and kindly thoughts. And yet
    again he got great Thaumas and proud Phoreys, being mated with
    Earth, and fair-cheeked Ceto and Eurybia who has a heart of flint
    within her.

    And of Nereus and rich-haired Doris, daughter of
    Ocean the perfect river, were born children, passing lovely
    amongst goddesses, Ploto, Eucrante, Sao, and Amphitrite, and
    Eudora, and Thetis, Galene and Glauce, Cymothoe, Speo, Thoe and
    lovely Halie, and Pasithea, and Erato, and rosy-armed Eunice, and
    gracious Melite, and Eulimene, and Agaue, Doto, Proto, Pherusa,
    and Dynamene, and Nisaea, and Actaea, and Protomedea, Doris,
    Panopea, and comely Galatea, and lovely Hippothoe, and rosy-armed
    Hipponoe, and Cymodoce who with Cymatolege and Amphitrite
    easily calms the waves upon the misty sea and the blasts of
    raging winds, and Cymo, and Eione, and rich-crowned Alimede, and
    Glauconome, fond of laughter, and Pontoporea, Leagore, Euagore,
    and Laomedea, and Polynoe, and Autonoe, and Lysianassa, and
    Euarne, lovely of shape and without blemish of form, and Psamathe
    of charming figure and divine Menippe, Neso, Eupompe, Themisto,
    Pronoe, and Nemertes who has the nature of her deathless
    father. These fifty daughters sprang from blameless Nereus,
    skilled in excellent crafts.

    And Thaumas wedded Electra the daughter of deep-
    flowing Ocean, and she bare him swift Iris and the long-haired
    Harpies, Aello and Ocypetes who on
    their swift wings keep pace with the blasts of the winds and the
    birds; for quick as time they dart along.

    And again, Ceto bare to Phoreys the fair-cheeked
    Graiae, sisters grey from their birth: and both deathless gods
    and men who walk on earth call them Graiae, Pemphredo well-clad,
    and saffron-robed Enyo, and the Gorgons who dwell beyond glorious
    Ocean in the frontier land towards Night where are the clear-
    voiced Hesperides, Sthenno, and Euryale, and Medusa who suffered
    a woeful fate: she was mortal, but the two were undying and grew
    not old. With her lay the Dark-haired One in a soft meadow
    amid spring flowers.

    And when Perseus cut off her head, there
    sprang forth great Chrysaor and the horse Pegasus who is so
    called because he was born near the springs of Ocean; and
    that other, because he held a golden blade in his hands.
    Now Pegasus flew away and left the earth, the mother of flocks,
    and came to the deathless gods: and he dwells in the house of
    Zeus and brings to wise Zeus the thunder and lightning. But
    Chrysaor was joined in love to Callirrhoe, the daughter of
    glorious Ocean, and begot three-headed Geryones.

    Him mighty
    Heracles slew in sea-girt Erythea by his shambling oxen on that
    day when he drove the wide-browed oxen to holy Tiryns, and had
    crossed the ford of Ocean and killed Orthus and Eurytion the
    herdsman in the dim stead out beyond glorious Ocean.

    And in a hollow cave she bare another monster,
    irresistible, in no wise like either to mortal men or to the
    undying gods, even the goddess fierce Echidna who is half a nymph
    with glancing eyes and fair cheeks, and half again a huge snake,
    great and awful, with speckled skin, eating raw flesh beneath the
    secret parts of the holy earth. And there she has a cave deep
    down under a hollow rock far from the deathless gods and mortal
    men. There, then, did the gods appoint her a glorious house to
    dwell in: and she keeps guard in Arima beneath the earth, grim
    Echidna, a nymph who dies not nor grows old all her days.

    Men say that Typhaon the terrible, outrageous and
    lawless, was joined in love to her, the maid with glancing eyes.
    So she conceived and brought forth fierce offspring; first she
    bare Orthus the hound of Geryones, and then again she bare a
    second, a monster not to be overcome and that may not be
    described, Cerberus who eats raw flesh, the brazen-voiced hound
    of Hades, fifty-headed, relentless and strong. And again she
    bore a third, the evil-minded Hydra of Lerna, whom the goddess,
    white-armed Hera nourished, being angry beyond measure with the
    mighty Heracles. And her Heracles, the son of Zeus, of the house
    of Amphitryon, together with warlike Iolaus, destroyed with the
    unpitying sword through the plans of Athene the spoil-driver.
     

    She was the mother of Chimaera who breathed raging fire, a
    creature fearful, great, swift-footed and strong, who had three
    heads, one of a grim-eyed lion; in her hinderpart, a dragon; and
    in her middle, a goat, breathing forth a fearful blast of blazing
    fire. Her did Pegasus and noble Bellerophon slay; but Echidna
    was subject in love to Orthus and brought forth the deadly Sphinx
    which destroyed the Cadmeans, and the Nemean lion, which Hera,
    the good wife of Zeus, brought up and made to haunt the hills of
    Nemea, a plague to men. There he preyed upon the tribes of her
    own people and had power over Tretus of Nemea and Apesas: yet the
    strength of stout Heracles overcame him.

