In Greek folklore, Scylla is a sea monster who lived underneath a dangerous rock at one side of the Strait of Messia, opposite the Charybdis.The latter is
the whirlpool who lived in a cave at one side of the Strait of Messina, opposite the Scylla.
Scylla was a nymph, daughter of Phorcys. The fisherman-turned-sea-god Glaucus fell madly in love with her, but she fled from him onto the land where he could not follow. Despair filled his heart.
He went to the sorceress Circe to ask for a love potion to melt Scylla's heart. As he told his tale of love to Circe, she herself fell in love with him.
She wooed him with her sweetest words and looks, but the sea-god would have none of her.
Circe was furiously angry, but with Scylla and not with Glaucus. She prepared a vial of very powerful poison and poured it in the pool where Scylla bathed.
As soon as the nymph entered the water she was transformed into a frightful monster with twelve feet and six heads, each with three rows of teeth. Below the waist her body was made up of hideous monsters, like dogs, who barked unceasingly.
She stood there in utter misery, unable to move, loathing and destroying everything that came into her reach...
Charybdis was once a nymph-daughter of Poseidon and Gaia who flooded lands for her father's underwater kingdom until Zeus turned her into a monster and have her suck in and out water three times an day...
Both Scylla and Charybdis form a dangerous threat to passing ships...A peril to all sailors who passed nearby...
To be “between Scylla and Charybdis” means to be caught between two equally unpleasant alternatives....
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