To these may be added the class of Inferior Divinities, of whose residence no determinate ideas were given. […] He killed, in the forest of Nemea, an enormous lion, whose skin he afterwards wore. […] He, on foot, hunted down, after a chace of a year, a hind consecrated to Diana, whose feet were of brass, and whose horns were of gold. […] The walls of Babylon, built by Semiramis, whose circumference was sixty miles, and whose breadth was so great, that six chariots could drive upon them abreast. […] Hence all those animals whose aspect is hideous, and whose disposition is fierce and untameable, were sacred to Typhon; such as the crocodile, the hippopotamus, and others.