Idyll XXV

Idyll XXV, later titled Ηρακλής Λεοντοφόνος ('Heracles the Lion-slayer') by Callierges,[1] is a poem doubtfully attributed to the 3rd-century BC Greek poet Theocritus.

[5] The first part, which bears the traditional stage-direction Heracles to the Husbandman, is concerned first with a description of the great farm of Augeias or Augeas, king of the Epeians of Elis—the same whose stables Heracles at another time cleaned out—put into the mouth of a garrulous old ploughman of whom Heracles has asked where he can find the king; then the old man undertakes to show the mysterious stranger the way, and as they draw near the homestead they have a Homeric meeting with the barking dogs.

[5] It tells how the enormous herd of cattle given by the Sun to his child Augeas returned in the evening from pasture, how the king and his son Phyleus took Heracles to see the busy scene in the farmyard, and how Heracles encountered the finest bull in the whole herd.

[7] According to Edwardian classicist J. M. Edmonds, the poet's interest in the details of the rural life, and in the description of the herds of King Augeas, seem to mark this poem as the work of Theocritus.

[7] It was once attributed by learned conjecture to various writers of an older age,[3] and most modern scholars doubt its authenticity.

Coin of Tauromenion : 3rd cent. BC. Diademed head of Heracles (obverse); bull butting (reverse)
'Then marvelled the king himself, and his son, the warlike Phyleus, ... when they beheld the exceeding strength of the son of Amphitryon '