THE Reprefenting tlie Fabulous FI r s OF THE EATHEN AND TORIES GODS. Moft Uluftaious Heroes; I N A Short, Plain, and Familiar Method by Way of Dialogue. Revifed, Corrected, Amended, and llluftrated with new Copper Cuts of the feveral Deities. For the XJfe of Schools. By ANDREW,? O O K E, A. M late Profeflor of Geometry in Grefiam College, and Matter of the Charter-House-School. LONDON: Printed forC, Bathurst, J. Rivikgton, B. Law, G. Keith, S. B l a d o n, G. Robinson, R. Baldwin, and W. Stuart. MDCCLXXVIII. v n ^the Parts of this Work: H E Approach of the Pantheon PART I. Of die Celefiial or Heavenly Gods The Celeftial Goddefles «— Page S 30 86 PART XI. Of the Terreflrial or Earthly Gods The Terreftrial Goddefies — The Goddehes of the Woods The Nymphs —-- The Inferior Deities ■ 137 167 209 2 23 228 PART Ilf. Of the Marine Gods, or Gods of the Sea The Monfters of the Sea - ■ 231 2 39 PART IV. Of the Infernal Deities The Fates The Furies The Judges of Hell . w W The molt- famous of the Condemn’d in The Monfters of Hell The EljJian Fields Hell 245 257 2 59 262 263 272 2 75 PART V. Of the Subordinate and Mifcellaneous Deities — 277 ♦ PART VI. Of the Adfcriptitious Gods, Demi-Gods, and Heroes An^AppENDix of the Virtues and Vices which have 294 been 341 T O TO THE A © 3 lS confefs'd , that there are already mafiy Boohs pub^ ^ liftf don the prefent Subject, two or three of which are in our own ! Tongue ; and thofe , 'without doubt , with, hy fome Men , thought enough : Buff nee this can be the - 'Opinion but of a few , and thofe. unexperienced People , *£ been judg'd more proper to regard the Advice oj many grave Perfons of known Skill hi the Art of Teaching* who, though they ?mtft acknowledge that Goodwin, in his Antiquities, has done very well in the Whole , yet can't but own that he has been too Jhort in this Point: ‘That JRofie alfo , thd 3 he deferves Commendation for his Mytbo~ logy, is yet very tedious , and as much too large ; and that Galtruchius, as D’Afiigny has tranflated and dift) dhim out to us,> is fo Corfu fed and artlefs in his Method? as welt as unfortunate in his Corrections? that it in no wife an - fwers the Purpofe it was defign d for\ and hereupon this Work was recommended to be tranfated , being firjl well approved by learned Gentlemen , as is above-mentioned ^, for its eafy Method , and agreeable Plainnefs • Befdes , it having been written by fo leaved a P erf on , and that for the UJe of fo great a Prince, and fo univefciUy received in our neighbour Nations , as to have fold fever a l Impreffions in a Jhort Time , there was no room to doubt of its being well receiv'd here . As for the Quotations out of the Latin Poets, it was confidedd a while , whether they jhQuid.be tranfated or not, but is was , at iajl? judg'd proper to print them in Lnglifh, cither from thofe who already i ender 9 d them well? or? vjhsre they could not 'be had? to give a new Tranfia- A 2, tian To the Reader; Aon of them-) that fo nothing of the whole TJAork might h& out of the Reach of the young Scholar's TJnderftcmding, for whofe Benefit chiefly as this Verflon was intended, fo, in this loft hnprefflon, Care has been taken, not only to move the Citations to the Ends of the Pages, Sections, or Chap¬ ters, ivhicb before lying in the Body of the Dijcourfe, and making Part of it, the Senfe was greatly interrupted, the Connexion diflnrVd, and thereby a Confufion oft-ti?nes created in the JJnderfl an dings offome of thofe younger Scho¬ lars, into zvhoje Hands it was put, byfucb an undue and improper Mixture of Englifh and Latin, of Profe and Verfc ; but farther, to make it Jlill ?nore plain andfasniiiar, and thereby better failed to their Capacity, and snore proper for their Ufe, fuel? ambiguous Expreffions and obfeure Phrafcs have been removed, and fuch perplex'd Periods rectified , as had been found, either to caufe Mifunderfland- ing of the Author's Meaning-, or to lead the Scholar into Barbarifm, in rendering any Part of it into Latin, when fuch Tranflations have been impofedas a Pafk* And laflly, a complete andfignificant Index, hiflead of a verbal one before, has been added to this hnpreffion, whereby any Thing material in the whole Book may be readily found out; the Uffulncfs. of which need not be mention'd here, flnee the JVant of it, in all former Editions, has been hitherto fo . much (and fo jtifily) complain'd of by mofi of thofe many JMaJlers who have made ufe hereoffn their Schools . C har te r-h o u fe, June 30,1713. Andrew Tooke. OF OF THE OF THE A T H E N CHAP. I. The Approach to the Pantheon. Idolatry. The Original of PALJEOPHILUS. Sort of Building is that before ^ ^ 5 , us, of fo unufual a Figure ? For, I C? think it is round, unlefs the Diftance ^ ^ deceives my Sight. W a*? Myftagogus . You are not deceived. It is a Place well deferving to be vifited __ O in this, the §)ueen of Cities. Let us go and view it, before we go to any other Place. P . What t is its Name ? JW. The Fabulous Pantheon . That is, the "Temple of the Heathen Gods , which the fuperftitious Folly of all Men hath feigned, cither through a grofs Ignorance of the true and only God, or through a deteftable Contempt of him. P. What was the Occafion of the feigning of many Gods ? B M. Many 2 Of the Gods of the Heathens. M. Many Caufes thereof may be afligned, but 3 thefe four were the principal ones, upon which, as upon-fo many Pillars, the whole Frame of the Fabrick depends, 1. The firjl Canfe of Idolatry was the extreme Folly b and Vain-glory of Aden, who have denied to Him, who- is the inexhaufted Fountain of all Good, the Honours* which they have attributed to muddy Streams : Digg¬ ings c as the holy Prophet complains, to themfelves broken and dirty Cijlerns , and neglecting and forfakbig the moji pure Fountain of living Waters . It ordinarily happened after this Manner: d if any one did excel in Stature of Body ; if he was endued with Great- nefs of Min'd ; or noted forClearnefs of c Wit, hefirft gained to himfelf the Admiration of the ignorant Vul- gar, which Admiration was by Degrees turned into a profound Refpeft; till at length they paid him greater Honour than Men ought to receive, and aferibed the Man into the Number of the Gods ; whilft the more. Prudent were either carried away by the Torrent of the vulgar Opinion, or were unable, or at leaft afraid, to refift it. 2. The fordid Flattery of Subjects towards their Princes was a fecond Caufe of Idolatry . For, to gratify their V a- nity, to flatter their Pride, and to footh them in their Self-conceit, they erefted Altars, and fet the Images of their Princes on them ; to which they offered ln- cenfe, in like Manner as-to their Gods $ f and ma¬ ny Times alfo, while they were yet living. 3. A third Caufe of Idolatry vjos an & immoderate Love of Immortality in many , who ftudied to attain'to It, by leaving EfHgies of themfelves behind them ; a Vid. Eufcb. Ladlant. Clem. Auguft. Plat. Cic. b Sap. xlv, 14. c jerem ii. 13. d Diodor. lib. 17. Plutarch, in JLyfand. e Val. Max. 1 . 8. c. ult. Cic. derep.apud. Aug. 3. de civ. cap. 15. * Athcn. lib. 6. deipnofoph. cap. 6. de Demetrio Poliorcete. Sueton. in Julio, c. 76, & 84. b Pontan. I. 1. c. dc Saturn. 3 ima- Of the Gods of the Heathens. 3 imagining that their Names would .ftill be preferved from the Power of Death and Time, fo .long as they lived in Brafs, or, as it were, breathed in living Sta¬ tues of Marble, after their Funerals. 4i 11 A prepofterous Defre of perpetuating the Memo¬ ries of excellent and ufefiil Men to future Ages, was the fourth Caufe of Idolatry . 1 For, to make the Memory of fuch Men eternal, and their Names immortal, they made them Gods , or rather called them fo. P . But, who was the fir ft Contriver and AfTertor of Falfe Gods ? M* k Nhiusy the firft King of the Affyrians, was, as it is reported ; who, to render the Name of his Fa¬ ther BeluSy or Nimrody immortal, worfhipped him with Divine Honour after his Death. t • P . When, and in what Manner, do they fay that happened ? M. I will tell you. After that Nmus had conquered many Nations far and near, and built the City, called, after his Name, Niniveh; in a public Aflembly of the Babyloniansy he extolled his Father BeluSy the Founder of the City and Empire of Babylon, beyond all Meafure, as his Manner was; and reprefenting him, not only wor¬ thy of perpetual Honour among all Pofterity, but of an Immortality alfo among the Gods above : 1 hen he ex¬ hibited a Statue of him, that was curioufly and neatly made, to which he commanded them to pay the fame Reverence that they would have given to Belus alive ; . and, appointing it to be a common Saiuftuary to the miferable, he ordained, That if at anyTimean Offender fhould fly to this Statue, it fhould not be lawful to force him away from thence to Puniftime'nt. This Privilege eafily procured fo great a Veneration to the dead Prince, that he was thought more than a Man, I mi «i—»—I ■ —— Ml l— « h n i— 11 Thucydid. I. 7. Plutarch. Apophth. Laccn. 4. Cic. 1. de nat. Deor. 1 Sap. 14, 1 1 Vid. Annal. Salian. anno 2000, k Hier. in Esech. (2 in Ofeam. B 2 and 4 Of the Gods of the Heathens. ♦ and therefore was created a God, and called Jupiter ; or, as others write, Saturn of Babylon ; where a moft magnificent Temple was erected to him by his Son* and dedicated with Variety of Sacrifices in the two thoufandth Year of the World* which was the Iaft Year but one of the Life of Noah. And from thence,, as from a Peftilential Head, the Sacrilegious Plague of Idols pafTed, by a Kind of Contagion, into other Na¬ tions, and difperfed itfelf every where about. P. What ! Did all other Natrons of the World worfhip Belus ? M. All, indeed, did not worfhip Belus ; but, after this Beginning of Idolatry, feveral Nations formed to themfelves feveral Gods ; receiving into that Number not only mortal and dead Men, but Brutes alfo ; and, which is a greater Wonder, even the moft mean and pitiful inanimate Things. For, it is evident, from the Authority of innumerable Writers, that the Africans worfhipped the Heavens, as a God ; the Perfans adored Fire, Water, and the Winds; the Lybians , the Sun and Moon ; the Thebans , Sheep and Weefels : the Babylo¬ nians of Memphis , a Whale; the Inhabitants of Mendes , a Goat; the Thejfalians , Storks \ the Syrophcenicians , Doves; the Egyptians , Dogs, Cats, Crocodiles, and Hawks; nay. Leeks, Onions, and Garlick. Which moft fenfelefs Folly 1 Juvenal wittily expofes. P. But certainly the ancient Inhabitants and moft wife Citizens of Rome did not fo fottifhly receive thofe Images of Vain Gods, as thofe Barbarous Nations did, to whom they were fuperior, not in Arms only and Humanity, but in Wit and Judgment. 3 O fan Si as genus quibus hac nafcuntur in bortis Nu- min a . Religious Nations fure y and blefs’d Abodes, Where ev’ry Orchard is o’er-run with Gods, Juru* Lib. v. Ver. 591. M . You Of the Gods of the Heathens . 'g M* You are miftaken, Sir ; for they exceeded ever* thofe Barbarians in this Sort of Folly, P. Say you fo ? Af. Indeed. For they reckoned among their Gods, and adored not. only Beafts and Things void of all Senfe $ but, which is far greater Madnefs, they wor* fhipped alfo Murderers, Adulterers, Thieves, Drunk¬ ards, Robbers, and fuch-like Pejis of Mankind. P. How many, and what Kind of Gods did the Romans worfhip ? M . It is fcarce pofiible to recount them : When^ belides their own Country Gods and Family Gods, all ftrange Gods, that came to the City, were made free of it. Whence it came to pafs, in Time, that, when they faw their Precinfis too narrow to contain fo many, Necefiity forced them to fend their Gods into Colonies , as they did their Men. But thefe Things, which I c.urforily tell you, you will fee more conve¬ nient! y and pleafantly by and by, with your own Eyes, when you come into this Pantheon with me $ where we are now at the Door* Let us enter* CHAR IL % The Entrance into the Pantheon*. A button of the Gods into feveral Clafles. A O O D God ! What a Crowd of dead Deities \J is here, if all thefe are Deities, whofe gures I fee painted and defcribed upon the Walls \ M. This is the fmalleft Part of therm For the very Walls of the City, although it be fo large, much iefs the Walls of this Temple, cannot contain even their Titles . P* Were all thefe Gods of the fame Order and Dignity ? M. By no means. But as th e Roman People were B 3 dif- 6 Of the Gods of Heathens. J diftributed into three Ranks ; namely, of a Senators or Noblemen , Knights or Gentlemen , Plel elans or Citizens \ as alfo into b Noble, New-raifed , and Ignoble ; (of which the Nejv-raiJed re thofe, who did not receive their Nobility from their Anceftors, but obtained it them- felves by their own Virtue ;) io the Roman Gods were divided, as it were, into three ClaJJes . > • # • * * « ^ The firjl Clafs is of c Superior Gods ; for the Peo¬ ple paid to them a higher Degree of Worfhip, becaufe they imagined that thefe Gods were more eminently employed in the Government of this World. Thefe were called alfo d SeleSf ; becaufe they had always had the Title of Celejlial Gods , and were famous and eminent above others, of extraordinary Authority and Renown. Twelve of thefe were {filed e Conjentes ; becaufe, in Affairs of great Importance, 'Jupiter ad¬ mitted them into his Council. The Images of thefe were fixed* in the Forum at Rome : Six of them were Malesi and fix Females; commonly, without other Additions,'called the Twelve Gods; and whofe Name Ennius comprifes in f a Diftich. Thefe Twelve Gods were believed to prefide over the Twelve Months \ to each of them was allotted a Month; January to Juno , February to Neptune , March to Mi- rterva r April to Venus , May to- Apollo , June to Mercury , • 1 a Patricii, Equites, & Plebeii. b Nobiles, Novi, & Ig- nobiles. Cic. pro Murom. c Dii Majorum Gentium. d Se- Ie£ti. c Confentes, quail Confentientes. Settee. 1 . 2. Quaeff. Nat. Lucian, dial.de Deorum concil. Plaut. in Epidico. f Juno, Veft a, Minerva, Ceres , Diana, Venus, Mars, JAercurius t Neptunits, Jupiter, Vulcanits, Apollo . Dempiter, Paralip. ad c. 3. In pofteriore hoc verfu alii legunt Jovis, non Jupiter ; & melius meojudicio: olim enim Jovis in nominativo dice- bat u r, elisa, metri gratia, ultima liter a. Rofin. Antiq. i Of the Gods f the Heathens . J yMy to Jupiter , Augujl to Ceres? September to Vulcan? October to Mars , JSfove?nber to Diana? Deee?nber to Vejla. s 1 hey like wife p redded over the twelve Ce- ieffial Signs. And if to thefe twelve DU Confentes you add the eight following, Janus? Saiurnus , Ge?iius , Sol , Pluto , Bacchus , Tellus , and Luna, you will have twen¬ ty, that is, all the Seledi Gods, The fcconclQXtfs contains the Gods of lower Rank and Dignity, who were failed DU Ad in or tun Gentium $ becaufe they £hine with a lefs Degree of Glory, and have been placed among the Gods, as h Tully fays, by their own Merits* Whence they are called alfo 1 Ad- feriptitii Adinufcularii? k Putatitii and 1 lndigetes ; be¬ caufe now they wanted nothing; or becaufe, being tranflated from this Earth into Heaven, they converfed with the Gods ; or being fixed, as it were, to certain Places, committed peculiarly to their Care, they dwelt an them, to perform -the Duty entruited to them n *. Thus Mneas was made a God by his Mother Venus ., in the Manner deferibed by Ovid n . The Gods of the third and lower Clafs are fame- * £ Man'dii Aftron. 1 2. h De Naturd Deo rum , 1.2. IVar, apud Augtft . k Lucian, dial . de Dcor . cone, 1 lndigetes quod nullius rei indigerent, quod in Diis agerent, vel quod in iis (fc, locis) degerent. Str-v- in 12. Ain, Liv.L I* n Luftration genifrix diajino corpus odore Ufixity id A mb r oft a cum dulci Neel are mixta Contigit OS' fecitque Deum ,. quern turba S^uii'ini Nuncupat. Indigetem , temploque, arifque recepit • His Mother,then his Body purify’d. Anoints with facred Odours, and his Lips In Ne&ar mingled with Amhrofta dips ; So deify ? d ; which Indiges Rome calls. Honour’d with Altars, Shrines, and Feftivals, Met am, 1 . 14. B 4 times 8 Of the Gods of the Heathens. * times called ° Jldinuti , Vefci , and Mlfcellanei , but more ufually p Semones^ whofe Merits were not fufficient to gain them a Place among the Celejli a l Gods \ yet their Virtues were fuch, that the People thought them fu- perior to mortal Men. They were called * Patellarii from certain fmall r Difhes, in which the Ancients offered to the Gods their Sacrifices, of which s Ovid makes mention. To thefe we ought to adjoin the Gods called l No- 'vtnfiles^ which the Sabines brought to Romeby the Com¬ mand of King Tatius 5 and which were fo named, as fome fay, becaufe they u were lateft of all reckoned among the Gods ; or becaufe they were w Prefidents over the Changes, by which the Things of this World fubfift. Circius believes them to have been the flrange Gods of coyiquered Nations ; whereof the Numbers were fo vaft, that it was thought fit to call them, all in ge- ral, x Novenjiles, left they fhould forget any of them. And laftly, to this Clafs alfo muft we refer thofe Gods and GoddefTes, by whofe Help and Means, as y Tally fays. Men are advanced to Heaven, and obtain a Place among the Gods ; of which Sort are the principal Vir¬ tues, as we fhall particularly fhew in its proper Place. 0 Horat. I. 3. carm. p Semones vulgo dicebantur quafi Semi-homines, antiqui enim kominem dice bant hemonetn . Ap. Guther.!. r. cap. 4. de jur. Man. Lipf. 1 . 2. ant. left. 2. 28. * Plautus ini Ciffdl. r Fulgent. Placid, ad Chalcid. 5 Fert mijfos Vejlsepura patella ethos. Ovid. Fall. 1 , 6. To Vejia's Deity, with humble Mefs. In cleanly Difh ferv’d up, they now addrefs. * Liv. 1 . 8. Varro de Lingua Lat. 11 Quod novifiimi omnium inter Deos numerati ilnt. w Novitatum prsefldes, quod omnia novitate consent aut redin tegrentur. A pud Gyrald. Synt. 5. * Arnob. 3. adv. Gentes. y De Nat. Deor. 1 . 2. CHAP. Gods of the Heathens « CHAR III. A View of the Pantheon. A in ore commodious Divijion of the Gods . P. T Caft my Eyes very curioufly every where about JL me, and yet I do not fee the three Clajfes of the Gods, ' which you have juft now defcribed. M. Becaufe there is made here another and more convenient Divifion of them ; which we will follow alfo, if you pleafe, in our Difcourfe. P. How can I deny myfelf that moft ufeful Pleafure^ which I fball reap from your Converfatiorl ? M . You fee that the three Clailes, which I mention¬ ed to you, are here divided into fix, and painted upon the feveral Parts of the Pantheon . i. You fee the Ce- lefial Gods and Goddefles upon an Arch. 2. The ref rial , upon the Wall on the Right-hand 3. The Ma¬ rine and River Gods upon the Wall of the Left. 4. The Infernal on the lower Apartment by the Pavement* 5. The Minuti , or Semones , and Mifcellanei before you. 6. The Adfcriptitii and Indigetes behind you. Our Dif¬ courfe fhall likewife confift of {ix Parts ; in each of which I {hall lay before you whatfoever I have found moft remarkable amongft the beft Authors upon this Subjeft, if fo be you can bear with my Talkativenels. P. Six', you jeft when you call it Tallcativenefs. Can any Difcourfe be more pleafant to me? JU. Then, fince it pleafes you, let us lit down toge¬ ther a while ; And, fince the Place is free from all Company, we will take a deliberate View of the whole Army of Gods, and infpe he, to avenge their Death, flew-that Serpent* whofeTeeth he took out, and, by the Advice .ofJkf/- 7ierva , flowed them in,the Ground ; and fluddenly a Hal¬ ve ft of armed Soldiers (prouted up; who quarrelling among themflelves, with the flame Speed that they grew -up, mowed one another down again, excepting five on¬ ly, by whom that Country was peopled afterward. At length Cadmus and his Wife :Her?ntone? or ,Hermonia , 9 after much Experience, and many Proofs of the Incon- fhmey of JFortune, were changed into Serpents. He is laid to 3 have-invented fix teen of the .Letters of .the G 7 'eck Alphabet: y 9 e, a, ^ v, o, p, cr , 7b v, which, in the Time of .the Judges «of hebroiight out of 'Phoenicia into Greece; two hundred and fifty Years af¬ ter which, Paht?tiedes added four more Letters, namely in the Time of the Siege of Troy: (although 'Jfome affirm that Epichar?nus invented the Letters 0 and % : and, fix hundred and fifty Years after the Siege of T'royj Simonides invented the other four Letters, namely, v), a, J/. 'Cadmus is alflo faid to have taught the Manner of writing,in Profle; and that he was the finft among the G??eehs^ who .confederated Statues .to the Honour of the Gods. Now the Hifiorical Meaning of the Fable, perhaps*, •is this : b Cad?mis was in Truth King of S'uhn^ by Na¬ tion a Kadnmriite^ asdris Name intimates ; of the Num¬ ber of thofle mentioned by c Mojes. Which Knd?nomU.s •were the flame .with the d Hivitcs , who poilcflcd the Bids Cadmus trace.and find the raviflfld Fair, •Or hope no more to br.earbe Pbccnician A ir. Both juft and wicked in the flame Deftgn ; 'The Care was pious, but too great the Fine. 0 -i>/d. Met. 3. 3 PJ. 3. c. z9. Ca?fl 39. 24. b Bocbart. 2. p. Geogr. % c. S'Q, c Geu. 15, 29. d Idem enm Hevctis; • Bocharr: ibid. I * C Maun- 18 Of the Gods of the Heathens. Mountain Herman , and were thence alfo called Her* monai : And To it came to pafs, that the Wfife of Cad - ?nus had the Name of Hermiona or Hermi one , from the fame Mountain. And why is it faid, that Catbnus's Companions were converted into Serpents, unlefs be- caufe the Word Hevcsus in the Syriac .Language figni¬ fies a Serpent ? Moreover, another Word of a double Signification in the fame Language occafioned the Fa¬ ble, that armed Soldiers fprouted forth from the Teeth of the Serpent : For, a the fame Word fignifies both Serpents Teeth and brazen Spear j, with which b Cadmus firft armed his Soldiers in Greece , being indeed tKe In¬ ventor. of Brafs \ infomuch that the Ore , of which Brafs is made, is from him even now called Cadmia . As to the five Soldiers, which are faid to furvive all the reft of their Brethren, who fprouted up out of the Teeth of the Serpent, the fame Syriac Word fignifies c Five , and alfo a Man ready for Battle , according as-it is dif¬ ferently pronounced. • m a Hygin. c. 2. 4. b jPiin. 1 . 34. c. 1 . 10. c Bochartus ut fupra, SECT. IV. Jupiter’s Names . § P. IT O W many Names has Jupiter ? XT! did. They can hardly be numbered ; fo ma¬ ny were the Names which he obtained, either from the ‘Places where he lived and was worfhipped, or from the Things that he did. The more remarkable I will here fet down alphabetically. Th e Greeks called him a Ammon y or Hammon , which Name fignifies Sandy . He obtained this Name firft in 'Lybia , where he was worfhipped under the Figure of a Ram 5 becaufe when Bacchus was a-thirft in the fabu¬ lous Deferts of Arabia , and implored the AfHftahce of Jupiter , Jupiter , appearing in the Form of a Ram, a Arenarias ab Arena, PJut. in Oiir. V . Curt. I. 4. ooehetl i Of the Gods of the Heathens . i g ©pened a Fountain with his Foot, and difcovered it to him. But others give this Reaion, becaufe ‘Jupiter in War wore a Helmet, whofe Creffc was a Ram’s Head. The Babyloniazzs and jiJJyrians , whom he governed, called him h Belus , who was the impious Author of Idolatry; and, becaufe of the Uncertainty of his De- fcent, they believed that he had neither Father nor Mother ; and therefore he was thought the firft: of all Gods : In different Places and Languages he was af¬ terwards called Bee!? Baal? Beelphegor , Beclzebz/b , and Belzeznen . Jupiter was called * Capitolinus , from the Capitoline Hill, upon the Top whereof he had the firft: Temple that ever was built in Rome $ which Tarquin the Elder firft vowed to build, 'Tarquin the Proud "built, and Ho - ratius the Conful dedicated. He was belides called Tarpeius , from the Tarpeian Rock on which this Tem¬ ple was built. He was alfo ftiled k Optimus Maximus? from his Power and Willingnefs to profit all Men. He is alfo called 1 Ciz/Ios. There is in Nero’s Coins an Image of him fitting on his Throne, which bears in its Right-hand Thunder, and in its Left a Spear, with this Infcription, Jupiter Cujios . Antiently in fome Forms of Oaths he was commonly called m JDiefpiter , the Father of Light ;. as we fhall far- therremark prefently under the Word Lapis-? and to the fame Purpofe he was by the n Cretans called directly Dies . The Title of Dodonaus was given him from the City Dodona in Chaonia , which was fo called from Dodona , a Nymph of the Sea. Near to which City M h Berof. J. 4. Eufebius; 1 . 1. prarp. Evang. Hier. 1. in Cl earn. 1 O Capitoline, quern, propter bencficia, populus Roma- .nus Optimum, propter, vim. Maximum appelJavit, Tull, de Nat. Deorum i. k Plin. Liv. flut. Tacit. 19, 1 Apul. de mundo. Senec. 2. an, nat. m Quail did pater. -Var. de Lingua Latina. n Macrob. in Saturn, ap. Bochart. in Geogr, C 2 there 20 Of the Gods of the Heathens «. there was a Grove facred to Jupiter* which was plant¬ ed with Oaks, and famous ; becaufe in it was the an- tienteft Oracle of all Greece. Two Doves delivered * Refponfes there to thofe, who confulted it. Or, as others ufe to fay, p the Leaves of the Oaks themfelves became Vocal, and gave forth Oracles. • He was named q Eticius , Becaufe the Prayers of Men may bring him down from Heaven* The Name Feretrius is given him, becaufe r hefmites his Enemies $ or becaufe he is the 5 Giver of Peace ; for, when a Peace was made, the Scepter by which the Em- bafladors fwore and the Flint-ftone on which they con¬ firmed their Agreement, were fetched out of his Tem¬ ple : or laftly, becaufe, after they had overcome their Enemies, they 1 carried the grand Spoils (Spolia opima) to his Temple. Romulus firfl prefented fuch Spoils to 'Jupiter , after he had ilain Acron , King of Can in a * and Cornelius Galius offered the fame Spoils after he had conquered Tolumnius King of Hetruria ; and thirdly, M. Marcellas , when he had vanquifhed Viridomarus King of the Gauls , as we read in u Virgil. Thofe Spoils were called Opima , which one Gene-* ral took from the other in Battle. Fulminatory or xV Ceraunius , in Greek Ke^at'wo?,. is Jupiter's. Title, from hurling Thunder, which- is p Alex, ab Alex. c. 2. q Quod ccelo praxibus eliciatur, fic Ovid. Faff, 3. ~ El: ci unt cczlo ie Jupiter ; unde Mir ores Rune quoqu? ie celebrant , Ehci unique *vocanf • Jove can’t refill the juft Man’s Cries, They bring him down e’en from the Skies; Hence he’s Elicius call’d. - r A feriendo, quod hofles feriat. 5 vel a. ferenda pace. Fell, £ Vel a ferendis fpoliis opimis in ejus Templum. Flut. in. Jlom. Dion. 2. u Perilaque arma Pafri fufpendet capia Spuirino. And the third Spoils fhali grace Peretrian Jove. JELxi. 6. w $er*v. ibid. thought Of the Gods of the Heathens. 2 r : thought to be his proper Office, if we believe the * Poet. In Lycia they worfhipped him under the * Name of Gragus , [Grapfes,] and Genitor . In JEgium, about the Sea-coaft, he is faid to havfe had a Temple, with the Name of r Homogynus . At Pranejle he was called hnperator . s "There was a moft famous Statue of him there, afterwards tran- flated to Ro7ne . He was called LatiaVis , 1 becaufe he was worlhipped in Latium , a Country of Italy; whence the” Latin Fes¬ tivals are denominated, to which all thofe Cities of Ita- 9 /y reforted, who deiired to be Partakers of the Solemni¬ ty; and brought to yupiter feveral Oblations : Particu¬ larly a Bull was facrificed at that Xime, in the com¬ mon Name of them all, whereof every one took a Part, The Name Lapis , or, as others write, Lapideus * was given him by the Rojnans , who believed that an Oath, w made in the Name of yupiter Lapis, was the moft folemn of all Oaths. And it is derived either from the Stone, which was prefented to Saturn by his Wife Ops, who faid it was yupiter , in which Senfe * Eufebius fays, that Lapis reigned in Crete \ or from the Flmt-Jlone, which, in making Bargains, the Swearer held in his Hand, and faid. If k.720wingly I deceive , Jo let Diefpiter, faving the ■City and the Capitol, cajl me P Horat. 3 Carm. and Virgil. JEn. i. — - O que res bominumque Deumque JFiernis regis imperils, J'ulmine ter res* O King of Gods and Men, whofe awful Hand Difperfes Thunder on the Seas and Land ; Difpenfing all with absolute Command. * Lycophron. r Virg. 1 . I. Sc 4. ^En. 3 Paufan. Sc Hefych. Liv. 6. 1 Cic. pro Milone, 86. Dion. 1 . 4. u Latinas Fe'rias. w Juramenturn per Jovem Lapidem omnium fandifUmuni, Cic. 7. Epilt. 12. * In Chron. C 3 2 2 Of the Gods of the Heathens. away from all that 9 s goody as / cajl away this Stone ~ p whereupon he threw the Stone away. The Romans had another Form, not unlike to this, of making Bar¬ gains : It will not be amifs to mention it here ;. q If with evil Intention 1 at any "Time deceive ; upon that Day , O Jupiter, fo Jlrike thou me , as I/ball this DayJlrike this SwinCy andjo'much the moreJlrike thou 9 as thou art the more able andJkilful to do it $ whereupon he ftruck down the Swine. In the Language of the People of Ca?npa?iiay he is called Lucetius from Lux ; and among the Latins r Dief- piter from Dies. Which Names were given to Jupiter 9 5 becaufe he cheers and comfor is us with the Light of the Day as much as with Life itfclf: Or, becaufe he was believ¬ ed to be the Caufe of Lis;ht r . The People of Elis ufed to celebrate him by the Ti¬ tle of 11 Ikfartius . ■ He was alfo called w MufcariuSy becaufe he drove a- way the Flies : For, when Hercules's religious Exer- cifes were interrupted by a Multitude of Flies, he there¬ upon offered a Sacrifice to Jupiter , which being finifh- ed, all the Flies flew away. x NicephdruSy that is, carrying Victory 5 and, by the Oracle of Jupiter Ntccpborusy the Emperor Adrian was told, that he fhould be promoted to the Empire. Livy often mentions him ; and many Coins are extant* P Si feiens fallo, me Diefpiter, falva urbe, areeque, bonis ejiciat, ut ego hunc Tapidem. Fell. ap. Lil. q Si dolo malo aliquando fallam, tu illo die, Jupiter , me fic ferito, ut ego hunc porcum hodie feriam ; tantoque ma- gis ferito, quanto magis potes, poliefque. Liv. 1. 1 • r Serv. 9. JEn. 3 Quod nos die ac luce quafi vita ipsa afficeret ac juvaret. Aul. Cell. * Feflus. u Zeve, Jupiter pugnax. Plut. in Pyrrho. w . mufearum abator. Paufan. 5. Eliac. x N/. s. Vi&oriam geftans. iElias Spart. jn A- driani vita. * Of the Gods of the Heathens . 23 In which is the Image of Jupiter bearing Victory in his Hand. He was called alfo p Qpitulus , or Opitulator , the Hel¬ per ; and Centipeda from his Slabi 1 i ty ; beca ufe th ofc "Things fland fecure and firm which have many Feet. He was called Stabilitor and Tigellus , becaufe he fup- ports the World. Almas alfo and Alummrt^ becaufe he cherifhes all Things : And Rumhrns from Ru?na y which fignifies the Nipple, by which he nourifhes Animals. He is alfo.named 11 Qly?npius from Olympus , the Name of the Maflrer who taught him, and of the Heaven where¬ in he refides; or, of a City which flood near the Moun¬ tain Olympus , and was anciently celebrated far and near, becaufe there a Temple was dedicated to Jupiter , arid Games folemnized every five Years. r To this Jupiter Olympus the firftCupwas facrificed in their Feflivals. When the Gauls befieged the Capitol, an Altar was ereCied to Jupiter 5 Pijlor ; becaufe he put it into the Minds of the Romans . to make Loaves of Bread, and throw them into the Gauls Tents ; whereupon the Siege was raifed. The Athenians ereCted a Statue to him, and worfhip- ped it upon the Mountain Hymettus , giving him in that Place the Title of 1 Pluvius ; this Title is men¬ tioned by u "Tibullus . Precdator was alfo his Name; not becaufe he pro¬ tected Robbers , but becaufe, out of all the Booty taken from the Enemy, one Part was due to him. w For, when the Romans went to War, they ufed to devote to p Qnafi opis lator. Fell. Aug. 7. de Civit. m Paufan. Att. & Eliac. Liv. J. 4. dec. 4. *• Pollux. 0 A pinfendo Ovid. 6. Fall. LaCh 1 . 12. Liv. 1 . 