Page:Hesiod, The Homeric Hymns, and Homerica.djvu/559

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THE CYPRIA

17.

The poet of the Cypria says that the wife of Protesilaus—who, when the Hellenes reached the Trojan shore, first dared to land—was called Polydora, and was the daughter of Meleager, the son of Oeneus.


18.

Some relate that Chryseïs was taken from Hypoplaeian[1] Thebes, and that she had not taken refuge there nor gone there to sacrifice to Artemis, as the author of the Cypria states, but was simply a fellow townswoman of Andromache.


19.

I know, because I have read it in the epic Cypria, that Palamedes was drowned when he had gone out fishing, and that it was Diomedes and Odysseus who caused his death.


20.

"That it is Zeus who has done this, and brought all these things to pass, you do not like to say; for where fear is, there too is shame."


21.

"By him she conceived and bare the Gorgons, fearful monsters who lived in Sarpedon, a rocky island in deep-eddying Oceanus."

  1. sc. the Asiatic Thebes at the foot of Mt. Placius.
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