    And Ceto was joined in love to Phorcys and bare her
    youngest, the awful snake who guards the apples all of gold in
    the secret places of the dark earth at its great bounds. This is
    the offspring of Ceto and Phoreys.

    And Tethys bare to Ocean eddying rivers, Nilus, and
    Alpheus, and deep-swirling Eridanus, Strymon, and Meander, and
    the fair stream of Ister, and Phasis, and Rhesus, and the silver
    eddies of Achelous, Nessus, and Rhodius, Haliacmon, and
    Heptaporus, Granicus, and Aesepus, and holy Simois, and Peneus,
    and Hermus, and Caicus fair stream, and great Sangarius, Ladon,
    Parthenius, Euenus, Ardescus, and divine Scamander.

    Also she brought forth a holy company of daughters
    who with the lord Apollo and the Rivers have youths in their
    keeping -- to this charge Zeus appointed them -- Peitho, and
    Admete, and Ianthe, and Electra, and Doris, and Prymno, and
    Urania divine in form, Hippo, Clymene, Rhodea, and Callirrhoe,
    Zeuxo and Clytie, and Idyia, and Pasithoe, Plexaura, and
    Galaxaura, and lovely Dione, Melobosis and Thoe and handsome
    Polydora, Cerceis lovely of form, and soft eyed Pluto, Perseis,
    Ianeira, Acaste, Xanthe, Petraea the fair, Menestho, and Europa,
    Metis, and Eurynome, and Telesto saffron-clad, Chryseis and Asia
    and charming Calypso, Eudora, and Tyche, Amphirho, and Ocyrrhoe,
    and Styx who is the chiefest of them all. These are the eldest
    daughters that sprang from Ocean and Tethys; but there are many
    besides. For there are three thousand neat-ankled daughters of
    Ocean who are dispersed far and wide, and in every place alike
    serve the earth and the deep waters, children who are glorious
    among goddesses.

    And as many other rivers are there, babbling as
    they flow, sons of Ocean, whom queenly Tethys bare, but their
    names it is hard for a mortal man to tell, but people know those
    by which they severally dwell.

    And Theia was subject in love to Hyperion and bare
    great Helius and clear Selene and Eos who
    shines upon all that are on earth and upon the deathless Gods who
    live in the wide heaven.

    And Eurybia, bright goddess, was joined in love to
    Crius and bare great Astraeus, and Pallas, and Perses who also
    was eminent among all men in wisdom.

    And Eos bare to Astraeus the strong-hearted winds,
    brightening Zephyrus, and Boreas, headlong in his course, and
    Notus, -- a goddess mating in love with a god. And after these
    Erigenia bare the star Eosphorus, and the
    gleaming stars with which heaven is crowned.

    And Styx the daughter of Ocean was joined to Pallas
    and bare Zelus and trim-ankled Nike in the
    house. Also she brought forth Cratos and Bia,
    wonderful children. These have no house apart from Zeus, nor any
    dwelling nor path except that wherein God leads them, but they
    dwell always with Zeus the loud-thunderer.

    For so did Styx the
    deathless daughter of Ocean plan on that day when the Olympian
    Lightener called all the deathless gods to great Olympus, and
    said that whosoever of the gods would fight with him against the
    Titans, he would not cast him out from his rights, but each
    should have the office which he had before amongst the deathless
    gods. And he declared that he who was without office and rights
    as is just. So deathless Styx came first to Olympus with her
    children through the wit of her dear father.

    And Zeus honoured
    her, and gave her very great gifts, for her he appointed to be
    the great oath of the gods, and her children to live with him
    always. And as he promised, so he performed fully unto them all.

    But he himself mightily reigns and rules.

    Again, Phoebe came to the desired embrace of Coeus.

    Then the goddess through the love of the god conceived and
    brought forth dark-gowned Leto, always mild, kind to men and to
    the deathless gods, mild from the beginning, gentlest in all
    Olympus. Also she bare Asteria of happy name, whom Perses once
    led to his great house to be called his dear wife. And she
    conceived and bare Hecate whom Zeus the son of Cronos honoured
    above all. He gave her splendid gifts, to have a share of the
    earth and the unfruitful sea.

    She received honour also in starry
    heaven, and is honoured exceedingly by the deathless gods. For
    to this day, whenever any one of men on earth offers rich
    sacrifices and prays for favour according to custom, he calls
    upon Hecate. Great honour comes full easily to him whose prayers
    the goddess receives favourably, and she bestows wealth upon him;
    for the power surely is with her.

    For as many as were born of
    Earth and Ocean amongst all these she has her due portion. The
    son of Cronos did her no wrong nor took anything away of all that
    was her portion among the former Titan gods: but she holds, as
    the division was at the first from the beginning, privilege both
    in earth, and in heaven, and in sea. Also, because she is an
    only child, the goddess receives not less honour, but much more
    still, for Zeus honours her. Whom she will she greatly aids and
    advances: she sits by worshipful kings in judgement, and in the
    assembly whom she will is distinguished among the people. And
    when men arm themselves for the battle that destroys men, then
    the goddess is at hand to give victory and grant glory readily to
    whom she will.

