Chapter 208: The Creation of Interracial Life (3)
PS: Capture the Boar of Ermantos alive, bring it back to McKenny intact, and give it to King Eurystheus. www.biquge.info The boar was sacrificed to the goddess Artemis, but it was very harmful to the crops in the area of Erymantos.
On his way to Erymantos, Hercules came to the house of Phros, the son of Selenos, a native of Kentaulus, who warmly served a pot of roast meat to his guests, while he himself ate it raw. Hercules wished to accompany the food with good wine, and when Foros heard this, he smiled and said, "Honored guest, there is a barrel of wine in my basement, which belongs to all of us Kentauros. I didn't dare open it up, because I knew that we half-man, half-horse Kentaulos were not generous. "Open," said Hercules, "I promise you to protect you from their attacks. I'm so thirsty right now! ”
(4) Capture the big wild boar alive
Capture the boar of Erymantos alive and bring it back to McKenny intact and give it to King Eurystheus. This boar was sacrificed to the goddess Artemis, but it was very harmful to the crops in the area of Erymantos.
On his way to Erymantos, Hercules came to the house of Phros, the son of Selenos, a native of Kentaulus, who warmly served a pot of roast meat to his guests, while he himself ate it raw. Hercules wished to accompany the food with good wine, and when Foros heard this, he smiled and said, "Honored guest, there is a barrel of wine in my basement, which belongs to all of us Kentauros. I didn't dare open it up, because I knew that we half-man, half-horse Kentaulos were not generous. "Open it," said Hercules. I promise you to protect you from their attacks. I'm so thirsty right now! ”
Originally. This barrel was given to a centaur by the god of wine, Bacchus, himself, to a centaur man, the Kentauros. and instructed him not to open it in advance until Hercules, after the fourth generation of centaurs, when Hercules arrived. So, Foros went to the basement. No sooner had he opened the barrel than the horses flocked to the basement of Foross with stones or sticks in their hands. Hercules took the fiery rod and sent back the first group of Kentauros, and then shot arrows after the rest. It was pursued all the way to the Marek River in the southeastern corner of the Peloponnese, where Hercules' old friend Charon lived. The Kentauros defected to Charon. Hercules fired an arrow at them, and the arrow grazed the arm of a Kentaurus man and struck Charon in the knee, only to realize that he had shot his childhood friend. He plucked the arrow from his friend's knee and applied it to the wound with an ointment made by the healed Keron himself. But because the arrows had been soaked in the poisonous blood of Xudra, the wounds could not be healed. Caron instructed his brothers to carry him back to the cave, hoping to die in the arms of his friend. Unfortunately, this wish is also vain, because he forgets that he is immortal. His pain will always endure. Hercules said goodbye to Charon in tears, promising to ask death to grant his old friend's wish to free him from his suffering, no matter what the cost. We know. He fulfilled his promise.
Hercules returned to Foros, and he saw that the friend was dead. It turned out that he had pulled out an arrow from the body of a dead Kentaulus, and he couldn't help but marvel at the power of this short arrow. Can kill a life. He threw the arrow to the ground, but it cut his foot. He was killed instantly. Hercules was so sad that he buried his friend at the foot of a mountain. The mountain has been known as Mt. Furo ever since.
Hercules continued on his way in search of wild boars. He roared loudly, drove the boar out of the jungle, and chased it after him, until he drove it into the snow, and finally caught the exhausted boar with a slipknot. At the behest of King Eurystheus, he captured alive the boar on Mount Erymantos and delivered it alive to McKenny.
(5) Sweep the cattle pen
Divert water from the river to sweep the dung-filled cattle pens of Augeas. He seemed to have been sent to do what a hero disdained to do, and he was to clean the cowshed of Augeas in one day. Augeas was the king of Elise and had a large number of cattle. His herd was kept in a barn in front of the palace, according to ancient custom, and there were more than 3,000 cattle in it. It was filled with cow dung for years. Hercules didn't know what to do in order to get rid of the cow dung in just one day.
