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<title>The new pantheon; or, an introduction to the mythology of the ancients</title>
<author key="Hort, William Jillard (18..-19..)" ref="">William Jillard Hort</author>
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<bibl><author>Hort, William Jillard,</author><title> The New Pantheon ; or, An Introduction to the Mythology of the Ancients, in Question and Answer : Compiled for the Use of Young Persons. To which Are Added, an Accentuated Index, Questions for Exercise, and Poetical Illustrations of Grecian Mythology, from Homer and Virgil. By W. Jillard Hort. A New Edition, Considerably Enlarged by the Addition of the Oriental and the Northern Mythology</title>, <pubPlace>London</pubPlace>, <publisher>Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman,</publisher> <date>1836</date>, <biblScope>VIII-260 p.</biblScope> Source: <ref target="https://archive.org/details/newpantheonoran00hortgoog">Internet Archive</ref>.</bibl>
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<body>
<div>
<head>[Frontispiece.]</head>
<figure>
<graphic url="http://obvil.github.io/mythographie/images/hort_new-pantheon_1836_img000.png"/>
</figure>
</div>
<div>
<head>Preface.</head>
<p><hi rend="sc">In</hi> poetry and works of elegant literature allusions are so frequently made to the Mythology of the Antients, as to render it desirable that young persons should acquire some knowledge of that subject; yet few of the sources whence information of this kind can be derived, are sufficiently pure to meet the eye of innocence.</p>
<p>Before the glorious splendour of truth beamed forth from the <title>Gospel of Christ</title>, upon the darkened world, the pollutions of licentiousness were intermingled even with religious rites and compositions.</p>
<p>Passions so degrading, and actions so shameful, were attributed by the Heathens to the false divinities whom their deluded imaginations had devised, that from the contemplation of such a spectacle, the delicate mind must turn away with disgust; so that, without some modification, such histories are utterly improper to be presented to the attention of youth. The following introduction to Pagan Mythology was intended to obviate this difficult;</p>
<p>In the successive editions of this work which the approbation of to the Public has called for, to the Grecian and Roman Mythology, illustrated by selections from
<author key="Homère">Homer</author> and
<author key="Virgile">Virgil</author>, have been added brief accounts of the Buddhic, Indian, Persian, Egyptian, Scythian, Celtic, Arabian, and Canaanitish systems, diversified likewise by quotations from various poets; to which is subjoined a slight sketch of the Mexican and Peruvian religious fables and ceremonies.</p>
<p>The Mythology of the Greeks and Romans is evidently drawn from that of the Oriental nations.</p>
<p>Orpheus, Pythagoras, Thales, and other founders of Grecian philosophy and mythology, studied in Egypt; and having learned the doctrines of its priests, introduced them, modelled agreeably to their own ideas, into their own country. As this is the case, it might have appeared more natural to the source before the stream; to introduce the young student, first, to Eastern mythology, and afterwards duct him to its corrupt but elegant offspring. Yet as the mythology of Greece and Rome occurs so much more frequently in those books which are most commonly, and most early, used in education, it has been deemed preferable to retain the order generally adopted in works of this kind.</p>
<p>The information given concerning the Oriental Mythology is borrowed principally from
<author key="Maurice">Maurice</author>’s <title>Indian Antiquities</title>, and the <title>Asiatic Researches</title>; from
<author key="Faber">Faber</author>’s excellent work on the <title>Pagan Mythology</title>; and from the <title>Cyclopædia</title> of
<author key="Rees">Dr. Rees</author>. The Author acknowledges, likewise, his obligations to
<author key="Prichard">Dr. Prichard</author>, for the information and pleasure he has received from his scientific work on <title>Egyptian Mythology and Chronology</title>.</p>
<p>Finally, the Author presumes to hope that, improved by some few alterations, and by considerable additions, the New Pantheon may be found to possess a juster claim to that favour which it has already experienced, may continue to enjoy that support which it has hitherto found, and may meet with still more extensive patronage.</p>
<dateline><hi rend="sc">Cork</hi>, January, 1824.</dateline>
</div>
<div>
<head>Part I.</head>
<div>
<head>Chap I. [Definitions of Mythology and Idolatry.]</head>
<q><hi rend="sc">What</hi> is Mythology?</q>
<p>Mythology, an expression compounded of the two Greek words, <hi rend="i">muthos</hi>, a fable, and, <hi rend="i">logos</hi>, a discourse, signifies a system of fables, or the fabulous history of the false gods of the heathen world.</p>
<q>What is the meaning of the word Idolatry?</q>
<p>The term Idolatry is derived from the two Greek words, <hi rend="i">eidolon</hi> and <hi rend="i">latreia</hi>, signifying worship and representation, or image; and, consequently, it means the worship of images, or symbols of gods or superior powers.</p>
<q>Where did Idolatry begin?</q>