    Good is she also when men contend at the games,
    for there too the goddess is with them and profits them: and he
    who by might and strength gets the victory wins the rich prize
    easily with joy, and brings glory to his parents. And she is
    good to stand by horsemen, whom she will: and to those whose
    business is in the grey discomfortable sea, and who pray to
    Hecate and the loud-crashing Earth-Shaker, easily the glorious
    goddess gives great catch, and easily she takes it away as soon
    as seen, if so she will. She is good in the byre with Hermes to
    increase the stock.

    The droves of kine and wide herds of goats
    and flocks of fleecy sheep, if she will, she increases from a
    few, or makes many to be less. So, then. albeit her mother's
    only child, she is honoured amongst all the deathless gods.
    And the son of Cronos made her a nurse of the young who after
    that day saw with their eyes the light of all-seeing Dawn. So
    from the beginning she is a nurse of the young, and these are her honours.

    But Rhea was subject in love to Cronos and bare
    splendid children, Hestia, Demeter, and gold-shod Hera and
    strong Hades, pitiless in heart, who dwells under the earth, and
    the loud-crashing Earth-Shaker, and wise Zeus, father of gods and
    men, by whose thunder the wide earth is shaken. These great
    Cronos swallowed as each came forth from the womb to his mother's
    knees with this intent, that no other of the proud sons of Heaven
    should hold the kingly office amongst the deathless gods. For he
    learned from Earth and starry Heaven that he was destined to be
    overcome by his own son, strong though he was, through the
    contriving of great Zeus.

    Therefore he kept no blind
    outlook, but watched and swallowed down his children: and
    unceasing grief seized Rhea. But when she was about to bear
    Zeus, the father of gods and men, then she besought her own dear
    parents, Earth and starry Heaven, to devise some plan with her
    that the birth of her dear child might be concealed, and that
    retribution might overtake great, crafty Cronos for his own
    father and also for the children whom he had swallowed down.

    And they readily heard and obeyed their dear daughter, and told her
    all that was destined to happen touching Cronos the king and his
    stout-hearted son. So they sent her to Lyetus, to the rich land
    of Crete, when she was ready to bear great Zeus, the youngest of
    her children. Him did vast Earth receive from Rhea in wide Crete
    to nourish and to bring up.

    Thither came Earth carrying him
    swiftly through the black night to Lyctus first, and took him in
    her arms and hid him in a remote cave beneath the secret places
    of the holy earth on thick-wooded Mount Aegeum; but to the
    mightily ruling son of Heaven, the earlier king of the gods, she
    gave a great stone wrapped in swaddling clothes.

    Then he took it
    in his hands and thrust it down into his belly: wretch! he knew
    not in his heart that in place of the stone his son was left
    behind, unconquered and untroubled, and that he was soon to
    overcome him by force and might and drive him from his honours,
    himself to reign over the deathless gods.

    After that, the strength and glorious limbs of the
    prince increased quickly, and as the years rolled on, great
    Cronos the wily was beguiled by the deep suggestions of Earth,
    and brought up again his offspring, vanquished by the arts and
    might of his own son, and he vomited up first the stone which he
    had swallowed last. And Zeus set it fast in the wide-pathed
    earth at goodly Pytho under the glens of Parnassus, to be a sign
    thenceforth and a marvel to mortal men.

    And he set free
    from their deadly bonds the brothers of his father, sons of
    Heaven whom his father in his foolishness had bound. And they
    remembered to be grateful to him for his kindness, and gave him
    thunder and the glowing thunderbolt and lightening: for before
    that, huge Earth had hidden these. In them he trusts and rules
    over mortals and immortals.

    Now Iapetus took to wife the neat-ankled mad
    Clymene, daughter of Ocean, and went up with her into one bed.
    And she bare him a stout-hearted son, Atlas: also she bare very
    glorious Menoetius and clever Prometheus, full of various wiles,
    and scatter-brained Epimetheus who from the first was a mischief
    to men who eat bread; for it was he who first took of Zeus the
    woman, the maiden whom he had formed. But Menoetius was
    outrageous, and far-seeing Zeus struck him with a lurid
    thunderbolt and sent him down to Erebus because of his mad
    presumption and exceeding pride.

    And Atlas through hard
    constraint upholds the wide heaven with unwearying head and arms,
    standing at the borders of the earth before the clear-voiced
    Hesperides; for this lot wise Zeus assigned to him. And ready-
    witted Prometheus he bound with inextricable bonds, cruel chains,
    and drove a shaft through his middle, and set on him a long-
    winged eagle, which used to eat his immortal liver; but by night
    the liver grew as much again everyway as the long-winged bird
    devoured in the whole day.

    That bird Heracles, the valiant son
    of shapely-ankled Alcmene, slew; and delivered the son of Iapetus
    from the cruel plague, and released him from his affliction --
    not without the will of Olympian Zeus who reigns on high, that
    the glory of Heracles the Theban-born might be yet greater than
    it was before over the plenteous earth.

