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Ancient edit
Homer edit
- 1.68–73
- Nay, it is Poseidon, the earth-enfolder, who is ever filled with stubborn wrath because of the Cyclops, whom Odysseus blinded of his eye— [70] even the godlike Polyphemus, whose might is greatest among all the Cyclopes; and the nymph Thoosa bore him, daughter of Phorcys who rules over the unresting sea; for in the hollow caves she lay with Poseidon.
Modern edit
Heubeck, Hainsworth and West edit
p. p. 69 on line 71-3
- 71-3. Polyphemus' mother Thoosa seems to be a ad hoc invention, her name recalling the swift movement of the waves; cf. the Phaeacian Thoon (Viii 113).