Scylla (princess)

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File:Skylla.jpg
"Scylla" By Oleksii Gnievyshev (2016)

     This page is for the mythological princess. For other uses, see Scylla (disambiguation).

17th-century engraving of Scylla falling in love with Minos

Scylla is a princess of Megara in Greek mythology. She is mentioned by Ovid.

As the story goes, Scylla was the daughter of Nisus (Nisos) the King of Megara, who possessed a single lock of purple hair which granted him invincibility. When Minos, the King of Crete, invaded Nisus's kingdom, Scylla saw him from the city's battlements and fell in love with him. In order to win Minos's heart, she decided that she would grant him victory in battle by removing the lock from her father's head and presented it to Minos. Disgusted with her lack of filial devotion, he left Megara immediately. Scylla did not give up easily and started swimming after Minos's boat. She nearly reached him but a sea eagle, into which her father had been metamorphosed after death, drowned her. Scylla was transformed into a seabird (ciris), relentlessly pursued by her father, who was transformed into a sea eagle (haliaeetus).[1][2]

Scylla's story is a close parallel to that of Comaetho, daughter of Pterelaus. Similar stories were told of Pisidice (princess of Methymna) and of Leucophrye.

Scylla appears in Alexander Pope's mock-heroic "Rape of the Lock" as part of an extended representation of gallant chatter round a card table in the guise of a heroic battle:

Ah cease, rash youth! desist ere 'tis too late,

Fear the just gods, and think of Scylla's fate!
Chang'd to a bird, and sent to flit in air,

She dearly pays for Nisus' injur'd hair![3]

References

  1. Ovid, Metamorphoses VIII, 6-151, esp. 154-151
  2. Hyginus, Fabulae, 198
  3. "Rape of the Lock", canto III.

eo:Skilo#Skilo el Megaro