    This, then, he regarded,
    and honoured his famous son; though he was angry, he ceased from
    the wrath which he had before because Prometheus matched himself
    in wit with the almighty son of Cronos. For when the gods and
    mortal men had a dispute at Mecone, even then Prometheus was
    forward to cut up a great ox and set portions before them, trying
    to befool the mind of Zeus. Before the rest he set flesh and
    inner parts thick with fat upon the hide, covering them with an
    ox paunch; but for Zeus he put the white bones dressed up with
    cunning art and covered with shining fat. Then the father of men
    and of gods said to him:

    `Son of Iapetus, most glorious of all lords, good
    sir, how unfairly you have divided the portions!'

    So said Zeus whose wisdom is everlasting, rebuking
    him. But wily Prometheus answered him, smiling softly and not
    forgetting his cunning trick:

    `Zeus, most glorious and greatest of the eternal
    gods, take which ever of these portions your heart within you
    bids.' So he said, thinking trickery. But Zeus, whose wisdom is
    everlasting, saw and failed not to perceive the trick, and in his
    heart he thought mischief against mortal men which also was to be
    fulfilled. With both hands he took up the white fat and was
    angry at heart, and wrath came to his spirit when he saw the
    white ox-bones craftily tricked out: and because of this the
    tribes of men upon earth burn white bones to the deathless gods
    upon fragrant altars. But Zeus who drives the clouds was greatly
    vexed and said to him:

    'Son of Iapetus, clever above all! So, sir, you
    have not yet forgotten your cunning arts!'

    So spake Zeus in anger, whose wisdom is
    everlasting; and from that time he was always mindful of the
    trick, and would not give the power of unwearying fire to the
    Melian (21) race of mortal men who live on the earth. But the
    noble son of Iapetus outwitted him and stole the far-seen gleam
    of unwearying fire in a hollow fennel stalk. And Zeus who
    thunders on high was stung in spirit, and his dear heart was
    angered when he saw amongst men the far-seen ray of fire.
    Forthwith he made an evil thing for men as the price of fire; for
    the very famous Limping God formed of earth the likeness of a shy
    maiden as the son of Cronos willed. And the goddess bright-eyed
    Athene girded and clothed her with silvery raiment, and down from
    her head she spread with her hands a broidered veil, a wonder to
    see; and she, Pallas Athene, put about her head lovely garlands,
    flowers of new-grown herbs.

    Also she put upon her head a crown
    of gold which the very famous Limping God made himself and worked
    with his own hands as a favour to Zeus his father. On it was
    much curious work, wonderful to see; for of the many creatures
    which the land and sea rear up, he put most upon it, wonderful
    things, like living beings with voices: and great beauty shone out from it.

    But when he had made the beautiful evil to be the
    price for the blessing, he brought her out, delighting in the
    finery which the bright-eyed daughter of a mighty father had
    given her, to the place where the other gods and men were. And
    wonder took hold of the deathless gods and mortal men when they
    saw that which was sheer guile, not to be withstood by men.

    For from her is the race of women and female kind:
    of her is the deadly race and tribe of women who live amongst
    mortal men to their great trouble, no helpmeets in hateful
    poverty, but only in wealth. And as in thatched hives bees feed
    the drones whose nature is to do mischief -- by day and
    throughout the day until the sun goes down the bees are busy and
    lay the white combs, while the drones stay at home in the covered
    skeps and reap the toil of others into their own bellies -- even
    so Zeus who thunders on high made women to be an evil to mortal
    men, with a nature to do evil.

    And he gave them a second evil to
    be the price for the good they had: whoever avoids marriage and
    the sorrows that women cause, and will not wed, reaches deadly
    old age without anyone to tend his years, and though he at least
    has no lack of livelihood while he lives, yet, when he is dead,
    his kinsfolk divide his possessions amongst them.

    And as for the
    man who chooses the lot of marriage and takes a good wife suited
    to his mind, evil continually contends with good; for whoever
    happens to have mischievous children, lives always with unceasing
    grief in his spirit and heart within him; and this evil cannot be healed.

    So it is not possible to deceive or go beyond the
    will of Zeus; for not even the son of Iapetus, kindly Prometheus,
    escaped his heavy anger, but of necessity strong bands confined
    him, although he knew many a wile.

    But when first their father was vexed in his heart
    with Obriareus and Cottus and Gyes, he bound them in cruel bonds,
    because he was jealous of their exceeding manhood and comeliness
    and great size: and he made them live beneath the wide-pathed
    earth, where they were afflicted, being set to dwell under the
    ground, at the end of the earth, at its great borders, in bitter
    anguish for a long time and with great grief at heart. But the
    son of Cronos and the other deathless gods whom rich-haired Rhea
    bare from union with Cronos, brought them up again to the light
    at Earth's advising.

    For she herself recounted all things to the
    gods fully, how that with these they would gain victory and a
    glorious cause to vaunt themselves. For the Titan gods and as
    many as sprang from Cronos had long been fighting together in
    stubborn war with heart-grieving toil, the lordly Titans from
    high Othyrs, but the gods, givers of good, whom rich-haired Rhea
    bare in union with Cronos, from Olympus.

