lt in
the swamp of Lerna, but came occasionally over the country, destroying
herds and laying waste the fields. The hydra was an enormous creature--a
serpent with nine heads, of which eight were mortal and one immortal.
Hercules set out with high courage for this fight. He mounted his
chariot, and his beloved nephew Iolaus; the son of his stepbrother
Iphicles, who for a long time had been his inseparable companion, sat by
his side, guiding the horses; and so they sped toward Lerna.
At last the hydra was visible on a hill by the springs of Amymone, where
its lair was found. Here Iolaus left the horses stand. Hercules leaped
from the chariot and sought with burning arrows to drive the many-headed
serpent from its hiding place. It came forth hissing, its nine heads
raised and swaying like the branches of a tree in a storm.
Undismayed, Hercules approached it, seized it, and held it fast. But the
snake wrapped itself around one of his feet. Then he began with his
sword to cut off its heads. But this looked like an endless task, for no
sooner had he cut off one head than two grew in its place. At the same
time an enormous crab came to the help of the hydra and began biting the
hero's foot. Killing this with his club, he called to Iolaus for help.
The latter had lighted a torch, set fire to a portion of the nearby
wood, and with brands therefrom touched the serpent's newly growing
heads and prevented them from living. In this way the hero was at last
master of the situation and was able to cut off even the head of the
hydra that could not be killed. This he buried deep in the ground and
rolled a heavy stone over the place. The body of the hydra he cut into
half, dipping his arrows in the blood, which was poisonous.
From that time the wounds made by the arrows of Hercules were fatal.
THE THIRD LABOR
The third demand of Eurystheus was that Hercules bring to him alive the
hind Cerynitis. This was a noble animal, with horns of gold and feet of
iron. She lived on a hill in Arcadia, and was one of the five hinds
which the goddess Diana had caught on her first hunt. This one, of all
the five, was permitted to run loose again in the woods, for it was
decreed by fate that Hercules should one day hunt her.
For a whole year Hercules pursued her; came at last to the river Ladon;
and there captured the hind, not far from the city Oenon, on the
mountains of Diana. But he knew of no way of becoming master of the
animal with
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