5/ r Phurnut. in Jovin. u Arida nec Pluvio fupplicat berba Jo-vi. Nor the parch’d Grafs for Rain from Jove doth c ill. * Serv. 5;. JE.n-. C 4. the 24 Of She- Gods of the- Heathens'. the Odds a Part of the Spoil that they fhould get>; and for that Reafon there was a Temple at Ro?ne dedi¬ cated to ‘Jupiter 'Predator.. Qulrinusy as appears by that Verfe of Virgily which- v/e cited above p, when he fpoke of the Name Feretrius . Rex -and Regnat'or are his common Titles in tj Virgil Homery and Ennius,. Jupiter is alfo called r &'fatfry. which Title he firfb had from Romulus on this'' Occafion : When Romulus - was fighting with the SabineSy his Soldiers began to- xTy; whereupon Romidusy as s ZzVy relates, ; thus prayed' Vo Jupitery O thou Father- of the Gods and Mankind 9 at this Place at leaf drive hack the Ehemyy take away the Fear of the Romans, and Jlop their dijhonourable Flight „ And l vow to / build a 'Temple to thee upon the fame Place that J})cdl bear the Name of Jupiter Stator, for a Monu¬ ment: to- Pojlerityy that it was from thy immediate Jlf fftanee that Rome received its Prefer vail on. After this Prayer the Soldiers flopped, and, returning again to* the Battle, obtained'the Vidtory 5; whereupon Romulus? con fee rated a Temple to Jupiter Siator . The Greeks called hnrrS^T^ [foterl Scrvator % the* Samoury becaufe he delivered them, from the Medes a . Confervaibr alfo was his Title,., as appears from divers of Dioclefaris Coins; in which his Effigies Rands, with Thunder brandifhed in his Right-hand, and a Spear in* his .Left i with>this*InfcrFption, ConfcrvatarL In others,, P Note 6, on Page 20'. 9 ? Di which iw* is, according to + Tally 9 s Definition, The Caufe from all Eternity y why fuch ‘Things , zy*r becaufe there is but one Sun ; fo fome think the Greeks gave him the ISFame Apollo for the fame Reafon : Tho’ 1 others think that he is called Apollo , either becaufe he drives away Difeafes, or becaufe he darts vigoroufiy his Rays. He is called u Cynthius , from the Mountain Cy?2thus % in the Ifland of Delos± from whence Diana alfo is> called Cynthia. . warn m—m ■ — ■■■■■ ■■ ™ ->«»-■ 4 Ab a particuia privativa, & *30 \>.oty quemadmodum Sol, quod lit folus, Chryfip* apud Gyr- rSynt. 7. p* 219. «.ttq •ts cLvrcc}X?• 3 Nofxev?, /. e . Paltor, quod pavit Admeti gregem, vel quod quafi pafeat omnia, Phurnut. Macrob. b Lex Macrob. Cic. 3 * de Nat. Deor. c n etpet to tzccvzw a fedando moleftias, vel wupcc to his difcite> P.ean ! Decidit in caffes prtsda. peiita meos . Sing Io Pa?a?i twice, twice Io fay : fifty Toils are pitch’d, and I have caught my Prey, Ovid , de Arte Am and. 1. 2. He < Of the Gods of the Heathens. He is.called Phoebus f from the great Swiftnefs of liis Motion, or from his Method of Healing by Purging ; iince, by the Help of Phyfic, which was Apollo y s Inven¬ tion, the Bodies of Mankind are purged and cured. He.was named Pythlus , not only from the Serpent Python , which he killed, but like wife from g ofking and £onfulting \ for none among the Gods was more coni u It- ed, or delivered more Refponfes, or fpake more Oracles, than he; efpecially in the Temple, which he had at Del¬ phi, to which all Sorts of Nations, reforted, fo that it was called the Oracle of all the Earth h . The Oracles were given out by a young Virgin, till one was debauch - ed : Whereupon a Law was made, that a very ancient Woman, fhould give the Anfwers, in the Drefs of a young Maid, who was therefore call’d Pythia and Py- thtus , one of Apollo's Names $ and fometimes Phoohas , from Phoebus , another of them. But, as. to the Man¬ ner that the Woman underftood the God’s Mind, Mens Opinions differ. ■ Tally fuppofes,- that fome-Vapours exhaled out of the Earth, and affedted .the Brain much* and raifed in it a Power of Divination . P. .What was the Tripos on which ,the Pythian La dy fat : ? •' > : M: Some-fay, that it.was a Table with .th.i'eeJFeet, on which fhe placed herielf whenjfhe defigned to give forth Oracles s and, becaufe it was covered with the Skin of the Serpent Python , they call ..it alfo by the Name of .Cortina . k But others-fay., that it .was a Veflel, in which fhe was plunged before fhe prophe{*ed ; or rather,.that it was a golden Veffel furni(hed;,w;ith Ears, and fupport- ed by three T.eet, whence it was .called: Tripos ; and ,f ’A? dore, (poirZv, quod vi feratur, vel a (poifidcj, purgo, X»il. Gyr. Synt.-y. p.,22 z. s ’Atto '&vi' 9 &y£cr$ ried to Thales of Miletus 3 who fent it to Bia$y as to a ivifer Perfon. Bias referred it to another, and that other deferred it to a fourth ; fill? after It had been fent back¬ ward and forward to all the wife Men, it returned agaify Thales , who dedicated it to flpollo at Delphos f _ P . Who were the wife Men of Greece ? M* Thefe feyen, to whole Names I adjoin the places of their Nativity 3 Thales of Miletus , Solon of : Athens , Chilo of Laced&mon , Pittacns of Mytilene , Bias pf Prieney ■ Cle oh ulus pf Lindiy and Periander of Co^ ■rinth. I will add fome remarkable Things concerning 9 m * % • ' • • ' . . • O » C? them. * Thales was reckoned among the wife Men, becaufe })e was believed to be the firft that brought Geo? 7 ictry into Greece . He firft obferved the Courfes of the Times, $he Motion of the Winds* the Nature of Thunder, and • i • » ». ' » ■ ' 1 r - 1 the Motions of the Sun and the Stars. Being afked. What he thought the difHculteft Thing in the World ? he aufwered, to know one's felf\ which perhaps was the Qpeafion of the Advice written on the Front of Apql- Id's Temple, to thofe that were about to enter, 1 Know thyfelf, For there ajre very few that-kn.ow themfelves. '"When Solon, vifited Crcefus the King of Lydiay the King fhewed his vaft Treasures to him, and alked him wheth.er he knew a Man happier than he ? Tes 9 fays Sploriy 1 know fpellus, a very poor 7 but a very virtu¬ ous Man at Athens, who lives in a little Tenement there ; and he is more happy than your Majefy : For^ neither 'can thefe Things make us hdppyy * which are fubjelt to foe Changes of the Times 3 nor is any one to be thought , f # ‘ ' * 1 azavTov, Nofce teipfum-. Laert . ' 1 * truly 4 V Of the Gods of the lie Athens. 41 truly happy till he dies, p It is faid, when King Crcefus •was afterwards taken Prifoner by Cyrus , and laid upon the Pile to be burnt-, he remembered this Saying of Solon j and often repeated his Name ; fo that Gyrus afked why he cried out Solon , and who the God was, whofe Affiftance he begged. Crcefus faid, I find nozv by Ex¬ perience that to be true , which heretofore he faid to me ; and fo he told Cyrus the Story : Who, hearing it, was . fo touched with the Senfe of the Viciffitude of human ^ # « % • - - Affairs, that he preferved Crcefus from the Fire, and ever after had him in great Honour. Chi lo had this faying continually in his Mouth, q De~ fire nothing too much . Yet, when his Son, had got the yi£Iory at the Olympick Games, the good Mail died with Joy, and all Greece honoured his Funeral. Bias.) a Man no lefs famous for Learning than Nobility, preferved his Citizens a long Time : And zvhcn at laj ?, * fays Tidly^ his Country Priene was taken , and the rejl of the Inhabitants , in their Efcape 0 carried azvay with them as much of their Goods as they coufd 3 one advifed him to do the fame-, but he made Anfwer, s It is what I do already , for all the Things that are mine I carry about me. He often faid, t that Friends Jhould remember to love one another , fo as Per forts who may fometimes hate one another . Of the reft, nothing extraordinary is reported. • • s _ • • _ 4 « « ■ 1 » • * • p Plutarch. Herodotus, q Nequid nimiurn cupias, Plin. 1 , 7. c. 32. r De Amicitia. ? Ego vero facio, nam omnia mea mecum po'rto, Val. Max. 1 . c. 2. 1 Amicos ita amare / / ^ ^ • 1 • • oporteret ut aliquando eiTent ofuri. Laert . t. ' . • x % • * • 1 • SECT. IV. of A p o l l o means the Sun. f r • t • • ♦♦ A *|T VE RY one agrees, that by u Apollo the Sun is to be JZLy underftood; for, the four chief Prophecies afcrib- 'ed to ApoW were, the Arts of Prophefying , of Heal - « * • * ^ ing 9 of Darting , and of Adufzck 9 of all which we may £nd in the Sun a lively Reprefentation and Image. Was Apollo famous for his Skill in Prophefying and Divination ? And what is more agreeable to the Na¬ ture of the Sun, than by its Light to difpel Darknefs, and to make minifeft hidden and concealed Truth? Was Apollo famous for his Knowledge of Medicine, and his Power of Healing ? Surely nothing in the World conduces more to the Health and Prefervation of all Things, than the Sun’s Heat and Warmth : And therefore thofe Herbs and Plants, which are moft: ex- pofed to its Rays, are found to have moft Power and Vir¬ tue. Thirdly, Is Apollo (kilful in Darting or Shooting ? And are not the Sun’s Rays like fo many Darts or Ar¬ rows fhot from his Body to the Earth ? And; laftly, how well does Apollo* s Skill in Muftck agree to the Na¬ ture of the Sun, which, being placed in the Midft of the Planets, makes with them a Kind of Harmony, and all together, by their uniform Motion, make, as it were, a Concert, of Muftck ? And, becaufe the Sun is thus placed the middlemoft of the feven Planets, the Poets aflert, that the Inftrument which Apollo plays on^As a Harp with feven Strings. Beftdes, from the Things facrificed to. Apollo, r - it ap¬ pears that he was the Sun : The firft of which Things was the OUve 9 the Fruit of which fo loves the Sun, that it cannot be nourifh’d in Places diftant from it. • 2. The Laurel , g a Tree of a hot Nature, always flourifhing, never old, and conducing not a little towards Divina¬ tion, and therefore the Poets are crowned with Laurel. 3. Among Animals, Szvans h are offered to him ; be¬ caufe, as was obferved before, they have from Apollo a Faculty ofDivination, for they, forefeeing the Happinefs in Death, die ftnging and pleafed. 4. Griffins alfo, and Crozvs, were facred to him for the fame Reafon 5 and the JHawk 9 which has Eyes as bright and piercing as the Sun; k f Theocr. in Here. g Aerius. h Cic. Tufcul. 1. * the Of the Gods of the Heathens . 43 ^he Goc&t which foretels his Riling; and the GraJhoppei\ a finging Creature : Wherefore e it was a Cuftom among the Athenians to faften golden Grafhoppers to their Hair, in Honour of Apollo . And especially, if f we derive the Name of Laiona , the Mother of Apollo and Diana , from the Greek *«*- Saw \lanthano , *0 A/rf] it will fignify that before the Birth of Apollo and Diana , that is, before the Pro¬ duction of the Sun and the Moon, all Things lay in¬ volved in Darknefs : From whence thefe two glorious Luminaries afterwards proceeded, as out of the Womb of a Mother. 4 But, notwithstanding all this, feveral poetical Fa¬ bles have Relation only to the Sun, and not to Apollo . And of thofe therefore it is necefTary to treat apart. c Thucyd. Schol. Arift. * Vid. Lil. Gyr. i. in A poll. CHAP. VI. The Sun. His Genealogy and Names . as we learn from Hiftory. 3. The Maufoleum , or Sepulchre of Maufoleus King of Carla, f built by his Queen Artemijia , of the pureit Marble ; and yet the Workmanfhip of it was much more valuable than the Marble. It was, from North to South, fixty-three Feet long, almoft four hundred and eleven Feet in Compafs, and twenty-five Cubits, (that is, about thirty-five Feet) high, furrounded with thirty-fix Columns, that were beautified in a wonder¬ ful Manner : And from this Adaufoleum all other fump- tuous Sepulchres are called by the fame Name. 4. A Statue of "Jupiter , in the Temple of the City g Olympia , carved with the greateft Art by Phidias, out of Ivory, and made of a prodigious Size. 5. The Walls of the City of Babylon , (which was the Metropolis of Chaldea) h built by Queen Semiramis , whofe Circumference was fixty Miles, their Breadth fifty Feet; fo that fix Chariots might conveniently pafs upon them in a Row. - 6. The ' Pyramids of Egypt ; three of which, remar¬ kable for their Height, do ftill remain. The firft has a fquar eBaJis, and is one hundred and forty-three Feet long and aThoufand high: It is made of fuch great Stones, that the le.aft of them is thirty Feet thick. Three hun¬ dred and fixty-thoufand Men were employed in building it, for the Space of twenty Years. The two other Pyra¬ mids, which are fomewhat fmaller, attraft the Admira¬ tion of all Speftators. And in thefe Pyramids, it is re¬ ported, the Bodies of the Kings of Egypt lie interred. 7. The Royal Palace of k Cyrus , King of the Medes, made by Meiion, with no lefs Prodigality than Art 3 for, he cemented the Stones with Gold. f Plin. lib. 36. c. 5. p Idem. L 36. c. 3. h Idem. 1 . 6. c. 26. 1 Plin. 1. 36. c.13. Belo. 1. 2. c. 32. Sing. Obfer- vat. k Calepin. V. Miraculum. SECT. •JC* Of the Gods of the Heathens . SECT. III*.. It he Children of the Sun . N OW let us turn our Difcourfe again to SoPs Children ; the moft famous of which was Phae- ton, who gave the Poets an excellent Opportunity of {hewing their Ingenuity by the following Action. Epa- phus , one of the Sons o {Jupiter? quarrelled with Phae- ton , and faid, that., though he called himfelfthe Son of ftpollo, he was not ; and, that his Mother Clymene in¬ vented this Pretence only to cover her Adultery- This Slander fo provoked Phaeton , that, by his Mother’s Ad¬ vice, he went to the Royal Palace of the Sun, to bring from thence fome indubitable Marks of his Nativity^ The Sun received him, when hecame, kindly, and own’d him his Son; and, to take away all Occafion of Doubt¬ ing hereafter, he gave him Liberty to afk any Thing* fwearing by the Stygian Lake ( which Sort of Oath none of theGWx dare violate) that he would not deny Him. Here¬ upon Phaeton deft red leave to govern his Father 7 s Cha¬ riot for one Day, which was the Occafion of great Grief to his Father; who, forefeeing his Son’s Ruin thereby, was very uneafy that he had obliged himfelf to grant a RequefI: fo pernicious to his Son ; and there¬ fore endeavoured to peffuade him not to perfift in his Delire, a telling him that he fought his own Ruin, and was defirous of undertaking an Employment above his Ability* a - Pemeraria dixit Vox mea faff a tua eft. lit in am promiffh liter et IS on dare : Conftteor, /alum hoc tibi , natc, negarem, DiJJuadere licet • Non eji tua tuta voluntas ; Magna petis, Phaeton, & quae non viribus i /1 is Munera conveniiwt y nec ta?n puerilibus. annis, Sors tua mortal is : non eft snort ale, quod opt as* *T\vas this alone I could refufe a Son, Elfe by’s own Wifh apd my rafh Oath undone. ou Of the Gods of the Heathens • Ability, and which no Mortal was capable to execute. x Phaeton was not moved with the good Advice of his Father, but prefled him to keep his Promife, and per¬ form what he had fworn by. the P-iver Styx to do. In Abort, the Father was forced to comply with his Son’s Ralhnefs ; and therefore unwillingly granted what was not now in his Power, after his Oath, to deny ; never- thelefs, he directed him how to guide the Horfes, and efpecially he advifed him to obferye the middle Path. Phaeton was tranfported with Joy, y mounted the Cha¬ riot, and taking the Reins, he began to drive the Hor¬ fes, which, finding him unable to. govern them, ran away, and fet on Fire both the Heavens and the Earth. Jupiter , to put an End to the Conflagration, ftrUclt him out of the Chariot with Thunder, and caft him headlong into the River Pa . His Sifters Phaethufa , Lampetia , and Pbaeba , lamenting his Death inceflant- ly upon the Banks of that River, were turned, by the Thou to thy Ruin my rafh Vow doll weft: O ! would I could break Promife. Thy Requeft, Poor haplefs Youth, forego ; retraft it now. Recall thy With, and I can keep my Vow. Think, Phaeton , think o’er thy wild Defires, That Work more Years, and greater Strength, requires: Confine thy Thoughts to thy own humble Fate.: What thou wouldft'ft have, becomes no mortal State. x , — Pi a is tamen ille repugnat 9 Propofk unique premit> fiagratque cupidine currus . In vain to move his Son the - Father aim’d. He, with Ambition’s hotter Fire inflam’d, His Sire’s irrevocable Promife claim’d, y Occupat ille levem juvenili cor pore cur rum , Statque fuper , manibufquc da fas coniingere habenas Gaudet , invito grates agit indeparenti . Now Phaeton, by lofty Hopes poflefs’d. The burning Seat with joyful Vigour prefs’d; With nimble Hands the heavy Reins he weigh’d. And Thanks unpleafing to his Father paid. Ovid. Met am ,!. 2. Of the Gods of the Heathens „ 49 pity of the Gods into Poplar-Trees? from that Time weeping Amber inftead of Tears. A great Fire that happened in Italy near the Po , in the Time of King Phaeton , was the Occafion of this Fable. And the Am*- bit ions are taught hereby what Event they ought to ex¬ pert, when they foar higher than they ought. v Circe , the mod: fkilful of all Sorcerefles, poifoned her Hufband, a King of the Sarmatians ; for which fhe was banifhed by her Subjects, and, flying into Italy ^ fixed her Seat upon the Promontory Circcewn? where fhe fell in Love with Glaucus a Sea God , who at the fame Time loved Scylla : Circe turned her into a Sea- Mo offer, by poifoning the Water in which fhe ufed to wafh. She entertained UlyJJis , who was driven thither by the Violence of Storms, with great Civility 5 and reftored 4 his Companions unto their former Shapes 5 whom, according to her ufual Cuftom, fhe had chang¬ ed into Hogs, Bears, Wolves, and the like Beafts, Ulyfi* fes was armed againft her Aftaults; Co that fhe fet upon him in vain. It is . faid that fhe drew down the very Stars from Heaven ; whence we are plainly informed that Voluptuoufnefs (whereof Circe is the Emblem) alters Men into ravenous and filthy Beafts j that even thofe who with the Luftre of their Wit and Virtue fhine in the World as Stars in the Firmament, when once they addict themfelves to obfeene Pleafures, be¬ come obfeure and inconfiderable, falling, as it were, headlong from the Glory of Heaven. q Pajiphae was the Wife of Minos , King of Crete : She fell in Love with a Bull, and obtained her Defire by the Afiiftance of Daedalus , who, for that Purpofe, inclofed her in a wooden Cow : She brought forth a Minotaur , a Monfter, one Part of which was like a Man, the other like a Bull. r Now the Occafion of p Ovid. Metam. 14. ap. Boccat. 1 . 4. Ovid. Metam. 1 E r Serv. this go Of the Gods of the Heathens . this Fable, they fay, was this : Pafiphae loved a Man whofe Name was Taurus , and had Twins by him in Desdalus’s Houfe; one of whom was very like her Hufband Minos , and the other like its Father. But however that is, the Minotaur was fhut up in the La¬ byrinth that Dcedalus made by the Order of King Mz~ nos; This Labyrinth was a Place diverfified with ve¬ ry many Windings and Turnings, and Crofs-paths running into one another. How this Minotaur was killed, and by whom, I fliall {hew particularly in its Place in the Hiftory of The feus . p Dcedalus was an-ex¬ cellent Artificer of Athens*, who firft, as it is faid, in¬ vented the Ax, the Saw, the Plumb-line, the Augre, and Glue $ alfo he firfl contrived Mails and Yards for Ships : Refides, he carved Statues fo admirably, that they not only feemed alive, but would never Hand Hill in one Place; nay, would fly away unlefs they were chained. This Daedalus^ together with Icarus his Son, was lhut up by Minos in the Labyrinth which he had made, becaufe he had a Hilled the Amours of Pafphae 5 whereupon he made Wings for himfelf and his Son, with Wax and Feathers of Birds : Faftenino- thefe Wings to his Shoulders, he flew out of Crete into Si¬ cily ; at which Time Icarus , in his Flight, neglected his Father’s Advice, and obferved not his due Courfe, but, out of a juvenile Wantonnefs, flew higher than he ought; whereupon the Wax was melted by the Heat of the Sun, and the Wings broke in Pieces, and he fell into the Sea, which is fince, q according to Ovid 7 named the Icarian Sea, from him. Tp thefe Children of the Sun y we may add his Niece and his Nephew Sybils and Caunus. Sybils was fo much in Love with Caunus , though he was her ♦ p Ovid. Met am, L 8. Paufan. in Attic. - Icarus lean’is nomhm fecit aqins . Ovid. I. Trill. Icarian Seas' from Icarus were call’d,, Brother, Of the Gods of the Heathens . 5 x Brother* that fhe employed all her Charms to entice him to commit Inceft; and when nothing would over¬ come his Modcftv, fhe followed him fo Jong, that at Jaft being quite opprefled with Sorrow and Labour, flie fat down under a Tree, and fhed fuch a Quantity of Tears, f that fhe was converted into a Fountain,, f Sic lachiymis confumpta.fiiis Phcsbeia By b lis Vertitur in fbntem 9 qui nunc quoquc , from Mercury^ whofe Greek Name was Hermes: Concerning which Hermes it is to be obferved, I. Thefe Images have neither 5 Hands nor Feet, and from hence Mercury was called Cyllenius , and by Con- $ra£tian 1 Cyllius^ which Words are derived from a Greek r At Battus , poJlqua?n efi merces gcmznata , fub illzs Monti bus, inquit , erant: & era'at fub montibus ill is ► Rifit Atlantiades, & me mibi y perfede^ prodis ; Me mi hi prodis , ait ? perjuraque pedtora ajertit In durumJilicem , qui nunc qtwqiie dicitur Index. Battus 9 on th’ double Proffer, tells him, there; Beneath thofe Hills, beneath thofe Hills they were. Then Hermes laughing loud* What Kna\ r e, I fay. Me to njyfelf, myfelf to rne betray ? Then to aTouchftone turn’d his perjur’d Breaft, Whofe Nature now is in that Name exp refs } d. 5 Sunt" Atto^e; iC) dxagss Hero d. 1 . i. ? Kvaao$ i. e. ma. nuum Sc pedum expers. Lil. Gyraldus. " I Word ^ * % * * Of the Gods of the Heathens. ft Word fignifying a Man without Hands and Feet ; and not from Cyllene , a Mountain in Arcadia , in which he was educated. 2. A Purfe was ufually hung to a Statue of Mercury , c (o fignify that he was the God of Gain and Profit , and prefided over Merchandizing; in which, becaufe ma¬ ny Times Things are done by Fraud and Treachery, they save him the Name of Dallas . 3. The Romans ufed to join the Statues of Mercury and Minerva together, and thefe Images they called f Hermathenas'y and facrificed to both Deities upon one and the fame Altar. Xhofe who had efcaped any great Danger, always offered Sacrifices to Mercury: z They offered up a Calf, and Milk, and Honey, and efpecially the Tongues of the Sacrifice?, which, with a great deal of Ceremony, they caft into the Fire, and then the Sa¬ crifice was finifhed. It is laid, that the Megarenfes firft ufed this Ceremony. e Macrob. Sc Sind, apud Lip. f Cicero, s Paufan. in Attic. OvidMetam. 4. Caliiitrat. Homer. O CHAP. VIII. Bacchus, His Image . JH y ou Palaophilus P W P, Who can forbear, when he fees that fil¬ thy, fhamelefs, and immodeft God, placed next to Mer¬ cury ; h with a naked Body, a red face, lafcivious Looks, in an effeminate Pofture, difpirited with Luxury, and overcome with Wine. His fwoln Cheeks refemble Bottles; his great Belly, fat Breads, and his diftended fwelling Paunch, reprefent a Hogffiead, rather than a God to be carried in that Chariot. M. Th M. That is no Wonder ; for it is Bacchus himfelj^ the God of Wine, and the Captain and Emperor of Drunk¬ ards* He is crowned with Ivy and Vine-leaves. He has a *Tbyrfus infcead of a Sceptre, which is a Javelin with an Iron Head, encircled by Ivy or Vine-leaves, in his Hand. J He is carried in a Chariot, which is Sometimes drawn by Tygers and Lions, and fome- times by Lynxes and Panthers : And, like a King, he has his Guards, k who are a drunken Band of Satyrs 9 Demons, Nymphs that prefide over the Wine-prefles, jFairies of Fountains, and Prieftefles. Silcmts oftentimes comes after him, fitting on an Afs that bends under his Burthen. P. But what’s here?’This Bacchus has got Horns, and is a young Man without a Beard: I have heard, that the Inhabitants of Elis paint him like an old Man, with a Beard. AE It is true. He is fomettmes painted an old Man, and fometimes a fmooth and beardlefs Boy: as 1 Ovid and 111 Tibullus deferibe him. I fhall give you the Rea- fon of all thefe Things, and of his Horns, mentioned alfo in p * Ovid , before I make an End of this Fable. * Ovid, de Arte Amandi, Arlfloph. Scholiait. in PLutuim Strabo, I. 26. Ovid. 3. 4. k Gohors Satyrorum, Cobglorum, Lenarum, Naiadun:* atque Baccharum. / I -- Tibi inconfwnpta jUsvctiia p Tu puer or Tanrh ceps ; and he is fuppofed to have Horns, becaufe he firft ploughed with Oxen, or becaufe he was the Son of Jupiter Ammon , who had the Head of a Ram. d Dre?? 7 o ?2 bonus , the good Angel ; and in Feafb, after the Vidluals were taken away, the laft Glafs was drunk round to his Honour. e DithyrcnnbuS'y which fignifies either that he was born twice, of Scmele and of Jove; or the double Gate, which the Cave had in which he was brought up; or perhaps it means that Drunkards cannot keep Secrets; but whatever is in the Head comes into the Mouth, and then burfls f forth, as fafl as it would cut of two Doors, Dionyjsus or Diony/us , £ from his Father Jupiter , or from the Nymphs called Nyfa?^ by -whom he was nurf- edi, as they fay: -or from a Greek Word, fignifying to h prick , becaufe he pricked his Father’s Side with his Horns, when he was born ; or from Jupiter’s Lame- nefs who limped when Bacchus was in his Thigh ; or from an Ifland among the Cyclades , called Dia^ or Nay,of which was dedicated to him when he married Ariadne ; or laftly from the City of Nyfa^" in which Bacchus reigned. K Evihus , or Evehus . For, in the War of the Giants, when Jupiter did not fee Bacchus , he thought that c 33sy?w i. e. a hove genitus. Clemens Strom. Euf. 1. 4 , Freep. Evnng\ 6 Diodor. 1; 3 . Idem. j. 3 . c 'Avro 0 .$ f.U Qvqxv dva.izct, *Vsir, a bis in jar)uam ingrediendo. Diodor. Grig. Eufeb. ^ Quail per geminam portam, hie pro¬ verbial iter dc vino, facit to ct>Qvfoi>. s a?.-L tu a Jove, Fhurnut. in fab. h a vve-c-v pun go, Lucian. Dial! 5 NTvVc?, i. e. claudus, Nonn, 1. 9 . k Eheu vli\ Eheu Eli ! Eurir*. in B a cell. he Of the Gods of the Heathens 6 3 he was killed, and cried out, fc Alas Son / Or, becaufe v/hen he found that Bacchus had overcome the Giants* by changing himfelf into a Lion, he cried out again, * JVell done , *SW. m Evan^ from the Acclamations of the 'Bacchantes^ ■ V/ho were therefore called Ev antes . Eucbiusy . n becaufe Bacchus fills his Glafs plentifully* even up to the Brim, ° Eleletis and Eleus , from the Acclamation where¬ with they animated the Soldiers before the Fight, or encouraged them in the Battle itfelf. The fame Ac¬ clamation was alfo ufed in celebrating the Orgia, which were Sacrifices offered up to Bacchus . p lacchus was alfo qne of his Names, from theNoife which Men when drunk make: And this q Title is given him by Claudia?i ; from whofe Account of Bac¬ chus-, we may learn, that he was not always naked, bu£ forhetimes cloathed with the Skin of a Tyger. Lena:us ; becaufe, as Donaius fays, r Wine palliates and afluages the Sorrows of Men’s Minds. But Servius thinks that this Name, fince it is a Greek Name, ought not to be derived from a Latin Word, as Donatus fays, but from a Greek s Word, which fignifies the Vat or Prejif in which Wine is made. k Virg. JEn. 7. 1 hj vie Euge Hi! Cornut, in Peif. Acron. in Herat. In Virg. JEn. 6. Ovid 4, Metam* n Ab ivyioj, i. e. beneac large fnndo. Nat. Com 1 . p 0 Ab iAgAfy, exclamation e bclllca. Ovid. 4. Me tarn. JEfchyi* in Prometh. P Ab Icty-xzva clamo, vociferor. q .——Lestufqueflmul pro cedit lacchus Crinalt flare ns hedera : Sfjtsm Parthica Pigris Velat, & aura t os in nodur/i colli git ungues. - -The Jolly God comes in. His Hair with Ivy tvvindd, his Cloaths a Tvger’s Whofe Golden Claws are clutch’d into a Knot. Skin 1 de Raptu Projcrp . 1. 1 . r Quodleniat mentem vinum. sJ A7 to rov or i. e. torculari. Servius in Virg. Georg, 1 „ 2, Liber 6 4 Of the Gods of the Heathens. a Liber and Liber Pater , from Liber o ; as in Greek they call him f ' Elcutherios'\ the Deliverer ; for he is the Symbol of Liberty , and was worfhipped in all free Cities, Lyreus and Lyccus fignify the fame with Liber : For Wine b frees the Mind from Cares; and thofe, who have drank plentifully, fpeak whatever comes in their Minds, as c Ovid fays. The Sacrifices of Bacchus were celebrated in the Night , wherefore he is called d Nyflilius. Becaufe he was educated upon the Mountain Nifa , he is called Nif ecus c . Rebfusy ’Op$6,* [ Orthos ] becaufe he taught a certain King of Athens to dilute his Wine with Water ; thus Men, who through much Drinking ftagger’d before, by mixing .W*ater with their Wine, begin to go Jlraight . His Mother Serncle and his Nurfe were fometimes called Lhyo'j therefore from thence they called him f !Thy one us . Laftly, he was called 5 Triuniphus ; becaufe when in 1 Triumph the Conquerors went into the Capitol, the Sol¬ diers cried out, Jo Triianpbe ! a Virg. 7. Eel., Plutarch, in Probl. Paufan. in Attic. b ’atto tS 7 \v eir, i. e. a folvendo. c Cura mulio diluituryue ?nero. The plenteous Bowl all Care difpels. Ov. de Art . d i. e. no£te perfic,io. Phurnut. in Bacch. Ovid, Metatn. 4. c Ovid* ib. f Hor. 1 . 1. Carm. s OgiccfAfioc, Var. de Ling. Lat. SECT. III. AElions of Bacchus. * nACCHXJS invented a fo many Things ufeful to Man- ^ kind, either in finifhing Controverfies, in building Cities, in making Laws, or in obtaining Victories, that a Diod e 1 . 5. Hift, & Qrof. 1 . 2. Hor, Ep. 2,. he Of the Gods of the Heathens* he was declared a God by the joint Suffrages of the whole World. And, indeed, what could not Bacchus himfelf do, when his Priefteffes, by ffriking the Earth with their 'Tybifa drew forth Rivers of Milk, and Ho¬ ney, and Wine, and wrought feveral fuch Miracles, without the lead: Labour ? And yet they received their whole Power from Bacchus . 1. He invented the a Ufe of Wine ; and firft taught the Art of planting the Vine from whence it is made ; as aIfo the Art of making Honey, and tilling the Earth. This b he did among the People of /Egypt) who there¬ fore honoured him as a God) and called him Ofiris . Let Bacchus have Honour, becaufe he invented the Art of planting Vines : but let him not refufe to the Afs of Naupl'ta its Praifes, who, by gnawing Fines-, taught the Art o f pruning them. 2. He invented c Commerce and Merchandife, and found out Navigation, when he was King of Phoe¬ nicia* 3. Whereas Men wandered about unfettled, like Eeafis, d he reduced them into Society and Union : He taught them to worfhip the Gods, and was excel¬ lent in Prophefying. 4. He fubdued India , and many other Nations, rid¬ ing on an Elephant : c He vieftorioufiy fubdued Egypt , Syria , Phrygia , and all the Eaft; where he erecSled Pillars, a s-Hercules did in the Weft : He firft invented Triumphs and Crowns for Kings. 5. Bacchus was defirous to reward Midas the King 0 f Phrygia (of whofe Afs’s Ears we fpake before) be¬ caufe he had done fome Service to him ; and bid him aik what he would. Midas deflred, that vvhatfoever he a Ovid. 3. Faftorum. b Dion, de Situ Ofbis. Vide Nat. Com. Idem, ibid. A Ovid. Fafiorum, Euripid. in Bacch. c Dion, de Situ Orbis, F touched 66 Of the Gods of the JtTeathensi touched might become Gold ;• f Bacchus was troubles that Midas afked a Gift that might prove fo deltructivc to himfelf ; however, he granted bis Requeff, and gave him the Power he defired. Immediately whatever Mi¬ das touched became Gold ^ nay, when'he touched his- jVleat 01- Drink, they alfo became Gold : When there¬ fore he faw that he could not- efcape Death by Hunger or Thirft, he then perceived that he had foolifhly- begged a deftrudlive Gift ; and repenting his Bargain^ he defired Bacchus to take his Gift to himfelf again, Bacchus confentedi, and bid him bathe in the River PaStolus Midas obeyed and from hence the Sand of that River became Gold, and the River was called Chryforrhoos T or Aurifinus . 6. When he was yet a Child,, fo me Tyrrhenian Ma¬ riners found him afieep, and carried him into a Ship;, wherefore he firft ftupifed them, flopping the- Ship in Rich a Manner that it was unmoveable : afterwards he j caufed Vines to fpring up in the Ship on a hidden, and Ivy twining about the Oars; and when-the Seamen were almoft dead with the Fright^ he threw them head¬ long into the Sea, and changed them into Dolphins, Ovid. Met am . 