From Bulfinch's Mythology: Adventures of Aeneas - anthology.
Publié le 12/05/2013
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out of his way.
Hearing the oars, Polyphemus shouted after them, so that the shores resounded, and at the noise the other Cyclopses came forth from their caves andwoods and lined the shore, like a row of lofty pine trees.
The Trojans plied their oars and soon left them out of sight.
Æneas had been cautioned by Helenus to avoid the strait guarded by the monsters Scylla and Charybdis.
There Ulysses, the reader will remember, had lost six of hismen, seized by Scylla while the navigators were wholly intent upon avoiding Charybdis.
Æneas, following the advice of Helenus, shunned the dangerous pass andcoasted along the island of Sicily.
Juno [queen of the gods in Roman mythology, the counterpart of the Greek Hera], seeing the Trojans speeding their way prosperously towards their destined shore,felt her old grudge against them revive, for she could not forget the slight that Paris [son of the king and queen of Troy] had put upon her, in awarding the prize ofbeauty to another.
'In heavenly minds can such resentments dwell!' Accordingly she hastened to Æolus, the ruler of the winds,—the same who supplied Ulysses withfavouring gales, giving him the contrary ones tied up in a bag.
Æolus obeyed the goddess and sent forth his sons, Boreas, Typhon, and the other winds, to toss theocean.
A terrible storm ensued and the Trojan ships were driven out of their course towards the coast of Africa.
They were in imminent danger of being wrecked, andwere separated, so that Æneas thought that all were lost except his own.
At this crisis, Neptune, hearing the storm raging, and knowing that he had given no orders for one, raised his head above the waves, and saw the fleet of Æneasdriving before the gale.
Knowing the hostility of Juno, he was at no loss to account for it, but his anger was not the less at this interference in his province.
He calledthe winds and dismissed them with a severe reprimand.
He then soothed the waves, and brushed away the clouds from before the face of the sun.
Some of the shipswhich had got on the rocks he prised off with his own trident, while Triton and a sea-nymph, putting their shoulders under others, set them afloat again.
The Trojans,when the sea became calm, sought the nearest shore, which was the coast of Carthage, where Æneas was so happy as to find that one by one the ships all arrived safe,though badly shaken.
Source: Bulfinch, Thomas.
Bulfinch's Mythology: The Age of Fable, The Age of Chivalry, Legends of Charlemagne.
New York: Random House, 1934..
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