Cadmus

having slain the dragon which guarded the fountain of Dircë, in Bœotia, sowed the teeth of the monster, when a number of armed men sprang up and surrounded Cadmus with intent to kill him. By the counsel of Minerva, he threw a precious stone among the armed men, who, striving for it, killed one another. The foundation of the fable is this: Cadmus having slain a famous free-booter that infested Bœotia, his banditti set upon him to revenge their captain’s death; but Cadmus sent a bribe, for which they quarrelled and slew each other.

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Entry taken from Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. and revised in 1895.

Caddy
Cade
Cader Idris
Cadessia (Battle of)
Cadet
Cadger
Cadi
Cadmean Letters (The)
Cadmean Victory (Greek, Kadmeia nikê; Latin, Cadmea Victoria)
Cadmeans
Cadmus
Cadogan (Ca-dug-an)
Caduoeus
Cadurci
Cædmon
Cærite Franchise (The)
Caerleon
Cæsar
Cæsarian Operation
Cæsarism
Cæteris paribus (Latin)