Μυσιαι.
The like occurs in the Orphic Argonauts, where Beleus is pointing out the habitation of the Centaur Chiron:
[[807]]Ω φιλοι, αθρειτε σκοπιης προυχοντα κολωνον,
Μεσσῳ ενι πρηωνι κατασκιον, ενθα δε Χειρων
Ναιει ενι σπηλυγγι, δικαιοτατος Κενταυρων.
These Colonæ were sacred to the Apollo of Greece; and, as they were sea-marks and beacons, which stood on eminences near the mouths of rivers, and at the entrances of harbours, it caused them to be called ωρια, ουρεα, and ὁρμοι. Homer gives a beautiful description of such hills and headlands, and of the sea-coast projected in a beautiful landscape beneath, when, in some ravishing poetry, he makes all these places rejoice at the birth of Apollo:
[[808]]Πασαι δε σκοπιαι τοι αδον, και πρωονες ακροι
Ὑψηλων ορεων, ποταμοι θ' αλα δε προρεοντες,
Ακταιτ' εις ἁλα κεκλιμεναι, λιμενες τε θαλασσης.
In that happy hour