    So they, with bitter
    wrath, were fighting continually with one another at that time
    for ten full years, and the hard strife had no close or end for
    either side, and the issue of the war hung evenly balanced. But
    when he had provided those three with all things fitting, nectar
    and ambrosia which the gods themselves eat, and when their proud
    spirit revived within them all after they had fed on nectar and
    delicious ambrosia, then it was that the father of men and gods
    spoke amongst them:

    Hear me, bright children of Earth and Heaven, that
    I may say what my heart within me bids. A long while now have
    we, who are sprung from Cronos and the Titan gods, fought with
    each other every day to get victory and to prevail. But do you
    show your great might and unconquerable strength, and face the
    Titans in bitter strife; for remember our friendly kindness, and
    from what sufferings you are come back to the light from your
    cruel bondage under misty gloom through our counsels.'

    So he said. And blameless Cottus answered him
    again: `Divine one, you speak that which we know well: nay, even
    of ourselves we know that your wisdom and understanding is
    exceeding, and that you became a defender of the deathless ones
    from chill doom. And through your devising we are come back
    again from the murky gloom and from our merciless bonds, enjoying
    what we looked not for, O lord, son of Cronos. And so now with
    fixed purpose and deliberate counsel we will aid your power in
    dreadful strife and will fight against the Titans in hard battle.'

    So he said: and the gods, givers of good things,
    applauded when they heard his word, and their spirit longed for
    war even more than before, and they all, both male and female,
    stirred up hated battle that day, the Titan gods, and all that
    were born of Cronos together with those dread, mighty ones of
    overwhelming strength whom Zeus brought up to the light from
    Erebus beneath the earth. An hundred arms sprang from the
    shoulders of all alike, and each had fifty heads growing upon his
    shoulders upon stout limbs. These, then, stood against the
    Titans in grim strife, holding huge rocks in their strong hands.
    And on the other part the Titans eagerly strengthened their
    ranks, and both sides at one time showed the work of their hands
    and their might.

    The boundless sea rang terribly around, and the
    earth crashed loudly: wide Heaven was shaken and groaned, and
    high Olympus reeled from its foundation under the charge of the
    undying gods, and a heavy quaking reached dim Tartarus and the
    deep sound of their feet in the fearful onset and of their hard
    missiles. So, then, they launched their grievous shafts upon one
    another, and the cry of both armies as they shouted reached to
    starry heaven; and they met together with a great battle-cry.

    Then Zeus no longer held back his might; but
    straight his heart was filled with fury and he showed forth all
    his strength. From Heaven and from Olympus he came forthwith,
    hurling his lightning: the bold flew thick and fast from his
    strong hand together with thunder and lightning, whirling an
    awesome flame.

    The life-giving earth crashed around in burning,
    and the vast wood crackled loud with fire all about. All the
    land seethed, and Ocean's streams and the unfruitful sea. The
    hot vapour lapped round the earthborn Titans: flame unspeakable
    rose to the bright upper air: the flashing glare of the thunder-
    stone and lightning blinded their eyes for all that there were
    strong. Astounding heat seized Chaos: and to see with eyes and
    to hear the sound with ears it seemed even as if Earth and wide
    Heaven above came together; for such a mighty crash would have
    arisen if Earth were being hurled to ruin, and Heaven from on
    high were hurling her down; so great a crash was there while the
    gods were meeting together in strife.

    Also the winds brought
    rumbling earthquake and duststorm, thunder and lightning and the
    lurid thunderbolt, which are the shafts of great Zeus, and
    carried the clangour and the warcry into the midst of the two
    hosts. An horrible uproar of terrible strife arose: mighty deeds
    were shown and the battle inclined. But until then, they kept at
    one another and fought continually in cruel war.

    And amongst the foremost Cottus and Briareos and
    Gyes insatiate for war raised fierce fighting: three hundred
    rocks, one upon another, they launched from their strong hands
    and overshadowed the Titans with their missiles, and buried them
    beneath the wide-pathed earth, and bound them in bitter chains
    when they had conquered them by their strength for all their
    great spirit, as far beneath the earth to Tartarus. For a brazen
    anvil falling down from heaven nine nights and days would reach
    the earth upon the tenth: and again, a brazen anvil falling from
    earth nine nights and days would reach Tartarus upon the tenth.
    Round it runs a fence of bronze, and night spreads in triple line
    all about it like a neck-circlet, while above grow the roots of
    the earth and unfruitful sea.

    There by the counsel of Zeus who
    drives the clouds the Titan gods are hidden under misty gloom, in
    a dank place where are the ends of the huge earth. And they may
    not go out; for Poseidon fixed gates of bronze upon it, and a
    wall runs all round it on every side. There Gyes and Cottus and
    great-souled Obriareus live, trusty warders of Zeus who holds the aegis.

    And there, all in their order, are the sources and
    ends of gloomy earth and misty Tartarus and the unfruitful sea
    and starry heaven, loathsome and dank, which even the gods abhor.

    It is a great gulf, and if once a man were within the gates, he
    would not reach the floor until a whole year had reached its end,
    but cruel blast upon blast would carry him this way and that.
    And this marvel is awful even to the deathless gods.

