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Books about Hercules :
The Arms of Hercules (Saberhagen, Fred, Book of the Gods, Book 3)
The Story of Hercules (Dover Children's
Thrift Classics)
The strongest and most celebrated of the heroes of classical mythology, Hercules, called Heracles by the Greeks,
was the son of the god Zeus and the mortal Alcmene. The goddess Hera, who hated the infant Hercules, sent two serpents
to destroy him in his cradle, but Hercules strangled them. As a boy Hercules was trained by the centaur Chiron.
When Hercules was a young man, two maidens came to him. Arete represented virtue; Kakia was vice. Kakia offered
Hercules pleasure and riches if he would follow her. Arete offered him only glory for a lifelong struggle against
evil. Hercules chose to be guided by Arete.
In a fit of frenzy caused by Hera, Hercules slew his own children. To atone he had to serve his cousin King Eurystheus,
who ordered him to perform the tasks known as the 12 labors of Hercules.
The first was the slaying of the Nemean lion. Hercules strangled the animal and wore the lion's skin. He then slew
the Hydra, a terrible serpent with nine heads. The third and fourth labors involved the capture of two wild creatures--the
Ceryneian stag with golden horns and the wild Erymanthian boar.
For his next labor Hercules had to clean the Augean stables, which had not been cleaned for 30 years. He turned
two rivers, the Alpheus and the Peneus, through the stables, finishing the work in a single day. Next he slew the
fierce Stymphalian birds, after which he captured the Cretan bull. Then he captured the flesh-eating wild mares
of Diomedes, king of Thrace. Hercules killed Diomedes and fed him to the horses. He then had to obtain the belt
of Hippolyta, queen of the Amazons. He defeated the Amazons, killed the queen, and took the belt. For his tenth
labor Hercules captured the oxen of the monster Geryon, which dwelt on the fabled island Erytheia.
The last two labors were the most difficult. One involved stealing the golden apples guarded by four sister nymphs
called the Hesperides. Their father was Atlas, who supported the heavens on his back. To obtain the apples Hercules
took Atlas's place while Atlas took the apples. Finally Hercules traveled to Hades, where he captured Cerberus,
the many-headed dog who guarded the gates of the underworld. He brought Cerberus to Eurystheus, but the king was
so terrified that Hercules had to return to Hades to take the monster back.
Having completed the 12 tasks, Hercules was now free, but he performed other feats. The centaur Nessus tried to
carry off Hercules' wife, Deianeira. Hercules shot Nessus with a poisoned arrow. The dying centaur had Deianeira
keep some of his blood as a love charm. When Hercules fell in love with another maiden, Deianeira sent him a robe
steeped in the blood. Hercules put it on, and poison spread through his body like fire. He fled to Mount Oeta,
built a funeral fire, and threw himself on it to die.
Hercules' heroic strength inspired many works of art. A fine example in sculpture is the Farnese Hercules, a copy
of an earlier work by the ancient sculptor Lysippus.
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