3*. * Annuit optatis , ?iocituraque inuncra fol 68 Of the Cods of the Heathens'. Mujl ; and in the mean Time they fung the Praifes of Bacchus , begging that the Mujl might be fweet and good. 05 Canephoria? among the ancient Athenians? were per¬ formed by marriageable Virgins, who carried golden Bafkets filled with the fir ft Fruits of the Year. 11 Ne¬ ver th clefs, fome think that thefe Sacrifices were infti- tuted to the Honour of Diana , and that they did not carry Fruit in the Bafket, but Prefents wrought with their own Hands, which they offered to this Go deleft to teftify that they were defirous to quit their Virginity,, and marry. ylpaturia were Feafts celebrated in Honour of Bac¬ chus? fetting forth how greatly Aden are ° deceived by Wine. Thefe Feftivals were principally obferved by the Athenians . Amhrofta p were Feftivals obferved in 'January, a Adenth fuel*ed to Bacchus ; for which Reafon this Adonth was called Lcnaus , or Lenteo , becaufe the Wine was brought into the City about that time. q But the R.oman-s called thefe Feafts Brumalia , from Bruma , one of the Name of Bacchus among them ; and they cele¬ brated them twice a Year, in the Adcnths of February and Augitji . Afcolia , Feafts fo called, from a Greek r Word fignify- ing a Br^acbo? or Leathern Bottle ? feveral of which were produced filled with Air, or, as others fay, with Wine. • The Athenians were wont to leap upon them with one Foot, fo that they would fometimes fall down ; how¬ ever, they thought they did a great Honour to Bacchus hereby,- becaufe they trampled upon the Skins of the Goats, whofis the greateft Enemy to the Vines. But ni Deinarat. in Certain. Dionyf. n Doroth. Sydon.apud Nat. Com. ° A decipiendo ab ’A7raraf, fiilo, diftafunt Vide Nat. Com in Bac. p Idem. Ibid. q Cash Riiod. 1 . iS. c. ^. r .Ab 9 Ao-'-toc utrjs. Tzetfes in Hefi-od. * Men and. 1, de My Her. anion? Of the Gods of the Heathens . 69 'among the Romans y Rewards were diftributed to thofe v/ho, by artificially leaping upon thefe Leathern Bottles overcame the reft; and then all them together called aloud upon Bacchus confufedly, and in Verfes unpolifh- ed ; and, putting on Mafks, they carried his Statue a- bout their Vineyards, dawbing their Faces with Harks of Trees and the Dregs of Wine : So returning to his Altar again., from whence they came, they prefented their Oblations in BaTons to him, and burnt them. And, in the laft place, they hung upon the higheft Trees little wooden or earthen Images of Bacchus , which, from the Smallnefs of their Mouths, were called Of- cilia ; they intended that the Places, where thefe fmall Images were fet up in the Trees, fliould be, as it were, fo many Watch-Towers, from whence Bacchus might look after the Vines, and fee that they fuffered no In¬ juries. Thefe Fefiivals, and the Images hung up when they were celebrated, are elegantly deferibed by a Vir¬ gil 9 in the fecond Book of his Georgies . Laftly, the Bacchanalia , or Dionyfia , or .Orgia, were the Feafts of Bacchus b , .among the Roitians , which a -- Atque inter pocula laeti Moll/ bus in prat is -audios fall ere per litres Nec non Aufonii, L’rcja gens miffa coloni y Verjlbus iucomptis ludunt , rifuque Jointo , Oraque corticibus fiununt barren da cavatis : Et re? Baccbe, vacant per carmina hv.ta, iibique OJi ill a ex aha Jifpendunt mollia piniu Hive omvis largo pnbefeit vine a fatu 9 &c. And glad with Bacchus , on the gra/Ty Soil, Leaped o 7 er the Skins of Goats befmear’d with Oil. Thu s Roman Youth, deriv’d from ruin’d Lrcy, In rude Saturnian Rhimes exprefs their Joy ; Deform'd with Vizards cut from Barks of Trees, With Taunts and Laughter loud their Audience plcafe: Jn jolly Hymns they praife tlie God of Wine, J vv'hofe earthen Images adorn the Pine, i- .And there are hung on high, in Honour of the Vine* j J\ Madnefs fo devout the Vineyard fills, F' r g> 4* Georg. 6 & 7 /En. at a Bocliart. in Pha!eg„ Name (Ofit he Gods of the Heathens. yt •Name of Nimrod'm ay allude to the Hebrew Word Na- * or the Chaldee Na?ner^ a Tyger\ and accordingly a the Chariot of Bacchus was drawn by Tygers, and himfelf cloathed with the Sfcin of a Tyger. .3. Bacchus is fometimes called b .Nebrodcs, which is the very fame Zagreus , which in Greek Signifies the fame Thing. I did .not, indeed, .mention the Name of Bacchus among the reft before ; becaufe . I defign not a nice and complete Account . G); tu?ic pauper cornua flimit* By Wine and Mirth the Beggar grows a ICing. * Porphyr. in' z Carm. Horat. unde q-uafi a Lil. Gy raid. cated. Of the Gods of the Heathens. y j catcd, and had abandoned themfelves to all Sorts of Wickednefs. Accordingly Wine effeminates the moft niafculine Minds, and difpofes them to Luxury. It be- c-ets Anger, and ftirs up Men to Madnefs : And there¬ fore Lions and Tygers draw the Chariot of Bacchus. The Men and Women both celebrated the Bacchana¬ lia in Mafks : It is well that they were afhamed of their Faults their Modefty had not quite left them, fome Remains of it were yethid under thofe Difguifes, which would otherwife have been utterly loft by the Impu¬ dence of the ill Words and Adtions which were heard and feen on thofe Occafions. And does not Wine mafk and difguife us ftrangely ? Does it not make Men Beafts, and turn one into a Lion, another into a Bear, and an¬ other into a Swine, or an Afs ? I had alrnoft forgot to-tell you, that Bacchus is fome- times merry, and fometimes fad and morofe: For, in¬ deed, What cherifhes the Heart of Man fo much as Wine ? What more delightfully refrefhes the Spirits and the Mind, than that natural Nedlar^ that divine Medicine , which, when we have taken, a our Griefs are pacified, our Sorrows abated, and nothing but Cheerfulnefs appears in our Countenance. The Vine is fo beneficial to this Life, that many fay b that the Happinefs of one confifts in the Enjoyment of the other \ but they do not confider, that if Wine be the Cradle of Life , yet it is the Grave of Reafon : For, if Men do conftantly fail hi the Red-Sea of Claret , their Souls are oftentimes drowned therein. It blinds them, and leads them under Darknefs, efpecially when it be¬ gins to draw the Sparkles and little Stars from their Lyes, Then, the Body being drowned in Drink, the * 'Tunc dolor & cur a?-, rug ague front is ahejl . Gkir Sorrows flee, we end our Grief and Fears, No thoughtful Wrinkle in our Face appears. O vid, de Arte Amandin * In vite hominis vitam effe dicercs. a Mind A ♦ 74 Of the Gods of the Heathens.. But Bacchus is an eternal Boy. And do not th* oldcft Men become Children by too much Drinkf Does not Excels deprive us of that Reafon that diftia~ guifhes Men from Boys ? Bacchus is naked, as he is who has loft his Senfes by Drinking : He cannot conceal, he cannot hide any Thing. a Wine.always Jpeaks "Truths it opens all the Se¬ crets of the Mind and Body tco.j of which let Noah be a Witnefs. The Poets fays b Bacchus has Horns ; and from thence xve may learn, that Bacchus makes as many horned as Venus . Nor does c Wine make Men only forget.their Cares •and Troubles, but it renders ,l even the meaneft People bold, infolent, and fierce, • exercifing their Fury and Rageagainft others, as a-mad Ox gores with its Horns. I know very well, that fome think that Bacchus was laid to be horned, becaufe the Clips, out of which Wine was drank, were formerly made of Horn He is crowned with Ivy; becaufe that Plant (being always green and fiourifhing, and, as it were, young) by its natural Coldnefe, afTuages the Heat occafloned by too much Wine. Pie is both a young and an old Man ; becaufe, as a moderate Quantity of Wine increafes the Strength of the Body, fo Excefs of Wine deftroys it. Women only celebrated the Sacrifices of Bacchus v and of them only thofe, which were-enraged and intoxi- 3 In vino veritas, Eraftru in Adag, h Accedant capiti -cornua, Bacchus erir .. Piit but on Horns, arid Bacchus thou fiialt be. Ov+ Ep . Saph . c Cura f no it , multo diluiiurque mero. Full Bowls expel all Grief, diflolveall Care. a Tunc eventunt rifus , tunc pauper cornua Jitmiu By Wine and Mirth the Beggar grows a King. * Porphyr. in 2 Carm. Iiorat. unde quafi y.spf^ a LiL Gy raid. cated. i j Of the Gods of the Heathens. y j catcd, and had abandoned themfelves to all Sorts of Wickednefs. Accordingly Wine effeminates the mofl niafculine Minds, and difpofes them to Luxury. It be¬ gets Anger, and ftirs up Men to Madnefs : And there¬ fore Lions and Tygers draw the Chariot of Bacchus. The Men and Women both celebrated the Bacchana¬ lia in Mafks : It is well that they were afhamed of their Faults ; their Modefty had not quite left them, fome Remains of it were yethid under thofe Difguifes, which would otherwife have been utterly loft by the Impu¬ dence of the ill Words and Actions which were heard and feen on thofe Occafions. And does not Wine malic and difguife us ftrangely ? Does it not make Men Beafts, and turn one into a Lion, another into a Bear, and an¬ other into a Swine, or an Afs ? I had almoft forgot to tell you, that Bacchus is fome- times merry, and fometimes fad and morofe: For, in¬ deed, What cherifhes the Heart of Man fo much as Wine? What more delightfully refrefhes the Spirits and the Mind, than that natural Nediar^ that divine Medicine , which, when we have taken, a our Griefs are pacified, our Sorrows abated, and nothing but Cheerfulnefs appears in our Countenance. The Vine is fo beneficial to this Life, that many fay b that the Happinefs of one confifts in the Enjoyment of the other \ but they do not conftder, that if Wine be the Cradle of Life , yet it is the Grave of Reafon : For, if Men do conftantly fail in the Red-Sea of Claret , their Souls are oftentimes drowned therein, ft blinds them, and leads them under Darknefs, efpecially when it be¬ gins to draw the Sparkles and little Stars from their Eyes. Then, the Body being drowned in Drink, the * Laitc dolor & curat, rug aguefronds ahejl . Gkir Sorrows flee, we end our Grief and Fears, No thoughtful Wrinkle in our Face appears. Ovid, de Arte Amandi- m * In vite hominis vitam effe diceres. 2 Mind ^6 Of the Gods of the Heathens. Mmd floats, or elfe is ftranded. Thus too great Love of the Vine is pernicious to Life 5 for from it come more Faults than Grapes , and it breeds more Mifchiefs. than Cluficrs . Would you fee an Inflance of what you read? Ohferve a drunken Man : OBcaft ! See how his Head tctters,his Hams fink, his Feet fail, his Hands trem - ble, his Mouth froths, his Cheeks are flabby, his Eyes ip ark I e and water, his Words are unintelligible, his 'Longue fa niters and flops, his Throat fends forth a nafry loathforne Stench. But what do I fay ! It is not my Buiinefs now to tell Truth but Fables. CHAP. IX. M a r s. His Image,, i > . A S far as I fee, we mu ft tarry in this Place a!! X X Night. M. Do not fear it ; for I fhall not fay fo much of the other Gods as I have faid of Bacchus ; and efpeci- ally I hope that Mars> whofe Image is next, will not keep us fo long. • P. Do you call him Mars , that is fo fierce and four in his Afpedt 5 Terror is every where in his Looks, as well as in his Drcfs : He fits in a Chariot drawn by a Pair of Horfes, which arc driven by a diilradled Wo¬ man : He is covered with Armour, and brandifhes a Scear in his right Hand, as though he breathed Fire •a- O y O * and Death, and threatened every Body with Ruin and Deft ru£t ion.. M. It is Mars himfelf, the God of TVar^ whom I have often feen on Korfebaek, in ?. formidable Manner, with a Whip and a Spear together. A Dog was con¬ secrated to him, for his Vigilance in the Purfuit of his Prey ; a Wolf, for his Rapacioufnefs and Perfpicacity ; a Jlaven, be.caufe he diligently follows Armies when they Tl. VI. Tone jo * » Gf the Gods of the Heathens. 77 * they march, and watches for the Carcafes of the Slain ; an d a Cock, for his Wak'efulncfs, whereby he prevents 2 \\ Surprize. But, that you may underftand every Thlno- in that Picture, obferve, that the Creatures which* d raw the Chariot arc not Horfes, but Fear and terror. Sometimes Difcord goes before them in tatter’d Garments, and Cla?nour and Anger go behind. Yet fome fay, that Fear and Terror are Servants to Ildars j and accordingly, he is not more a awful and imperious in his Commands, than they are b ready and e:>:a£t in their Obedience ; as we learn from the Poets. P. Who is the "Woman that drives the Chariot ? J[4. She is Bcllona , the c Goddefs of War, and the Companion of Mars ; or, as others fay, his Sifter, ov Wife, or both. She prepares for him his Chariot and Horfes when he goes to fight. It is plain that fhe is called Bellona from Bclhtm . She is other wife called Due lion a from Duelhon , or from the G reek V/ ord [Belov e ] a Needle , whereof (he is faid to be the Invert- trefs. Her Priefts, the Bellonarii , facrificed to her in their own Blood : They do thou the rapid Driver fit. Claud o it: 0 - fatvit medio in cert amine Flavors, C re lat us Ferro, trijlcfjue ex at there DircC, Et feffa gaudens vadit Dfordio pallet, fhjani cum fa?iguinea fequitur Bel lera flag el la . A Tars in the Middle of the (Lining Shield Is grav’d, and (hides along the liquid Field. The Dir a come from Heav’n with quick Dcfcent, And Difcord dy’d in Blood, with Garments rent. Divides the Prefs: Her Steps Bellotia treads. And (hakes her Iron Rod above their Pleads. Virg* FEn. 8, c Silius, 1 . 4. Statius Theb. 1 . 7. d Sectis humeris & utraque manu diftri£\os gladios e;:erentes. currant, efferun- tur, infaniunt. La&antius, 1 . 1. c, 17. Szvordsz Of tbe Gods of the Heathens „ Swords , with which they cut their Shoulder r, and ivildly rim up and down like Men ?nad and pojjejfed: Whereupon a People thought that (after the Sacrifice was ended) they were able to fore tel future Events. Clauclian intro¬ duces Bellona combing Snakes ; and another b Poet de- feribes her fhaking a burning Torch, with her Hair hanging loofe, ftained and clotted with Blood, and running through the Midfl of the Ranks of tfie Army, and uttering horrid Shrieks and dreadful Groans. Before the Temple of this Goddefs, there flood a Pillar called Bellica , c over which the Herald threw a Spear when he proclaimed War. a Juveriw Sat. 4. Lucan. 1 . 1. Eutrop. b Ip/a Jaciem qualiens , Jla-uam Janguive multo Sparj'a com am* medias acies Bel loti a per err at* Si ride t \Tar tare a nigro fuh p eft ore Diva Lethifcrum murmur* Sil. lib. Her Torch Bellona waving thro* the Air, Sprinkles with clotted Gore her flaming Hair, And thro 5 both Armies up and down doth flee* Whillt from her horrid Bread; TiJ:phone A dreadful Murmur fends. c Alex, ab Alexandra, 1 . 8. c. n. SECT. I. His Defcenl . Jt/FARS is faid to be the Son of Jupiter and Juno , J. VJL though, according to Ovid's Story, he is the Child of^«»0only: For, fays he, Juno greatly admired by what'Way pofiible her Hufband Jupiter had conceived Minerva, and begot her himfelf, without the Concur¬ rence of a Mother (as we fhall fee in the Hiftory of Minerva;) but as foon as her Amazement ceafed d , fhe, being defirous of performing the like, went to Oceanus to afk his Advice, whether fhe could have a Child with- d Horner. Iliad. 5. Hefiod. in Theog. out Of the Gods of the Heathens . cut her Hufband’s Concurrence. She was tired in her Journey, and fat down at the Door of the Goddefs flora y who, underftanding the Occafion of her Jour¬ ney,. defired her to be of good Heart, for {lie had in her Garden a Flower, which if flic only touched with the Tips of her Fingers,, the Smell of it would make her conceive a Son prefently. So yiuio was carried into the Garden, and the Flower (hewn her ; file touched it, and conceived Mars , who afterwards took to Wife a Nerio> or Ncrione , (which Word in the Sabine Lan¬ guage hgnifies b falour and. Strength) and from her the Claudian Family formerly derived the Name of Nero . a Vide de la Cerda in Virgilii A 2 n. 1 . 8> b Virtutem Sc Robur iignificat. SECT. II. Names u/Mars, K T I S’Name a Mars fets forth the Power and Influ- 1 ence he has in War, where he prefides over the Soldiers : And his other Name b Mavors {hews, that all great Exploits are executed and brought about through his Means. The Greeks call him c [A?'es] either from the Deftrucftion and Slaughter which he caufes } or from the 4 Silence which is kept in War, where Actions, not Words, are neceffary. But from whatfoever Words this Nameis derived, it is certain that thofe fa- % * mous Names, Areopagus and Areopaglta , are derived .from Arcs. The Areopagus , *(that is theiAVY a Quod maribus in bello profit. b Quod magna vertaf* Var. de Ling. Eat. 3. c ’At to rov ocipsiv tollere, vel daccipav interficcre, Cic. 5. de Natura. Phurnut. 4 Ab d non & loquor, QTt lv TixoTUf/CW ov 7\zy:tJV ctTOt e^ycijv ^ptiety cpiod in bello necellaria non flat Verba fed Fafla. Saidas Paufan. in -Attic. or So Of the Gods of the Heathens . or Mountain of Mars) was a Place at Athens , In which, when Mars was accufed of Murder and Inceft, as though he had killed Halirothius , Neptune's Son, and debauched his Daughter Alcippa , he was forced to defend himfelf in a Trial before twelve Gods, and was acquitted by fix Voices ; from which that Place became a Court, wherein were tried capital Caufes, and the Things belonging to Religion. a The Areopa- gties were the Judges, whofe Integrity and good Credit was fo great, that no Perfon could be admitted into their Society, unleis, when he delivered in publick an Account of his Life paft, he was found in every Part thereof blamelefs. And, that the Lawyers who pleaded might not blind the Eyes of the Judges by their Charms- of Eloquence, they were obliged to plead their Caufes without any Ornaments of Speech $ if they did other- wife, they were immediately commanded to be filent. And, left they fhould be moved to Companion by fee¬ ing the mifenible Condition of the Prifoners, they gave Sentence in the Dark, without Lights, not by Words, but in a Paper; whence, when a Man is obferved to fpsak very little, or nothing at all, they ufed prover¬ bially to fay of him, that b He is as filent as one of the fudges in the Areopagus . PI is Name Gravidas comes from the Statelinefs in c marching ; or from his Vigour in li hrandzjhmg his Spear. .He is called dftirlnns c from Curls , or Sfuzris^ fig- nifying a Spear; whence comes Securzs , quafi Sejni - curls 9 a Piece of a Spear. And this Name was after¬ wards attributed to Romulus , becaufe he was efreem- ed the Son of Mars ; from whence the Romans were n :or ^ ' fudauis in Pandedh ult. de len. b Areopagita Cic. ad Attic. I. i. c d gradiendo. uirites 9 b Gradrvus is the Name of Mars when he rages ; and if> uirinus , when he is quiet; And ac¬ cordingly there were two Temples at Rome dedicated to him ; one within the City, which was dedicated to Mars uirinusy the Keeper of the City’s Peace ; the other without the City, near the Gate, to Mars Gra« dlvus , the JVarrior , and the Defender of the City a«* gainft all outward Enemies, The ancient Lathis applied to him the Title of c Sail* fubfulus , or Dancer^ ' from Salio 9 becaufe his Temper is very inconftant and uncertain, inclining fometimes. to this Side, and fometimes to that, in "Wars: . .Whence we fay, that the Iffiie of Battle is uncertain, . and the Chance dubious. . But \ye mull, not think that Mars was the only God of Wart c for Bellona , ViSlo- ria 9 Sou Luna , and Pluto ufe to .be reckoned in the ^ ^ ^ # * _• , _ # * * 9 • / Number of Martial Deities*. It was ufualwith the La¬ cedemonians to fhackle the. Feet. of the Image of Mars , that he fhould not fly from them: And amongft the Romans , the Priefts Salii were inftituted to look after ^ i % the Sacrifices of Mars y and go about the City dancing with their Shields/ „ „ . 4 % » * * .1 . * He was called EnyaTius i .from Enyo , that is, Bellona^ and by fuch-like Names ; but it is not worth my while to infiff upon them longer; • r b Idem. ibid. r Pacuv nis eft* Cic; 1 . 6. ep. 4. Lil. Gyr; in Norm. d Mars belli commu- c Servius in i 1 TEneid. f Vide S.iS C To III- Adlions of Mars. T T is ftrange* that the Poets relate only one A&ion J. of this terrible God; and even that deferves to be Concealed in Darknefs, if the Eight of the Sun had not difcoVered it; and if a good Kernel was not chntained in a bad Shell. The Story of Mars and V anus's Adultery, from whence s H amitotic , a tutelar g Plutarch, in Pelopida. G Deity,- 2 Of the Gods of the Heathens Deity, was born, was fo publickly known, that a Ozii concludes that every body knows it. Sc/had no fooner difcovered it, but he immediately acquainted Vulcan , Venus 's Hufband, with his Wife’s Treachery. Vulcan hereupon made a Net of Iron, wbofe Links were fo fmall and flender, that it was invifible; and fpread it over the Bed of Venus. Soon after the Lovers return to their Sport, and were caught in the Net. Vulcan calls all the Gods together to the Shew, who jeered them extremely b . And, after they had long been expofed to the Jett and Hides of the Company, Vulcan , at the Re- queft of Neptune, unloofes their Chains, and gives them their Liberty: But AleSlryon , Mars 's Favourite, fuf- fered the Punifhment that his Crime deferved; be- caufe, when he was appointed to watch, he fell a- fleep, and fo gave Sol an Opportunity to flip into the Chamber. Therefore Mars changed him into a Cock, which to this Day is c fo mindful of his old Fault, that he confiantly gives Notice of the Approach of the Sun, by his Crowing. I u I A 3 Fabula ?iarratur, toto notijfima earfo> Mulciberis fapti Marfque Veim/que dolls. The Fable’s told thro 7 Heaven far and wide, b How Mars and Venus were by Vulcan ty’d. - ' VI rg. 2. c Grasce *AA zxrcvwv* £. e* Gallus. Ovid, a 'U *^2 ^neid, si |« SECT. IV. The Signification of the foregoing Fable, * • L ET us explain this Fable. Indeed when a Venn* is married to a Vulcan , that is, a very handfome Woman to a very ugly Man, it is a great Occafionof Adultery. But neither can that Difhonefty, or any other, efcape the .Knowledge of the Sun of Right eoufnefi although they may be done in the obfcureft Darknefsj though they be with the utmoft Care guarded by the , . ? .... ... . . * - - — truftirt Of the Gods of the Heathens. 83 Sruftieft Pimps in the World ; though they be commit¬ ted in the privateft Retirement, and concealed with the greateft Art, they will at one Time or other he expofed to both the Infernal and Celeftial Regions, in the bright¬ er Lights when the Offenders fhall be fet in the Mid#* bound by the Chains of their Confcience, by that fal¬ len Vulcan , who is the In ft rumen t of the Terrors of the true Jupiter ; and then they lhall hear and fuffer the Sentence, that was formerly threatened to David 9 in this Life, "Thou did ft this ‘Thing fecretly ; but I vuill do this Thing before all I fra el, and before the Sun, 2 Sam. xii. 12. But let us return again to Mars , or rather to the Son of Mars 3 Tereus , who learnt Wickednefs from his Father’s Examples for, as the Proverb lays, a bad Fa¬ ther makes a bad Child. SECT. V, of M ofT the Son CjfERE'US Was the Son of Mars , begotten of the Nymph Biflonis . a He married Progne the Daugh¬ ter of Pandion , King of Athens , when he himfelf was King of Thrace. This Progne had a Sifter called Philomela , a Virgin in Modefty and Beauty inferior to none. She lived with her Father at Athens . Progne 9 being defirous to fee her Sifter, afked Tereus to fetch Philomela to her; he complied, and went to Athens , and brought Philomela , with her Father’s Leave, to Progne. CJpon this Occafion, Tereus falls defperate- ly in Love with Philomela ; and as they travelled together, becaufeihe refufed to Comply with his De¬ fires, he overpowered her, and cut out her Tongue, and threw her into a Gaol ; and, returning afterwards to his Wife, pretended, with the greateft: Aflurance, that a Ovid. Metam. 6 G 2 Philo - Philomela died in her Journey ; and, that this Story might appear true, he fhed many Tears, and put on Mourning, But a Injuries whet the Wit, and .Defire of Revenge makes People cunning*. For, Philomela , though {lie was dumb, found out a Way to tell her Sifter the Villainy of Pereus. The Way file difcovered the Injuries done to her was this5 fhe defcribed the Violence Percus of¬ fered her as well as (he could, in Embroidery, and fends the Work folded up, to her Sifter, who no fooner viewed it, but fhe boiled with Rage; and was fo tran¬ sported with Paftion, that fhe could b not fpeak, her Thoughts being wholly taken up in contriving how fhe fhould avenge the Affront. Firft then fhe haftened to f her Sifter, and brought her Home without Percui s Knowledge. Whilft: fhe was thus meditating Revenge, her young Son leys came embracing his Mother ; but fhe carried him afide into the remote Parts of the Houfe, and Hew him while c he hung abcut her Neck, and called her Mother: When fhe had killed him, fte cut him into Pieces, and dreffed the Flefb,. and gave it jVereus for Supper; Pereus d fed heartily on his own — Graride Moris pgeniuni eft, miferifqne njenit folertia reins. Xteftfe of Vengeance makes the Invention quick. When, miferable. Help with Craft we feek. b Bt (mirum potulfe ! ) ftlet ; dolor ova reprejjit , Verbaque queer inti fatis' indigna>itia lingtue JDefuerant , nec ft ere *vacat: fedfafque nefajque Confttfura ritit , poenreque in imaghie tota eft . She held her Peace, ’tis ftrange: Grief flruck her mute. No Language could .with, fiich- a Pallion fuit, - Nor had ftie Time fo weep * Right, Wrong were mix In her fell Thoughts her Soul on Vengeance iixt. c Bt mater , mater, clamahte?n 15 colla pbtentem Enfe ferit: ' «-He Mother, ’Mother, cries,- And on her clings,- whilft by her Sword he dies. 81 Vefcitur, inane fiamfua njifcera congerit al-vum . —-- -- - - does eat. And his own Flefh and Blood does make his Meat, v Of the Gods of the Heathens . 85 Flefb and Blood. And when after Supper he fent for his Son Itys , a Progne told him what the had done, and fhewed his Son’s Head. Tereus, incenfed with Rage, rufhed on them both with his drawn Sword 5 but they fled away, and Fear added Wings to their Flight; fo that Progne became a Swallow, and Philomela a Night¬ ingale. Fury gave Wings to Tereus himfelf; he was changed into a TVhoopo (Upupa) which is one-of the fil- thieft of all Birds. The Gods out of Pity changed Itys into a Pheafant* a Intus babes quodpoJcis y ait. Circumfpicit rile Atque ubi Jit> quterit ; qucercntiy iter unique vocanti^ Projiluit, Ityofque caput Philomela cnie?iiu?n Mi/it in ora pair,is. Thou haft, faid fhe, within thee thy Delire. He looks about, afks where. And while again He afks and calls ; allbloody with the Slain, Forth like a Fury Philomela flew, .And at liis Face the Head of Itys threw. SECT. YI. The Sacrifices -of Mak s. r fj ' v O Mars b were facrificed the Wolf for his Fierce- JL nefs ; the Horfe for his Ufefulnefs in War; the Woodpecker and the Vultur for their Ravenoufnefs ; the Cock for his Vigilance, which Virtue Soldiers ought chiefly to have; and Grafs, becaufe it grows in Towns that the War leaves without an Inhabitant; and is thought to come up the quicker in fuch Places as have been moiftened with human Blood. Among!!: the moft ancient Rites belonging to Mars s I do not know a more memorable one than the follow¬ ing : c Whoever had undertaken the Conduit of any War^ b Virgil, ^n. 9. c Qui belli alicujus fufceperat curam* facrarium Martisingreflus, primo Anciliacommovebat,poft haftam fimulacri ipfius ; dicens. Mars , Kigila, Servius. G 3 he 86 Of the Gods of the Heathens . he went into the Vejiry of the Temple of Mars ; and ftfl Jhaked the Ancilia (which zvere a Sort of holy Shields) af - terzvards the Spear of the Image of Mars if elf and faid i Mars, Watch, CHAP. X. The Celeftial Gcddejfes . Juno. ■ M. ' V %T OU have viewed the Five Celeftial Gods; JL now look upon the Celeftial Goddeftes that follow them there in Order. Firft obferve Juno, rid¬ ing in a a golden Chariot, drawn by Peacocks, diftin- guifhed by a Sceptre, which fhe holds in her Hand, and wearing a Crown that is fet about with Rofes and Lillies. She is the Queen of the Gods, and both the b Sifter and Wife of 'Jupiter . Her Father was c Saturn , and her Mother Ops: She was born in the Ifland Samos where fhe lived till fhe was married P. Really fhe carries a very majeftick Look. How bright, how majeftical, how beautiful is that Face, how comely are all her Limbs ? How well does a Sceptre be¬ come thofe Hands, and a Crown that Head ? How much Beauty is therein her Smiles? How much Gracefulnefs in her Breaft ? Who could refift fuch Charms, and not fall in Love, when he fees fo many Graces ? Her Carriage is ftately, her Drefs elegant and fine. She is full of Majefty, and worthy of the greateft Admiration* But what pretty Damfel is that, which waits upon her, as if fhe were her Servant ? Virg- 1. MJt a Ovid. Metam. 2. Apuleius, 1 . 10, b - Jo Ei(=v)vo'z;oio<; y i. e. pacificator. Vid, Serv. in iEneid. 4. quail"Epts Contentio. Servius d llupa to zgE?V} a loquendo. SECT. I. The Children of J uno. Her Dijpojition . P 9 \“XjT HAT Children had Juno by Jupiter? Vv At. Vulcan , Atars, and Hebe . c Although fome write that Hebe had no other Parent than Juno? and was born in the Manner following: Before Juno had any Children, fhe eat fome wild Lettuces, fet before her at a Feaft in Jupiter 9 s Houfe; and growing on a fudden big-bellied fhe brought forth Hebe , who, for her extraordj.fiary Beauty, was, by Jupiter* made Goddefs of Youth, and had the Office of Cup-bearer of Jupiter given to her. . But when by an unlucky Fall fhe made all the Guefts laugh, Jupiter was enraged, turned her out from her Office, and put Ganymede in her Stead® P. Which was Junds mod notorious Fault? At* Jealoufy: I will give one or two of the many Inftances of it. Jupiter loved Io y the Daughter of Ina- thus ; and enjoyed her. When Juno obferved that Jupiter was absent frpiq Heaven, fhe juftly Aifpe&ed • - f • • « — ^ % \+n m ♦ "T M * e Paufan. in Corintho • • • * 4 that n-'V that the Purfuit of his Amours was the Caufe of his Ab- fence. Therefore fhe immediately flew down to the Earth after him, and luckily found the very Place* where Jupiter and /? entertained themfelves in private. As foon as Jupiter perceived her coming, fearing a Chiding, he turned the young Lady into a white Cow* Juno, feeing the Cow, afked who fhe was, and from what gull fhe came? Says Jupiter , fhe was born on a fudden put of the Earth. The cunning Goddefs, fufpedfling the Matter, defued to have the Cow, which Jupiter could not refufe, left he fhould increafe her Sufpicion. 1 So Juno , taking the Cow, b gave it Argus to keep ; which Argus had an hundred Eyes, two of which in their Turns flept, while the others watched. Thus was Jo under conftant Confinement; nor was the perpetual Vigilance of her Keeper her only Mif- fortune; for, befides, fhe was fed with nothing but infipid Leayes and bitter Herbs, which Hardfhip Jupiter could not endure to fee. Wherefore he fent Mercury to Argus to fet Jo free. Mercury , under the Difguife pf a Shepherd, came to Argus , and with the Mufick of his Pipe lulled him afleep, and then cut off his Head. Juno was grieved at Argus's, Death, and to b-— Sernjandam tradidit Argo, Centum luminibus chiShjzn caput Argus babcbat : Indefuis *vicibus capieba?it bina quiet e?n ; Cestera fer-vabazzi , atque in Jlatione manebant* Conjiiterat quocunque loco , fpeftabat ad Jo , Ante oculos Jo, quamvis a'verfus babe bat, . The Goddefs then to Argus ftraight convey’d Her Gift, and him the watchful Keeper made. Argus's Head an hundred Eyes pofleft; And only two at once declin’d to Reft; The others watch’d, and in a conftant Round, Refrefliment in alternate Courles found. Where’er he turn’d he always Io view’d, Jo he faw, tho’ fhe behind him flood. 0 the Advifer of the Artifice, £he was afterwards called Citbesronia. .The reft of the rnoft confiderable of her Names follow. « -- Ceniumque oculos nox occupnt una y Excipzt bos, *voh(crfquefuai Saturnia pennis C olio cat, fsf gemmis caudamjlellantibus iniplet . • . There Argus lies; and all that wond’rous Light, Which gave his hundred Eyes their ufeful Sight, Lies buried now in one eternal Night. But Juno, that fhe might his Eyes retain. Soon fix’d them in her gawdy Peacock’s Train. d Doroth, de Nat. Fabulas. e Plut. in Arid. SECT II. Names of Juno. NT HI A? u e. Florida 9 Flowery: i Paufanias mentions her’TempIe. Jrgiva from the People s Argivi ; amongft whom the Sacrifices called [ Heraia ] c H^r« were celebrated to her Honour; in which an Iletacomb , that is, an Hundred Oxen, were facrificed ro her. They made her Image of Gold and Ivory, holding a Pomegranate in one Hand* a-d a Sceptre in the other; upon the Top of which flood, a Cuckow , becaufe Jupiter changed himfelf into than Bird, when he fell in Love with her* Bwuea , from h Bunanis the Son of Mercury , who built a Temple to this Goddefs at Corhith . Calendar is (from the old Word 1 Calo, to call; for flie was called upon by the Priefts, upon the firftDays of every Month ; which Days are called Calendar* Caprotbia , k on the Nones of July, that is, on the yth Day, Maid-fervants celebrated her Feftival, toge¬ ther with feveral Free-women, and offered Sacrifices to Juno under a wild Fig-tree (Caprificus) in Memory of that extraordinary Virtue, which directed the Maid- fervants of Rome to thofe Counfels, which preferved the Honour of the Roma?i Name. For after the City was taken, and the Gallick Tumults quieted, the Borderers having an Opportunity almoft to opprefs the Romans y who had already fuffered fo much ; they fent an He¬ rald to tell the Remans , that, if they defired to fave the Remainder of their City from Ruin, they muff fend all their Wives and Daughters. The Senate being ftrange- ly diftra&ed hereat, a Maid-fervant, whole Name was Philotis or Tutsla y telling her Defign to the Senate , took with her feveral other Maid-fervants, drefied then* f In Coripth. s Doroth. 