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[7] There are legends about the rocks,
which rise especially at the narrow part of the
road [from Megara to Corinth]. As to the
Molurian, it is said that from it Ino flung her
self into the sea with Melicertes, the younger of
her children. Learchus, the elder of them, had been
killed by his father. One account is that Athamas
did this in a fit of madness; another is that he
vented on Ino and her children unbridled rage when
he learned that the famine which befell the
Orchomenians and the supposed death of Phrixus were
not accidents from heaven, but that Ino, the
step-mother, had intrigued for all these things.
[8] Then it was that she fled to the sea
and cast herself and her son from the Molurian
Rock. The son, they say, was landed on the
Corinthian Isthmus by a dolphin, and honors were
offered to Melicertes, then renamed Palaemon,
including the celebration of the Isthmian games.
The Molurian dock they thought sacred to Leucothea
and Palaemon; but those after it they consider
accursed, in that Sciron, who dwelt by them, used
to cast into the sea all the strangers he met. A
tortoise used to swim under the rocks to seize
those that fell in. Sea tortoises are like land
tortoises except in size and for their feet, which
are like those of seals. Retribution for these
deeds overtook Sciron, for he was cast into the
same sea by Theseus.
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