<p>Idolatry appears to have had its origin in very early ages, in India, Egypt, and Phenicia; whence it spread into Chaldea, Mesopotamia, and the neighbouring countries. From them it passed into Asia Minor, Greece, and the adjacent islands. In the time of Moses, the illustrious Hebrew lawgiver, Idolatry had attained to so great a height that, through him, the only true God gave the children of Israel a number of peculiar rites and ceremonies, to remove them, as far as possible, from its pernicious contagion, and to keep them separate from the surrounding nations, among whom it prevailed.</p>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. II. Grecian and Roman Mythology.</head>
<p><hi rend="sc">The</hi> Mythology of the Greeks and the Romans is evidently derived from that of the Oriental nations. Orpheus, Pythagoras, Thales, and other founders of Grecian philosophy and mythology, travelled and studied in Egypt, where they learned those doctrines, which, having modelled according to their own ideas, they introduced into Greece. These were, in the course of time, diversified and augmented, until they expanded into that bulky, complicated system of mythology, which the poets adorned with all the charms of imagery and verse.</p>
<q>How may the Deities of Grecian and Roman Mythology be classed?</q>
<p>They are generally arranged in the following classes: — The Celestial; the Marine; the Terrestrial; the Infernal. To these may be added the class of Inferior Divinities, of whose residence no determinate ideas were given.</p>
<q>How were the Celestial Divinities arranged by Grecian Mythologists?</q>
<p>The Celestial Deities were ranked in four distinct orders.</p>
<q>What was the first order or division?</q>
<p>The first order comprised the Supreme Gods, who were likewise called Gods of the Nations, because they were known and revered by every nation. They were twenty in number.</p>
<q>How were the Deities of this first order farther divided, and what were their names?</q>
<p>They were divided into two classes; the first was called the Council of Jupiter, the supreme divinity, and was composed of six gods, namely, Jupiter, Neptune, Mercury, Apollo, Mars, Vulcan; and of six goddesses, namely, Juno, Ceres, Minerva, Vesta, Diana, and Venus.</p>
<p>The second class was composed of eight divinities, who did not assist at the supreme Council. They were named <hi rend="i">Dii Selecti</hi> — Select Gods. These were Cœlus, Saturn, Genius, Orcus, Sol, Bacchus, Terra, and Luna.</p>
<q>Of what was the second order composed?</q>
<p>The second order included the gods whom Ovid styled the celestial populace. They were called the Inferior Gods of Nations. They had no place in heaven; nor were they admitted to the Council of Jupiter. Pan, Pomona, Flora, and the other rural Deities, were of this class.</p>
<q>What was the third order?</q>
<p>The third order was composed of demigods, who derived their origin from a god and a mortal, or from a goddess and a mortal. Such were Hercules, Esculapius, Castor, Pollux, &c. Heroes likewise, who, by their valour, had raised themselves to the rank of immortals, had a place among these.</p>
<q>What was the fourth order?</q>
<p>The fourth order contained the virtues which had formed great men; Fidelity, Concord, Courage, Prudence, and others; and even the miseries of life, as Poverty, Pain, &c.</p>
<q>What were the Indigetes and Semones?</q>
<p>Those divinities who were not of the first or second class. The word, Semones, signifies half men, as being descended from an immortal and a mortal. Indigetes signifies deified mortals, or the peculiar gods of any country.</p>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. III. [The most ancient Divinities according to the Greeks, Saturn, Cybele.]</head>
<figure>
<graphic url="http://obvil.github.io/mythographie/images/hort_new-pantheon_1836_img004.png"/>
</figure>
<q><hi rend="sc">Which</hi>, according to the Greeks, was the most ancient of the divinities?</q>
<p>Cœlus, or Heaven, whom the Greeks called Uranus, was, by their account, the most ancient of the gods, as Vesta Prisca, or Terra, different names for the earth, was of the goddesses. Their sons were called Titan and Saturn, which latter was the same as Chronos, or time.<note place="bottom">Some writers have supposed that Saturn was no other than Nimrod, that mighty hunter before the Lord, who first usurped arbitrary power over his brethren of mankind. Others have imagined that Saturn was Noah himself, and that his sons Jupiter, Neptune, and Pluto, were Ham, Japhet, and Shem, the founders of Nations.</note></p>
<q>What is the history of Titan and Saturn, the sons of Cœlus and Terra?</q>
<p>The right of seniority assigned the kingdom, to Titan, who, in compliance with his mother’s desire, yielded his right to his younger brother Saturn, on condition that he should destroy all his male children. Conformably to this agreement, Saturn devoured his sons as fast as they were born.</p>
<q>What appears to be the meaning of this barbarous story?</q>
<p>The name Chronos, given to Saturn, signifies time; and, as time sees all things produced, and all things perish, it is allegorically said, that Time or Saturn devours his own offspring.</p>
<q>What is the continuation of this fiction?</q>
<p>Rhea, or Cybele, the wife of Saturn, concealed one of her sons, and had him privately educated; but all her precautions could not prevent Titan, the elder brother, from being informed of what had passed; who, wishing to preserve to his children their right of succession, made war on Saturn, conquered him, and confined both him and Cybele, till their son Jupiter released them by vanquishing Titan. But, taking the government into his own hands, he drove away his father Saturn, who sought refuge in Italy, with Janus, king of that country, by whom he was hospitably received. In gratitude for the kind reception he met with, Saturn endowed Janus with extraordinary prudence, with knowledge of future events, and with perpetual remembrance of the past. This the ancients wished to express by representing him with a double face; whence he is called Bifrons. We learn from history, that Janus was represented with two faces, because he governed two different people, and because he divided his kingdom with Saturn. He likewise caused medals to be struck with two faces, to shew that his dominions should be governed by the joint counsels of himself and Saturn.</p>