1. 2 . Met. & Paufan. h Pau- fan. in Corinth. 1 Macrob. in Sat. k Plutarch, & Ovid. deArte Amandi, Var« de Ling. Lat, like 92 Of fhe Gods of the Heathens. like Miflreffes of Families, and like Virgins, and went with them to the Enemy. Levy , the Dictator , difperC. ed them about the Camp ; and they incited the Men to drink much, becaufe they faid that was a Feftival Day; The Wine made the Soldiers fleep foundly 5 whereupon a Sign being given from a wild Fig*-tree, the Romani •came and {lew all the Soldiers. The Romans were not forgetful of this great Service; for they made all thefe Maid-fervants free, and gave them Portions out of the pubHclc Treafury: They ordered that the Day fhould be called Nones Capr Glints , from the wild Fig-tree, from whence they had the Sign: And they ordered an Anni- verfary Sacrifice to Juno Caprotina, to be celebrated un¬ der a wild Fig-tree, the Juice of which was mixed with the Sacrifices in Memory of the Action.. Curls or Curitis , from her Spear a called Curls in the Language of the old Sabines . The Matrons were un- derftood to be under her Guardianfhip; whence, fays b Plutarch^ the Spear is facred to her, and many of her Statues lean upon Spears, and fhe herfelf is called j rites and Curitis . Hence fprings the Cuftom, that the Bride combs her Hair with a c Spear found flicking in the Body of a Gladiator, and taken out of him when dead, which Spear was called Hajla Cell bar is. Cingula , d from the Girdle which the Bride wore when fhe was led to her Marriage ; for this Girdle was unloofed with Juno 9 s good Leave, who was thought the Patronefs of Marriage. Do min due a and Inter duca , c from bringing Home the Bride to her Hujband* 5 Houfe . Egeria , f becaufe Jhe promoted , as they believed , the Facility of the Birth. a Feflus. • b In Roinulo. c Crinis nubentium come- batur hafta celibari, quze fcilicet in cor pore gladiator is fletif- fet abje£tioccilique. Arnob. contra Gentcs. _ d A cin- gulo. Marian, de Niipt. c A ducerjda uxore in domum snariti. Auguft. 7 . de Civit. f Quod earn partui egerendo opitulari crederent. Feflus. Februalls , Of the Gods of the Heathens . 9 3 * Februalis , Februata , Februa , or Februla , a becaufe they facrificed to her in the Month of February . b Her Feftival was celebrated on the fame Day with Pern’s Feafb, when the Luperci, the Priefts of the God of Shepherds, running naked through the City, and c flri- Jcing the Hands and Bellies of breeding Women with Juno 9 s Cloak (that is, with ffo of a Goat) d purified them ; and they thought that this Ceremony caufed to the Women Fruitfulnefs and eafy Labours. All Sorts of Purgation in any Sacrifices were called Februa ; and the Animals facrificed to Juno c were a white Cow, a Swine, and a Sheep. The Goofe alfo, and the Pea¬ cock, were facred to her. Fluonia , f becaufe fheaffifted Women in their Courfes. Hoplofmta , that is, s armed completely , fhe was - wor¬ shipped at P/ri 5 and from hence Jupiter is called Afo- plofmius. b Jug a, becaufe fhe is the Goddefs of Marriages . * A Street in Rome, where her Altar flood, was called yi*- garius from thence. And anciently People ufed to en¬ ter into the Yoke of Marriage at that Altar. She is alfb, by fome 7 called Socigena, becaufe k fhe afiifts in the cou¬ pling the Bride and Bridegroom. Lacina , from the Temple Lacinium > built and dedi¬ cated to her by 1 Lac ini us. Lucina , and Lucilia, either from m the Grove, in which fhe had a Temple, or from the Light of this World, into which Infants are brought by her. n Ovid a Ex Sext. Pomp. b Cum Lupercalibus. c Ovid. -z>. Faftorum. d Februabant, id eft, purgaban.t. Cic. 2 . Phil. c Virg. 4. JEn . Idem 8 . Idem 4. f Ovid. ibid. Quod fiaoribus menftruis adefl. s Lil. Gyrald. h Et Greece Ziylu ajugo aut conjugio. Serv. -4. JEn. 1 Fefius. k Quodnubentes aflociet. 1 Strab. 1. 6 . Liv. 1. 24 ., a A luco vel luce. Var. de Ling. Lat. * Gratia Lucina , dedit hsec tibi nc?ni?ia Lucas, Vel quia principiumiu, dca, lucis babes. Lucina, hail, fo nam'd from thy own Grove, Or from the Light thou giv’It us from-above. Fafi. 1 . 2 . 2 computes g2 Of the Gods of the Heathens* like MiftrefTes ofFamilies, and like Virgins 9 and went with them to the Enemy* Levy , the Dictator , difperf* ed them about the Camp; and they incited the Men to drink much, becaufe they faid that was a Feftival Day; The Wine made the Soldiers fleep foundly ; whereupon a Sign being given from a wild Fig-tree, the Romans •came 2nd flew ail the Soldiers. The Romans were not forgetful of this great Service; for they made all thefe Maid-fervants free, and gave them Portions out of the publiclc Treafury: They ordered that the Day fhould be called Nonce Caprotincs , from the wild Fig-tree, from whence they had the Sign: And they ordered an Anni- verfary Sacrifice to Juno Caprotina , to be celebrated un¬ der a wild Fig-tree, the Juice of which was mixed with the Sacrifices in Memory of the A&ion,. Cur is or Curitis ,, from her Spear a called Curts in the Language of the old Sabines. The Matrons were un- derftood to be under her Guardianfhip; whence, fays b Plutarch , the Spear is facred to her, and many of her Statues lean upon Spears, and fhe herfelf is called S%ui- rites and Curitis. Hence fprings the Cuftom, that the Bride combs her Hair with a c Spear found flicking in the Body of a Gladiator, and taken out of him when dead, which Spear was called Hajla Celibaris . Cingula , d from the Girdle which the Bride wore when fhe was led to her Marriage ; for this Girdle was unloofed with Juno's good Leave, who was thought the Patronefs of Marriage . Dominduca and Interduca , c from bringing Home the Bride to her Hujband's Hotfe. Egeria , f becaufe f)e promoted , as they believed , the Facility of the Birth . a Feflus. ■ b In Romulo. c Crinis nubentium come- batur hafta celibari, quas fcilicetin corporegladiator;s ftetif- fet abjedtioccifique. Arrxob. contra Gentcs. d A cin- gulo. Marian. deNupt. c A ducenda uxore in domum mai iti. Auguft. 7. deCivit. f Quod earn partui egerendo opitulari crederent. Feflus« FebrualiSy Of the Gods of the Heathens. 93 * Felrualis , Februata , Februa , or Februla , a becaufe they facrificed to her in the Month of February . b Her Feftival was celebrated on the fame Day with Paw’s Feafis, when the Luperci 7 the Priefls of Pan, the Godcf Shepherds, running naked through the City, and c lin¬ king the Hands and Bellies of breeding Women with Juno's Cloak (that is, with the Skin of a Goat) a purified them ; and they thought that this Ceremony caufed to the Women Fruitfulnefs and eafy Labours. All Sorts of Purgation in any Sacrifices were called Februa ; and the Animals facrificed to Juno c were a white Cow, a Swine, and a Sheep. The Goofealfo, and the Pea¬ cock, were facred to her. Fluonia , { becaufe fheaffifted Women in their Courfes> Hoplofmia , that is, g armed completely , fhe was wor- fhipped a tElh'> and from hence Jupiter is called Ho - plojmius. * Juga , becaufe fhe is the Goddefs of Marriages . 1 A Street in Rome, where her" Altar flood, was called y#- from thence. And anciently People ufed to en¬ ter into the Yoke of Marriage at that Altar. She is alfo, by fome 7 called Socigena , becaufe k fhe afiifts in the cou¬ pling the Bride and Bridegroom. Lacina , from the Temple Lacinium > built and dedi¬ cated to her by 1 Lacinius . Lucina , and Lucilia, either from m the Grove, in which fhe had a Temple, or from the Light of this World, into which Infants are brought by her. n Ovid a Ex Se;;t. Pomp. b Cum Lupercalibus. c Ovid. 2. Faftorum. d Februabant, id eft, purgabant. Cic. 2. Phil, c Virg. 4. ^£n. Idem 8. Idem 4. f Ovid. ibid. Quod fiuoribus menftruis adeil. s Lil. Gyrald. h Et Graece Z lylcc ajugo aut conjugio. Serv. 4. 1 Fefius. k Quod nubentes aflociet. 1 Strab. 2 . 6. Liv. 1 . 24, a A luco vel luce. Var. de Ling. Lat. n Gratia. Lucina , dedit htvc iibi ncmbia Lucas , Vd quia principium iu , dea 9 lucis babes . Lucina , hail, fo nam’d from thy own Grove, Or from theLight thou giv’ft us from-above. FV?/?. 1 . 2, 2 computes 94 Of the Gods of the Heathens, comprifes both tliefe Significations of Lucian in a Db fiich. Moneta , s either becaufe fhe gives wholefomeCoun* fel to thofe who confult her, or becaufe ftie was believ¬ ed to be the Goddefs of Money. h Nuptialis; and when they facrificed to her under tils Name, 1 they took the Caul out of the Vi£Hm, and cafe It behind the Altar; to fignify, that there ought to be no Gall of Anger betwixt thofe -who are married together* Opigena, becaufe fhe gives ’* Help to "Women in Labour* Partbenos , the Virgin; or 1 Parthenia , Virginity; and fhe was fo called, as m we are told, from hence: There was a Fountain, amongft the Argivi , called Canathui , where Juno , wafhing herfelf every Year, was thought to recover her Virginity anew. Perfetta, that is, Perfedl: For n Marriage wasefteem* ed the Perfection of human Life, and unmarried People imperfect. \Vherefore fhe did not become perfe< 3 , nor deferve that Name till fhe married Jupiter . Populona , or Populonia , ° becaufe People pray to her; or becaufe they are procreated from Marriage, of which fhe is Goddefs. And for the fame Reafon fhe was called p Pronub: Neither indeed were any Marriages lawful, unlefs Juris was firft called upon. Regina , Queen : and this Title fhe gives herfelf, as we read in q VirgiL g Vel quod reddat monita falutaria, vel quod'fit Dea mo- netse, id eft, pecuniae. Liv, 1 . 7. Suid. Ovid. Epift. Parid. h Grasce 1 Eufeb,' 3. Praep. Evang. FluC, in Sympof. ' k Opem in partu laborantibus fert. Lil. Gy- rald. 1 Pindar, in Hymn. Olymp. m Paufan. in Co¬ rinth. n Jul. Pollux. 1 . 3. Apud Grsecoseodemfenfu Ju¬ no vocabatur r dkfiu, Sc conj ugium ipfum r&ziov, quod vitam humanam reddat perfe&am. Vide Scholiaft. Pindar. Od. 9. Veme. ® Aug. 6. de Civit. Macrob. 6. Saturn, p Seneca in Medea, *2 Aft ego , quee Dbutm bice do Regina, Jovi/que Et Soror &; Conjux 0 ‘ JEn> l* S of pit a $ Of the Gods of the Heathens, 9 g Sofpita 3 3 becaufe all the Women were fuppofed to be under .her Safeguard, every one of which had a Juno? as every Man had his Genius. JJnxia was another of her Names, b becaufe the Polls of the Door were anointed, where a new-married Co-u- lived : whence the Wife was called c Uxor . But I who walk in awful State above ; The MajeJly of Heaven; Siller and Wife of Jove. 3 A folpitando Cic. de Nat. b Ab ungendo. Lil. Gy- raid. c Quail Unxor, ab ungen'dis poliibus* SECT, III. • • * S the Signification of the Fable. Juno the Air! • 0 9 TF we regard Varro *s Account, by Juno was figni- JL fied the Earth , and by Jupiter the Heavens , By the Marriage of which two, that is, by the Commixture of the Influences of the Heavens with the Vapours of the Earth, all Things almoft are generated. But, if we.believe the Stoicks , by Juno is meant the Air; for that, as Tze/ly.fays 9 d lying between the Earth and the Heavens, is confecrated by the Name of Juno r And what makes this ConjetSlure more probable, the Greek c Names of Juno and the Air have great Affinity and Likenefs. Juno is called Jupiter’s Wife ; f be¬ caufe the Air, being naturally cold, is warmed by Ju~ piter , that is, by Fire. She is called Aeria %; becaufe fhe is the Air itfelf, or rules in the Air ; and hence a- rifes the Story, that Juno is bound by Jupiter with golden Chains, iron Anvils being.hung at her Feet: Hereby the Ancients fignified, that the Air, though na~ 9 * * d Aer interjedtus inter cesium Sc terrain Junonis nomine confecratus efl:. Cicero z. de Natura. c Sc "H get • f Hellenic, in Ac* p^otoy'cc, Horn. Iliad. , * Phurnut. . , . ? ' .... •" ■•iuraUy* rurally mote like Fire, yet it was fometimes mingled with Earth and Water, the heavieft Elements* And, as I mentioned before, every Woman had a unoy and every Man had a Genius * which were their 'utelar or Guardian Ahgels a . Sen. Epifl. 320. CHAP. XL SECT. I. Minerva s/- Pallas. Her hnage . JP. '“TpHtS is a threatening'Go.ddefs, and carries 1 A nothing but Terror in her Afpeft. M. It is Minerva , who derives her Name, as fome £hink, h from the Threats of her ftern and fierce Look, P. But why is fhe cloathed with Armour , rathpr than with Women’s Cloaths ? c What means that Head-piece of Gold, and the Creft that glitters fo? To what Purpofe has fhe a golden Breaft-plate, and a Lance in her Right-hand, and a terrible Shield in her Left? On the Shield, which fhe holds, I fee a grifly Head befet with Snakes. And what means the Cod • * and the OvA, that are painted there ? M. I will fatisfy all your Demands. She ought to be armed, rather than drefled' in Women’s Cloaths, becaufe fhe is the Prejident and In vent refs of War , The Cock ftands by her betaufe he is a fighting Bird j and is often painted fitting on her Head-piece 5 as does the Owl, of which by and by. But as for the Heals which feems fo formidable with Snakes* fhe not only carries it on her Shield* but fometimes alfo in the Midft of her Breaft : It is the Head of Medifa , one of 1 b Minerva dicitur a minis. c Apollon. 90. d 'Virg. II. -ffineid. Cic. de Nat. Dcoivl. x. the Of the Gods of the Heathens . gy Gdrgons, of . which ° Virgil gives a beautiful Defcription. The BafiliiE alfo.is (acred to her, to denote the great Sagacity of her Mind, and the dreadfuJ Effects of her Courage, {he being the Goddefsboth of Wifdom and of War; for, the Eye of the Bafilifk is hot only piercing enough to difcover the. fmaheft Objedh, but k is able to firike dead into whatfoever Creature it looks on. But,- I believe, yoii do not obferve an Olive-Crown upon the Head of this Goddefs. 4 P. It efcaped my Notice; nor do I yet fee why the Goddefs of iVar fhould be crowned with an Olive , which is an Eriiblem of Peace $ as, I remember, I have read in p Virgil ^ ; ^ M . For that very Reaforl, becaufe it is the Emblem * cf Peace it ought to be given to the Goddefs of War e For, War is only made that Peace may follow, Tho* there is another Reafon too, why {he wears the Olive : For, hie firft taught Mankind the Ufe of that Tree. When Cecrops built a new City,- Neptune and Minerva contending about the Name of that City, it was refol- ved, that whichfoever of the two Deities found out the moft ufeful Creature to Man, fhould give their Name to the City. Neptune brought a Horfe, and Minerva caufed an Olive to fpring out of the Earth, which was judged a more ufeful Creature far Man than the Horfe ; 0 yEgidaque horriferam, tier bates Pall adz s udrma^ QertatwiJ'qua??i??iisfcrpentu?;z , aui'oque polibant^ Conncxofque angues ; ipfamque i?i pediore Dives , Gorgo?za , dcfcSzo vcrientezzi Izwiina collo . The reft refrefh the fcaly Snakes that fold The Shield of Pallas , and renew their Gold : FuIIon the Creft the Gorgon^s Head they places With Eyes that roll in Death and with diftorted Face* PEneid. 8, p Paczferaque maiiu ramunz prestendit olives z And in her Hand a Branch of peaceful Olive bears. * Hut. in Themiffoc. Herod. Terpftch. H There-. 9 $ ©/* the Gods- of the Heathens ; Therefore Minerva named the City* and called it £ iBenay after her own Name* in Greek 5 a 0 W. SECT. II. The Birth of Minerva, IT Tift or V mentions five a Minerva* s. We fhall fpeak jLjL of that only which was bom of Jupiter and to whom the reft are referred. P . But how was fhe born ?' 40 M. I will tell you, if you do not know, though it is ridiculous. When 'Jupiter faw that his Wife Juno was barren, he through Grief ftruclc his Forehead, and after three Months brought forth Minerva \ from whence, as fome fay, fhe was called b Tritonia ; Vulcan was his Midwife, c who, opening his- Brain with the Blow of an Hatchet, was amazed,, when he faw d an armed Vi¬ rago leaping out of the Brain of the Father, inftead of a tender, little, naked Girl. Some havefaid, that c Jupiter conceived this Daugh¬ ter when he had devoured Metis,, one of his Wives, with which Food he prefently grew big, and brought forth the armed Pallas . They fay befides, f that it rained Gold in the Illaml of Rhodes , when Minerva' was born: Which Obferva- tion s Claudian makes alfo.- a Cic. de Nat. Deor. b Quail Tpilo^uic veli>V.MtA tertio menfe nata, Athena,-apud Gyr. c Lucian>■ in Dia¬ log. Deorum. u _- Zy e Capitis fertur Jine mat re prater nr Veviice arm clypeo projiluiJJe/no. Gut of her Father's Scull, as they report,- Without a Mother, all in Arms leap’d forth.- " Heliod in Theogon.- f Strabo, 1 . 14-. s Auratos Rbodiis imbrcs , nafcento Minerva, Induxi/fe Jove??! ferunt . At Pallas' Birth, great Jupiter, Ave’re told,- [Beflrew’d the Rhodians with a Show’r of G-old. SEC T. Of the Gods of the Heathens. 99 SECT. III. Names of Minerva. L EX us fir ft examine whence the Names Minerva and Pallas are derived. Minerva is fo called from a diminifhing. And it is very true, that fhe, being the Goddefs of War, dimi- nifhes the Numbers of Men, and both deprives Families of their Heads, and Cities of their Members. b Eut it may be derived from Threatenings, as I faid before $ becaufe her Looks threaten the Beholders with Vio¬ lence, and ftrike them with Terror, Or, perhaps, fhe has her Name from the good c Admonitions flic gives 5 becaufe fhe is the Goddefs of Wifdom . She is common¬ ly thought to be Wifdom itfelfy whence, when Men pretend to teach thofe that are wifer than themfelves* it is proverbially faid, d That Soto teaches Minerva . And from this Name of Minerva comes Minerval , or Mi- nervale c , fignifying the Salary that is given by the Sch'olars to their Mafters. The Greeks call her Athena % becaufe fhe never fucked the Breaft of her Mother or Nurfe f ; for file was born out of her Father’s Head, in full Strength* and was therefore called Motherlefs g . Plato thinks fhe had this Name from her Skill h in divine Affairs. Others think fhe was fo named, 1 becaufe fhe is never enflaved, but enjoys the moft perfect Liberty: And indeed Wifdom and Philofophy give their Votaries the moft perfect a Quod, minuit vel minuitur. Cic. de Nat. Deor. b Vel K minis, quod vim minetur, Cornif. ap Gyr. c Vel a mo- nendo, Fcftus. d Sus Minervam, avq'Afa Cic. 9. E- pift. l8. c Greece cKfrcty.'rgov . j Ab cl non& mammam fugere. dpnr&pt l e. matre ca- rens, Pollux, Phurnilt. h fiqua Ssoyvw, vel *kSi» >ov) T hoc eft, qua3 divina cognofcit. Plato in Cratylo. 1 Ab d non Sc fervire. Free* % H 2 IOO Of the Gods of the Heathens « Freedom, as the Stoic ks well obferve, who fay, a The Philofopher or Wife-man is the only Free-man. She is called Pallas , from a Giant of the fame Name, which file flew; or from the Lake Pallas , where fhc was firft feen by Men; or, laftly, which is more pro¬ bable b , from brandifhing her Spear in War. She had many other Names, which I might now re¬ count to you ; but becaufe a great many of them are infignificant and ufelefs, I will only fpeak of two or three, after I have firft difcourfed of the Palladium. The Palladiu?n was an Image of Pallas , preferved in the Caftle of the City of Troy : For, while the Caftlc and Temple of Minerva were building, they fay, this linage fell from Heaven into the Temple, before it was covered with a Roof. This raifed every body’s Admiration ; and when the Oracle of Jpollo was con- fulted, he anfwered,. That the City fhould be fafe fo long as that Image remained within it. Therefore, when the Grecians befieged 7 roy 9 they found c 'that it was impoftible to take the City, unlefs the Palladium was taken out of it. This Bufinefs was left to UlyJJes and Dtomedes , who undertook to creep into the City through the Common Sewers, and bring away this fa¬ tal Image. When they had performed this, Troy was taken without any Difficulty. from her Name, becaufe fhe was the Inventrefs of It. But, although Minerva fo much excelled all others Ut probat ipfe calorj t digit , flagnique quiet a Vultus njzdi t aqua , pojidtque i?z margins plant as , j Et fe deleftd, Tritonida dixit, ab imdd . This Fallas loves, born of the Brain of Jove, Who firft on Lybia trod ; (the Heat doth prove This Land next Heav’n) fhe, {landing by the Side* Her Face within the quiet Water fpy’d, And gave herfelf from the lov’d Pool a Name. a Tritonia — ; — Herodot. in Melp. b Ex Hefych. Ifidor. 1 . io. c Ovid. 6. Metam. Virgil. 7. ^Eneid. Theocrit. Eclog. 34.. , d Non ilia colo calathifque Miner vee ■ Fcemineas afflict a man us. Ovid. Metam. To Fallas 7 Arts her Hands were never train’d. 9 1 ^ e Cui tolerare colo wit eon tenuique Minerva. Virg. JEti* 8. By th* Spinfters’ Trade fhe gets her Livelihood. Of the Gods of .the Heathens, 2 °3 ; n Spinning; yet Arachne , a young Lady of Lydia , very jjkilful at Spinning, challenged her in this Art, tho ? it proved her Ruin ; for the Goddefs tore her Work, and .ftruck her Forehead with a a Spoke of the Wheel. This Pifgrace drove her into Defpair, fo that file hanged her- felf; wherefore Pallas , out of Companion, brought her again to .Life, and turned her into a Spider, b which con¬ tinues ftill employed in Spinning. The Art of Build- .ine, efpecially ofCaftles, was Minerva's Invention ; and therefore fhe was believed to prefide over them. She is called Mnfica ; becaufe, fays Pliny , c the Dra¬ gons or Serpents in her Shield, which, inftead of Hair, encompafled the Gorgon's Head, did ring, and refound, if the Strings of an Harp or Cittern near them were touched. But it is more likely that fhe was fo named, becaufe fhe invented the Pipe:, upon which, when fhe played by the River-fide, and fawin. the Water how .much her Face was {welled and deformed by blowing it, file was moved with Indignation, and threw it afide, .faying, d The .Sweetnefs of the Mufick is too dear, if pur- chafed with fo much Lofs. ---— . ...... . . . > M I - ■ - ■■■ a -- Fronte??i pei'cj/jfit Aracbnes : Non tulit inf Mix , laqueoque cinimofa ligavit Guttura , pendentem Pallas miferata leva^it . .At que, it a, Pme quidem , pends tamcn > improba? dixit . Arachne thrice upon the Forehead fmote ; Whole great Heart brooks it not: About her Throat A Rope fhe ties ; remorfeful Pallas ftaid - Her falling Weight; Live, Wretch ; Yet hang, fhe faido O.'vid. Met am. 6 . b - Et antiques exercet Aranca tel as. And. now a Spider turn’d, fhe hill fpins on. ,Id. it, c Di£la eft Mufica, quod dracones in ejusGorgone ad ic¬ tus citharas tinnitu refonabant. Plin Mat. HifiA. 34. c. S. d - Iprocid bine, non eft mibi tibia tanti , JJt njidit niultus Pa Has..in a nm e fuos. Away, thou art not fo much worth, fhe cry’d. Dear Pipe., when fhe her Face i 5 th’ Streams efpy’d. H 4 . Glau- 104 Of the Gods of the Heathens. a Glaucopi's was another of her Names; becaufeh^r Eyes, like the Eyes of an Owl, were grey or fk}‘-co¬ loured, that is, of a green Colour mixed with white, Others think that fhe was not called fo from the Co¬ lour of her Eyes, but from the Terror and Formidable- nefs of her Mien ; for which Reafons Lions and Dra¬ gons are alfo called Glaucii and Cafii. She was alfo called Pylotis , frpm a b Greek Word, Signifying a Gate : For, as the Image of Mars was fefc tip in the Suburbs, fo her Effigies or Pidlure was placed on the City-Gates, or Doors of Houfes ; whereby they fignified, that we ought to ufe our Weapons Abroad, to keep the Enemy from entering our Towns : but in the Town we muft ufe the Affiftance of Minerva , not of Mars; that is, the State ought to be governed at Home by Prudence, Counfel, and Law, - - ■III MlWI l T*^r—^ ..... i ■■ ■■m ■ mr M ill « i ■ i i n 4 * 4 » • • • * # # a Thccvxx 7r*?>habens oculos glaucos Sc csefios, quales habet y?&v£ 9 no£tua; Paufan. in Attic. An to nrr, and afterwards married to him* SECT. III. Names of Venus; S HE is called Venus, fays Tully ; a becaufe all Things are fubje£t to the Laws of Love, or are produced and begotten by Love : Or elfe, as b others fay, her Name is given her, becaufe fhe is eminently beautiful; for fhe is the Goddefs of Beauty : Or, laftly, fhe is fo called, becaufe fhe c was a Stranger or Foreigner to the Romans : For, fire was firft worfhipped by the Egyptians i and from the Egyptians fhe was tranflated to the Greeks , and from thence to the Romans. Let us now proceed to her other Names. A?nica , 'Eraipa, [Netazra] was a Name given her by the Athenians ; fl becaufe file joins Lovers together : And this Greek Word is ufed both in a good and bad Signifi¬ cation, fignifying both a Sweetheart and a Strumpet, Armata ; becaufe c when the Spartan Women Talli¬ ed out of their Towns, befieged by the Meffenians^ and beat them, their Hufbands, who were ignorant of it, went out to fight, and met their Wives returning from the Purfuit: The Men, believing them Enemies, made themfelves ready to fight; but the Women fhewed, both by Words and by Deeds, that they were their a A venicndo, quod ad omnes res veniat, vel quod per earn omnia proveniant ac progignantur. b Venus quafive- nufta, Paufan. in Attic. c Venus a veniendo, quafi adven¬ titia, fic Grascorum Doftrina adventitia & tranfmarina voca- batur. Cic. Ofhc. I. i. (l ’Era* pa,, id eft.', focia, quod amicos 5 c arnicas jungeret. Feilus ex Apol. & Hefych. e Paufan. in Lucan. & in Attic. 3 W ivesj II2- Of the Gods of the Heathens* Wives, (Modefty forbids a plainer Explanation ■) and for this Reafon a Temple was dedicated to Venus Armata * The Sidoniam called her a Aft arte ^ or Dea Syria (which Goddefs, others think, was the Moon) and worshipped her in the Figure of a Star . Apaiuria , that is, b the Deceiver % for neither is any Thing more deceitful than a Lover, nor any Thing more fraudulent than Love, which flatters our Eyes> and pleafes us, like Rofes in their fineft Colours, but leaves a Thorn in the Heart y it torments the Mind, and wounds the Confcience. She was called by the Rotnans c Barb at ay becaufe^. when the Roman Women were fo troubled with a vio- 4 lent Itching that all their Hair fell off, they prayed to Venus , and their Hair grew again: Whereupon they made an Image of Venus with a Comb, and gave it a Beard, that fhe might have the Signs of both Sexes, and be thought to prefide over the Generation of both. That this might be exprefled more plainly, the upper- moft Part of the Image reprefented a Man, and the lower Part of it a Woman. Cypris , Cypria , and Cyprogenia , becaufe fhe was wor¬ shipped in the Ifland of Cyprus . Cytheris and Cytherea from the Ifland of d Cythera , whither fhe was firfl: car¬ ried in a Sea-fhell. There was a Temple at Rome dedicated to Venus Calva y G becaufe when the Gauls pofleffed that City, Ropes for the Engines were made with the Women’s Mai r. Clna cm a , from f Cluo , an old'Word, tofighty becaufe f herlmage was fet up in the Place, in which the Peace was concluded betwixt the Romans and Sabines. Erycina , from the Mountain £ Eryx in the Ifland of f * H a Epiph, contra Hreref. Eufeb. i . de Praep. Evang. b Ab i 'AwccTciv fa’Io. Lucian, de Dea Syr. Strabo. L n. c Serv. f. Macrob. Suidas & alii. d Feftus. c La£iant..lib. i. Divin. f. Inditut. f Vegetius de Re militari. £ Plin. L 15. Polyb. i ; f 1. Serv. i. A£n. »■ 1: I* Sicily 1 II2 Of the Gods of the Heathens . Sicily, upon which /Eneas built a fplendid and famous Temple to her Honour, becaufe (he was his Mother, a Horace makes mention of her under this Name. b She is properly called Ridens , and Ho 7 ner calls her c a Lover of Laughing ; for, fhe is faid d to be born laughings and from thence called the Goddefs of Mirth . Hortenjis ; becaufe file looks after the Produ&ion of Seeds and Plants in Gardens. And Fejlus tells us, that the Word Venus is by Neevius put for Herbs , as Ceres is for Bread , and Ncptunits for Fijh. e Idalia and Acidalia , from the Mountain Idatns , in the Ifland Cyprus , and the Fountain Acidalius in Bceo - //#. - Marina ; becaufe fhe was born of the (as we faid) and begotten of the Froth of the Waters; which f Aufonius hath elegantly mentioned in his Poem. From thence file is called s Apbroditis2in& Auadyomene , that is, emerging out of the Waters, as Apelles painted her 5 and Pontia , from Pont us. Hence came the Cuf- tom, that thofe who had efcaped any Danger by Wa¬ ter, ufed to facrifice to Venus . Hence alfo the Mariners obferved thofe Solemnities called Aphrodijia , which Plu¬ tarch deferibes in aTreatife again Qc Epicurus. Melanis , or Mclanis , h that is, dark and concealed: Of which Nature are all Nodturnal Amours, both law- • • • • a Si-ve tit mavis, Erycina ritfens, Qgtam jocus circumvolal iff Cap Ido, Jt you, blithe Goddefs, will our Side defend. Whom Mirth and brifk Defire do fill attend. Her. 1 . i , 0 d, b Suida*? Phurnut. i. e. amans rifus, Horn.* Iliad. 20. d Hefiod. e Virg. \. JEn. & Scrv. Horatius fape.- f Orta Jalo , fitfeepta Join , patre edit a Ccelo . Heaven gave her Life, the Sea a Cradle gave,- And Earth’s wide Regions her with Joy receive. 3 Plin. 35. e. io. Alex. ab. Alex. 2. Clitipho Sc Leucippe.* b Nigra & tenebrola, a fizKac, i. e. niger, quod omne amo- ris opus am at tenebras. Paufan. in Arcad. ful * Of the Gods of th it? € fol and unlawful. , For a Works of Love do all of them Jed the Dark . ^Vhence the Egyptians vuor/hipped a Ve¬ nus, called b Scotia, a Goddefs to be admired in the Nig ht^ that is, in Marriage. Meretrix ; ‘ c becaufe fhe taught the Women, in Cy¬ prus , to proftitute themfelves for Money. d Mi gonitis fignifies her Power in the Management of Love. Therefore Paris, after he had mixed Em¬ braces with Helena, dedicated the firft Temple to c Ve¬ nus Ml gonitis ; and f Virgil ufes a like Exprefiion fpeak- ing of the Affairs of Love. She is called Murcia in Livy and Pliny, quafi Myrtea 5 becaufe the Myrtle was facred to Ve?ius - 9 and her Tem¬ ple, upon the Aventine Mountain at Rome, was ancient-* iy called Marcus. Papbia, from the City Paphos in the Xfland of Cy¬ prus, where they facrificed Flowers and Fran kin cenfe to her. And this is mentioned by s Virgil . This. 3 Find. Od. 9. Pyrrh-. ex Hefyc. b E; cotbU nod vvdh $cty* V-'No> Dea admirandaa no&u & tenebris. Eurip. in Hippo!. c heel. &-Serv. d a fiyw/sA, u e. mifeeo, Paufan* in Lacon. c Veneri Migonitidi. f - quern Rheafacer do 5. Furti frtifque recentibus halant. ftus Part perform'd, the Goddefs flies fublime. To vifit Paphos and her native Clime, Where Garlands, ever green and ever fair. With Vows are offer’d, and with folemn Pray’r : An hundred Altars in her Temple fmoke, A Thoufand bleeding Hearts her PovvT invoke. JEn. 1. I Image i. r4 Of the Gods- of the Heathens. ' # * " Image had not a human Shape; but as a "Tacitus fays 5 It was from the Top to the Bottom of an orbicular Figure a little broad beneath-, the Circumference, wasf?nall an( j : jharpening toward the Top like a Sugar-loaf. The Reafin. unknown . b Lucan obferves, that it was ufual to wor- fhip other Gods in confufed fhapelefs Figures. For certain the Goddefs Peffiinimtia (of whom we fhall fay more when we fpeak of Cybcle) was nothing but a fhapelefs Stone, which, fell down from Heaven, as we find by Herodian . So c Tertullian fays, Even Pallas 7 . the Athenian Goddefs , arrd Ceres, the Goddefs of Corn, both of them without any certain Effigies to them, but meer rugged Stakes, and fhapelefs Pieces of IVood, are Things that are bought andfold . And Arnobius adds, d The Ara¬ bians worjhippecl a Stone without Form, or Shape of a Deity . • Her Name 6 Veriicordia fignifies the Power of Love,, to change Hearts, and eafe the Minds of Men from all Cares that perplex.them. f Ovid, mentions this Power of hers. And for the fame Reafon Venus is called in, the Greek s Epijlrophia * a Erat continuus orbis, latiore initio* tenuem in ambitum, snetae modo exurgens ; & ratio in obfcuro.. Lib. 3°. - ^ finula era que mczjla Deorum Arte carent , caecffque extant in for mi a trunezs a . All artlefs, plain, miihapen Trunks they are. Their Mofs and Mouldinefs procures a Fear, c Et Pallas Attica Sc Ceres Farrea fine effigie rudi paloy & Ihformi ligno proftant. TertuL.in ApoL. d> Arabes infor- xnem coluerunt lapidem. Arnob.. contra Gentes Lib,.6« e Quail corda vertens. i Templa jubet fieri Venerz,. q.uibhs ordine faftis, Inde Venus?