The next day she found, by a fountain side, a naiad named Arethusa. […] She had a little boy, whom she named Itys, and she loved him dearly. […] Among those who admired Narcissus, was a young maiden, named Echo. […] Antinoe married a prince named Aristeus, and they had a son called Acteon. […] An old fisherman, named Dictys, was standing near the shore, mending his net, when he saw the chest gently thrown on the beach by the waves, and perceived in it a female and a child.
And they named her Pandora, “the gift of all the gods.” […] He opens the year, the first month being named after him. […] She sent a gadfly to torment Io, who, in her flight, swam through the sea, named after her, Ionian. […] The gods awarded the city to the goddess, and after her Greek appellation it was named. […] He was, for instance, passionately fond of a youth named Hyacinthus.