Sci´o, one of the island cities claiming to be Homer’s birthplace, [307].
Sco´pas, King of Thessaly, [202], [203].
Scor´pion, constellation, [41], [43].
Scyl´la, sea-nymph beloved by Glaucus, but changed by jealous Circe to a monster and finally to a dangerous rock on the Sicilian coast, facing the whirlpool Charybdis, many mariners being wrecked between the two, [59]-[61], [243]-[245], [261];
also, daughter of King Nisus of Megara, who loved Minos, besieging her father’s city, but he disliked her disloyalty and drowned her, [98]-[101];
also, a fair virgin of Sicily, friend of sea-nymph Galatea, [209]-[210].
Scy´ros, where Theseus was slain, [154].
Scyth´i-a, country lying north of Euxine Sea, [31], [43], [129], [170].
Sea, the, [1].