*verfo nomina- corde tenet*. Fafh-s Temples are rais’d to Venus , whence the Name, From changing Minds, of Verticordia came. qybd vertat homines^ Paufan. Attic. SEC X. IV. Actions of Ve nus, wT 7HAT Deeds can you expe£I from an Impudent and powerful Strumpet, but thofe which are full of Lewdnefs, and Mifchief, and Plagues? It were end- lefs only to repeat the Names of all thofe, whom fhe has armed to the Ruin of one another; whom jfhe has turned into Beafts, by inciting them to commit fuch monftrous Wickednefs, as Modefly will not let me mention. For, who, without blufhing, can hear the Story of Niftimene? who, infpired by impure Luft, and raging with curfed Flames, a is faid to have committed Incefi with her own Father; for which abominable Wicked- nefs fhe was changed into an Owl, an ugly difmal Bird of the Night, who, b confcious of her Guilt* never ap¬ pears in the Day-time, but feeks to conceal her Shame* and cover it by Darknefs, being driven from the So¬ ciety of all Birds. Who does not abhor the fame Fa£t of Myrrha , which was contrived and committed by the Encouragement arid the Affiftance of Venui ? She committed Inceft with her own Father by the AfHftance of Cy?iaras , her old Nurfe ; (may fuch Practices of old Women receive their juft Reward) but her Sin proved her Ruin ; c for, file was Patriwn temerajfe cubile . To have defil’d her Father’s Bed. Ovid. z. Met. b Confcia cidp# Coij'peRum, lucemque fugit ; t e71e.br ifquepudorem ■\ Cclat , & a cwjftis expellitur aere ioto . Still confcious of her Shame avoids the Light; And drives to fhroud her guilty Head in Night, ? Expell’d the winged Choir. ?; c Qs# quanquam amijit * Id. ihil Id. M Ofthe Gods of the Heathens* ixj tween the two Families. And, that the Children might not attempt any thing againfl their Parents Will, they were next permitted to fee each other, or to fpeak toge¬ ther. What could Pyramus do ?. Or how could Thifbe hear this?. There was a Partition-Wall between both Houfes, in which Wall there was a fmall Chink, never difeovered by any of the Servants. This Crevice a the Lovers found, and met here. Their Words and their Sighs went through, butKifles could not pafsj which, when they parted., they b printed on each Side, of the Wall* But what a fatal Rapture in their .Hearts did this fmall Breach in the Wall produce ? for their Love was too great to be confined to fuch narrow Bounds : The next Night therefore they refol ved to enjoy-that Li¬ berty abroad, which they could not receive at home, by efcapinginto a neighbouring Wood, where they agreed to meet under the Shade of a large Mulberry-Tree, which flood .clofe to a Fountain. When Night came oi^ThiJbe deceives her Keepers, and efcapes firff, and 'flies into the Wood ; for Love gave her Vv ings. When file came to the appointed Place, ^ a Lionefs came frefh >i i. ■ — mmrnmam ^ ■ y i — ■■ ■ 1i a Quid non fentit amor? *- lUam prbni e calls — O, Pyramus , reply! pan Pyramus be deaf to ^T'htjbe* s Cry '? v , : T. ' Aii V; : * '• T i-v * > • .fbjfit r * < 4 ** Of the ‘Gods of ihe Heathens. * \ y \ h a ^ , C. y I I 119 " %htfbe called him; but he was fpeechlefs, and, only looking up to her, expired. And now c ThiJbe was al~ moftdead with Grief. She tore her Cheeks, and beat her Breads., and rent her Hair, and fhed a Deluge of Tears, uponhis cold Face; nor feemed to mourn, tillfhe perceived her Veil, bloody and.torn, in Pyro?nus > s Hand» She then underftood the Occafion of his Death; and, with all her Strength,.fhe draws the Sword out of the .Body of her Lover, and ftrikes ?it deep into her.own;; and falling accidentally on him, gave him a cold Kifs, and breathed her la ft Breath into his Bofom. The Tree was warmed with the Blood of the Slain, fo that it be- veame fenfible of their Misfortune, and mourned. Its Berries, which were before white, became iirft red •with Grief, and blufhed for the Death of Pyra??ius ; ; ; when 57;//5^ alfo died, the Berries then became black ■} and dark, as if they had put on Mourning. (• In the next Place heartheStory of Atalanla and Hip- l .pomenes , She was the Daughter of King Schteiieus , or t Caneia , It was doubted whether her Beauty or Swift- | nefs in running were greater. When fhe confulted i the Oracle, whether fhe fhould marrv or.no,:-fhe/recei v- ci this Anfwer-, that Marriage would be fatal to her. | Hereupon the Virgin hid herfelf in the Woods, and r Jived in Places remote from the Converfation of Men. | But the more file avoidedthem, the more'eagerly they •courted her. Her Difdain inflamed their De-ftres, and ■ ; her Pride raifed their Adoration- At laft, when fhe jfaw fhe could not otherwife deliver herfelf from the l Importunity of her Lovers, fhe made this Agreement | with them.; 6 You court me in vain, fays fhe ; he who 6 overcomes me in running, fhall be my Hufband,; . H but they who are beaten by me fhall fuffer Death,; I > -1 When Tbi/be* s Name the dying Lover heard, His half-clos’d Eyes for one lalt Look he.rear'd : Which, having Hatch’d the Blefling of that Sight, ilefign'd themfelves to everlailing Niglito I 4 * m 120 Of the Gads of the lie at hens * * I’ll be the Vidlor’s Prize, but the Vanqui{hed’s Pit, - nifhment. If thefe Terms pleafe, come, go with me * into the Field. 3 They a all agreed to thefe Conditi¬ ons; they ftrove to outrun her; but they were all beaten and put to Death, according to the Agreement; fuf. fering the Lofs of their Lives for the Fault of their Feet, .Yet the Example of thefe Gentlemen did not deter , Hippomcnes from undertaking the Race. He entertain¬ ed Hopes of winning the Victory; becaufe Venus had given him three golden Apples, gathered in the Gar* .dens of the Hefperides ; and alfo told him how to ufe them, hlippomenes brifkly fet out and began the Race; • and when he faw that Atalanta overtook • him, lie threw down a golden Apple : The Beauty of it ind¬ eed her, fo that {he b went out of her Way, followed the Apple, and took it up. Afterwards he threw down another, and fhe {looped again to reach it; and again a third; fo. that while At¬ lanta was bulled in gathering them' up, Hippomm reached the Goal, and took the Lady as the Prize of • his Vi£lory. But how inconfirant is Venus? And how bafe Ingra¬ titude ? Hippomenes , being drunk with Love, gave not due Thanks to Venus , but was forgetful of her Kind* nefs. The Goddefs refented it, and inflamed them with fuch ffcrong impatient Deflres, that in their jour¬ ney they dared, to fatisfy their Paffions in a Temple; for which Sacrilege they were immediately punifhed, for they were turned into Lions. • : Laftly, let Paris and Helena come upon the Stage, Paris was the Son of Priamus King of 7 roy? by Heath. His Mother, when {he was big-bellied, dreamt that a Vsnif ad banc legem temeraria turba proeorum . • All her niad Wooers take the Terms propos’d. ° Declindt cur/us , aur unique njolubile tollit. She, greedy of the fhining Fruits, Heps back To catch the rolling; Gold. * * ♦ 1 . • * O • s 1 3 i * J \ - ki Of the Gods of the Heathens. 1 2 y foe brought forth a burning "Torch ; And, afking the Co¬ racle the Interpretation of it, was anfwered, that it did portend the Burning of Troy 9 and that the Fire fhould be kindled by that Boy that (he had in her Womb. Therefore, as foonas the Child was born, by the Com¬ mand of Priamus , he was expofed upon the Mountain Ida; where the Shepherds brought him up privately* and educated him, and called him Paris . When he was grown to Man’s Eftate, many excellent Endow¬ ments and Qualities fhined in him ; particularly, he gavefuch great Tokens of Angular Prudence and Equi¬ ty in deciding Controverfi.es, that when a great Diffe¬ rence arofe among the Goddefles, they referred it to his judgment to be determined. The Goddefs a Difcordia was the Occafionof this Contention : For, becaufe all the Gods and Goddefles, except herfelf, were invited to the Marriage of Peleus , fhe was angry, and refolved to revenge the Difgrace; therefore, when they all met and fat down at the Table, file came in privately, and threw down upon the Table an Jlpple of Golf on which was this Infcription, h Let the faireft take it . Hereupon arofe a Quarrel among the Goddefles; for every one thought herfelf the handfomeft. But, at laft, all the others yield to the three fuperior Goddeffes : "Juno , Pal¬ las , and Venus, who difputed fo eagerly, that Jupiter himfelf was not able to bring them to Agreement. He refolved therefore fo leave the final Determination of it to the Judgment of Paris; fo that fhe fhould have the Apple to whom Paris fhould appoint it. The Goddefles qonfent, and call for Paris , who was then feeding Sheep upon a Mountain. They tell him their Bufinefs; they every one court his Favour with great Promifes. 'Juno promifed to reward him with Power ; Pallas with TVif- dom 5 and Venus promifed him the mojl beautiful Woman •— in___ , 1— ■ jii^ 1 1 1 ■ 1 ♦ « • a Dion. Chryfoft. Orat. 20. Philoftrat. in Icon. ffrrtor accipiati vel Deittr Pulchricri . b PuL 122 hi the I-Vorld. In fhort, he obferved them all very curt- oufly 5 but Nature guided him to pronounce Venus the fair eft , and to affign to her the Apple of Gold, Nor did Venus break her Promife to Paris ; for in a little Time Paris was owned to be King Priam 9 s Son, and failed into Greece with a great Fleet, under the Colour of an Embafly, to fetch away Helena , the moft beautiful Virgin in the World ; who was betrothed to Menelaus , King of Sparta, and lived in his Houfe. "When he came, Menelaus was abfent from Home ; and, in his Abfence, Paris carried Helena to Troy. Menelaus demanded her, but Paris refufed to fend her back ; whereupon that fatal War between the Grecians and Trojans broke out, in which, Troy , the Metropolis of all Afia, was taken and miferably burnt, in the Year of the World 2871, There were killed eight hundred fixty-eight thoufand of the Grecians \ among whom Achilles , their General, loft his Life, by the Treachery of Paris himfelf. There were flain fix hundred feventy-fix thoufand of the Tro¬ jans, from the Beginning of the War to the Betraying the City ; (for it was thought that /Eneas and Antenor betrayed it) among whom Paris himfelf was killed by Pyrrhus or Philoftetes ; and his Brother Heft or, a the Pillar of his Country , was killed by Achilles. And when the City was taken and burnt, K ing Priamus, the Fa¬ ther of Paris and Heftor , at once lofi: all his Children., Hecuba his Queen, his Kingdom and his Life. Ple- lena , after Pails was killed, married his Brother Dei• phobus : Yet fhe, at laft, betrayed theCaftle tothe Gre¬ cians , and admitted Menelaus into her Chamber to kill Dciphobus ; whereby it is faid, fhe was reconciled to the Favour of Menelaus again. But thefe Things be¬ long rather to Hiftory than Fable, to which let us re¬ turn. a Patriae Columen* :S E e T, Of the Gods of the Heathens, 123 SECT. V. VENus’i Companions . Hyme- n/eus, the Cupids, the Graces, Adonis. % rip HE firft of Venus's Companions was the God JL Hymenasus. He prefided over Marriage, and was the Protestor of Virgins. He was the Son of Bacchus and VcnusUrania^ born in Attica, where heufed to re- fcue Virgins carried away by Thieves, and reftore them to their Parents. He was of a very fair Complexion ; crowned with the A?naracus or Sweet-Marjoram, and fometimes with Rofes; in one Hand he carried a Torch, in the other a Veil of a flame Colour, to re- prefent the Blufhes of a V irgin. Maids newly married offered Sacrifices to him, as they did alfo to the God- dcfs Can cor din. Cupid was the neri-t of Venus's Companions. He 13 called the God of Love, and a many different Parents are afcribed to him, becaufe there v/ere many Cupids . Plato b fays, he was bom of Penia^ the Goddefs of Po¬ verty > and Porus , the Son of Counfel and Plenty . c He- fiod relates, that he was born of Chaos and Terra. Sap¬ pho derives him from Venus and Caelum. Alcaeus fays he was the Son of Lite and Zephyrus. S'nnonidcs attributes hirn to Mars and Venus ^ and Alcmeeon to Zephyr us and Flora. But whatfoever Parents Cupid had, this is plain, lie always accompanies Venus , either as a Son, or as a Servant* 1 '.. . ♦ _ The Poets fpeak of two Cupids. One of which is an ingenious Youth c , the Son of Venus and ‘Jupiter , a eeleftial Deity ; the other an obfeene Debauchee, the Son of Nox and Erebus (Hell and the Night) a vulgar God, whofe Companions are Drunkennefs, Sorrow, « * :i Philoftrar. in Icon. b Plato in Sympof, c Vide Nnt. Com. Sc Lib Gyrald. i] Cic. de Nat. Deor. c Plate} ?n Pkaxlrp. Enmity, 12.2. Of the Gods of the Heathens . in the World. In fhort, he obferved them all very curi- oufly , but Nature guided him to pronounce Venus the fairejiy and to aflign to her the Apple of Gold, Nor did Venus break her Promife to Paris ; for in a little Time Paris was owned to be King Prian z’s Son, and failed into Greece with a great Fleet, under the Colour of an Embafly, to fetch away Helena , the moft beautiful Virgin in the World ; who was betrothed to Menelaus , King of Sparta , and lived in his Houfe. When he came, Menelaus was abfent from Home ; and, in his Abfence, Paris carried Helena to Troy. Menelaus demanded her, but Paris refufed to fend her back; whereupon that fatal War between the Grecians and Trojans broke out, in which, Troy , the Metropolis of all Afia^ was taken and miferably burnt, in the Year of the "World 2871. There were killed eight hundred flxty-eight thoufand of the Grecians ; among whom Achilles , their General, loft his Life, by the Treachery of Paris himfelf. There were flain fix hundred feventy-fix thoufand of the Tro¬ jans , from the Beginning of the War to the Betraying the City ; (for it was thought that /Eneas and Antenor betrayed it) among whom Paris himfelf was killed by Pyrrhus or Philooletes ; and his Brother Heffor, a the Pillar of his Country , was killed by Achilles . And when the City was taken and burnt, K.ingPriamus? the Fa¬ ther of Paris and HcPior, at once loft all his Children., Hecuba his Queen, his Kingdom and his Life. He - lien a , after Paris was killed* married his Brother Dei* phobus : Yet fhe, at laft, betrayed the Caftle to-the Gre - eianSy and admitted Menelaus into her Chamber to kill Dei phobus > whereby it is faid, fhe was reconciled to the Favour of Menelaus again. But thefe Things be¬ long rather to Hiftory than Fable, to which let us re¬ turn. a Patriae Columen. S E C T, Of the Gods of the Heathens, 123 SECT. V. Venus’.? Companions. Hyme- NiEus, the Cupids, the Graces, Adonis. % rpHE firfl of Venus *s Companions was the God JL Hymcnaus. He prefided over Marriage, and was the Protestor of Virgins. He was the Son of Bacchus and Venus Urania? born in Attica , where heufed to re- fcue Virgins carried away by Thieves, and reflore them to their Parents. He was of a very fair Complexion ; crowned with the A?naracus or Sweet-Marjoram, and fometirnes with Rofes ; in one Hand he carried a Torch, in the other a Veil of a flame Colour, to re¬ prefen t the Blufhes of a Virgin. Maids newly married offered Sacrifices to him, as they did alfo to the God- defs Concordia. Cupid was the ne*:t of Venus’s Companions. He 13 called the God of Love, and a many different Parents are afcribed to him, becaufe there were many Cupids . Plato b fays, he was born o fPcnia? the Goddefs of Po¬ verty? and Bor us , the Son of Counfel and Plenty . c He- fiod relates, that he was born of Chaos and Terra. Sap¬ pho derives him from Venus and Gcclu?n. Alcorns fa3^ he was the Son of Lite and Z ephyrus. Simonides attributes him to Mars and Venus ^ and Alcm & on to Zcphyrus and Flora. But whatfoever Parents Cupid had, this is plain, he always accompanies Venus , either as a Son, or as a Servant/ 5 '.. . The Poets fpeak of two Cupids . One of which is ingenious Youth c , the Son of Venus and Jupiter? a celeftial Deity ; the other an obfcenc Debauchee, the Son of Nox and Erebus (Hell and the Night) a vulgar God, whofe Companions are Drunkcnnefs, Sorrow* :i Philofhat. in Icon. b Plato in Sympof. c Vide Nat. Com. & Lil. Gyrald. d Cic. de Nat. Deor. c Platq in Phase! ro. Enmity^ 324 Qf the Gods of the Heathens* Enmity, Contention, and fuch Kind of Plagues; one of tbefe Cupids is called Eros y and the other Ant eras. Both of them are Boys, and naked, and winged, and blind, and armed with a Bow and Arrows and a Torch. * They have.two Darts of different Natures; a golden .Dart, which procures Love, and a leaden Dart, which caufes Hatred. b Anteros is alfo the God who avenges flighted Love. Although this be the youngefi: of all the Gods in Heaven, yet his Power is fo great, that he is efleemed the flrongeft of them ; for he fubdues them all. With¬ out his Aftiftance his Mother Vemts is weak, and can do nothing, as fhe herfelf c confeffes in Virgil. P . But why is Cupid naked? /A. He is naked becaufe the Lover has nothing .of his own, but deprives himfelf of all that he has, for his Miftrefs’s.Sake : He can neither cover nor conceal any Thing from her ; of which Sampfoti is a Witnefs : For he difeovered to his beloved Miflrefs even the Secret on which his Safety did depend; and here his Under- fhinding was blinded before his Eyes., Another fays, that Czipid is naked, d becaufe Lovers delight to be To. Cupid is a Boyy becaufe he is void of Judgment: His Chariot is drawn by Lions, for the Rage and Fierce- siefs of no Creature is greater than the Extravagance and Madnefs of violent Love. And he is blind ; be- •caufe a Lover does not fee the Faults of his beloved Obje£L nor confider in his Mind the Mifchief proceed¬ ing from that Paffion. He is winged, becaufe nothing 2 Plut. apud Stobamm. b Scholia#. in Theocr. io, Idyll. Faufan. in Boeot. Plut. in Synvpof. c IdtiiCj mecs 'vires y 712ca ?nag):a petentia , fains . Thou art my Strength, O Son, and Power alone. Virg. 4. Adncidy d Quavc intda limits, mtdi pingurTfur amores P Nuda quibtts plaeeat , nudes dunit tat opart et. Why’s Vepres naked, and the Loves are fo ? Thole that like Nakednefs Hiould naked go. * Ofthe Gods of the Heathens 9 j2 f flies fwifter than Love: It is well known, that he, who loves To-day may hate To-morrow ; the Space of one Day does oftentimes fee Love and Averfion, in their Turns, reigning in the fame Perfon * nay. Airman* King David’s Son, both loved and hated the fame Wo¬ man in a fhorter Space of Time 5 for, with the greateft Degree of Hatred, he turned her out of his Chamber* whom he juft before inticed into it, with the higheft Marks of Love. Laftly, the Boy is armed with Arrows * becaufe he ftrikes afar off The Graces , called a Charites , were three Sifters* the Daughters of 'Jupiter and Eurynome , or Ennomia , as- Orpheus fays ; or, as others rather fay, the Daughters of Bacchus and Venus. The fir ft was called b Aglaia from her Chearfulnefs; her Beauty, or her Worth * be¬ caufe Kindnefs ought to be performed freely and gene- roufly. The fecond, c ‘Thalia , from her perpetual Ver¬ dure ; becaufe Kindnefs ought never to die, but to re¬ main frefh always in the Receiver’s Memory. The third, d Eupbrofyne, from her Chearfulnefs ; becaufe we ought to be free and chearful, as well in doing as re¬ ceiving a Kindnefs. Thefe Sifters were painted naked (or in tranfparenfc andloofe Garments) young and merry, and all Virgins*., with Hands joined. One was turned from the Be¬ holder, as if fhe was going from him * the other two turned their Faces, as if they were coming to him* whereby we underftand, that when one Kindnefs is. done, Thanks are twice due; once when received* and again when it is repaid. The Graces are naked * becaufe Kindnefles ought to be done in Sincerity and Candour, and without Difguife. i 2 X&QiTEq dids c&7ro tvs ’X J cc £&’$i i* a Gaudio. b 'Ay^aia,, id eft, fplendor, honeftas, vel dignitas. c Sa- K'j. (nam Sc&Xeicc eft Mufenomen) id eft, viriditas Sc cone 5 a- nitas a So.Ww vireo. d ’EvZpzorvw* id eft, Lxtitia Sc Urba¬ nites, Vide Heiiod. in Tlxeogon. They 126 Of the Gods of the Heathens „ 4 They are young; becaufe the Memory of Kindnefles received ought never to grow old. They are Virgins; becaufe Kindnefles ought to be pure, without Expefta- tion of Requital; or becaufe we ought never to give or receive'a bafe or immodeft Kindnefs. Their Hands are joined; becaufe a one good "Turn requires another: There ought to be a perpetual Intercourfe of Kind¬ nefs and Affiflance among Friends, Adonis was the Son of Cynarus , King of Cyprus , and A'fyrrha. As he was very handfome, Venus took great Delight in him, and loved his Company- When he hunted, a Boar goared his Groin with his Tufks, and killed him. Venus bewailed his Death with much Sor¬ row and Concern, and changed his Blood, which was fhed on the Ground, into the Flower Anemone^ which ever fince has retained the Colour of Blood. And while fhe ran to aflift him, being led by his dying Voice, file pricked her Foot with a Thorn, and the Blood which came from thence, fell on the Rofe, which before was white, being hereby made red. Some add another pleafant Conceit. They fay, that when Venus and Proferpina contended before Jupiter , which fhould have Adonis , Jupiter referred them to CaU Hope , whom he appointed to be Judge of their Quarrel, Calliope gave this Sentence, that Adonis fhould ferve Venus every Year fix Months, and wait upon Proferpina the other fix. The Meaning of which Fable is this: Venus is the Earth, and her Adonis is the Sun. She reigns with him fix Months, attired with beauteous Flowers, and inriched with Fruit and Corn; the other fix Months the Sun leaves us, and goes, as it were, to live with Proferpina . LafHy, from Adonis comes the Proverb, b Adonis' s Gardens , by which are fignified all thofe Things that are fine and gay, but ufelefs and trifling. * % t a X*? iV h e * Gratia gratiam park, in Adag. * Adomdis Horti, in Adag, SECT, Of the Gods of the Heathens „ 127 SECT, VI. "The Explanation of the Fable , VenusV Amoroufnefs . rT^H'E Graces , Cupid , and Adonis are Venus's Com- J. panions, whereby is defcribed that ungovern¬ able Appetite and Inclination, which is in Men towards obfcene Pleafures. 1. She is called the Goddefs of Beauty and Comdinefs %■ becaufe Beauty is the greatell Fomenter of impure De- fires. She, fitting on a frail corporeal Throne, fubdues the Soul. She, by her Flattery and Enticement, fteals into the AfFe£Uons, and drives Virtue from thence, and bafely inflaves the whole Man. The Cythereans wor- fliipped Venus armed. Beauty needs no Weapons t She who pofiefles that is fufiiciently armed. Anacreovz. jngenioufly tells us, that Nature gave Women Beauty, that they might ufe it inftead of Spears and Shields, and conquer with greater Speed and Force, than either Iron' or Fire can. Helena? Phrync? and innumerable others, are Witnefles of this Truth. One Lady, when fhe was bound to the Stake to be Boned, with the Lightning of her Eyes difarmed her Executioners: Another, when her Crime was proved, and thcf {he had often offend¬ ed before, when fhe tore her Garments, and opened her Breaft, flopped the Judge’s Mouth 5 and, when her Beauty pleaded her Caufe, every body acquitted her. 2» Beauteous Venus rides in a Chariot, as it were, to triumph over her fubdued Enemies, whom Love, rather than Force, has conquered. She has her Ambufhes, but they are conipofed of Pleafure and Enjoyment: She fkirmifhes with Delights, and not with Fire and Bullets. The Wounds fhe gives are bloodlefs and gentle: She ufes no other Flames than what (lie kin¬ dles with her Eyes, and draws the Arrows which fhe fcoots from no other Quiver. And if fhe fights thus, it is no Wonder if fhe makes the Enemy fly to her, ra¬ fter than from her* . x 3. She? ► - ' ^ — - * ✓ / T 2 2 8 Of the Gods of the Heathens* 3. She wears a Crown ; becaufe fhe is always victo¬ rious. Beauty never wants Succefs ; becaufe (he fights at Leifure, conquers in Time of Peace, and triumphs with her Eyes. Thunder is contained even in herSi- lerlce, and Lightning in her Look. She feizes the Breaft* ftorms the Mind, and takes it captive with one Aflaulf, nay, with one Look. Beiuty fpeaks without a Voice, forces us without Violence, ties us down without Fetters, and charms us without Witchcraft; and in her to fee is to overcome, and to be feen is to triumph. Auguftm refufed to fee her in Cleopatra , left himfelf fhould be taken, and the Conqueror of the World fubmit to a “Woman: When therefore fhe pleaded, and made her Defence, he opened his Ears, but flint his Eyes. 4. She carries a Looking-glafs, that the Brittleftefs of the Glafs may remind her of the Frailty of her Beau¬ ty. She is crowned with flowery Garlands; becaufe nothing is more fading than Beauty, which, like a Flower, is blafted by the leaft Breath, and broken by the leaft Accident, and dies in the fhorteft Moment. 5. She is born from the Sea ; becaufe as many Storms and Tempefts afflicft the Lover, as difturb the Sea: Nothing but Bitternefs is his Portion ; fo that we may fay, that a to love is to fwalJow a bitter Potion. This is certainly true, that the Bitternefs cf the Sea is fweet, if compared with the Bittternefs of Love. But fuppofe Love had Sweetnefs, yet, like the Sea, from whence Venus fprang, it is full oftempeftuous Defires, and ftor- my Disappointments. How many Vefiels have beert fhipwreck’d there? How many Goods loft ? What De- ftru&ion, not only of Men’s Eflates, but of their Un- . derftandings alfo, have happened there? Inftances of which, every body, who is not blind, has obferved. 6 . Confider the Adulteries, Rapes, and Incefts of which Venus is accufed, and you will find which Way her Beauty tends. See the Precipices into which that Ignisfatuus^ in her Eyes, betrays its Admirers. Though a Amare efle amatori amarum, her Of the Gods of the Heathens . 129 JicrFace appears pure and cool as the Ice, it creates a paflion both impure and hot as Fire. From that Stream offparkling Fire which comes from her .Eyes, Clouds of dark and hellifh Impurity, and black Mitts of Lutt, proceed. Thus, by a ftrange Con tradition, many are blinded by others Eyes, and find Tumults raifed in their Breads from the calm Serenity of others Looks ; grow pale at the Rednefs in their Cheeks - 3 lofe their own Beauty in admiring the Beauty of others, and grow immodeft by loving Modefty. P. How far, I prithee, will the Fervour and the flowing Tide of your Wit and Fancy carry you ? The Beauty of this Goddefs, I fee, has raifed your Admira¬ tion. M. It has rather moved my Indignation : But, how¬ ever, you do well in flopping me. She hath detained us longer than I expc£ied, though not without Rea- f'on ; becaufe fhe is one of the greateft of all the God- defies. The reft are lefs illuftrious, and will by no Means detain us fo long. CHAP. XIII. Latona, T ATO N A, whom you fee ftanding next fo% " was the Daughter of Phoebe and Cans the Titan* So great was her Beauty that Jupiter fell in Love with her, and deflowered her : When Juno perceived that fhe was big with Child by him, fhe caft her out of Heaven to the Earth, and obliged Terra , by an Oath, not to give her any where an Habitation to bring forth in : And befides, b fhe fet the Serpent Python upon her, to perfe- uteherall over the W*orld. Juno, however, was dif- “ Apollodor. L 1, Ovid. 6. Metam. b Orph. in Hymn. K appointed 13 0 Of the Gods of the Heathens* appointed in every Thing; for the Ifland Delos re¬ ceived Latona , where, under a Palm, or an Olive-tree, Cie brought forth Diana ; who, as foon as fhe was born, performed the Office of Midwife to her Mother, and took Care of her Brother //potto as foon as he was born. P . But if Terra fwore that flie would allow no Place to Latona , how could file bring forth in Delos ? M. Very well; a for they fay. That that Ifland for¬ merly floated in the Sea, and at that Time was hid un¬ der the Waters when Terra took her Oath, but emerged afterwards by the Order of Neptune , and became fixed and immoveable for Latona’ s Ufe; from which Time it was called h Delos, becaufe it was now vifible, like other Places. P. But why did the Ifland Delos emerge for Latom\ X Jfc ? < | M. That is not ft range : For this Ifland was Sifter , to Latona. Some fay, that her Name was formerly' y/jhria , whom Jupiter loved and courted, but flic was converted into an Ifland : But others report, that fhe was c converted into a ghtail, and flew into this Ifland. which was therefore, among other Names, called' 1 Qrtygia . Niobe’s Pride, and the Barbarity of the Countrymen of Lycia , increafe the Fame of this God-i deft. ! Niobe was the Daughter of Tantalus , and the Wife of Arnphion , King of Thebes . c She was fo inriched with all the Gifts of Nature and Fortune, and her Happinefsi was fo great, that file could not bear it; wherefore,: puffed up with Pride, and full of Self conceit, fhe began! to defpife Latona , and to efteem herfelf greater than! her, faying. Is any Happinefs to be compared to mhu t \ p f ! a Lucian, in Dial. Iridis & Neptuni, h AjjAo*, id ell, i • confpicua Sc manifefla. c Ovid. i^. Met. d \Atto7«; o^vyocy a. coturnice. e Ovid, 6. Mctam. * ivh \ i v % M 2 Of the Gods of the Heathens » 131 * who a?n out of the Reach of Fortune ? foe may rob me of much JVeedthy but foe carat of injure me, fence fee ?nuft leave me feill very rich . Does any one’s JNealth exceed mine ? Is any one’s Beauty Uhc mine P Have 1 not feeven mo ft beautiful Daughters P And as many ingenious and bandfome Sons ? And have I ?iot therefore Rea Jon to be proud ? In this Manner did (lie boaft of her Happioefs, and defpife others in Comparifon of herfelf; but her mad Pride, in a fhort Time, deprived her of a)] that Happinefs which fhe had poflefled* and reduced her from the Height of good Fortune to the 1 owe ft Degree of Mifery : For when Latona faw herfelf defpifed, and her Sacrifices difturbed by Niche , {he appointed Apollo and Diana to punifh the Injury that was offered to their Mother. Immediately they two go, with their Quivers well filled with Arrows, to Niche's Houfe; where firft they kill the Sons, then the Daughters, and next the Father, in the Sight of Niobe , who by that Means b was ftupified with Grief, till at length fhe was * n ll'jorftm qnam cut pofjit forttma tiocere ; Multaque ut eripiat , multo mi hi plura relinquet • In quamcumque donuts adverti lit?tibia partem , Immenfe fpeciantur opes . Acccdat eodem Digna Ded facies . Hide rotas adjice Jeptem , Et tot idem juvenes : & ttiox gazer ofque, numtfque : Qtucrite nunc habeat quant nofera Juperbza caufam P My State’s too great for Fortune to bereave; Tho’ much fhe lavifh, fhe much more mull leave. Throughout my Court behold in ev’ry Place Infinite Riches ! Add to this a Face Worthy a Goddefs : Then, to crown my Joys, Seven beauteous Daughters, and as many Boys. All thefe by Marriage to be multiply’d. Behold, have we not Reafon for our Pride ? b - —Or ha ref edit Exonimcs inter natos , natafque , vir unique, Dirigzbtqnc malis. Idem, ibid. She by her Hufband, Sons, and Daughters fits A Childlefs Widow, waxing it iff with Woes, . K 2 turned i j2 Of the Gods of the Heathens. turned into Marble, which, becaufe of this Misfortune, fheds many Tears to this Day. The Rufticks of the Country Lycia , in Afa , did alfo experience the Anger of Latova with their Ruin ; for, when (he wandered in the Fields very big with Twins, the Heat of the Weather, and the Toil of her Journey, brought fuch a Drought upon her, that (he aim ©ft fain¬ ted for Third:: At lad difeovering a Spring in the Bot¬ tom of the Valley, {he ran to it with great Joy, and fell on her n Knees to drink the cool Waters; but the neighbouring Clowns hindered her, and bid her depart. She earneftly begged Leave, and they as furlily denied it: She did not defire, b (hefaid, to muddy the Streams by wafhing herfclf in them, but only to' quench her Third, ;i *- gelidos potura liquor es . To quench her Third with the refrefhing Stream, k* Quid'probidetis aquas ? vfus conwumis aquarian cjl Quas tauten ut delis, fupplex peto. Non ego noftros Abluere hie art us, laffataque membra parabam r tied rele-uare Jitim . Caret os humore loquentis , JEt fauces arent, into Heaven. j Gepbalus married Procris , the Daughter of the King i of Athens. When Aurora could by no Perfuafion move j him to violate his- Marriage-Vow, fhecarried him into i Heaven ; but even there fhe could not fhake his Con- ** _ | ftancy : Therefore fhe fent him again to his Wife Pro- • cris^ difguifed in the Habit of a Merchant; who, being defirous to try her Fidelity to her abfent Hufband, temp- : ted her, with much Courtfhip and many Prefents, to yield to his Defires ; and, when fhe almoft confented, hecaft off his Difguife, and chid his Wife for her Inconftancy, i She was greatly afhamed, and hid herfelf in the Woods; j hut afterwards was reconciled to her Hufband, and gave = him an Arrow, which never milled the Mark, whichIhe | had received from Mime . When Cephalus had this Ar- \ row, he fpenthis whole Time in hunting and purfuing’ wild Beafts. d Procris , fufpeflirig that her Hufband I loved fome Nymphs, went before, and lay in a to difeover the Truth ; but when fhe moved careldly j in the Bufh, her Hufband heard the Ruffling, and,i thinking that fome wild Beall was there, drew his Bow, j and fhot his Wife with his unerring Arrow. j Tit bonus was the Son of Laomedon , arid Brother of, Priamus : c Aurora , for his fingular Beauty, carried! _ a Grasce dicitur ’H&>s & ’E^c unde Eous Sc Heous: Lati*j nis nominatur Axirora 9 quail Aurea. Fit enim, ut inquit Or-J pheus in Hymnis, ’Ayystaa ©£« IVroVos* id eil, Solis Nun*| cia. ^ h Hefiod. in Theogon. c Ovid.