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10. (1838) The Mythology of Ancient Greece and Italy (2e éd.) pp. -516

The stars appear to have been regarded as moving under the solid heaven, for they rose out of and sank into the Ocean stream. […] To Astræos Eôs bore the winds Zephyros, Boreas, and Notos, and Eosphoros (Dawn-bearer), or Morning-star, and the stars of heaven. […] The physical union of earth and heaven is, we think, plainly discernible in the beautiful passage of Homer above noticed. […] It was here he fell when flung from heaven by Zeus for attempting to aid his mother Hera, whom Zeus had suspended in the air with anvils fastened to her feet. […] The goddess, though the most gentle of her race, was roused to indignation : she raised her hand to heaven and cried, “May you live for ever in that pool !”

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