[The Argonautica by Apollonius Rhodius]@TWC D-Link bookThe Argonautica BOOK III 61/83
I implore thee by Hecate herself, by thy parents, and by Zeus who holds his guardian hand over strangers and suppliants; I come here to thee both a suppliant and a stranger, bending the knee in my sore need.
For without thee and thy sister never shall I prevail in the grievous contest.
And to thee will I render thanks hereafter for thy aid, as is right and fitting for men who dwell far oft, making glorious thy name and fame; and the rest of the heroes, returning to Hellas, will spread thy renown and so will the heroes' wives and mothers, who now perhaps are sitting on the shore and making moan for us; their painful affliction thou mightest scatter to the winds.
In days past the maiden Ariadne, daughter of Minos, with kindly intent rescued Theseus from grim contests--the maiden whom Pasiphae daughter of Helios bare.
But she, when Minos had lulled his wrath to rest, went aboard the ship with him and left her fatherland; and her even the immortal gods loved, and, as a sign in mid-sky, a crown of stars, which men call Ariadne's crown, rolls along all night among the heavenly constellations.
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