The ancients appear to me to have gotten over this difficulty by saying, that those gods had indeed reigned, but that they had been overcome by their Zeus ; and that the goddesses had indeed cohabited with Zeus, but they had not been his lawful wives. […] Pallas had by Styx the Ocean-nymph, Envy and Victory, Strength and Force ; and Perses married Asteria the daughter of Coios and Phœbe, by whom he had Hecate. […] By Io he had a son named Epaphos. […] The tradition was that it had been the domestic image of Priamos, and had been brought from Troy by Sthenelos. […] Erôs also had altars at Athens and elsewhere.