[4]
But angry at him for not sacrificing the bull, Poseidon
made the animal savage, and contrived that Pasiphae should conceive a passion for it.1 In her love for the bull she
found an accomplice in Daedalus, an architect, who had been banished from Athens for murder.2 He constructed a wooden
cow on wheels, took it, hollowed it out in the inside, sewed it up in the hide of a cow
which he had skinned, and set it in the meadow in which the bull used to graze. Then he
introduced Pasiphae into it; and the bull came and coupled with it, as if it were a real
cow. And she gave birth to Asterius, who was called the Minotaur. He had the face of a
bull, but the rest of him was human; and Minos, in compliance with certain oracles, shut
him up and guarded him in the Labyrinth. Now the Labyrinth which Daedalus constructed was
a chamber “ that with its tangled windings perplexed the outward
way. ”3 The story of
the Minotaur, and Androgeus, and Phaedra, and Ariadne, I will tell hereafter in my account
of Theseus.4
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1 Here Apollodorus seems to be following Euripides, who in a fragment of his drama, The Cretans, introduces Pasiphae excusing herself on the ground that her passion for the bull was a form of madness inflicted on her by Poseidon as a punishment for the impiety of her husband Minos, who had broken his vow by not sacrificing the bull to the sea-god. See W. Schubart und U. von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, Griechische Dichterfragmente, ii. (Berlin, 1907), pp. 74ff.
2 See below, Apollod. 3.15.8.
3 In the Greek original these words are seemingly a quotation from a poem, probably a tragedy—perhaps Sophocles's tragedy Daedalus, of which a few fragments survive. See TGF (Nauck 2nd ed.), pp. 167ff.; The Fragments of Sophocles, ed. A. C. Pearson, vol. i. pp. 110ff. As to the Minotaur and the labyrinth, compare Diod. 4.77.1-5; Plut. Thes. 15ff.; Hyginus, Fab. 40; Lactantius Placidus on Statius, Achill. 192. As to the loves of Pasiphae and the bull, see also Scholiast on Eur. Hipp. 887; Tzetzes, Chiliades i.479ff.; Verg. Ecl. 6.45ff.; Ovid, Ars Am. i.289ff.
4 See below, Apollod. 3.15.7-9; Apollod. E.1.7-11.
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