-y. Metam. Pafl'l fan. in Lacon. d Ovid. Metam. 7. c Horatius, l.-l Carm. | him] Ofthe Gods of the Heathens. 135 him up to Heaven, and married him ; and, inftead of a portion, obtained from the Fates Immortality for him': She had Memnon by him ; but fhe forgot to afk the Fates to grant him perpetual Youth, fo that he became fo old and decrepid, that, like an Infant, he was rocked to Sleep in a Cradle. Hereupon he grew weary of Life, and,wifhing for Death,afked Aurora to grant him Power to die. She faid, that it was not in her Power to grant it; but that fhe would do what file could ; a and there¬ fore turned her Hufband into a Grafhopper, which, they fay, moults when it is old, and grows young again. P. And what became of Memnon ? M. Memnon , their Son, went to Troy., to alii ft King Priam , where, in a Duel with Achilles , he was killed ; b and, in the Place where he fell, a Fountain arofe, which every Year, on the fame Day on which he died, fends forth Blood inftead of Water. But, as his Body lay upon the Funeral Pile to be burnt, it was changed into a Bird, by his Mother Aurora’s Interceflion $ and ma¬ ny other Birds of the fame Kind flew out of the Pile with him, which, from his Name, were called Aves Memnonits: Thefe dividing themfelves into two Troops, and, furioufly fighting with their Beaks and Claws, with their own Blood, appe&fed the Ghoft of Memnon , from whom they fprung. There was a Statue of this Memnon, made of black Marble, and fet up in the Temple of -Serapis at Thebes in Egypt , of which c they relate an incredible Story : For it is faid, that the Mouth of this Statue, when firft touched by the Rays of the rifing Sun, fent forth a fweet and harmonious Sound, as though it rejoiced when its Mother Aurora came, but, at the Setting of the Sun, it fent forth a low melancholy Tone, as though it lamented its Mothers Departure. 3 Ovid. Metam. 1. 9 . h Ovid. 13 , Metam. * Fucian, in PJiilofoph. Tzetzes Club 6 . K 4 And 136 Of the Gods of the Heathens . And thus I have told you, Palaopbilus , all Things, which I thought ufeful, concerning the Celeltial Gods and Goddeffes. P. How much am I indebted to you for this, my moll kind Friend? But what now? Are you going away? Will you not keep your Word ! Did you not promife to explain all the Images in the fabulous Pan¬ theon ? M Never trouble yourfdf; what I undertake I will furely perform. But would you have us flay here all Day without our Dinner ? Let us dine, and we will foon return again to our Bufinefs. Come, you fhall dine with me in my Houfe. P. Excufe me. Sir j I will not give you that Trouble, I had rather dine at my own Inn. M. What do you talk of Trouble? I know no Per- fon, whole Company is more obliging and grateful. Let us go, I fay: You arc not your own Mailer To¬ day. Obey then. P, I do fo$ I wait upon you. PART; “Pi ATT C II A P. I. Of the Terreftrial Deities. SECT. I. Saturn, his Image, Family, and Actions, r ew € O W certainly, fince we have dined fo ^ well, you will fpeak, and I {hall mind better. Come on : Whereabouts will ^ ^ a? y ou ^ ave me J°°k • ,,j Ad. Look upon the Wall on the Right-hand; becaufe it will be ill Luck to begin from the Left: Upon that Wall, which is the fecond Part of the Pantheon , as well as of our Difcourfe, you fee the Tcrrejlrial Deities divided into two Sorts ; for fomeof them inhabit both the Ci¬ ties and the Fields indifferently, and are called in ge¬ neral a the Perrcjirial Gods: Rut the others live only in the Countries and the Woods, and are properly cal- s 3 8 Of the Gods of the Heathens . led a the Gods of the Woods* We will begin with the in Pc. Of the TcrreJlrialGods (which are fo called, becaufe their Habitation is in the Earth) the mod: celebrated are Saturn j Janus , Vulcan , JEolus^ and Mamas. The Terr efi rial Goddejfs are Vcjla^ Cybele y Ceres , the Muje^ and Themis ; they are equal in Number to the Cele- ftial Gods and Goddeiles. We will begin with the elded', Saturn , whofe Image you fee there. P . Is that decrepid, wrinkled, old Man b Saturn , with a long Beard, a hoary Plead ? PIIs Shoulders are bowed like an Arch, and his Jaws are hollow and thin 5 his Eyes are full of Corruption, and his Cheeks funk, his Nofe flat, his Forehead full of Furrows, his Chin turning up, his Lips black and blue, his little Ears flagging, and his Hands crooked ; c his right Hand holds a nifty Scythe, and his left Hand a Child, which he is about to devour. lid. It is indeed Saturn , the Son of Terra (or Vejla) and Caelum^ d Ccelus , or Caelzus , c who was the Son of /Ether and Dies , and the ancienteft of all the Gods. This Cesium (according to the Story) married his own Daughter Vejla , and begat many Children of her, the mod eminent of which was Saturn^ whofe Brothers we re the Cyclop s 7 Oceanus , Titan , f the h u n d red-handed Giants, and divers others ; his Sifters were Ceres , Tctbys> zndOps, or Rhea (whom he afterwards married.) The Sifters perfuaded their Mother Vejla to exclude Titan or Thames^ the deleft Son, and to appoint Saturn Heir of Iiis Father’s Kingdom. When Titan faw the fixed Resolution of bis Mother and Sifters, he would not a Dii astern iylveflres rare tantum &• in fylvis degunt. n 7 - dineid. c Martian, apnd Lilium Gyrald. d Grace dicitur c Nonn. lib. 21. Dionyf. Lad. Placid, in Thebaid. I. 6. f Cenu'man u ftrivc Of the Gods of the Heathens. 139 ftriv’e again ft the Stream, but voluntarily quitted his Right, and transferred it upon Saturn , under Condi¬ tion, that he fhould not bring up any Male Children* that fo, after Saturn's Death, the Kingdom might re¬ turn to the Children of Titan . P. Did Saturn accept that Condition ? M- He not only accepted, but finccrely kept it, whilft he could ; but at laft his Defign was prevented : For when his Wife Ops perceived that her Hufband de¬ voured ali her Male Children, when fhe brought forth the Twins, 'Jupiter and Juno , fhe fent only Juno to him, but fent Jupiter to be nurfed in Mount Ida , by the Pricftefles of Cybcle , who were called Curetes , or Corybantes . It was their Cuftom to beat Drums and Cymbals, while the Sacrifices were offered up, and the Noife of them hindered Saturn from hearing the Cries of Jupiter. By the fame Trick file alfo faved Neptune and Pluto from her devouring Hufband. P. Was this Artifice ever difeovered to Saturn? M. Yes ; and he demanded the Boy of Ops ; but Ops wrapped up a Stone in Swaddling cloaths, and deli¬ vered that to her Hufband, to be devoured inftead of Jupiter , and Saturn fwallowed it down in a Moment. P. What did Titan do, when he faw himfelf cheated, and the Agreement broken ? M. To revenge the Injury done to him, he railed Forces, and brought them againft Saturn , and, making both him and Rhea Prifoners, he bound them, and {hut them up together in u Hell, where they lay, till Jupiter , a few Years after, overcame the Titans , and fet his Fa¬ ther and Mother again at Liberty. P. I fuppofe that Saturn remembered this Kindnefs, and favoured Jupiter afterwards. M. On the contrary, he ftrove to take away his Life, b becaufe he heard by an Oracle, that he fhould a In Tar taro, b Enn, in Euemero* be s 3 8 Qf t? je Gods of the Heathens . led a the Gods of the TVoods. We will begin with the fir ft* Of the Ter ref rial Gods (which are fo called, bccaufe their Habitation is in the Earth) the moft celebrated are Saturn , Janus , Vulcan , SEolus y and Mourns. The 'Terr eft rial Goddejfes are Vejla , Cybele , Ceres ^ the Mufe^ and Themis ; they are equal in Number to the Cele- ftial Gods and Goddefles- We will begin with the eldeft, Saturn ,• whole Image you fee there. Is that decrepid, wrinkled, old Man b with a long Beard, a hoary Head ? His Shoulders are bowed like an Arch, and his Jaws are hollow and thin 5 his Eyes are full of Corruption, and his Cheeks funk, his Nofe flat, his Forehead full of Furrows, his Chin turning up, his Lips black and blue, his little Ears flagging, and his Hands crooked ; c his right Hand holds a rufty Scythe, and his left Hand a Child, which he is about to devour. H 4 . It is indeed Saturn , the Son of Terra (or Veft a) and Caelum? 5. As Noah curfcd his Son Ham , becaufc he faw his Father's Nakednefs with Delight ; f Saturn made a Law, that whofoever faw the Gods naked fliould be puniflied. 6. Plato fays g that Saturn and his TVife Rhea, and ihofe with them, rue re born of Ocean us and Thetis : And thus AWZ?, and all that were with him, were as it were new born out of the Waters of the Deluge, by the Help of the Ark* And if a Ship was ftamped upon the ancient Coins, h becaufe Saturn came into Italy in a ' Ship; furely this Honour belonged rather to North , who in a Ship preferved the Race of Mankind from utter Definition. 7. Did Noah foretel the Coming of the Flood P So • did Saturn foretel 1 that there fliould be great Ffjtan- * _. — — - * 1 , _ • . — 2 2 Sam. xvi. 17. b Exod. x. c Gen. xlvi. 22. d Alt- rcl Victor, de Origine Gentis Romans. c Macrob. Satur- nal. 1 . c. 6. Lucian, in Ep. Sat. f Callimachus in Hymn. e K porog k} Pico o&ot (a.stcI tovtuv, &c. id eft, Saturn us So Rhea Sc qui cum illis fuere ex Oceano Sc Thctide nati per- hibentur. Plato in 1 irnzeo. il Plutarch, in ' Pui/~&iCv.'j?e. K{''vo<; mg’cxrvptciivEtv YcfsoBcct '8J?.%&os'o(s*(3pcJv 9 See, id eft, Saturn us pra:nunciat magnam imbrium vim futuram, & fabricanaam efiearcam, & in ea cum volucribus, reptilibus, atquejumen¬ tis efle navigandum. * Alex. Polyhiftor, apud Cyril, contra Julian. 1. r, % L r titles *4 6 Of the Gods of the Heathens. titles of Rain , and an Ark built , in which Men, and Birdu and creeping Things Jhould all fail together. 8. Saturn is laid to have devoured all his Sons, but thefe three, f up iter , Neptune, and Pluto . So AW;, the Paftor and Prophet, and as it were the Father of all Mortals, may be faid to have condemned and de¬ ftroyed all Men, u becaufe he foretold that they would be deftroyed in the Flood. For, in the Scripture- Phrafe, the Prophets are faid to do the Thing which thy foretel Jhall be done hereafter . Thus when the b Prophet lays, tv ben I came to dejlroy the City % he means, when l came to foretell that the City floould be defrayed. But as Saturn had three Sons left to him not devoured; fo had Noah three, Scm 7 Chain, and .Japhet 7 who were not deftroyed in the Flood. Furthermore, thefe Reafons may perfuade us that Noah's Son Cham is Jupiter: i. Plis Hebrew Name Plain is by many called Cham, from whence it is plain, “She Egyptians had the Name dfk'j [ Amonn ] and the A- fricans, Ammon or Hammon. 2. Cham was theyoungeft Son of Noah, as Jupiter was of Saturn . 3. Jupiter is • feigned to be c Lord of the Heavens \ thus Cham had A frica , which Country is efteemed nearer the Heavens ; than other Countries, becaufe it has the Planets vertical, ' 4. Jupiter gelded his Father,, which Stones feem to be ; taken from the twenty-fecond Verfe of the ninth? Chapter o tGencfis, where it is written, And Ham few \ the Neke chiefs of his Father, and cold ; or, and cut off f \ for fo it might, by Miftake, be read in the Ilebnv)\ Tongue, by altering only one or two Vowels. j Japhcl is the fame with Neptune 3 c for as Neptunt \ had the Command of the Sea, fo the Ifands and Lem* j field's fell chiefly to Jap bet's Lot. a Hebrews xi. 7. b Eaek. xliii. 2. * c Callimach. Hynin.,1 nd Jovem. Lucan. 2. 9. d Et nuncia-uit , vajagged, pro quo^ facile legi potuit vejaggod, id eft, abfeidit ; turn maxintfj cum vocalia pun£ta nulladum eratu fublciipca confonanlibus»| c Laclantius de faiia Religione, 1 . 1. c. 1* But Buthowfhall we prove thatS*»2 was Pluto? What carried him into Hell ? Not his Piety and Holinefs, by which he excelled his Brothers, and glorified his own- Name ; But, perhaps, becaufe he was fo holy, and fo p-reat an Enemy to Idolatry, the Idolaters hated him vvhilft he lived, and endeavoured to blacken his Memo¬ ry when he died, by fending him to the Stygian Dark- nefs, and putting into his Hand the Sceptre of Hell. S E C X V. A Philofophical Senfe of the Fable . Saturn, Time. T HE Grech a Words fignifying Saturn and "Time differ only in one Letter ; from whence it is plain, that, by Saturn , Pune may be meant. And, on this Account, b Saturn is painted devouring his Chil¬ dren, and vomiting them up again ; as indeed Time de¬ vours and confumcs all Things which it has produced, which at length revive again, and are as it were re¬ newed. Orelfe, Days, Months, and Years are the Children of Time, which he conftantly devours and produces a - new*. Sometimes he is painted in the Midi! betwixt two young Boys and two Girls -> and Tune is furrounded by the different Seafons of the Year, as Parents are by their Children. Laftly, as Saturn has his Scythe , fo has Tune too, with which he mows down all Things ; neither can the hardeft Adamant withftand the Edge thereof. a Kp-froj, Saturnus, xpovos Tempus. b Cicero z. de Nat. Orph. in Hymn, ad Saturn. JEfchyl. in Eumen, L 2 CHAP. % 148 Of the Gods of the Heathenst CHAP. 'll. SECT. I. Janus, his Image . P0 f~\ Strange !• What is this ? An image with two Faccs, and one Plead only ! H 4 f. It is fo ; and by thofe f'aces he fees the Things placed both before and behind him. It is '"(amis the two-faced God \ holding a Key in his Right-hand, and a Rod in his Left. Beneath his Feet you foe twelve Altars. If he could lay afide that Rod and Key, perhaps, according to his Cuftom, he would ex- prcls to you the Number Three-Hundred with one Hand, and the Number Sixty-Five by the other 5 by differently moving, bending, and weaving his Fingers. P. I do not thoroughly underftand your Meaning, M. You will presently clearly and perfectly under¬ ftand both what 1 fay, and what you fee with your Eyes. Stay a little, till I explain the Four in oft remarkable Names of this God : For, in fo doing, I fhall not only explain this Picture, but alfo tell you whatever Things arc neceftary concerning Janus in this Place. a Bifrons Deus, Ovid.- SEC T. II. Names and Adi ions of Janus. S OME a fay that Janus was the Son of Cashs and Hecate : And that his Name was given him b from a Word figniTying to go or pals through. From whence it is , that c Thoroughfares are called , in the Plural Num- a Arnob. cont. Gentes. b Janus quafi Ganns abeuvdc . c Unde fit, ut tranfitiones perviae Jani (plurali numero) fo¬ re bue in liminibusprofanarum tedium januas dicer entur.. Cic. 2. do Nat. 3. pl.m Pqqe z4-8 Of the Gods of the Heathens . *49 i f Tani \ and the Gates before the Doors of private jjhufeSi januse. A Place at JZmw* was called >' am 3 a where were three Images of 'Janus : hi this Place Ufuivrs and Creditors always met to pay and receive Money- And this Place is mentioned both by b Tally and c Horace. • . he is painted with two Faces, fo he is called by Pifl d Bifrons , and by OwV fc Biceps,: Becaufe, fo rrreat was his Prudence, that he faw both the Things pair, and thofe which were future. Or, elfe, becaufe by Ja?ius the World was thought to be meant, view¬ ing‘with its two Faces the principal Quarters of it, the Eaft and Wed: He is alfo deferibed f zvithjour Faces , from the four Quarters of the World-; becaufe he go¬ verns them by his Counfel and Authority. Orbecaufe, as he is Lord of the Day, with his two Faces, he ob- ferves both the Morning and the Evening ; as s Horace fays. When Romulus , King of the Romans > made a League with Tail us. King of ihe Sabines, they fet up an Image o Vjanus Bifons , intended thereby, to reprefent h both Nations, between which the Peace was concluded, a Acron. in Horat. 1. 2 . Sat. 8 . b Viri optimi.ad me¬ dium [anurn fedentes. Cicero de Ofiic. 2 . Dempiler. in Pa- ralip. c Imus So fummus Janus. Horat. 1. 1. ep. 1 . fl Virg. 12 iEncid. L ' Jane Biceps anni facile labenils imago> Solus de fipsris , qui fact terga *uideu Thou, Double Pate, the fliding Year doll: /hew, r i he only God that thine own Back canil view* Quadrifrons. S Matitt'me patci *, feu Jane, libenfior audit. Unde homines eperum primes njitaeque labores luftituunt —— Old Janus, if you pleafe, grave two-fac’d Father, •O.r elfe bright God o’the Morning, chu/eyou whether. Who dat’ii the Lives and Toils of mortal Men, h EfFecerunt Emulacrum Jano Bifronti quail ad imaginem duorum populoram. Seivius in izA^neid. Jj Numa 150 Of the Gods of the Heathens . Nu?na afterwards built a Temple., which had double Doors, and dedicated it to that fame "Janus . When Falifcl , a City of Heiruria , was taken, a an Image of Janus found ivhhfour Faces ; whereupon the Temple of Janus had four Gates. But of that Tem¬ ple we fhall fpeak by and by. He was called 'Turnkey , or Club-bearer? [Claviger} from the and j&yi in his Hands. He held the Rod, becaufe he was the b Guardian cf the TVciys\ and the Keys, for thefe Reafons : 1. He was the Inventer of Locks, Doors, and Gates, which are called Jamice? after his Name \ and himfclf is called c Janitor , becaufe Doors were under his Pro- ted! ion. 2. He is the Janitor of the Year, and of all the Month* ? the firfE of which takes the Name of January from him. To Juno belong the Calends of the Months, and {he committed them to his Care, wherefore he is called by fome Junonius , and <] Martial takes Notice, that the Government of the Year was committed to him; for which Reafon, c twelve Altars were dedicated to him, according to the Number of the Months 5 as there were alfo twelve fmall Chapels in his Temple. f The Con- fids were, among the Romans? inaugurated in the Tem¬ ple of Janus , who were from thence faid s to open the Tear . Upon the Calends of January (and as Macroom fays on the Calends of March) a new Laurel was hung a Captis Falifcis inventum eft fimulacrum jani Quadri- frontis, Servius in 7. ^Eneid. b Redior viarum. Lil. Gyr. - c Gra:ce GupuToz* d aI nnerum , vitidique fatcr pttlcherritne mundi. Gay Founder of the World, and of our Years. Mari . 1 . 10. Epigy- 28. e Van lib. Human. Sidon. Apollin. Carm. 7. 1. Sat. c. 12. f Sidon. ibid. sAperire annum. Vide Lexicogr. upon Of the Gods of the Heathens . i % x •upon the Statue of Janus 9 and the old Laurel taken away 5 of which Cuftom a Ovid makes mention. P. Was this done, becaufe he was the Inventer of Laurel Garlands ? M . Pliny thought not. but believed this Cuftom was occafioned, becaufe Janus rules over the Year ; b The Statue , fays he, of Jan us, which was dedicated by Numa, bad its Fingers jo cotnpofed , to Jignify the Number of Three'hundred' Jixty-five Days \ to Jheiv that Janus was cl God , by his Knowledge in the Year , .and Thne and Ages . c He had not thefe Figures deferibed on his Hand, but had a peculiar Way of numbering them, by bending, ftretching, or mixing his Fingers , of which Numera¬ tion many are the Opinions of Authors. 3. He holds a Key in his Hand, becaufe he is, as it were, the fl Door through which the Prayers of Mankind have Accefs to the Gods. For, in all the Sacrifices, Prayers were firft offered up to Janus . And If anus him- felf gives the fame Reafon, c as we find in Ovid y why* before Men facrificed to any of the other Gods, they firft rfWc'o Sacrifice to him. Rut Fefius gives another • « •* a Lanrea Fland ;ii busquee loto perfiitit a?vno y Tcl/itur , & frondes funt in hot?., re nova:. Fall. I. 3. The Laurel, that the former Year did- gface, T’ a frefh and verdant Garland yields his Place. b Qnod Janus Geminus aNuma Rege dicatus digitis ha iiguratis ut trecentorum quinquaginta quinqne (fexaginta quinque alii legunt) dierum nota, per fignificationem anni, temporis. Sc asvi, fe Deum ihdicaret. Piinius, Vide etiam Athen. L 34. c. 7. & Lil. Gyr. c Tiraq. Lil. Gyr* Apu«> leii 2. Apol. See, d Arnob. contra (Rentes. Cur quemvis aliorum nutnina placem 9 Jane , tibi primzmi thura merunique fero P Vi poffis adit urn per me, qui limit: a fervo , Ad quojeunque voles, inquit , habere deos* Ovid, Fall. 1 . U Why is’t that, tho’’ I other Gods adore, I firft mu ft Janus ? Deity implore ? Becaufe I hold the Door, by which Accefs Is had to any God you would addrefs. L 4 Reafon 152 Of the Gods of the Heathens. Rcafon why Prayers and Sacrifices were, in the firft Place, offered to 'Jama \ to wit, hecaufe Men thought that all Things took, their Seine; from '} 'anus- therefore thev iirie made their Supplications to him as to a common Father. For though the Name :l Father is given to ail the Gods, yet 'Janus v/as particularly called by this Name. Ke firft built Temples and Altars, b and infti- offered to any other Deity . Frankincenfe was never of¬ fered to him, though Ovid mentions it in the Vcrfes adjoined, which therefore he infers either by Poetical Liccnfe, or only in refpeft to the Sacrifices which were in ufe in his Time. For as d Pliny writes, ’They did not facrifiee with Frankincenfe in the Times of the ‘ Trojans , Neither does Homer in the leait mention Frankincenfe in any Place, where he fpeaks concerning Sacrifices; which fo ex aft an Author would never have omitted, if it had been in ufe. Neither do I find a Greek Word that properly figniiies Thus ; for S vou 9 [ T'hnon ] or S««, \T'huio?i~\ fignifies not only Thus , but any odoriferous Smell. He was alfo called Patulcius and Chiftus , or Patulacius and Clujius \ from c opening and /hutting \ for in the Time of tine War ‘Janus’ s 'Temple was open, but fhut in Time of Peace. This Temple was founded by Romulus and Tint ins 9 and, as I faid before, Hu via or¬ dained that it fhould be opened when the Romani a Quod fucrit omnium primus a quo rerum omnium fac¬ tum putabant initium : Ideo ei fupplicahant velut paienti. Feilus, I. 3. in verbo Chaos. b Virg. FEneid. 8. Juvenal. Sat; 6. Servius in 2 Georg. c Proptcreaque in Omni fa- crificio perpetua ei prrefatioprrEmittitur, farque alli Sc vinum praslibatur. Fab. Pied. 1 . 1. de Anr. Lat. d Iliads Tern- poribus Thure non fupplicatum, Plin. 1 . 13. c. 1. Vide Dempfh in Paivilip. e a patendo vel patefaciendo Sc clau- dendo.. Servius in 1. /Eneid. Claud, de Hon. 6. Conf. waged Of the Gods of the Heathens . 153 waged War,' but fhut when they enjoyed Peace. l£ is op- :> »:i Time of War, becaufe a Spring of hoc .• ;ofe out of the Place v/here this Temple ftands* v/hen Romulus fought with the Sabines , and forced the Ericmv to march away therefore in War they opened tiiat Temple, hoping for the fame or the like Aflift- anc ej or, it may he, rather, a becaufe they that go to War, ought to think of Peace, and wifh for a quick Return into their Native Country. Ovid mentions both thefe Names of Janus in a b Dibich, and firgil defcribes c the Manner and Occa- fion of opening his Temple, and the d Confequences a Serv. in 7. AEneid. b Nomina ride bis, moefb namque Pat nidus idem, Et me do finer ifico Clufius ore vocor. The Pricfl this Moment me Patulcius calls, and then Ne;:t Moment me he Clufius names again. c Sunt geniinai belli port re (fie nomine die unt) Religione finer re & jd-uifor mi dine Mart is. Centum rerei claudunt ucd/es rsiernaqueferri Rob or a ; ne: cufios abfifiit limine Janus. Has ubi cert a j'edct pat ribus font end a pugnre , Ipje dpuirinali trabea cindluque Gabino Lfignis, refer at Jiridentia limina C onfiul . , AEneid. 1. j „ Two Gates of Steel (the Names of Mars they bear) And bill are worfhipp’d with religious Fear, , Before his Temple band ; the dire Abode And the fear’d I hues of the furious God, Are fenc’d with brazen Bolts ; without the Gates The weary Guardian Janus doubly waits. Then when the facred Senate votes the Wars, The Roman Conful their Decree declares. And in his Robes the founding Gates unbars. d Afper a turn pefitis mitcficcnt Jrccula bellis : Cana fides, & Fefia, Remo cum firaire Quirinus Jura dab unt : dir a ferro & comp agi bus ardi is Claudentur belli port re. Furor impius intus , Smuci fedens fiuper arma, & Centura 6. Of the Gods of the Heathens 7 1 0 / to the Will of this nafty Wretch. But fhe refilled his Attempts, and in the Struggle his Nature fell from him upon the Earth, and produced the Monfter Erich- thoniits , Erich then s> or E richth aniens, who was a Boy with Dragon’s P'eet; to hide the monftrous Deformity of which, he fir ft invented Chariots. ‘Jupiter (as £ faid) confented that Vulcan fliould marry Minerva, if he could overcome her Mode fly. For, when Jidcan made Arms for the Gods, Jjup iter gave him Leave to chufc out of the Goddefies a Wife, and he chofe Mi¬ nerva: But he admonifhed Minerva , at the fame 'Lime, to refufe him, and preferve her Virginity, as fhe did admirably well. At Rome were celebrated the Vulcanic?, a Feafts in Honour of Vulcan ; at which they threw Animals into the Fire to be burnt to Death. The Athenians infti- tuted other Feafts to his Honour called Chaleea. A Temple befides was dedicated to him upon the Moun¬ tain b /Etna, from which he is fometimes named /Ef- i\tens. This Temple was guarded by Dogs, c whole Senfe of Smelling was fo exquifue, that they could dif- cern, whether the Perfons that came thither were Chafte and Religious, or whether they were Wicked : They ufed to meet, and Ratter, and follow the Good* efteeming them the Acquaintance and Friends of f'zd- con their Mafter ; but they barked and flew at the Bad;, and never left off tearing them, ’till they had driven them away. P, I have heard, unlefs lam mi (taken, that this Vnt~ can, by 'Jupiter s Command, made a living l-Vonion . Is it true ? M. It is a comical Thing to expedf Truth in Fallen It is indeed feigned, that the firft Woman was fafhion- ed by the Hammer of Vulcan , and that every God Ita difl'US dMi T'hc \c\iqc Keel yJ)A' terra. Vide Virg. 3 Georg b Var. ap. LiL c Pollux, 1 . 7. ex con tent lone apud LiL Gyr. 'i 1 I £ 8 Of the Gods of the Heathens * gave her fome Prefent, whence ffce was called P an . dor a . Pallas gave her Wifdom, Apollo the Art of Mufick, Mercury the Art of Eloquence, Venus g;ue her Beauty, and the reft of the Gods gave her other Accomplishments. a They fay alfo, that when Pro,, onethcits flole Fire from Heaven, to animate the Man xvhich he had made, 'Jupiter was incenfed, and font Pandora to Prometheus with a fealed Box, but Prome¬ theus would not receive it. He fent her with the fame Box again to the Wife of Epimethctts , the Brother of Prometheus; and file, out of a Curiofity natural to her Sex, opened it, which as foon as fhe had done, all Sorts of Difeafes and Evils, with which it was filled, flew among ft Mankind, and have infefted them ever fince, And nothing was. left in the Bottom of the Box, but Hope . a Paufan. in At. SECT. II. ''The Cyclops, Servants to V ULC AN, P. IirHAT black W thofe ? M. "They are Vulcan’s Servants, and work with him in his Shop. They were called b Cyclops , becaufe they had but one Eye, which was in the Middle of their Foreheads, of a Circular Figure : Neptune and Amphi- trite were their Parents. And the c Names of three of them were Brontes , Steropes , and Pyracinon; befides , nafty, one-eyed Fellows are b A kvi #^* circulus, & oculus. c Per rum exercchaut njaflo Cyclopes in antro . j Bronte/que, Steropefque* nudus membra Pjracmon . On their eternal Anvils here he found The Brethren beating, and the Blows go round. Virg* which) Of the Gods of the Heathens* ' i ^ tybicb, there were many more whofe Names are not mentioned, who all exercifed a the Art of Smithery under Vulcan , as we are taught by Virgil. a ———— Alii « \ ^ ~ N 1 At to m xecnti, a maio. c -- Cdcum in tenebris incendia vara uj omen fern Corripit , in nodum complex us ; id an pit iuhecrens Elifos oculos , id fccu?n /anguine gun nr. Yirg± The Monfier fpewing fruiclefs Flames he found ; He fqueez’d hig Throat, he wreath’d his Neck aroun And in a Knot his crippled Members bound : Then from the Sockets tore his burning Eyes ; Roll’d on a Heap the breathlefs Robber lies. hun 16 o Of the Gods of the ITeathens* him to Death. a His Cave was fo dark that it admit¬ ted not the leaft Ray of Light. The Floor of it was red with the Blood perpetually filed upon ir, and the Heads and Limbs of the Men he had murdered were faftened to the Poffs of the Doors. Cecculus alfo lived by Plunder and Robbery. He was fo called from the Smallnefs of his I£ycs (it is thought the noble Family of the Ccecilii at Jio?nc derived their Original from him.) Whilft his Mother fat by the Fire, a Spark flew into her Lap ; hereupon fhe grew big with Child, and, within the uf'ual Time, fhe brought forth this Son ; who was afterwards the Founder of the City Preenejle. b Others fay, that the Shepherds found Cecculus unhurt in the Midfl of the Fire, as foon as he was horn ; from whence he was thought to be the Son of Vulcan. To thefe Servants and Sons of Vid can , add the Shepherd Polyphemus , a Monfter not unlike them, born of Neptune. For, he had but one Eye in his Fore- Tread like the Cyclops 5 and he got his Living by Mur¬ ders and ^Robberies, like Cacas and Cesc ulus. c This * Hie fpelunca fuit jEoliam or Houflwld-goods. e She is efteem¬ ed the Prefideht and Guardian of Houfes , and one of the Houfhold Deities, not without Reafon ; fince file in¬ vented the Art of Building of Houfes: And therefore an Image of Vejia , to which they facrificed every Day, was placed before the Doors of the Houfes at Rome> a Ejfgietn nullam V'(jla nec.ignis babet . Ovid. Fall. 1 . 6 . No Image Vefta s Shape can e’er exprefs, * Or Fire’s-—- - b Plutarch, in Sympof. c Horn, in Hymn. d Ap.Lil. Gyr. 1. Strabo. c Hujus vis omnis ad aras foeos pertinet , Cic. de Nat. Deor. Lb. 2. r Ducitur a Grreco nomine erlaquod fccunh penatetn, domumfgnificat, £ Horn, in Hymn. Vi rg. 2. & Georg. 1- Eugraphius in And.Terent. Ad:. 4. Sc. 3. and Of the Gods of the Heathens* 169 and the Places where thefe Statues were fe£ up were called Vcjlibula from Vejla. This Goddefs was a Virgin , a and fo great an Admirer of Virginity, that, when 'Jupiter her Brother gave her Liberty of afking what file would, £he afked, tbatyft* might always be a Virgin , and have the firjl Oblations in all Sacrifices » Wherein (he not only obtained her Defire, but received this farther Honour b among the Romans , that perpetual Fire was kept in herTemple, amongft the facred Pledges of the Empire ; not upon an Altar, or in the Chimnies, but in earthen Veffels, hanging in the Air, which the Vejlal Virgins tended with fo much Care, that if by Chance this Fire was extinguifhed, all public and private Bufinefs was interrupted, and a Vocation pro¬ claimed, till they had expiated the unhappy Prodigy with incredible Pains. c And if it appears that the Virgins were the Qccafion- of its going out by Carelefnefs, they werefeverely punifhed,and fometimes with Rods. Upon the Kalends of March , every Year, though it was not extinguifhed, they ufed to renew it, with no other Fire than that which was produced by the Rays of the Sun. Ovid mentions both the elder and the younger Vcjla % a in the fixth Book of his Fafii. a Arid:. 5.I. 2. Ariftoph. in Vefpis. b Val. Max. 1 c. 4. Liv. 5. dec. 1. Val. Max. 1 . 