Some Tyrrhenian pirates, having found him asleep, took him off from the island of Naxos with a view to sell him for a slave. […] The Gauls honoured him under the name of Theutates, and offered him human victims. […] One of the shepherds of Polybius, king of Corinth, soon found him and brought him home. […] A shepherd thought he saw him surrounded with light, and brought him home. […] Hercules was ordered to destroy him; but, finding him invulnerable to any weapon, he strangled him with his hands, and afterwards wore his skin.