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When
the Argonauts were seeking the Golden Fleece
they let a wine-coloured (oinas) dove fly between
these magic rocks that used to approach and
strike one another with thunderous sound and
then draw apart again. They followed the bird
on its route, led by the goddess Athena. Drawing
strength from the sound of the Thracian Orpheus
lyre and chorusing songs that drowned out those
of the sirens trying to lead them to their doom,
they were able to reach the Black Sea. (According
to myth, wine-coloured doves fed the infant
Zeus in a Cretan Cave and offered him ambrosia,
the elixir of immortality.) Certain mythographers
claim that Triton, a sea-god rising from the
depths of the Bosphorus, held the gigantic rocks
apart as the Argo sailed through and that the
Symplegadae never moved again. The boat Argo
(Swift), bearing the name of its legendary builder,
Argus, boasted mythological heroes as oarsmen,
among them Hercules the Invincible. The Argos
figurehead was a bough from Zeus Prophetic
Oak. Antique sources and mythographers such
as Apollonius, Apollodorus,
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