4. c. 4. Pap. Scat, 1 . 4. Syl. 3. c Idem. c. 1. Ovid. Fall. 3. d Vefia eademefi) & Terra: fubefi vigil ignis utrique y Significant fedem Terra Focufque fuam. Vefia and Earth are one, one Fire they fhare. Which does the Centre of them both declare. SECT. II. An Explanation of the Fable. The Younger. Vesta the Vital Heat in the Body. F ROM hence we may cohje&ure, that when the Poets fay, that Vejla is the fame with Fire, the terrible, fcorching, blazing Fire of Vulcan's Forge is not 170 Of the Gods of the Heathens* not underftood $ nor yet the impure and dangerous Flames of Venus * of which we fpake above ; but a pure* unmixed benign Flame* fo neceffary for us* that Hu- ?nan Life cannot poflibly fubfift without it; whofe Heat s being diiFufed through all the Parts of the Body* quic¬ kens* cberifhes* refrefhes* and nourifhes us. A Flame really faered * heavenly * and drome; repaired daily by the Food which we eat; on which the Safety and Welfare of our Bodies depend. This Flame moves and actu¬ ates. the whole Body; and cannot be extinguifhed but when Life kfelf is extinguifhed together with it. And then comes a lafting Vacation * and a certain End is put to all our Bufinefs in this World. 13 ut ? if by our own Faults it is extinguifhed* we are guilty of our own Death* and deferve that our Memory fhould rot with our Bodies in the Grave, and that our Names fhould be entombed with our Carcafes ; which would bean .AfHicfion no lei's fevere* than was the Punifhment of the guilty Vefal Virgins * who were buried alive» CHAP. VII. SECT. I. Cyeele. Her Image . P . O T R A N G E ! Here is a Goddefs whole n Head *3 is crowned with Towers, what means this? Is fhe the Goddefs of Cities and Garrtfons ? 2 M. She is the Goddefs not of Cities only* but of all Things which the Earth fuftains. h She is the Earth itfelf: On the Earth are built many Towers and Oaftles, ib on her Head is placed a Crown of Towers. In her Hand fhe carries a Key, which* perhaps* you did not obferve* c becaufe in the Winter the Earth locks'thole W a Luc. I. 2. de Regn. b Servius 5. Sc 10. -^EnekL c Ifid. L 8. Treafures iHinimmi Of the Gods of the Heathens . 171 Treafures up, which he brings forth, and difpenfes with fo much Plenty in the Summer. She rides in a Chariot, becaufe the Earth hangs fufpended in the Air, balanced and poifedby its own Weight. But that Cha¬ riot is fupported by Wheels, becaufe the Earth is a vo¬ luble Body , and turns round : * and it is drawn by Lions, becaufe nothing is fo fierce, fo favage, or fo ungovern¬ able, but a motherly Piety and Tendernefs is able to tame it, and make it fubmit to the Yoke. I need not explain why her b Garments are painted with diverfe Colours, and figured with the Images of fevers 1 Crea¬ tures, fince every body fees that fuch a Drefs is fuitable to the Earth. a Ovid. Fait. 1 . 4. b Martian. Lil. Gyrald, SECT. II. Names of Cyeele. P. ? S.then this Goddefs called TerraP I M. No, 0 fhe is called Cybele , and Ops, and Rhea, and Dyndymcna , and Berecyntbia, and Bona Dca (the good Goddefs) and 1 data , and Pejjimtntia , and Magna Deoruin Mater (the great Mother of the Gods) and fometimes alfo Vcfta, All thefe Names, for differ¬ ent Reafons, were given to the fame Goddefs, who was the Daughter of Caslum , and of the elder Fiji a , and Saturn's Wife. She is called Cybele , cl from the Mountain Cyhclus ir* Phrygia, where her Sacrifices were infiituted fir ft. Or the this Name was given her from the Behaviour of her Priefts, who ufed e to dance upon their Heads, and tofs about their Hair like Madmen, foretelling Things to come, and making an horrible Nolle. They were ( Propertius, 1 . 3. Eleg. 16. d Stephanas. Strabo. e ’Atto re xvffiTsw, id eft, in caput faltarc, Suid. Servius in 3 *$nei4. named ny 2 Of the Gods of t7oe Heathens. seamed Gallic and this Fury and Outrage in prophefk ing is deferibed by 3 Lucian in his firft Book, Others again derive the Word Cybele from a b Cube* becaufe the Cube, which is a Body every Way fquare was dedicated to her by the Ancients.. She is called c Ops? becaufe £he brings Help and Af- isfiance to every Thing contained in this World. Her Name d Rhea is derived from that Abundance of Benefits, which, without ceafing, flow from heron every Side. c Dyndymene and Dindyme , is a Name given her from the Mountain Dindymus in Phrygia. Firgil calls her f Ad ait r Berecynthia , from Berecyn - thus? a Caftle in that Country ; and in the fame Place deferibes her numerous and happy Offspring. She was by the Greeks called £ Pajlthea \ that is, as the Romans ufualfy named her, the Mother of all the Gods 5 and, from the h Greek Word, fignifying Mo¬ ther, her Sacrifices are named Metroa , and to celc- 51 -- crinemqtte rot antes Sangithicum Populis ulularunt trijlia Galli . Shaking their bloody TrefTes, fiome fad Spell The Priefts of Cybcl to the People yell. h *At.'o tb Pefhis. c Quod opem ferat. i?uo, quod bonis omnibus circum flu at. c Honit. L i. Carm. f- qzcalis Berecynthia mater Twvehitur curm Phrygia ? turrit a per urbes ■■ L Idseunique 71 emus : hinc fida flentia facris, Etfunfti air rum Dornzna fubiere Leoties . JEneld, 1 . 3. Here Cybcle , the Mother of the Gods, With tinkling Cymbals charm’d th’ Idaan Woods, She fecret Rites and Ceremonies taught. And to the Yoke the favage Lions brought. e Ap. De la Cerda in yEneid. 3. f Loquendi magiftros homines habemus, tacendi Deos: ab illis filentium accipi- entes in i.iitiationibus & myfleriis. Piut.de Loquac. s Luc. I 1 I' Of the Gods of the Heathens • tj§ jfan among the Romans* 'The Senate a was a tittle bufied it pafs & Judgment in the Cafe, and refolve , ‘was the heft Man in the City . ^z> nondam Quacltorem, judicaveruntin tota civitate virum op¬ timum efic. b Hefiod. 1 . 1. c doro 'mergiv, aca- quod idem eft ac 'Creo, quod candtarum fruguin creatrixait Sc altrix. Cicero 2. deMat. Deoruxn. Ma¬ ter,. tie prof. Rel. c. iS. Scaligcr Sc Servius in i. Georg, Caliimach. Hymn, in Cererera. c PI in. 7. c. 50. rough Of the Gods of the Heathens .. 181 rough and uncultivated, covered with Briars, and un¬ profitable Plants : where there were no Proprietors of Land, they neglected to cultivate it ; when no-body had any Ground of his own, they did not a care to fix: Land-marks : But all Things were common to all JVlen, till Ceres , who had invented the Art of Hufban- dry 3 taught Men how to exercife it and then they be¬ gan to contend and difpute about the .Limits of thofe / Fields, from whofe Culture,they reaped fo much Pro¬ fit : And from lienee it was neceflary that Laws fhould be enabled to determine the Rights and Properties of thofe who contended. For this Reafon Ceres wa,s , named the b Foundrefs of .Laws. P. I underftand now the Meaning of her Crown 1 made of Corn ; but yet .I do not fee what that .Handful ' of Poppies fignifies. M. I will explain the Signification of that alfo in its Place; but firft let me fpeak offome other Things. 5 As, r. Sheds beautiful and well-fhaped, becaufe the Earth, which fhe refembles, appears beautiful and de- lightful to the Beholders; efpecialiy when it is array- | ed with Plants, diversified with Trees, adorned with Flowers, enriched with Fruits, and covered with h y * | Greens ; when it difplays the Honours of the .Spring, i and pours forth the Gifts of Autumn with a bountiful I Hand. n s-------— | a Prhna Ceres unco gleham dimo'vit aratro 9 I Pri/na dedit fruges alimentaque mitia t err is , a Prima dedit leges . Cereris fiait omnia tnunus* I Ceres was fhe who firft our Furrows plough’d : I Who gave fweet Fruits, and eafy Food allow’d, jj Ceres firft tam’d us with her gentle Laws, I From her kind Hand the World Subfiftance draws. Autjfgnare qutefcm, aut part ini limite campion. Or to make Land-marks, or to balk their Fields. c Lcgifera, Sc G razee Beo-(/. 6 latebramque petit , apt unique colort Nomen habet , njariis Jiellatus corpora guttis . Flies the old Wife, and creeps into a Hole, And from his ipeckled Back a Name he gets. SECT. Ili. rhe Sacrifices of Ceres. t A MONG all the Cerealia , or 'Sacrifices inftitu- ted to the Honour of Ceres , thefe which foliow are the chief; Eleujinia (by which b Name the God- • « - - - I * * - * ♦ ' * ^ * Mfll b Paufan. in Atticis, • ■ " clefs w Of the Gods of the Heathens. 185 ^efs herfelf was alfo known) were fo called, becaufe they were firft celebrated in the City Elcujis . Of thefe were two Sorts ; the Major a , confecrated to Ceres , and the Minora to Proferpina . a It was a Cuftom, that thofe, who were initiated in the Major a , never pulled off the Cloaths, which they then wore, till they fell off in Rags. b In both the Major a and Minora , a perpe¬ tual and wonderful Silence was kept: To publifh any Thing concerning them was a Crime; whence came the Proverb concerning fdent P erf ons , hWW' Elcujinia ; and the Word Myjlerium fignifies a religious Rite , from M ^ 5 0$ clciudo . Righted Torches were ufed in their Sacrifices, c becaufe Geres? with them, fought Proferpina ; and, up and down the Streets and the Highways, they cried out Proferpina , till they had filled all Places with their difmal Rowl¬ ings. Games were celebrated in thefe Sacrifices, in which the Vifiors d were honoured with a Barley Crown. The c Tbefmophoria were inftituted by Triptolcinus ; and thofe Women, who vowed perpetual Chaftity, were initiated in them. For fome Days a Faff was kept; and Wine was f altogether baniftied from her Altar; v/hence this ExprelHon came Cereri nuptias fa- core , which (among the Ancients) fignifies a Feaft where there was no Wine. Swine were facrificed to this Goddefs, s becaufe they hurt the Fruits of the a Plut. in Demetrio. b Ariffoph. in Pluto. c Seneca 1 . 7. Nat. Quarft. c. 3(0 d Nofturtiifque Hecate triajiis uhdata per urbes . vFneid. vide Servium. And Hecate by Night ador’d with Shrieks. L Pindar, in Iithm. f Pliny, 1 . 24. Servius in .iEneid. 3. 2 Prim a Ceres a UltaJ'uas meritd c the Countrymen following him with Dancing, and Leap¬ ing, and Acclamations of Joy, till all the Helds run g with the Noife. In the mean Time, one of them, a- dorned with a Crown, fung the Praifesof Ceres ; and af¬ ter they had offered an Oblation of mixed with Honey and Milk, before they began to reap, they fa- crificed the Sow to her. The Rites of thefe FLinbca- . _ • f CHAR valla are beautifully deferibed by Virgih 3 Flava Ceres , tihi fit nofiro de rure corona Spicea, qua: templi pendent ante fores . To thee, fairGoddefs, we’ll a Garden plait Of Ears of Corn, t’adorn thy Temple Gate. b Quod vi&ima ambiret arva: Serv. in 1. Georg. c Virg. 3* HT d Cun hi a tihi Cererem pubes agreflis adoret : Cut tu ladle fet vos, & miti dilue Baccho y “Ferque novas clrcum felix eat hofhafruges ; Gmms qzsam chorus t3 foci 2 comitentur ovanteSy Ft Cererem clamore vocent in ted?a .* r.eqne ante Falcem mat avis quifquam fupponat arifiis , ffgam Cercriy tort a redimitus temper a quercu , Det mot us incompofitos , & car min a die at. Let every Swain adore her Power divine. And Milk and Honey mix with fparkling Wine ; Let all the Choir of Clowns attend this Show, In long Proceffion fhouting as they go ; Invoking her to blefs their yearly Stores,. Inviting Plenty to their crowned Floors. Tibullu So Thus ; ■ i.. :wnr Pujrc / % 2B 7 Of the Gods of the Heathens . Thus In the Spring, and thus in Summer’s Heat, Before the Sickles touch the rip’ning Wheat, On Ceres call, and let the hib’ring Hind With Oaken Wreaths his hollow Temples bind : On Ceres let him call, and Ceres praife. With uncouth Dances, and with Country-Lays 0 CHAP- IX. SECT. I. rfhe Muses. ST heir Image . P o What Beauty, what Sweetnefs, what Elegance is here ! M* You mean in thefe Nine Virgins , a that are crowned with Palms ; Do you not ? P. Certainly. How pleafantly and kindly they fmile ! How decent and becoming is their Drefs! How handfomely do they fit together in the Shade of that Laurel Arbour ! How fkilfully fome of them play on the Harp, fome upon the Cittern, fome upon the Pipe, fome upon the Cymbal, and fome harmonioufly fmg and play at once ! Methinks I hear them with united Minds, Voice and Hands, make an agreeable Concord arifing from their different Inftruments, governing their lev era 1 Voices in fuch a Manner, that they make the mofl noble Harmony, whofe pleafing Charms, entering into my Ears, ravifh my Mind with Pleafure. M. They are the Mufes b the Miftreffes of all the Sciences, the Prefidents of the Muficians and Pods , and the Governors of the Feafts and Solemnities of the Gods. c Jupiter begat them of the Nymph Mnemofyne , who afterwards brought them forth upon the Moun¬ tain Fieri us. Some affirm that they had other Parents, 3 Corint. Muf. Bub 50. apud Lil. Gyrald. p b Hefiod. in Theog. 560. Orph. in Hymn, c Tzetzes Chil. 6„ and £-88 Of the Gods of the Heathens * and a ancient Writers fay, that they lived before piter , and were the Daughters of Ccelujn . They are called the Daughters of Jupiter and Mnemofyne (which, in Greek? fignifies Me?nofy) becaufe all Students and Scholars ought not only to have great Ingenuity, but ready Memories* 2 Muf. ap. LiL Gyr. SECT* II* 5 The Names of the Muses. X HE A'fofeSi or Mufa^ were formerly called Mo~ fa^ and were fo named from a a Gr£ek Word, that ngnines to enquire ; becaufe Alen, by enquiring o.f them, learn the Things of which they were before ignorant. But others fay, they had their Name from their Refemhlance , becaufe there is a Similitude, and an Affinity and Relation betwixt all the Sciences; in which they agree together, and are united with one another. Wherefore the Mufes are often painted with their Hands joined, dancing in a Ring; in the Middle of them fits Apollo , their Commander and Prince. The pencil of Nature deferibed them in that Manner upon the Agate which Pyrrhus , who made War againft the Roinans , wore in a Ring. For in it was a Reprefenta- iion of the Nine Mufes , and Apollo holding a Harp; and thefe Figures were not delineated by Art, but by the c fpontaneous Handy-work of Nature; and the Veins of the Stone were formed fo regularly, that every Mufe had her particular Diftindlion. a ’Atto TfcT [jA ecu, id eft, ab inquirendo. Plato in Gratylo. 15 M Serai, qua!! opoiovc-cti, id eft, ftmiles, Cafhodor, c Plin. 1 - 27 ^ c. i. SECT Of the Gods of the Heathens . i 89 SECT III. The Names of the HAT were the proper Names of each of the Mufes'? M- They had each of them a Name derived from fome particular Accomplifhment of their Minds or Bodies. The Firft, ' Calliope , was fo called ^ from the Sweet- nr fs of her Voice 5 £he prefutes over Rhetoric!: , and is efteetned the moft excellent of all the Nine. The Second, Clio, is fo named from b Glory. For fhe is the Hiftorical Mufe, and takes her Name from the Famoufiefs of the Things file records. The Third, Erato , has her Name c from Love , be¬ caufe (he lings of Amours ; or bee aide learned Men are belcvccl and praifed by others. She is alfo called Salt air ix j for fhe firft invented the Art of Dancing, over which file p refuted. She was alfo the In ventre fs of Poetry. The Fourth, Thalia , from tl her Gaiety , Brifknefs andPleafantry $ becaufe file fings pleafantly and wan¬ tonly. Some aferibe to her the Invention of Comedy others of Geometry. The Fifth, Melpomene , from e the Excellency of her Song, and the Melody foe makes when fhe fings. She is fuppofed to prefide over Tragedy , and to have invented Sonnets. The Sixth, Ter p/ichor e , has her Name from f the Plcafure foe takes in Dancing 9 becaufe fhe delights in Balls. Some call her Githarijlria. ■> 't* b ? a \ ** * A 7TQ rev KASt}<; 7 w _ • Schol. Ap. I. 5/ >1^- ab am ore. Ovid, de Arte. 1. 2 . d hWo toiT a ’/.cto iLOtfhr.c; 07 T 7 } q-> a {mlvitate VOC2S. a Gloria fc. reruni geftaruro cjuas memorat Attq TOV _ Am 1 , id eft, virere, germinare. Sc fiorere. Proc. in He- fiod. c a (/Jort&t/.cci cantor & modulor, vel «Vo rov •stcittv concentam facere. f ’A?ro *qo°d. Choreis deiefletur. The 1 go Of the Gods of the Heathens . The Seventh Euterpe , or Enterpia , from a for Singing . Some call her Tibicina ; becaufe according to them, fhe prefides over the Pipes : And fome fay. Logick was invented by her. The Eighth, Polyhy?nnia, or Polymnia , or Polymnew from b her excellent Memory : And therefore the Inven¬ tion of writing Hiftory is attributed to her ; which re¬ quires a good Memory- It was owing to her, c That the Songflers add , to the Verfes that they Jing , Hands and Fmgers , which fpeak ?nore than the Tongue; an exprcjfroe Silence ; <2 Language without Words 5 i/z Jhort, Gejlure and Action. The Ninth,, d Urania , was fo called either becaufe fhe fings of divine Things; or becaufe, through her Affiftance, Men are praifed to the Sides \ or becaufe, by the Sciences, they become converfant in the Con¬ templation of Things CeleftiaL Bahufius , a modern Poet, has comprifed the Names of thefe nine Mufcs in a e Diftich : That is, he has made the nine Mufes to Hand, which is fomethino- ftrange, but upon eleven Feet. Perhaps you will re¬ member their Names better, when they are thus joined together in two Verfes. 2 Ab £ y TEgynjc, jucunda nempein concentu b a nohU tnultus, memoria. c Plut. in Syinpof. quod car- iriinibus additre lint Orcheflxarum loquacifiimae manus, lin- guofi digiti, filentium clamofum, expofitio tacita, uno verbo geftus & a£tio. d J Ao ry yjayy, a Coelo. c Calliope , Polymneia , j Erato, Clio , citque Thalia , Melpomene, Euterpe, Terpjichore, XJrania . Babul. 4 . Epig. j, SECT, IV. The Names common to all the Muses. < P. TI 7 HAT Names have the Mufes common to V V them all ? AT* The mofl remarkable are. Hcli cenides , Of the Gods of the Heathens . HcUcontdes , or Helico?iiades , from the Mountain He- lim in Baeotia. ParnaJJides , from the Mountain ParnaJJus in Pbocis 9 which has two Heads 5 a where if any Perfon flept, he prefen tly became a Poet* It was anciently called Lar* taps, from Larnace , the Aric of Deucalion , which rett¬ ed here, and was named ParnaJJus , after the Flood*, from an Inhabitant of this Mountain fo called. Cither ides or Cither iadesy from the Mountain Citbe- rorty where they dwelt- AonideSy from the Country Aonia . Pieridesy or Pieria* b from the Mountain PieruSy or Pieriay in Thrace \ or from the Daughters of Pierius and Anippc\ who, daring to contend with the Mufes* were changed into Pyes. * Pegafides and Hippocrenides , from the famous Foun¬ tain Helicon y which, by the Greeks is called c Hippa- crency and, by the Latins* d Caballinus* both which Words fignify theHorfe’s Fountain : It was alfo named PcgafeiuSy from Pegafus the 'winged Horfe , c who link¬ ing a Stone in this Place with his Foot, opened the Fountain, f and the Waters of it became I'ocaL Aganippidesy or Aganipfca* from the Fountain Aza** nippe . 6 Cajialicles , from the Fountain Cajlalius at the Foot of Parnajfus . a Pvriius in Procemio. * Idem ibid. * Ah I Woe equus, & fons. d Caballinus a Caballus, id eft, equus. c Ovid. 5. Metam. f Sidonius Apollin. SECT. V. Number of P. W HAT was the Number of the A/Pufes? Some write, a that they were but i hree in the Beginning becaufe Sound* out of which * Var. apud Auguft. ail igz Of the Gods of the Heathens - all Singing is formed, is natural !y threefold\ either mad? by the Voice alone; or by blowing, as in Pipes : or by ftriking as in Citterns or Drums. Or, it may be, be- caufe there are three Tones of the Voice or other In. firuments, the Bcife, the Tenor, and the Treble . *(j r becaufe Three is the molt perfect of Numbers ; for it agrees to the Perfons of the Godhead. b Or, ialUy, becaufe all the Sciences are diflributed into threegene¬ ral Parts, P‘bilof*phy , Rbctorick , and Ad’athemailcks\ and each three Parts are subdivided into three other Parts Philofophy , into LogicEthicks? and Phyfcks ; Rheiorhk into the Dcmonflrative , Deliberative , and 'JudicialKind-, uVI a thematic ks into Adufick^ Geometry , and 'Arithmciick: Whence it came to pafs, that they reckoned not only Three Mufes but Nine. Others give us a different Reafon why they are Nine. 1 c When the Citizens of Sicyon appointed three fkilful Artificers to make the Statues of the Three Mufes , pro- mifing to chufe thofe three Statues out of the Nine, which they liked belt 5 they were all fo well made that they could nofc.tell which to chufe ; fo that they brought them all, and placed them in the Temples: And Hrjiod afterwards affign’d to them the Names mention’d above. JP. Were they Virgins ? A/I. ,l Some affirm- it; and others deny* it, who rec¬ kon up their Children. But, however 5 let no Perfon defpife the A/tufes , unlefs he deflgns to bring Deftruflion upon himfelf by the Example of Thainyrasox T'ba?nyris; e who, being conceited of his own Beauty and Skill in Singing, prefumed to challenge the Mufes to ling, up¬ on Condition, that, if he was overcome, they fliould puniffi him as they pleafed. And after he was over¬ come, he was deprived at once both of his Harp and his Eyes. a Cenforin. de die natali. b Phur. de Deorum Natnra. c Var. ibid, ex Lil. Gyr. p. 261. d Plato ap. eundem. Vide Nat. Com. e Homer. Iliad. 2. Plut. de Mufica. CHAP. Of the Gods of the Heathens „ 193 % « CHAP. X. Themis, Astr^a, Nemesis. p t HE SE three GoddefTes, I fee, contrive and I consult together of Affairs of great Moment,, ]£ I fuppofe fo : For the Bufinefs of them is al- ujoft the fame : The fame Function is incumbent upon each of them. But, however, let us infpedl them all fingly* Themis, the nrft of them, a is the Daughter of Cae¬ lum and 'Terra . According to the b Signification of her Name, her Office is to inflrudl Mankind to do Things honeft, juft, and right. c Wherefore her Images were brought and placed before thofe who were about to fpcak to the People, that they might be admonifhed thereby to fay nothing in publick, but what was juft and righteous. Some fay, 11 fhe fpoke Oracles at Del¬ phi ^ before /lpolio ; though c Homer fays, that flie ferved Apollo with Ne&ar and Ambrofia. There was another Themis , of whom JttJiice , Law , and Peace are faid to be born. Hefzocl , by way of Eminence, calls her f Mode ft , bccaufe fhe was afhamed to fee any Thing that is done againft Right and Equity. Eufebius calls her Carmen - ta\ z becaufe, by her Verfe and Precepts , flic directs every one to that which is juft: When he means a different Carmenta from the Roman Carmcnta , who was the Mo¬ ther of Evunder j otlierwife called Themis TAicoJlrata , a a Hefiod. in Theogon. b enim. figniiicat fas . c Ex Lii. Gyr. d Ex Ovidii Metam. 1 . i. e Hymn, in Apollinem. f Vw&hAtjv, id eft, pudibundam. Hefiod. in T leogon. s Quod carminibus edi£tifque fuis prxei- piat unicuique quod juftum eft. Eufebius, 1 . 3. Prsep. Evang. o pro- *94 Of the Gods- of the Heathens prophetical Lady. a She was worfhipped by the Roniam becaufe (lie prophefied ;..and was called Carmenta ,either b from the Vet'fe in.which file uttered her Predictions or c from the JVladncfs which feemed to po fiefs her when file prophefied. To this Lady an Altar was dedicated near the Gate Gar?nentali $, by the Capitol and a Tem¬ ple was built to her Honour alfo upon this Occafiou. tl The Senate forbad the married Women the Ufeof Litters or Sedans ; they combined together, and refoly- ed that they would never bring Childrenunlefs their Hufbands refeinded that Edi£t: They kept to this Agreement with fo much Refolution, that the Senate was obliged to change their Sentence, and yield to the Women’s Will,- and'allow them all Sedans- and Cha¬ riots again. And when their Wives conceived,, and. brought forth fine Children, they ere£ted a Temple in Honour of Carmenta■. AJlraa* c the Daughter of Jurora ^nd AJlraus^ the. "Titan (or, as others rather fay,-, the Daughter of Jupi¬ ter and Tbnnis) was efteemed f the Princcfs of JuJlice, The Poets feign, that in.the Gclde?i Age fhe defcendeA from Heaven to the Earth ;* and being offended’at -lafi: by the Wickednefs of Mankind, s fhe returned to Hea¬ ven a train, after all the other Gods had gone before her. • O 7 _ _ ^ . . « 1 , 1 XT r She is many Times diredily. called by the Name of Juflitia ; as particularly by h Virgil And when fhe had .1! 3 - Solinus in deferiptione Romrc.- b ^ Carmine,.Ovid. Faff. c Quali carens mente. d Vide Ovid, in Hdlis, 1 * 3 » c Hefiod. in Theogon. f Juflitia: antiftita. ? Viola jacet pietas y uirgo csede madentes■ Ultima cce lefl dm terras AJlr/ea r eh quit.* All Duty dies, and weary'd Juftice flies- From bloody Earth at lath and mounts the Skies. - - - extrema per illos . Juftitia exccdens tends j Ingemuit, Jtexitque rot am .-Claudian. j Th’ avenging Goddefs, t’our Defires unbent, J Firft groan’d, then turn’d her Wheel. | 1 ' CHAP. XI. ] SECT. I. Fhe Gods of the Woods, and the j Rural Gods. Firft , Pan. His Names . I _ i W E are now come into the fecond Part of the ) Right-hand Wall, which exhibits the Images \ of the Gods and GoddeJJes of the Woods . Here you may j fee the Gods Pan , Sylvanus , and the Fauni , Satyr !, Si- j lenus , Priapus , Ariftteus, and Fer?ninus . 1 And there you fee the GoddefTes, Diana, Pales , Fio* \ ra, Feronia^ Pomona , and an innumerable Company of 1 Nymphs . 'j P. What GWj do you fhew me ? Do you call thofe j Cornuted Monfters Gods? Who are half Men, and . half Bealls, hairy, and ihaggy, with Goats' Feet, and ] Horfes 5 Tails. ] M. Why not? Since they have attained to that Ho- j nour. Firft, let us examine the Prince of them all Pond Pa?i is called by that Name, either, as fome tell us,.] b becaufe he was the Son of Pe?ielope by all her Woocn\\ or c becaufe he exhilarated the Minds of all the Goih\ with the Mufickofthe Pipe, which he invented; and:j by the Harmony of the Cittern, upon which he played,] b A n«Vomrie, quod ex omnium Procorum congreflucuni] Penelope lit natus Samius. c Homer, in Hymn. fkilfully: t Pi. XIX. ZV' *9 ^ Of the Gods of the Heat belts. 197 flcilfully as foon as he was born : Or, perhaps, he is called Pan? a becaufe he governs the Affairs of the Univcrfal W*orld by his Mind, as he reprefcnts it by h\s Body, as we fhall fee by and by. The Latins called him Inuus and Incubus , the Night- Mare \ b becaufe he ufes Carnality with all Creatures . And at Rome he was worfhipped, c and called Luper - cus and Lyccus . To His Honour a Temple was built at the Foot of the Palatine Hill, and Feftivals called Lupercalia were inffituted, in which his Prieffs, the Luperci y ran about the City naked. . - -—--- * - ■ -v » — - ■■■■■ —> 3 Phurnutius. b Ab ineundo paffim cum omnibus ani- malibus. Servius in iEneid. c Jultin. 1 . 43. SECT. II. His Defcent • K i[ IS Defcent is uncertain; but the common Opi- 1 nion is, that he was born of Mercury and Penelope . (I For when Mercury fell violently in love with her, and tried in vain to move her; at lafr, by changing him- fclf into a very white Goat, he obtained his Deftre, and begat Pan of her, when fire kept the Sheep of her' Father Icarius in the Mount Taygetus . Pan? after he was born, c was lapt up in the Skin of a Hare, and car¬ ried to Heaven. But why do I here detain you with Words? Look upon the Image of him. d Hefiod. in Euterpe. c Homer, m Hymn. SECT. III. The Image of P a n. P, T S that Pan ? f that horned half Goat, that re fern- A blcs a Beaft rather than a Man, much 1 efs a God ; whom I fee deferibed with a fmiling ruddy Face, and two Horns ; his Beard comes down to his Breaft ; his * Lucian, in Bacch. O 3 Skin 198 Of the Xjods of the Heathens , Skin is fpotted, and his Legs and Thighs covered with long Hair ; he has the 1 all and the Feet of a Goat* his Head is crowned, and he holds a crooked Staff in one Hand, and in the other a Pipe of uneven Reeds, with the Mufick of which he can chear even the Gods them- felves. O ridiculous Deity, fit only to terrify Boys! M* Believe me, he has frighted the Men too: For when the Gauls , under Brennus their Leader, made an Irruption into Greece , and weie juft about to plunder the City Delpbos , Pan in the Night frightened themfo much, that they all betook themfelves to Flight, when no-body purfued them. Whence we proverbially fay, that Men are in a Panick Fears , when we fee them af¬ frighted without a Caufe. Now hear what the Image of Pan fignifies. Pan , they fay, is a Symbol of the Univerfal World, as I intimated before : b In his upper Part he refembles a Man, in his lower Part a Beaft; becaufe the fuperior and celeftial Part of the World is beautiful, radiant, and glorious; as is. the Face of this God, whofe Horns refemble the Rays of the Sun, and the Horns or the Moon. The Redncfs of his Face is like the Splendor of the Sky; and the fpotted Skin, that he wears, is an Image of the Starry Firmament. In his lower Parts he is {bag¬ ged and deformed, which reprefents the Shrubs, and wild Beafts, and Trees of the Earth below. His Goat’s Feet fignify the Solidity of the Earth ; and his Pipe of feven Reeds, that celeftial Harmony which is made by the feven Planets. He has a Sheep-hook, crooked at the Top, in his Hand, which fignifies the Turning of the Year into itfelf. a Terrores Panic! eorum funt qui fine causa perterrentur. paufanias, Plutarchus. b Servius in Eclog. 2. 4 f SECT. 'Of the ?Gods ‘qf.the Heathens. 199 * SECT. IV. ,A£i ions of Pan. % p K U T what mean thofe young Ladles that dance J3 about Jiim ? M* They are Nymphs which dance to the Mufick of his Pipe; a which inftrument Pan firft invented. You 5 ]! wonder when you hear the Relations which the .Poets tell us of this Pipe, to wit, 4C b as oft as Pan blows “it, the Dugs of the Sheep arc filled with Milk:” For he is the G ':d cj the Shepherds and Hunters , the Captain of the Nymphs , the Prejident of the Mountains , and of a Country Life ; and the 0 Guardian of the Flocks that graze upon the Mountains. Although his Afpedl is.fo deformed, yet, when he changed himfelf into a white Ham, he plea fed and gratified the Moon, jYnu’t - : : -— Virg. Eel. Pan taught to join with Wax unequal Reeds. h Orpheus in Hymn. lbicu c , Poeta Grascus. c Pan cit"at oajes, o^uiunique magi/iros* Virg. Eel. 2. Pan loves the Shepherds, and their Flocks he feeds. l! Min? ere fie ni c ueo lante, f credere dignum ejl, •Pan Da/s u 4 readirs capiamtc^ Luna, fcjell it . Virg. Georg. 3.0 Twas thus with Fleeces milky white (if we May truft Report) Pan, God of A ready. Did bribe thee, Cynthia , nor didlt thou difdain. When call’d in woody Shades, to eafe a Lover’s Pain. r i heactet. Poeta Gracus. f Homer, in Hymn o 4 was 198 Of the Gods of the Heathens , Skin is fpotted, and his Legs and 1'highs covered with long Hair ; he has the Tail and the Feet of a Goat; his Head is crowned, and he holds a crooked Staff in one Hand, and in the other aPipe of uneven Reeds, with the Mufick ofwhich he can cheat even the Gods them- felves. O ridiculous Deity, fit only to terrify Boys! M. Believe me, he has frighted the Men too : For when the Gauls , under Brennus their Leader, made an Irruption into Greece, and weie juft about to plunder the City Delphos , Pan in the Night frightened themfo niuch, that they all betook themfelves to Flight, when no-body purfued them. Whence we proverbially fay, that Men are in a Paittck Fears , when we fee them af¬ frighted without a Caufe. _ Now hear what the Image of PiJTzfignines. Part , they fay, is a Symbol of the Univerfal World, as I intimated before : b In his upper Part he refembles a Man, in his lower Part a Beaft ; becaufe the fuperior and cekftial Part of the World is beautiful, radiant, and glorious; as is. the Face of this God, whofe Horns referable the Rays of the Sun, and the Horns of the Moon. The JRednefs of his Face is like the Splendor of the Sky; and the fpotted Skin, that he wears, is an Image of the Starry Firmament. In his lower Parts he is fhag- eed and deformed, which reprefents the Shrubs, and wild Beafts, and Trees of the Earth below. His Goats Feet fignify the Solidity of the Earth ; and his I ipe of feven Reeds, that celeftial Harmony which is made by the feven Planets. He has a Sheep-hook, crooked at the Top, in his Hand, which fignifies the Turning of the Year into itfelf. a Terrores Panici eorum funt qui fine causa perterrentui. paufanias, Plutarchus. b Servius in Eciog. z. ✓ SECT. Of the 'Gods a ugh ter named Ifingcs^ who c gave Medea the Medicines (they fay) with which fhe charm¬ ed Jafon. f He could not but pi cafe Dry ope , to gain whom, belaid afidc, as it were, his Divinity, and be¬ came a Shepherd. But he did not court the Nymph Sy¬ rinx with fo much Succefs.: For fhe ran away to avoid fo filthy a Lover 3 till coming to a River (where her Flight a Pan primus cal am os cerd conj linger e pin res bijliitiit Virg. Eel. Pan taught to join with Wax unequal Reeds. h Orpheus in Hymn. !bicu% Poeta Grzecus. c Pan cunt o-ues , cnjiumque magi fir os. Virg. Eel. 2, Par. loves the Shepherds, and their Flocks he feeds. 