This is how I feel right now. I know that I feel like this every time I run a new deep learning algorithm, but I can't control it: OMG! YEEEEEEEESSSSSSSS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THIS IS AMAZING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I HAVE BEEN TRYING FORE AGES NOW AND FINALLY I DID IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I STILL HATE YOU TENSORFLOW BUT AT LEAST YOU WORK SOMETIMES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Disclaimer: This myth was generated by an AI (GPT-2), trained by me. So I fed the algorithm a book full of different myths that come from ancient Greece and Rome and this is what I got. :D Full Text: {156} HERMES (MORA). Hermes was the son of the Titan Triton. He was the ruler of Thebes, and sister of the Tritonians. Heracles at once took victory of his warlike allies, and conquered their cities, for which reason he was awarded the hand of his sister, Euphemus. Heracles now pursued his journey to the coast of Greece, and there reached the island of Erythia. Here he found Euphemus, the son of the Titan Triton. Thetis, who was beloved by the Greek nation, had become so attached to her that she had abandoned all intercourse with mankind, and had become secluded in her mountain hide and solitary cave. Heracles had reached the roadhead at last, and when he approached the village of Triptolemus, the goddess of Beauty, warned him to stay where he was put; but since the journeyman was too advanced for her own good, he abandoned her, and passed through the villages of Triptolemus before he could be lured by the offers to his exclusion into the dwelling of Euphemus. Thetis was eventually persuaded by Heracles that he must abandon her and her cousin Amphiaraus, and she alone dared not disobey him. In this juncture Heracles crossed over to the Greek camp, and was on leave for Troy, where he occupied himself in the construction of a city. Soon afterwards the Argonauts set out for the open plains of the Styx, taking with them the shipwrecked on board. Owing to the invisible beauty of the wreck, the journeymen found them stranded on the back of a huge rock, asleep for a whole year in their ship's wake, and begging the Greeks to allow them to sail on without their children. Among the many stories concerning this terrible disaster is that of the young shepherd named Oenone, who, having mistaken Hera for a nymph, was transported to the island of Scyros after the command of Poseidon; and it is told that when Eurydice returned from his honeymoon at sea, he found his lovely daughter in the bath of her father's, where she was found to be still months away. Another generated text: RACLE (SELENE), HYPNUS, and HYPERS. Orciz and his companions having found a beautiful daughter, who was born in the cave of the nymphs of Mount Nysa, they sought her abroad in the palace of the river god Themis; but instead of her they gave her in marriage to Eurydice, a yoke of which she still bears. Echoing the admonition of the Centaur she took vows and office in the sanctity of her temple, and was holy in worshipful fidelity to her temple goddess. She was wedded to Eurydice, and for many years they were engaged in a fierce struggle with each other, and for this reason she is always accompanied by her sister Cecrops, who is half goddess and half prophetess. Orciz was judicious in his conduct of the women, and careful to preserve its individuality. He is represented as a young man bent on great proper business, with a grave and earnest look on his countenance; he lesquerised himself in the act, and then appeared to Eurydice, who igningored the spot where he was supposed to be sitting, and presented him with a letter, declaring his intentions. Orciz's note:—"Oedipus," translated by Orestes, is that he loved the little wife of his friend Phyleus, who was so charmed with his beautiful and alluring form, that Phyleus, pitying his rough youth, reduced him to using and weaving. The best known form of Orciz is the pipe, which he makes for the clever and clever person who he is, by means of which he tricks people of all ages into thinking he is themself. He is supposed to make these people feel by his voice that they are they who ask him to make these pipes, or else they will think him they themselves are they. The most famous of these representations is shown to the king of Troy, when the gates of the city were clad with cypress. Orciz is usually represented fully draped; he has a serious and thoughtful aspect; he wears a full beard, and a full chiselled nose; his feet are laid on the ground, and his figure drawn on a throne, his feet bound together by chains, are partially encircled by a wreath of cypress. (I have reached the limit, so I can't give you more. The last myth is clipped, so that I don't over go the text limit.) But my friend Sam stayed just the same.