Ragnarok : the age of fire and gravel

156 THE LEGENDS,

the steeds had perceived this they rush on and leave the beaten track, and run not in the order in which they did before. He himself becomes alarmed, and knows not which way to turn the reins intrusted to him ; nor does he know where the way is, nor, if he did know, could he control them. ‘Then, for the first time, did the cold Triones grow warm with sunbeams, and attempt, in vain, to be dipped in the sea that was forbidden to them. And the Serpent, which is situate next to the icy pole, being before torpid with cold, and formidable to no one, grew warm, and regained new rage for the heat. And they say that thou, Bodtes, scoured off in a mighty bustle, although thou wert but slow, and thy cart hindered thee. But when from the height of the skies the unhappy Phaéton looked down upon the earth lying far, very far beneath, he grew pale, and his knees shook with a sudden terror ; and, in a light so great, darkness overspread his eyes. And now he could wish that he had never touched the horses of his father ; and now he is sorry that he knew his descent, and prevailed in his request ; now desiring to be called the son of Merops.”

“What can he do? ... He is stupefied ; he neither lets go the reins, nor is able to control them. In his fright, too, he sees strange objects scattered every where in various parts of the heavens, and the forms of huge wild beasts. There is a spot where the Scorpion bends his arms into two curves, and, with his tail and claws bending on either side, he extends his limbs through the space of two signs of the zodiac. As soon as the youth beheld him, wet with the sweat of black venom, and threatening wounds with the barbed point of his tail, bereft of sense he let go the reins in a chill of horror.”

Compare the course which Ovid tells us Phaéton pursued through the constellations, past the Great Serpent and Bodtes, and close to the venomous Scorpion, with the orbit of Donati’s comet in 1858, as given in Schellen’s great work.*

* “Spectrum Analysis,” p. 391.