"Asimov, Isaac - Mythical BeastiesUC - MWoF#6" - читать интересную книгу автора (Asimov Isaac)9 Pegasus 237
The Triumph of PegasusЧby F. A. Javor 239 10 Phoenix 269 Caution! Inflammable!Чfry Thomas N. Scortia 271 11 Sphinx 274 The Pyramid ProjectЧby Robert F. Young 276 12 Unicorn 307 The Silken-SwiftЧfry Theodore Sturgeon 309 13 Wendigo 330 Mood WendigoЧfry Thomas A. Easton 332 CENTAUR The horse was tamed about 2000 B.C. by the nomads of the Central Asian steppes, and when it drew a light chariot bearing a driver and an armed warrior, it proved a fear- world from India to Egypt, and held their rule until the dominated people learned the use of the horse themselves. By 800 B.C.. the Medes of western Asia had bred horses large enough to carry men on their backs, and that combination was even more fearsome. To farmers who encountered horsemen for the first time this combination of men and animals must have seemed monstrous. The early Greeks were not horsepeople, for their moun- tainous terrain and narrow valleys were not conducive to either the breeding or the use of horses. In northern Greece, however, there was the plain of Thessaly, and there horses and horsemen made their appearance. The fearful Greeks must have first seen them as horse- human combinations, and so was born the myth of the ' 'centaur,'' finally portrayed in Greek art as a creature with the head and torso of a human being replacing the head and neck of a horse. For the most part, the Greeks pictured the centaurs as barbariansЧcrude, wild. lawless, easily made drunk, and, in that state, prone to be lascivi- ous. Perhaps' that is how they saw the real Thessalian horsemen. |
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