    There stands the awful home of murky Night wrapped
    in dark clouds. In front of it the son of Iapetus stands
    immovably upholding the wide heaven upon his head and unwearying
    hands, where Night and Day draw near and greet one another as
    they pass the great threshold of bronze: and while the one is
    about to go down into the house, the other comes out at the door.

    And the house never holds them both within; but always one is
    without the house passing over the earth, while the other stays
    at home and waits until the time for her journeying come; and the
    one holds all-seeing light for them on earth, but the other holds
    in her arms Sleep the brother of Death, even evil Night, wrapped
    in a vaporous cloud.

    And there the children of dark Night have their
    dwellings, Sleep and Death, awful gods. The glowing Sun never
    looks upon them with his beams, neither as he goes up into
    heaven, nor as he comes down from heaven. And the former of them
    roams peacefully over the earth and the sea's broad back and is
    kindly to men; but the other has a heart of iron, and his spirit
    within him is pitiless as bronze: whomsoever of men he has once
    seized he holds fast: and he is hateful even to the deathless gods.

    There, in front, stand the echoing halls of the god
    of the lower-world, strong Hades, and of awful Persephone. A
    fearful hound guards the house in front, pitiless, and he has a
    cruel trick. On those who go in he fawns with his tail and both
    is ears, but suffers them not to go out back again, but keeps
    watch and devours whomsoever he catches going out of the gates of
    strong Hades and awful Persephone.

    And there dwells the goddess loathed by the
    deathless gods, terrible Styx, eldest daughter of back-flowing
    Ocean. She lives apart from the gods in her glorious house
    vaulted over with great rocks and propped up to heaven all round
    with silver pillars. Rarely does the daughter of Thaumas, swift-
    footed Iris, come to her with a message over the sea's wide back.

    But when strife and quarrel arise among the deathless gods, and
    when any of them who live in the house of Olympus lies, then Zeus
    sends Iris to bring in a golden jug the great oath of the gods
    from far away, the famous cold water which trickles down from a
    high and beetling rock. Far under the wide-pathed earth a branch
    of Oceanus flows through the dark night out of the holy stream,
    and a tenth part of his water is allotted to her. With nine
    silver-swirling streams he winds about the earth and the sea's
    wide back, and then falls into the main; but the tenth flows
    out from a rock, a sore trouble to the gods.

    For whoever of the
    deathless gods that hold the peaks of snowy Olympus pours a
    libation of her water is forsworn, lies breathless until a full
    year is completed, and never comes near to taste ambrosia and
    nectar, but lies spiritless and voiceless on a strewn bed: and a
    heavy trance overshadows him. But when he has spent a long year
    in his sickness, another penance and an harder follows after the
    first. For nine years he is cut off from the eternal gods and
    never joins their councils of their feasts, nine full years. But
    in the tenth year he comes again to join the assemblies of the
    deathless gods who live in the house of Olympus. Such an oath,
    then, did the gods appoint the eternal and primaeval water of
    Styx to be: and it spouts through a rugged place.

    And there, all in their order, are the sources and
    ends of the dark earth and misty Tartarus and the unfruitful sea
    and starry heaven, loathsome and dank, which even the gods abhor.

    And there are shining gates and an immoveable threshold of bronze
    having unending roots and it is grown of itself. And
    beyond, away from all the gods, live the Titans, beyond gloomy
    Chaos. But the glorious allies of loud-crashing Zeus have their
    dwelling upon Ocean's foundations, even Cottus and Gyes; but
    Briareos, being goodly, the deep-roaring Earth-Shaker made his
    son-in-law, giving him Cymopolea his daughter to wed.

    But when Zeus had driven the Titans from heaven,
    huge Earth bare her youngest child Typhoeus of the love of
    Tartarus, by the aid of golden Aphrodite. Strength was with his
    hands in all that he did and the feet of the strong god were
    untiring. From his shoulders grew an hundred heads of a snake, a
    fearful dragon, with dark, flickering tongues, and from under the
    brows of his eyes in his marvellous heads flashed fire, and fire
    burned from his heads as he glared. And there were voices in all
    his dreadful heads which uttered every kind of sound unspeakable;
    for at one time they made sounds such that the gods understood,
    but at another, the noise of a bull bellowing aloud in proud
    ungovernable fury; and at another, the sound of a lion,
    relentless of heart; and at anothers, sounds like whelps,
    wonderful to hear; and again, at another, he would hiss, so that
    the high mountains re-echoed.

    And truly a thing past help would
    have happened on that day, and he would have come to reign over
    mortals and immortals, had not the father of men and gods been
    quick to perceive it. But he thundered hard and mightily: and the
    earth around resounded terribly and the wide heaven above, and
    the sea and Ocean's streams and the nether parts of the earth.
    Great Olympus reeled beneath the divine feet of the king as he
    arose and earth groaned thereat. And through the two of them
    heat took hold on the dark-blue sea, through the thunder and
    lightning, and through the fire from the monster, and the
    scorching winds and blazing thunderbolt.

