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POLYPHEMUS , in See also: Greek See also: mythology, the most famous of the Cyclopes, son of See also: Poseidon and the nymph Thoosa
.
He dwelt in a cave in the See also: south-west corner of See also: Sicily, and was the owner of large flocks and herds
.
He was of gigantic stature, with one See also: eye in the See also: middle of his forehead, a consumer of human flesh, without respect for the See also: laws of See also: God or See also: man
.
Odysseus, having been cast ashore on the See also: coast of Sicily, See also: fell into the hands of Polyphemus, who shut him up with twelve of his companions in his cave, and blocked the entrance with an enormous See also: rock
.
Odysseus at length succeeded in making the giant drunk, blinded' him by plunging a burning stake into his eye while he See also: lay asleep, and with six of his See also: friends (the others having been
devoured by Polyphemus) made his escape by clinging to the bellies of the See also: sheep let out to pasture
.
See also: Euripides in the Cyclops essentially follows the Homeric account
.
A later See also: story associates Polyphemus with Galatea (see See also: Acis)
.
See also: Homer, Odyssey, ix.; Ovid, Metam. xiii
.
749; See also: Theocritus xi
.
See W
.
See also: Grimm, Die See also: Sage von Polyphem
.
(1857); G
.
R . See also: Holland, in Leipziger Studien (1884), vii
.
139-312
.
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