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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: SAR-SCY |
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SCYLLA AND CHARYBDIS . In Homer
monster
heads, twelve feet and a voice like the yelp of a puppy. She dwelt in a sea-cave looking to'the west, far up the face of a huge cliff. Out of her cave she stuck her heads, fishing for marine creatures and snatching the seamen out of passing ships. Within a bowshot of this cliff was another lower cliff with a great
rock
Homer
Lille
1 This Heracleides is noticed in an Egyptian papyrus containing a fragment of the historian Sosylus, which alludes, by way of comparison, to the tactical ability displayed by him at the battle of Artemisium (Wilcken in Hermes, xli., 1906, pp. 103 seq.). Ovid (Metam. xiv. 1-74) Scylla appears as a beautiful maiden beloved by the sea-god Glaucus and other deities, and changed by the jealous Circe (or other rival) into a sea- monster
rock
late
body
Another Scylla, confounded. by Virgil (Eel. vi. 74) with the sea-monster, was a daughter of Nisus (q.v.), king of Megara
Griechen and Romer (1894); and D. Jobst, Skyll and Charybdis (Wurzburg, 1902), who endeavours to show that the Homeric description really referred, as the ancients assumed, to the Sicilian straits. End of Article: SCYLLA AND CHARYBDIS If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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