From Callimachus' Bath of Pallas, 132-145 — F. Nisetich trans.
Athena rationalizes the blinding of Teiresias, who had seen her bathing:
"...the laws of Kronos have decreed [that] Whosoever catches sight of an immortal, when the god himself does not choose to be seen, pays a great price. And what is done, noble Lady, /cannot be undone ... How many burnt offerings will the daughter of Kadmos and Aristaios make praying one day to see their only son, the young Aktaion, blinded! He will be great Artemis' hunting companion but neither hunting in her company nor shooting in the mountains at her side will save him then, when, unwittingly, he sees the lovely goddess bathing. His own hunting bitches will dine on him, their former master. His mother will go, searching under every bush for her son's bones. 'Most happy, most fortunate' she will say you were, to get your son back, blind, from the mountains."