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lies The burning brand. Dipt in the Hydra's gall, His arrows slightest wound is death to all. 3 The Maenalaean Stag. [Illustration] A Stag with horns of gold and feet of brass, On Maenalus bounds o'er th'unbending grass, To Dian sacred, this he's doom'd to bring, Unhurt into the presence of the King, Forbid to wound, how take a Stag so fleet? A twelvemonth's end scarce saw the task complete. 4 The Erymanthian Boar. [Illustration] To Erymanthus next his course is bent, To seize the Boar by incensed Dian sent, The fell destroyer bound he o'er him flings, And unto scared Eurystheus quickly brings, The trembling Tyrant shrinks aghast with dread, And in his brazen Vessel hides his coward head. 5 The Stables of Augeas. [Illustration] To cleanse the Augean Stables now he's sped, Where thirty years three thousand Oxen fed; The task for man too great. A river's course He turn'd, & thro' the stables urged its force, The tide resistless rolls, and in one day The gather'd filth of years is swept away. 6 The Stymphalides. [Illustration] The Lake Stymphalus by his arm was freed, From those dire birds on human flesh who feed, By Pallas' aid the dreadful race subdued, No more its banks with whitening bones are strew'd. Honour'd by all mankind he now returns, But still Eurystheus' envious hatred burns. 7 The Cretan Bull. [Illustration] A furious Bull with nostrils breathing fire, To punish Minos sent by Neptune's ire, Roams wild in vengeance thro' his wide domains, And death & terror spreads o'er Crete's fair plains; But soon the bellowing beast alive he caught, And vainly struggling to Eurystheus brought. 8 Diomedes and his Horses. [Illustration] Fell Diomed, whose horses fat with gore, His subjects bodies in their mangers tore, He next o'erthrew. And as old authors say, The Tyrant gave to his own steeds a prey, On Mount Olympus rent by savage beasts, No more the horses make on man their horrid feasts. 9 The Amazon Hippolite. [Illustration] By Fate constrain'd Eurystheus to obey, The matchless Hero now must bend his way, To gain the golden girdle which adorns The Queen of Amazons. Who proudly scorns To yield, and in her warriors doth confide-- But vanquish'd she becomes great Theseus' bride. 10 Geryon. [Illustration] A Giant King in Gades once did keep, (Unlike their gentle rac
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