[645] Those who are desirous of seeing the whole account may consult Diodorus, or Banier’s Mythology, [or Keightley’s Mythology of Ancient Greece and Italy, p. 398, Lond. 1838.]
[646] Hygin. Fab. 39, 244, 274.
[647] Ad Georg. i. 143.
[648] Mythographi, ed. Van Staveren, lib. iii. 2, p. 708.
[649] In Mythogr. et in Ovid. Burm. lib. viii. fab. 3.
[650] Orig. lib. xix. cap. 19.
[651] Chiliad. i. 493.
[652] Metamorph. lib. viii. 244. The following line from the Ibis, ver. 500, alludes to the same circumstance:
“Ut cui causa necis serra reperta fuit.”
[653] See Cadomosto’s Voyage to Africa, in Novi Orbis Navigat. cap. 6. This account is not so ridiculous as that of Olaus Magnus, who says that the saw-fish can with his snout bore through a ship. [There are however many well-authenticated instances of the planks of ships being perforated by the upper jaw of this powerful animal, which it has been supposed occasionally attacks the hulls of vessels in mistake for the whale.]