Hercules came to King Augeas and offered to sweep the barn, but he did not say that it was a task given to him by Eurystheus. Ogas looked at the burly man in lion's skin in front of him, and couldn't help but laugh at the thought that such a noble warrior would be willing to do the work of a servant. But he thought to himself, his desires are tempting, and perhaps this samurai is greedy for a lot of money, and he wants me to reward him heavily. If he could clean the barn in one day, I would be fine with a reward, but how could so much cow dung be cleaned in one day? It's impossible for anyone to do this. Thinking of this, the king confidently said, "Listen, stranger, if you could clean the cowshed in front of the palace in one day, I will give you a tenth of the herd." ”
Hercules accepted this condition. The king thought that he was about to start sweeping, but Hercules called Philoyus, the son of Ochas, and called him as a witness, and then dug a ditch on one side of the cowshed, and brought in the water of the rivers Alphous and Penaeus, and flowed through the cowshed, and washed away the large pile of cow dung inside.
As a result, he completed the task without even getting his hands dirty.
When Augeas heard that Hercules had been ordered by Eurystheus to do this, he wanted to repay the debt, denying that he had promised not to pay Hercules anything, and that if Hercules did not accept it, they could go to court. When the judge heard the case, Philoyus, the son of Augeas, testified that it was true, and that his father had promised Hercules a heavy reward. Augeas was furious, and without waiting for the verdict, he ordered his son and the strangers to leave his kingdom immediately.
Hercules completed his mission and happily returned to the kingdom of Eurystheus, but the king announced that the mission could not be counted because Hercules was asking for compensation. He sent Hercules to complete the sixth mission.
(6) Chase away strange birds
Chase away the strange birds on Lake Stinfaro. This is a huge bird of prey, with iron wings, iron beak, iron claws, very powerful. They inhabit the shores of Lake Stynfaros in Alcadia. Their feathers are like arrows, and their iron beaks can even peck through bronze shields, where they have harmed countless humans and animals. Hercules set out for Lake Stinfaros, and soon came to the shores of a lake surrounded by dense forests. A flock of strange birds flew around in terror in the woods, as if they were afraid of being eaten by wolves. Hercules watched the birds fly through the air, but was unable to subdue them. Suddenly, he felt a gentle tap on his shoulder, and when he looked back, it turned out to be Athena, who had handed him two large bronze cymbals, which Hephaestus had made for her. She taught Hercules how to use cymbals to keep strange birds away. After speaking, she suddenly disappeared. So Hercules climbed a hill by the lake, and struck the cymbals so hard that they frightened the strange birds, and they could not stand the harsh sound, and they all flew out of the woods in a hurry. Hercules took advantage of this opportunity to bend his bow and shoot several arrows in succession, and several strange birds fell to the ground, and the rest also flew away in a hurry. They flew over the sea all the way to the island of Aritiya, never to return.
(7) Catch bulls
Catch the crazy bull of Crete. King Minos of Crete promised Poseidon, the god of the sea, to sacrifice the first animal that appeared in the sea to him, because Minos believed that there was not a single animal in his territory worthy of being sacrificed to the great god. Poseidon was so moved that he made a sturdy bull emerge from the waves. When Minos saw the bull, he liked it so much that he was reluctant to offer it to the god of the sea, so he quietly hid it in his herd and sacrificed it in his place with another bull.
The god of the sea was very angry, and he made the bull from the sea go crazy and wreak havoc on Crete, and Hercules was given the seventh task to tame the bull on Crete and bring it back to King Eurystheus.
Hercules came to Crete and met King Minos. Minos was glad that he had already broken his mind for the bull, and wished that someone would rid him of it. The king even personally helped Hercules to capture the crazy bull. Hercules had extraordinary strength, he subdued the rampaging bull in good order, and then rode on the back of the ox as if it were sailing in a boat, and from here he returned to the Peloponnese. King Eurystheus was pleased with the work he had done, but he looked at the bull and let it go. Once the bull was out of Hercules' control, he went on a rampage again. It runs through the regions of Laconia and Lagadia, then crosses the isthmus and reaches Marathon in Artetica, doing evil everywhere, as it did on the island of Crete. It was not until much later that he was subdued by the Greek hero Theseus. (To be continued.) )
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