    The whole earth
    seethed, and sky and sea: and the long waves raged along the
    beaches round and about, at the rush of the deathless gods: and
    there arose an endless shaking. Hades trembled where he rules
    over the dead below, and the Titans under Tartarus who live with
    Cronos, because of the unending clamour and the fearful strife.
    So when Zeus had raised up his might and seized his arms, thunder
    and lightning and lurid thunderbolt, he leaped form Olympus and
    struck him, and burned all the marvellous heads of the monster
    about him. But when Zeus had conquered him and lashed him with
    strokes, Typhoeus was hurled down, a maimed wreck, so that the
    huge earth groaned. And flame shot forth from the thunder-
    stricken lord in the dim rugged glens of the mount, when he
    was smitten.

    A great part of huge earth was scorched by the
    terrible vapour and melted as tin melts when heated by men's art
    in channelled crucibles; or as iron, which is hardest of all
    things, is softened by glowing fire in mountain glens and melts
    in the divine earth through the strength of Hephaestus.
    Even so, then, the earth melted in the glow of the blazing fire.
    And in the bitterness of his anger Zeus cast him into wide Tartarus.

    And from Typhoeus come boisterous winds which blow
    damply, except Notus and Boreas and clear Zephyr. These are a
    god-sent kind, and a great blessing to men; but the others blow
    fitfully upon the seas. Some rush upon the misty sea and work
    great havoc among men with their evil, raging blasts; for varying
    with the season they blow, scattering ships and destroying
    sailors. And men who meet these upon the sea have no help
    against the mischief. Others again over the boundless, flowering
    earth spoil the fair fields of men who dwell below, filling them
    with dust and cruel uproar.

    But when the blessed gods had finished their toil,
    and settled by force their struggle for honours with the Titans,
    they pressed far-seeing Olympian Zeus to reign and to rule over
    them, by Earth's prompting. So he divided their dignities amongst them.

    Now Zeus, king of the gods, made Metis his wife
    first, and she was wisest among gods and mortal men. But when
    she was about to bring forth the goddess bright-eyed Athene, Zeus
    craftily deceived her with cunning words and put her in his own
    belly, as Earth and starry Heaven advised. For they advised him
    so, to the end that no other should hold royal sway over the
    eternal gods in place of Zeus; for very wise children were
    destined to be born of her, first the maiden bright-eyed
    Tritogeneia, equal to her father in strength and in wise
    understanding; but afterwards she was to bear a son of
    overbearing spirit, king of gods and men. But Zeus put her into
    his own belly first, that the goddess might devise for him both
    good and evil.

    Next he married bright Themis who bare the Horae,
    and Eunomia, Dike, and blooming Eirene
    (Peace), who mind the works of mortal men, and the Moerae
    to whom wise Zeus gave the greatest honour, Clotho, and Lachesis,
    and Atropos who give mortal men evil and good to have.

    And Eurynome, the daughter of Ocean, beautiful in
    form, bare him three fair-cheeked Charites, Aglaea, and
    Euphrosyne, and lovely Thaleia, from whose eyes as they glanced
    flowed love that unnerves the limbs: and beautiful is their
    glance beneath their brows.

    Also he came to the bed of all-nourishing Demeter,
    and she bare white-armed Persephone whom Aidoneus carried off
    from her mother; but wise Zeus gave her to him.

    And again, he loved Mnemosyne with the beautiful
    hair: and of her the nine gold-crowned Muses were born who
    delight in feasts and the pleasures of song.

    And Leto was joined in love with Zeus who holds the
    aegis, and bare Apollo and Artemis delighting in arrows, children
    lovely above all the sons of Heaven.

    Lastly, he made Hera his blooming wife: and she was
    joined in love with the king of gods and men, and brought forth
    Hebe and Ares and Eileithyia.

    But Zeus himself gave birth from his own head to
    bright-eyed Tritogeneia, the awful, the strife-stirring, the
    host-leader, the unwearying, the queen, who delights in tumults
    and wars and battles. But Hera without union with Zeus -- for
    she was very angry and quarrelled with her mate -- bare famous
    Hephaestus, who is skilled in crafts more than all the sons of Heaven.

    But Hera was very angry and quarrelled with
    her mate. And because of this strife she bare without union with
    Zeus who holds the aegis a glorious son, Hephaestus, who excelled
    all the sons of Heaven in crafts. But Zeus lay with the fair-
    cheeked daughter of Ocean and Tethys apart from Hera....
    LACUNA
    ....deceiving Metis Thought although she was full wise. But he
    seized her with his hands and put her in his belly, for fear that
    she might bring forth something stronger than his thunderbolt:
    therefore did Zeus, who sits on high and dwells in the aether,
    swallow her down suddenly. But she straightway conceived Pallas
    Athene: and the father of men and gods gave her birth by way of
    his head on the banks of the river Trito. And she remained
    hidden beneath the inward parts of Zeus, even Metis, Athena's
    mother, worker of righteousness, who was wiser than gods and
    mortal men. There the goddess Athena received that
    whereby she excelled in strength all the deathless ones who dwell
    in Olympus, she who made the host-scaring weapon of Athena. And
    with it Zeus gave her birth, arrayed in arms of war.