11 Mur. ere ftc m*veo lanes , fi credere dignum efl , •Pant Dcin sir cad itscaplam te, Luna , fefellit . Virg. Georo*. -3, was thus with Fleeces milky white (if we ° May trull Report) Pan , God of Arcady. Did bribe thee, Cynthia , nor didll-thou difdain. When call’d in woody Shades, to eafe a Lover’s Pain. r 1 hea.net. Poeta Grsecus. f Homer, in Hymn. O 4 was 200 Of the Gods of the Heathens . j was flopped) fhe prayed the Naiades , the Nymphs of th Watery becaufe file could not efcape her Purfuer, to . change her into a Bundle of Reeds, juft as Pan was \ laying hold of her, a who therefore caught the Reeds 1 in his Arms inftcad of her. b The W inds moving | tliefe Reeds backward and forward occaftoned mourn- \ ful, but mufical Sounds, which Pan perceiving, cut \ them down, and made them Reeden Pipes. But c Lib ] a Hie fe mutarent liquidas ordfjc for ores : | Pantique cum prevfam fibi jam Syr rug a puiaret j Coy pc re pro Nympho c alamos triviffe palufres . Met. 1 . 1, | When, that ihe might avoid a 1 lift ful Rap?, | She begg’d her Siller Nymphs to change her Shape: j Pan thought h’ had hugg'd his Miftrefs, when indeed He only hugg’d aTrufs of Moorifh keed. 1 b Dtanque ibifufpirai ,. mot os in ar undine vent os \ BffeoffeJ'onum tenucm fmilemque querent :. | Arte'nova voefquc Dcian dit Ice dine cap t tan , ] JrJoc mi hi concilium tec tan, dixijfe, manebit ; } Atque it a difparibus calaniis compagine cert? j Inter fe junbtis nomen tenttijfe puella\ ] He lighs, his Sighs the toiling Reeds return J In foft fmall Notes, like one that feem’d to mourn; ) The new, but pleafant Notes the God furprife, j Yet this (hall make us Friends at laft, he cries ; j So he this Pipe of Reeds unequal fram’d j With Wax ; and Syrinx from his Miftrefs nam’d. c - Z'pb) ri cava per calamorum Jibila primtim Agrefcs aocucre cavas infare dent as; j Judd mi nut at/m dukes aidicete querelas, j Tibia qua$f tv dit digit is pulfata caveat um : \ Avia per ?:cmora ac fykvas faltufque reperta, j Per loca pa/iorum ceferta, atqne otia Dia, Lucr. 1 . {. j And whillt loft Evening Gale* blew o’er the Plains, j And fliook the founding Reeds, they taught the Swains; j And thus the Pipe was fram’d, and tuneful Reed; ] And whilft the tender Flocks fecurely feed, ! The harmlefs Shepherds tun’d their Pipes- to Love, j And Amaryllis founds in ev’ry Grove. _ : Of the Gods of the Heathens - 201 cretins afcribes the Invention of thefe Pipes not to Pan, but to fome Country-men, who had obferved, on fome other Occafion, rhe Whiffling of the Wind through Reeds. In the Sacrifices of this God, a they offered to him Milk and Honey in a Shepherd’s Bottle. He was more cfpecially worshipped in Arcadia ^ for which Reafon he is fo often called b Pan Dens Arcadia?. Some derive from him c Hifpania , Spain 5 formerly called Iberia ; for he lived there, when he returned from the Indian War, to which he went with Bacchus and the Satyrs . a Theocr. in Viator.' b Virg. 3. Georg. 4. Eel. ? Lil. Gy r. CHAP. XII. % Sylvanus. A LTHOUGH many Writers confound the Sylvani , .. Fauni , Satyri , and Silcm\ with Pan 5 yet many diftinguifti them ; therefore we will treat of them feparately, and begin with Sylvanus . That old Man is Sylvanus > whom you fee placed next to Pat?) with the Feet of a Goat, and the li Face of a Man, of little Stature; c he holds Cyprefs in his Hand Wretched out. He is fo called from bylvce^ the Woods ; for he prefides over them. f Fie mightily loved the Boy C';pari]Jus-y who had a tame Deer, in which he took g/eat Plcafure. Sylvanus by Chance killed if, where¬ upon the Youth died for Grief, e Therefore Sylvanus changed him into a Gyprcfs-irce, and carried a Branch of it always in his Hand, in Memory of his Lofs. (! /Elian. Hid. Varia.. 0 Mai tin. de Nuptiis. f Servius in Virg. Aneid. & Georg.- = Et teller am a radiccfcrcns , Sylvane, 0 //;v$&rza?. Georg. i .20. A tender Cyprefs .Plant Sylvanus bears. There 202 Of the Gods of the Heathens+ There were many other Sylvan who endeavoured, much as they could, to violate the Chaflity of Women, St. Aitjlln fays, a That they and the Fa uni ((commonly caL led Incubi) were oftentimes wicked to Women , dejiring and enjoying their Embraces. And Varro fays, that they were xnifehievous to big-bellied Women. a Eos cum Faunis (quos vulgo Incubos vocant) impro- Los faepe extitiffe mulieribus, & earum appetiiTe 8 c pere~ ■giile concubitum. Aug. ae Civitate Dei, 1 . 15. c. 23. CHAP. XIII. SlLENUS. ■^'|'~ V HAT old Fellow, who follows next, with a fiat JL Nofe, and a bald Head, with large Ears, and a fmall, fat, gore-bellied Body, is Silenus ; fo called, b from his jocular Temper , becaufe he perpetually jefts upon People. He fits upon a c Saddle back'd Afs; but, when he walks, he leans upon a Staff. He was Bacchus's Fof- ter-Father, his M after, and his perpetual Companion, and confequently almoft always drunk, as we find him deferibed d in the fixth Eclogue of Virgil . The Cup w h i ch b J A 7 to (Ti7&aim» 9 id eft, didteria in aliquem dicere, ./Elian. 3. Var. Hift. c. 10. c Fando Aiello. d Silenum pucrifo?nno '-v id erejaccntcm? Inftatnm hefter710 c ve?icis? ut jemper , Iaccho ; Serta procul tantum capiti delapfaj ace bant? JSt grant is attritd pendebat cantharus a 7 isa . --* Two Satyrs , on the Ground, Stretch’d at'their JEafe, their Sire Silenus found ; Dos’d with his Fumes, and heavy with his Load, They found him fnoring in his dark Abode ; His rofy Wreath was dropp’d not long before, Dome by the Tide of Wine, and floating on the Floor. ♦ Of the Gods of the Heathens , 203 w hich he and Bacchus ufed was called Cantharus ; and the Staff with which he fupported himfelf a Ferula : This he ufed when he was fo drunk, as it often happen- that he could not fit, b but fell from his Afs. The Satyrs were not only conftant Companions of Silenus , but were aftiftant to him; for they held him in o-reat Efteem, and honoured him as their Father; and 5 c\ v hen they became old, they were called Silent too. And concerning Silenus 9 s Afs, they fay, that d he was tranflated into Heaven, and placed among the Stars ; becaufe, in the Giants War, Silenus rode on him, and helped Jupiter very much. c But when Silenus once was taken, and afked. What was the bejl "Thing that could hefal Man? He after long Silence anfwered. It is heft for all never to be born , but being born , to die very quickly . Which Expreflion Pliny reports aim oft in the fame Words, f "There have been many who have judged it very happy never to have been born , or to die immediately after one 9 s Birth . His empty Can, with Ears half worn away. Was hung on high, to boaft the Triumph of the Day. a Quinque fcnexfend a tit ub antes ebriits art us Suftmet , £5 pando non fortiter htsret afello . Ovid. Met. 4^ His Staff does hardly keep him on his Legs, When mounted on his Afs, fee how he fwags. b Ebrius ecce fetiex pando delapfus afello , Clamarunt Satyri, /urge, age, /urge , pater. De Art. Am. 2. Th’ old Soker’s drunk, from’s Afs he’s got a Fall, Roufe, Daddy, roufe, again the Satyrs bawl. c Paufanias in Atticis. d Aratus in Phsenomen. c Ro- gatus quidnam ejfet hominibus optimum? refpondit, omnibus effe optimum non nafci , & natos quam citijfime interire* Plut. in Confolatione Apol. f Multi exiifcre qui non nafci optimum cenferunt , aut quam citijfme akoleri . Plin. in Prasfat. 1 . 7. CHAP. 204 Of the Gods of the Ileatbens. CHAP. XIV". The Satyr s. * EHOLD! a Thofe ar e.Satyrs who dance in laf civ ions Motions and PoRures under the Shade of that tali and threading Oak; they have Heads armed w;th Horns, and Goats Feet and Legs, crooked Hands, rough, hairy Bodies, and Tails not much fhorter than Horfes Tails. There is no Animal in Nature more fallacious and libidinous than thefe Gods. Their b Name itfself (hews the Filthinefs of their Nature : And Paufanicu gave a Proof of it, by relating a Story of fom’e Manners, who were drove upon a defart I Hand by Storm, and faw themfelves furrounded by a Flock of Satyrs : The Seamen were frightened, and betook thernfelves to their Ships, and the Satyrs left the Men^ bui they feized the JVamcn, and committed all Manner of Wickcdnefs with them* a Paufan. in Attieis. b Satyrus dcrivatur, «?ro &*«&*?> a veretro, Jiufeb. in Prtep. Evang„ ibid. C H A P. XV. The Fauns. T HE Fauns , which you lee joined with' the Satyr s x differ from them in the Name onlv *, at leaft they are not unlike them in their Look.s v L for they have Hoofs and Horns, and are fI crowned with the Branches cl Idem, in Epiftola Ocnones. c Ovid. Fafloruai 2. I « of the Pine, When they meet drunken Perfons, they flupify them (as it is faid) with 41 their Looks alone. The Boors of this Country call them the b Rural Gods 5 and pay them the more Refpedl \ becaufe they are armed with Horns and Nails, and painted in terrible Shapes. faunas, or Fatuellus (as he isotherwife called) c was the Son of Picus King of the Latins. d He married his own Sifter, whofe Name was Fauna or Fatita : He con- fecrated and made her Prieftefs, after which ihe had the Gift of Prophecy. Hiflory like wife tells us, that this Faimus was the Father and Prime of the other Fauns and the Satyrs- c His Name was given him from his Skill in Prophcfying , and from thence alfo Faiui fig- nifies both Perfons that fpeak rafhly and incoKfieJerate- ly, and Enthufiafts-, becaufe they, who propbefy, deli¬ ver the Mind and Will of another, and fpeak Things which themfelves, many Times, do not underftand. ’h red roe. b Dli a ore lies. Virgil. 7, /Eneid. 6. ll Nat. Comes lib. cj. c Faunus dicitur a faudo feu vatlcinando. Ser. 7. Ancid. Ifid. Hifp. Epifcopus. 2 Idem, in Epillola I Geore. 1, c Servius CHAP. XVI PRIAPUS. P.T f A ! What means that naked God, wuh his J Sickle, behind the Trunk of the Tree? Why does he hide the Half of his Body fo? M, The Painter was mod eft, and therefore painted but half of him, becaufe he is a ftiamelefs and obfeene Deity: His Name is priapus. I am afhamed to teli the Story of him, it is fo very filthy ; and therefore I ill all fay only, that he was the Son of Ferns and Bacchus , born at L mitv* ✓ * j - -j * _ t LampfacuSs where his Mother hating his Defor- and the £)i (proportion of his Members,. rejected h 1 m, CHAP. XIV. The Satyr s. B >. EHOL D ! a Thofe are Satyrs who dance in lah ) civious Motions and Poffures under the Shade of that rail and fpreading Oak; they have Heads armed •w;th Horns, and Goats Feet and Legs, crooked Hands, rough, hairy Bodies, and Vails not much fit or ter than Horfes Tads. There is no Animal in Nature more fa!acinus and libidinous than thefe Gods. Their b Name itfel'f fhews the Filthinefs of their Nature : And Paufama .r gave a Proof of it, by relating a Story of fame Manners, who were drove u-pon a defart Ifland by Storm, and faw themfelves furrounded by a Flock of Satyrs: The Seamen were frightened, and betook themfelves to their Ships, and the Satyrs left the Men> bui they feized the lVamm % and committed all Manner * of Wickednefs with them. a Paufan. in Atticis. b Satyrus dcrivatur, ktto 7>fc g'o&c. a veretro, Eu&b. in Prcep. Evang- ibid. CHAP, XV. ''I be Faun s. T HE Fauns , vvhich you fee joined with the Satyrs t differ from them in the Name only; at leafl they are not unlike them in their Looks :■ c For they have Hoofs and Horns-, and are d crowned with the Branches cl Idem, in Epiflola Oenones vi c Ovid. Fnflorum 2. 4 * Of the Gods of the Heathens of the Pine. When they meet drunken Perfons, they flupify them (as it is faid) with a their Looks UT, pray, what is that Stone or Log placed JO there? (It is fo far off that I cannot tlifiin. guifia whether of the two it is.) Jlf. It has a Place among the rural Gods, becaiife it is a God itfelf. P. A God, do you fay? Surely you jeft. Sir. M No ; it is not only a God, but a God greatly honoured in this City of Rome. They call him Ter- minus , and imagine that the Boundaries and Limits of Men’s Eftates are under his Protcftion. His Name, and tlie divine Honours paid to him by the Ancients, are mentioned by a Ovid, by b Tibullus , and by c Seneca. The Statue of this God d was either a fquare Stone, or a Log of Wood plained ; which they ufually perfumed with Ointment, and crowned with Garlands. And indeed the Lapides Terminates (that is, Land- Marks) were efttemed Jacred: c i'o that whoever dared rl e Ter mine , five lapis, fi^jc cs defertus in agro Stipes , ab p.ntiqiiis ft-: qi toque nesnen babes. Ovid. Faft. 2> Terminus , whether Stump or Stone thou be. The Ancients gave a Godhead too to thee. Nam veneror, feu fifes babet defert ns in agris 9 Seu veins in iriviis fieri dj fertu lapis. For I my Adoration freely give. Whether a Stump forlorn my Vows receive. Or a beflower’cl Stone my Wcrfhip have. Null us in carnpo fr.ee r c _ Cn - Divifit agro- arbiter pcpulis lapis. Hippol. A 'ft. 2. fc. / . The facred Land-Mark then was quite unknown. Arnobius contra Gcntes, 1 . 2 • Clemens Alex. Strom. 7. Dion Kali cam. 1 . 2. to PI. XX. Of the God's of the Heathens . '209 to rnove, or plow up, or transfer them to another Place, his Head became devoted to the Diis Tenhinali- b'us> and it was lawful for any Body to kill him. And further, though they did not facrifice the Lives of Animals to thofe Stones, becaufe they thought that it \vas not lawful to Jiain ihemivith Blood; yet they offer¬ ed Wafers made of Flour to them, and the firfh Fruits of Corn, and the like : And upon the laft Day of the Year they always obferved Feftivals to their Honour, called Terminalia. Now we pafs to the Goddejfes of the Woods. CHAP. XIX. 9 The Goddefs of the Woods. Dian^. • • P, TT is very well. Here come a Goddefs a taller 1 than the other GoddelTes, in whofe Virgm-Looks wemayeafe:our Eyes, which have been tired with the" horrid Sight of thofe monftrous Deities. Welcome, Diana 5 b your hunting Habit, the Bow in your Hand, and the Quiver full'of Arrows, which hangs downfrom your Shoulders, and the Skin of a Deer faftened to your Bread:, difeover who you are* c Your Behaviour,-which is free and eafy,but medeft and decent ^ your Garments, which are handfome arid yet careiefs$ fhew that-you area Virgin. Your d Name fhews your Modefly and Honour. I wifh that you, who are the talleft of the GoddefTes, c to whom Women owe their Stature, would implant in them alfo a Love of your Chaftity. ForJ know you hate, you abhor the Conversation of Ivlern ‘ Virgil ^Eneid. 1 . 1. ■•’■Idem ibid. «= Paufan. In Area- ApTEfMq, ab-ctgTepyjs, perfettus, pudiciriam' inte- gmatemque Diana; indicat. Strabo; 1. 14. "= Homer. Udvli. 20. , , • • « * 1 . • ♦ ^ p * 4 and PI. XX. Of the Gods of the Heathens . '209 to move, or plow up, or transfer them to another Place, his Head became devoted to the Dils Tenhinali- fi us an d it was lawful for any Body to kill him. And further, though they did not facrifice the Lives of Animals to thofe Stones, becaufe they thought that it y/as not lawful to fain them with Blood 5 yet they offer¬ ed Wafers made of Flour to them, and the fir ft Fruits of Corn, and the like : And upon the laft Day of the Year they always obferved Festivals to their Honour,, called Terminalia . Now we pafs to the Goddeffes of the Woods . 1 ♦ C H A P. XIX. * 9 % : The Goddefs of the JVoods. Diana. 0 p, T-T is very well. Here come a Goddefs a taller • JL . than the other Goddeffes, in whofe Virgin-Looks we may eafe.our Eyes, which have been tired with the' Horrid Sight of thofe monftrous Deities. Welcome, Diana 3 b your hunting Habit, the JBow in your Hand, and the Quiver full of Arrows, which hangs down from your Shoulders, and the Skin of a Deer faftened to your Breaft, difeover who you are* c Your Behaviour,-which is free and eafy, but modeft and decent; your Garments, which are handfome arid yetcarelefs^ fhew that you area Virgin. Your d Name fhews your Modefty and Honour. I wifh that you, who are the talleft of the Goddeffes, c to whom Women owe their Stature, would implant in them alfo a Love of your Chaftity, For,I know you hate, you abhor the Converfation of Men, * Virgil. ./Eneid. 1 . i. - b Idem ibid. c Faufan. In Area- (lids. ab perfeflns> pudiciriam inte- gritatemque Bianjfe indicat. Strabo* 1 . u, c Homer, Odyff 2o. i • and 2i a- ^ • r Of the Gods of the Heathens . and-fly from the very fight of them. Yet reject the Temptations of Delight, and abhor the charming Witchcraft of Phafure with all your Heart. 0 Aftteon, the Son of Arijlaia , that famous-Hunifirian, a -fatally learned this, when he impudently looked upon you/Vhen you were naked in the Fountain : You de^ fcrred not the Punifhment of his Impurity for a Mo. meat, for, fprihkling him with the Water, you chang¬ ed him- into a Deer, to be afterwards torn m Pieces by his own Dogs. Farther Honour is due to you ; becau-fe you are the Moon ,, b the Glory of the Stars , and the only Goddefs, c who obferved perpetual Chaftky. Nor am I ignorant of that famous and deferving Action that you did, to avoid the f lames of Alpheus y when you fo haftily Red-to your Nymphs, who were all together in one Place 5. and befmeared both yourfelf and them with Dirt fo, that when he came he did not know you : Whereby your honed: Deceit fucceeded. according to your Intentions; and the Dirt, which fouls every Thing elfe, added a, new Du fire to your Virtue. Welcome once again, O ! * Guardian of the Mountains; by v/hofe kind Afiiltance Women in Child-bed are preferved from Death.. a Ovid. 4:.. Me tarn. b Aftrorum decus. Virg. iEneid. 9.. • c MUrnum te'lo rum M\ Virg i nit at is* amorcni. Interne rata eolith ' VIrg v JEneid. in ——Heifelf untainted dill, : .... « • Hunting and Cha-ftity flie always roykL. • , Paufanias in potter. Eliac. . c 'Mi'opthim cifo.s, nemorunique Virga^ cfiec labor ant es''utero-pitellas - - • - v flir_ Hecate aptu' Prof. 1 , 2- Behold far off the .Goddefs Hecate In threefold Shape advances f Ap. Lil. Gvr. M . s A lucendo/quod una fit qua: nodu lucet, Cic. 2 ; deMat. •vel K Quod luce aliena fplendeat, unde Gncce dicnur a crfAtfs «ov, id eft, lumen novum. Id. ibid. been l)een wor(hipped, efpecially among the Egyptians ; and indeed, they give this Property to all the other Gods. Thus both Ltmus and Luna were worfhipped, but with this Difference, that thofe who worfhipped Luna were thought fubjeffc to,the Women, and thofe who wor¬ shipped Lunus were fuperior to them. a We muff alfo obferve, that the Men facrificed to Venus , under the Name of Luna , in W omens Cloaths, and the Women in Men’s Cloaths. This Luna had a Gallant who was named Endytnion , and he was mightily courted by her .; b infomuch that, to kifs him, fhe defcended out of Heaven, and came to the Mountain Laitnus , or Lathynius , in Carla ; where he lay condemned to an eternal Sleep by Jupiter ^ bc- caufe, when he was taken into Heaven, he impudently attempted to violate the Modefty of Juno . In reality, findytnion was a famous VLJlrotiomer^ who firft defcribed the Courfe of the Moon, and he is reprefented Jleeping , becaufe he contemplated nothing but the Planetary Motions, Hecate may he derived from & [ Hecathen ] e?nz - ms ; becaufe the Moon darts her Rays or Arrozvs afar of c She is faid to be the Daughter of Ceres by Jupiter , who being calf out by her Mother, and ex- pofedin the Streets, was taken up by Shepherds, and nourifhed by them ; for which Reafon d fhe was wor- Jhipped in the Streets, and her Statue was ufually fet be¬ fore the Doors of the Houfes, whence fhe took the Name Propyl oca, Others derive her Name from top [Hekaton] centum , becaufe they facrificed a hundred Viaims to her : c Or becaufe, by her Edift, thofe who a Servius iu 2. -Eneid.. Philocor. Spartian. in Imp. Ca- .rKeal. b Apoll. 4. Argonaut. Plin. 1 . 2. c. o. c Heflod. in Theogon. d Nn&urwjque Hecate triruiis ululata per urles . And Hecate by Night c Paufan. in Atticis. Virg. iEneid, 9, ador’d with Shrieks. t 214 Of the Gods of the die at hens, die, and are not buried, zy cinder an hundred Years up a n p • down HelL However, it is certain, Hie is called Tri¬ via a Trlviis, from ihe Streets ; for fhe was believed to prefidc over the Streets and Ways; fo that they facri- fi.ee d to her in the Streets , a and the Athenians , every New Moon, made a Sumptuous Supper for her there, which was eaten in the Night by the Poor People of the City. b They fay that file was exccffive tall 5 her Head was covered with frightful Snakes inftead of Hair, and her pe.et were like Serpents. c She was rep relented encompalled with Dogs : becaufe that Animal was facrcd to her \ and Hejychius fays, that Ihe was fome- times reprefen ted by a Dog. We are told that fhe prefidcd over Inchantments, and that, d when fhe was called feven Times, fhe came to the Sacrifices : As foon as thefc were finifned, c feveral Apparitions ap¬ peared, called from her Hecataa. She was called by the Egyptians f Bubajiis 5 her Fcafts were named Bulajhta \ and the City where they were yearly celebrated, was called Bubajiis . Brimo is another of the Names of Hecate and Diana ; which is derived from s the City , which fhe gave when Apollo or Mars offered Violence to her when foe was U hunting. She was called Lucira, and Op is , becaufe h foe helps to bring the Children into the JVci Id , which good Office (as they fay) {he fir ft performed to her Brother Apollo:■ For, as foon as foe herfclf was born, fhe affiftedher Mother Lai an a, and did the Office of a Midwife \ 1 but was fo affrighted with her Mother’s Pain, that foe rcfolvcd never to have Children, but to live a Vir¬ gin perpetually. :l Anftophi.nes in Pluto. b Lucian. Pfeucloph. c A- pul Gvraiu. Apollin. a Arc-or.ant. c Ovid. o. Metam. f Apollon. 3. Arr,on. R a iVjMBw, fremo, ira exardeico. v ^ ^ 4 4 * - n n Quod ir/il.mihii? in lueem venientibus open jferat, Aug. cie Civirat. 4. c, 2. \ Caiiimach. Hymn, in Dian* x bn n v/ Of the Gods of the Heathens. 215 She is called Cbitone and Chitonia , n becaufe Women., ?.fter Child-birth, ufed firft to facrifice to *Juno , and then ofFer to Diana their own and their Children’s Cloaths. She was named Diflynna , -not only from the b Nets , which flie ufed c (for file was an Huntrefs, and the Prin- cefs of Hunters ; for which Reafon all Woods were de¬ dicated to her) but alfo becaufe 11 Britomarth the Virgin j whom file hunted, fell into the Nets, and vowed, if (he efcaped, to build a Temple for Diana. She did efcape, and then confecrated a Temple to Diana Diffynna* Others relate the Story .thus : When Brhomartis , whom Diana loved, becaufe {he was an Huntrefs, fled from Minos her Lover, and caft herfelf into the Sea; flic fell into the Fifhermens’ Nets, and Diana made her a Goddefs. And fince we are talking of Hunting, give me Leave, to add, that the c Ancients thought that Dion a left off Hun ting on the Ides of Augnjl 5 therefore at that Time it was not lawful for any one to hunt, but they crowned the Dogs with Garlands, and, by ■the Light of Torches made of Stubble, they hung up the hunting Instruments near them. We fhal! only adjoin, to what has been faid, the two Stories o fDhjone and Meleager. Cbione was the Daughter of Daedalian , the Son of Dadctlus: She was deflowered by Apollo and Mercury , and brought forth Twins, namely, Pbilammon , a fkilful Mufkian, the Son of Apollo s and Antolychus the Son of Mercury , who proved a famous f Juggler, and an art¬ ful Thief. She was fo far from thinking this a Shame, .quail tunicata a yj-un, .tunica; folebant enim feemina: partus laboribus perfundtae Junoni facrificare; fuas autem Sc in fan tiu m voltes Dianas confecrare. Plat. 3. Sympof. c. ult. b Retia enim fev* dicuntur. c Ovid. 2. Metam. La£t. Plac. d Schol. Arifloph. • c Brodaeus in Anthol. ex Schol. Pindari. * •f- Furtum ingeniofus ad o?nne 9 Qni facere afterai , patr'us non degetter art is* P 4 thufi that fhe grew very proud ; nay openly boafted, a that her Beauty had charmed two Gods, and that (he had two Sons by them. Befides, fhe was b fo bold as to fpeak fcornfully of Diana's Beauty, and to prefer her- felf before her: But Diana did herfelf Juftice, and pu- nifhed the Infolence of this Boafter; for fhe drew her Bow, and Shot an Arrow through her Tongue, and thereby put her to Silence. Meleager was punifhed for his Father c Oenetih Fault, who, when he offered his firft Fruits to the Gods, wilfully forgot Diana ; wherefore fhe was an¬ gry, and fent a wild Boar into the Fields of his King¬ dom of Caledonia to deffroy them. Meleager , accom¬ panied with many chofen Youths, immediately under¬ took either to kill this Boar or to drive him out of the Country. The Virgin Atalanta was among the Hun¬ ters, and gave the Boar the fir ft Wound \ and foon af¬ ter Meleager killed him. He valued Atalanta more who wounded him, than himfelf who killed him, d and therefore offered her the Boar’s Skin. But the Uncles of Candida de nigris 15 de. c andcnil bus atra . Ovid. Met. n. Cunning in Theft, and wily in all Sleights. Who could with Subtlety deceive the Sight, Converting white to black, and black to white. a -- Se peperifte- duos , ta Diis placuijje duobus. That file two Sons had brought, by having pleas’d two h - Se prefer re Dianre (Gods. Suft innit 9 faciemque Dea? culpasvit. At ills Ira ferox mot a eft , faclifque placabimus , inquit . Nec mora, eur-uanjit cornu , ner bacido, pcjltis per tempera ca?)is . With grey-hair’d Noddle, leaning on a Staff. Ov. Met. 14 , 222 Qj the Gods of the Heathens* If they had not a Props or Supports, which, like Huf- bands, hold them up, they would perifh and decay. j\\\ this did not move her, till Verinmnus b changed himfelf Into a young Man, and then file began alio to feel the Force and Power of Love, and fubmitted to his W i (h es. % a At ft floret,, ait, c&lcbsfine palmiie trztncus , Nil prazier frondesy quare peieretur, bciberet ; Hate quoque, qurs junlia ■zfitis reqftieflcit in ul/?H> Si non jun&afloret, terrrc acclinata jaceret : 'Tit tarns n exemplo non t anger is arbor is hup us, Yety faith he, if tills Elm fhould grow alone. Except for Shade, it would be priz’d by none: And fo this Vine in amorous Foldings wound. If but disjoin’d, would creep upon the Ground a Yet aft hot thou by fuch Examples led. But fhunn'ft the 1 'leafure of an happy Bed. b -- In junjenem redditi , & a nilia demit bifirumentci fibi ; taliflque apparuit illi , flhsalis ubi oppcfitas nitidiflfima Solis Imago Nvlcit nnbes , niilldque obfiante relax it , Vi tuque par at, fled non eft opus, inque figurd Captci Dei Nympho eft , C2 mutua ‘vulneraflenftt^ --Again himfelf he grew; . Th* Infirmities of heatlcfs Age depos’d. And fuch himfelf unto the Nymph difclos’d; As when the Sun, fubduing with his Rays The muffling Cloud, his golden Brow difplays, He Force.prepares; of Force there was no Need, Struck with his-Beauty, mutually they bleed. 9 CHAP. Of the Gods of the Heathens. C H A P. X X E V. *The Nymphs. O W ob ferve that great Company of neat, pret¬ ty, hand fome, beautiful, charming Virgins, who are verv near the Gardens of Pomona, Some run about the Woods, and hide them Selves in the Trunks of the aged Oaks; fome plunge themfelves into the Fountains,- and fome fwim in the Rivers. They are called by one common Name. 2 Nymphs , b becanfe they always hvkyoung 5 or c becaufe they are hanclfome. Yet all have their proper Names befides, which they derive either from the Places where they live, or the Offices they perform $ they are efpecially diftrihuted in Three Clafles, Celt- Jiial , Terrefrtal , and Marhu Nymphs. The Gcleftial Nymphs were thofe Genii? thofe Souls and Intellects} a who guided the Spheres of the Heavens,, and difpenfed the Influences of the Stars to the Things of the Earth. Of the Perrefrial Nymphs fome preside over the Woods, and were called Dryades- from a Greek [Word'®*-, which principally fignifies an Oak, but generally any Tree whatever. • Thefe Dryades had their Habitations in the Oaks . Other Nymphs were called f Ramadrya&cS^ for they were born when the Oak was firfl: planted, and when it peri flies they die alfo. The Ancients held Arrange Opinions concerning Oaks, they imagined that even the fmalleff Oak was Tent from Heaven.. a Pkurnut. k .** A-7r 51 tv dzi vests tp eclvzvkt eel quod Ism per c ’A570 rT (peewzw fplendere, quod forma? juvenes appsrean-t. c decore prarfulgeant.. d Ex. Hlut. Mac rob. Prod. Abided, quercus, Virg. Georg 4. ^ Ab dy.ee, fi k ^ vc, quercus. a. ial The a Druidee, Priefts of the Gauls, efleemed nothing more divine and facred, than the Excrefcence whici flicks to Oaks.- Others of the Terrejirial Nymphs are called b Oreades or Orejliades , becaufe they prefidedover the Mountains. Others c Napeses, becaufe they had Dominion over the Groves and Vallies. Others 11 Li- moniades, becaufe they looked after the Meadoves and Fields. And others c Meliee , from the Afh-trees facred to them; and thefe were fuppofed to be the Mothers of thofe Children, who were accidentally born under a Tree, or expofed there. The Marine Nymphs were either thofe Nymphs f which prefide over the Seas, and were called Nereides, or Nerines , from the Sea-God Nercus , and the Sea- Nymph Doris , their Parents ; (which Nereus and Do¬ ris were born of Dethys and Occanus ; from whom they were called Ouanitides and Oceania-,) or thofe Nymphs who prefide over the Fountains, and were called s Nai- des and Naiades ; or elfe inhabit the Rivers , and were called Fluvtales or h Pot amides ; or laftly, who prefide over the Lakes and Ponds, and were called Limnadcs, 1 from [ Limtie ,] a Lake.. All the Gods had Nymphs attending, them. Jnpitcr fpeaks of his k in Ovid. Neptune had feveral Nymphs, infomuch that Heftod and Pindar call him ' Nymph- getes, that is, the Captain of the Nymphs I he Poets generally give him fifty. Phoebus likewife had Nymphs called Jganippid.a and Mufee. Innumerable were the => Li!. Gyr. Synt. i. b AbS^Mons. c a wr» f»™ vel vallis. ' d a >au.u», pratum. c IVhxla, fraxmus. Ur- pheus in Hymn. S KA, fluo. h a «r orapd;, huvias. a AiaP/?) lac U3. X Sunt mihi Snntdd, fwii rujlica Numr.ia Fawn, El Nymph*, Satyrittae, id MantUol* Sylvan. Met. 1.1. Half Gods and ruilic Fauns attend my Will, Nymphs, Satyrs, Svlvans that on Mountains owed, i Nv^ccyh-nojJ oil, Nympharum dux. Hcfiod & 1 im- in I ft Inn. N/mphs Of the Gods of the Heathens. 225 ^ ^ * Nymphs of Bacchus , who were called by different Names, Bacchus , BaJJarides , Eloides , and ‘Tbyades. Hunt- j n g Nymphs attended upon Diana \ and Sea-Nymphs* cal led J Nereides i waited upon T'cthys. a Fourteen very- beautiful Nymphs belonged to yuno: Our. of ail winch. I will only give you the Hi (lory of two. Arethufa was brie of Dianas Nymphs: Her Virtue was as great as her Beauty; The Pleafantnefs of the Place invited her to cool herfelf in the Waters of a tine clear River : Alpheus , the God of the Rier, afiumed ihe Shape of a Man, and arofe out of the Water : He firli faluted her with kind IVords , and then approached near to her; but away file flies; and he follows her; and, when he had aim oft overtaken her, (he was diflolved with Fear, with the Ailiftance of Diana? whom {he im¬ plored, into a Fountain. b Alpheus then refumed his former Shape of Water, and endeavoured to mix his with her Stream, but in vain; for to rhis Day Arethufa continues her Flight, and, by her Paflage through a Cavity of the Earth, file goes under Ground-into Si¬ cily. Alpheus alfo follows by the like fubterraneous Paf- fages, till at laft he unites, and marries his own Streams to thofe of Arethufa ? iri that Ifiand. Echo d was a Nymph formerly, though nothing of her but her Voice remains now, and even when file was a —Pisfeptemprafianti corpore Nymph ns. Virg. ^heid. 1. 1 * Twice feven, the charming Daughters of the Main, Around my Perfon wait, and bear my Train. b - fedenhn cognojcit a?hata's Amnis aquas ; pojiioque a)irz, qued fumpferat, ore. Vert it ur in proprias , nt fe illi ?nijceat , undos. Ov. Met. 5 * The River his beloved Waters km w ; And, putting oif tlv afiumed Shape of Man, Refumes his own, and in a Current ran. c Virgil, ./En. 3. d Corpus adhuc Echo , 72o?i