He was probably to the Athenians what Hermes was to the Arcadians, and the two deities were united in the usual manner. […] It stood at the foot of the Aventine and belonged to the plebeians, to whom it seems to have been what the Capitoline temple was to the patricians. […] These visits were not unobserved by Helios (for what can escape the piercing eye of the Sun-god ?) […] To their question in return, of what that place was to which they were come, he replies by informing them who he is, and what his purpose was in bringing them thither. […] When Cinyras found what he had unwittingly done, he pursued his daughter with his drawn sword, to efface her crime in her blood.