    And of Amphitrite and the loud-roaring Earth-Shaker
    was born great, wide-ruling Triton, and he owns the depths of the
    sea, living with his dear mother and the lord his father in their
    golden house, an awful god.

    Also Cytherea bare to Ares the shield-piercer Panic
    and Fear, terrible gods who drive in disorder the close ranks of
    men in numbing war, with the help of Ares, sacker of towns: and
    Harmonia whom high-spirited Cadmus made his wife.

    And Maia, the daughter of Atlas, bare to Zeus
    glorious Hermes, the herald of the deathless gods, for she went
    up into his holy bed.

    And Semele, daughter of Cadmus was joined with him
    in love and bare him a splendid son, joyous Dionysus, -- a mortal
    woman an immortal son. And now they both are gods.

    And Alemena was joined in love with Zeus who drives
    the clouds and bare mighty Heracles.

    And Hephaestus, the famous Lame One, made Aglaea,
    youngest of the Graces, his buxom wife.

    And golden-haired Dionysus made brown-haired
    Ariadne, the daughter of Minos, his buxom wife: and the son of
    Cronos made her deathless and unageing for him.

    And mighty Heracles, the valiant son of neat-ankled
    Alemena, when he had finished his grievous toils, made Hebe the
    child of great Zeus and gold-shod Hera his shy wife in snowy
    Olympus. Happy he! For he has finished his great works and
    lives amongst the dying gods, untroubled and unaging all his days.

    And Perseis, the daughter of Ocean, bare to
    unwearying Helios Circe and Aeetes the king. And Aeetes, the son
    of Helios who shows light to men, took to wife fair-cheeked
    Idyia, daughter of Ocean the perfect stream, by the will of the
    gods: and she was subject to him in love through golden Aphrodite
    and bare him neat-ankled Medea.

    And now farewell, you dwellers on Olympus and you
    islands and continents and thou briny sea within. Now sing the
    company of goddesses, sweet-voiced Muses of Olympus, daughter of
    Zeus who holds the aegis, -- even those deathless one who lay
    with mortal men and bare children like unto gods.

    Demeter, bright goddess, was joined in sweet love
    with the hero Iasion in a thrice-ploughed fallow in the rich land
    of Crete, and bare Plutus, a kindly god who goes everywhere over
    land and the sea's wide back, and him who finds him and into
    whose hands he comes he makes rich, bestowing great wealth upon him.

    And Harmonia, the daughter of golden Aphrodite,
    bare to Cadmus Ino and Semele and fair-cheeked Agave and Autonoe
    whom long haired Aristaeus wedded, and Polydorus also in rich-crowned Thebe.

    And the daughter of Ocean, Callirrhoe was joined in
    the love of rich Aphrodite with stout hearted Chrysaor and bare a
    son who was the strongest of all men, Geryones, whom mighty
    Heracles killed in sea-girt Erythea for the sake of his shambling oxen.

    And Eos bare to Tithonus brazen-crested Memnon,
    king of the Ethiopians, and the Lord Emathion. And to Cephalus
    she bare a splendid son, strong Phaethon, a man like the gods,
    whom, when he was a young boy in the tender flower of glorious
    youth with childish thoughts, laughter-loving Aphrodite seized
    and caught up and made a keeper of her shrine by night, a divine spirit.

    And the son of Aeson by the will of the gods led
    away from Aeetes the daughter of Aeetes the heaven-nurtured king,
    when he had finished the many grievous labours which the great
    king, over bearing Pelias, that outrageous and presumptuous doer
    of violence, put upon him. But when the son of Aeson had
    finished them, he came to Iolcus after long toil bringing the
    coy-eyed girl with him on his swift ship, and made her his buxom
    wife. And she was subject to Iason, shepherd of the people, and
    bare a son Medeus whom Cheiron the son of Philyra brought up in
    the mountains. And the will of great Zeus was fulfilled.

    But of the daughters of Nereus, the Old man of
    the Sea, Psamathe the fair goddess, was loved by Aeacus through
    golden Aphrodite and bare Phocus. And the silver-shod goddess
    Thetis was subject to Peleus and brought forth lion-hearted
    Achilles, the destroyer of men.

    And Cytherea with the beautiful crown was joined
    in sweet love with the hero Anchises and bare Aeneas on the peaks
    of Ida with its many wooded glens.

    And Circe the daughter of Helius, Hyperion's son,
    loved steadfast Odysseus and bare Agrius and Latinus who was
    faultless and strong: also she brought forth Telegonus by the
    will of golden Aphrodite. And they ruled over the famous
    Tyrenians, very far off in a recess of the holy islands.

    And the bright goddess Calypso was joined to
    Odysseus in sweet love, and bare him Nausithous and Nausinous.

    These are the immortal goddesses who lay with
    mortal men and bare them children like unto gods.
     
    But now, sweet-voiced Muses of Olympus, daughters
    of Zeus who holds the aegis, sing of the company of women.
     
    THE END

     

    THE THEOGONY
    Hesiod

     

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