his own form againe, and tell him; for so O••pheus in
his A••gonauticis informs us. He is said to have a principa∣lity
in the sea, to be delighted in the company of Nymphs
and Damosels; as also to be the beginning and end of wa∣ters;
of whom O••pheus in one of his hymns thus sings:
Tu fundamen aquae tu terrae Finis, & Idem
Principium es cunctis.
Euripides in one of his Tragedies, saith, he was educated
and noursed by the waters, and cals him the father of the
Nereides. He had daughters by Doris, the Nymphs Halia,
Spio, Pasitaea, and Lygaea; Hesiod in his Theogonia reckons of
them to the number of fifty. Doris was the sister of Nereus;
Horace and others describe her with green haire. Theocri∣tus
in Thessaliis, saith, that the birds called Halciones, were
to them most gratefull: some say that they use to dance
and revell in the waters, and play about the chariot of Tri∣ton,
as nimbly as fishes. Homer in his Iliads reckons of that
ranck, Glauce, Thalia, Cymodoce, Nesea, Spio, Thoe, Halie, Cymo∣thoe,
Actaee, Melite, Agane, Amphithoe, Iaere, Doto, Proto, Pheru∣sa,
Dinamione, Doris, Amphinome, Panope, Callianira, Dexamine,
Gala••aea, Amathaea, Callianassa, Climine, Ianira, Ianassa, Mera,
Orithia. Hesiod besides these reckons up Euerate, Sao, Eu∣dore,
Galene, Glauce, Pasithaea, Erato, Eunice, Doro, Pherusa, Ne∣saee,
Protomedea, Do••is, Panope, Hippothoe, Hypponoe, Cymatole∣ge,
Cimo, Eione, Halimeda, Glanconome, Panto, Pautopenia, Liago∣re,
Evagore, Laomedala, P••l••nome, An••onoe, Lasianassa, Evarne,
Psamathe, Menippe, Neso, Eupompe, Themito, Pronoe, Nemertes,
Apollodorus Athentensis adds to these, Glancothoe, Nonsithoe,
Halia, Pione, Plesrure, Calipso, Crante, Neomeris, De••ane••ra, Poli∣noe,
Melie, Dione Isaea, Dero, Eumolpe, Ione, Ceto, Limnoraea, and
all these are held to be most beautifull▪ it is therefore thus
fabled, That C••ssiope wife to Cepheus King of Aethiopia, glo∣ried
so much in her beauty, that she held her selfe to be the
fairest woman in the world; and did not onely compare,
but preferre her selfe before the Nymphs called Nereides:
for which, their indignation was kindled against her, and
in that high measure, that they sent into those seas a Whale
of an incredible greatnesse; the people consulting with the
Oracle, how to appease the goddesses, and free themselves
from the monster; answer was returned, That it could not
be done, but by exposing their only daughter Androme∣da,
fast bound to a rock that overloked the sea, to be a prey
to the sea-Whale; but she was thence released by the ver∣tue