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From Jupiter and Eurynome, the Graces.
From Jupiter again and Juno, Youth (Hebe), Liberty.
From Jupiter and Themis, the Hours.
From Jupiter and Ceres, Proserpina.
From Jupiter and Moneta, the Muses.
From Jupiter and the Moon, Pandion.
From Venus and Mars, Harmonia and Fear (Phobos).
c From Achelous and Melpomene, the Sirens, Teles, Raidne, Molphetes, Tione.
From Jupiter and Clymene, Mnemosyne.
From Jupiter and Maia, Mercury.
From Jupiter and Latona, Apollo and Diana.
From [unknown] and Earth, the divine serpent Python.
d From Thaumas and Iris, the Harpies, Celaeno, Ocypete, Podarce.
From the Sun and Persa, Circe, Pasiphae, Aeeta, Perses.
Idya. From Aeeta and Clytia, Medea.
From the Sun and Clymene, Phaethon and the Phaethontides: Merore, Helie, Etherie, Dioxippe.
From Typhon and Echidna, the Gorgon, Cerberus, the dragon which guarded the golden fleece of the ram in Colchis, Scylla (who had the upper part of a woman and the lower part of a dog, whom Hercules killed), the Chimera, the Sphinx who was in Boeotia, the Hydra serpent which had nine heads (whom Hercules killed), and the dragon of the Hesperides.
From Neptune and Medusa, Chrysaor and the horse Pegasus.
From Chrysaor and Callirhoe, the three-bodied Geryon.
a: From the 6th book of the Iliad and the 5th of Virgil, he transferred the names, but the number from Hesiod. He repeats Panopaea and Clymene, however, to fill out the number, for in Hesiod there are fifty, but they are listed by other names.
b: In an old copy it was read: from Pallas the giant, Scylla, Stygian force; which words we transposed from Hesiod.
c: The commentary on the Odyssey (Book 12) calls them Thelxiepeia, Aglaopheme, Peisinoe, and Ligea, and makes them four.
d: Electra perhaps should be added, for thus Hesiod has it.