<q>What have the poets said farther concerning Saturn?</q>
<p>The reputation of Saturn grew so famous in Latium, that the mountain, afterwards named the Capitoline Hill, was called Saturninus. From him, all Italy was sometimes called Saturnia; and the festival of the Saturnalia was instituted in honour of him, and of the happy state of things which prevailed, during his reign, in Italy, emphatically called the golden age.<note place="bottom">During this festival, which lasted, at first, only one day, but from the time of Julius Cæsar, three, four, and five days successively, there was an universal cessation of business amongst the Romans; unbounded hilarity prevailed, and even the slaves shared in the general joy, being placed upon an equality with their masters, and allowed to taste the sweets of liberty.</note></p>
<q>What were the actions and attributes of Janus?</q>
<p>Janus received divine honours; but neither Saturn, nor he, was ever ranked among the Deities of the first class. Janus must be reckoned among those gods called Indigetes. Besides his having two faces, he was represented with a wand in his hand, as inspector of the public roads; and with a key, as being the inventor of doors. Numa Pompilius erected a temple to him, which was open in time of war, and shut during peace. The invention of crowns and boats was attributed to him; he was also the first who coined copper money. This Prince came from Perhibea, a town of Thessaly, into Italy. He there civilized the manners of the people, who were living in a wild and savage state; and when success had crowned his efforts, gratitude raised altars to his memory.</p>
<q>How was Saturn represented?</q>
<p>The ancient statues of Saturn wear chains, in remembrance of those with which his son loaded him. These were taken off during the festival of the Saturnalia, to shew that his reign had been that of happiness and liberty. He is frequently represented under the form of an old man, armed with a scythe, to imply that he presided over the times and seasons. Under this form, he was called Chronos or Time.</p>
<q>What is the history of Cybele?</q>
<p>Cybele was generally regarded as the mother of the gods, and, on that account, was called <hi rend="i">Magna Mater</hi> — the Great Mother. She had many names, the most common of which are: Dindyméne, Idæa, and Berecynthia, from different mountains, where she was worshiped. She was likewise called Ops and Tellus, as presiding over the earth; and Rhea, from a Greek word, signifying to flow; because all plants, trees, and animals proceed from the earth. The box and pine trees were esteemed sacred to her. History informs us, that Cybele was the daughter of a king of Phrygia, who came from her own country into Italy, where she married Saturn. She was the first who fortified the walls of cities with towers, and she is therefore depicted with a crown of towers on her head.</p>
<q>How is Cybele described?</q>
<p>Cybele is generally represented sitting, to denote the stability of the earth; and bearing a drum or disk, emblematical of the winds confined in the bowels of the earth. She wears a crown of towers, as before mentioned. She has keys in her hand, to signify her keeping, locked up in her bosom, the seeds of every sort of fruit. Her temples were round, in imitation of the form of the earth. The feasts of Cybele were called Megalesia, and her priests Galli, from a river of Phrygia; or Corybantes, from their striking themselves in their dances; or Curetes, from the island Crete, where they brought up Jupiter; or Dactyli, from the Greek word signifying fingers, because they were ten in number, like the fingers. The feasts of this goddess were celebrated with the noise of drums and cymbals, and with frightful yells and cries.<anchor xml:id="footnote1"/><note place="bottom">Her priests were seated on the ground when they sacrificed, and offered only the hearts of the victims.</note></p>
<p>She had a temple at Rome, called Opertum, into which men were never admitted.</p>
<quote>
<l>Great guardian queen of Ida’s hills and woods,</l>
<l>Supreme, majestic mother of the gods!</l>
<l>Whose strong defence proud tow’ring cities share,</l>
<l>While roaring lions whirl thy mighty car!</l>
<l>Oh! kindly second this auspicious sign,</l>
<l>And grace thy Phrygians with thy aid divine.</l>
<l>Inspir’d by thee, the combat I require,</l>
<l>My bosom kindles, and my soul’s on fire.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pitt">Pitt</author>’s
<author key="Virgile">Virgil</author>.</bibl>
</quote>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. IV. [Vesta, Vestal Virgins.]</head>
<q><hi rend="sc">Who</hi> was Vesta?</q>
<p>Vesta was the daughter of Saturn; the goddess of fire; emblematical of that pure vital heat, which, being diffused through the frame of Man, enlivens and cherishes him. Numa Pompilius raised an altar to her, and instituted those celebrated priestesses who bore the name of Vestals, or Vestal Virgins.</p>
<q>What was the number of these Priestesses of Vesta?</q>
<p>At first, they were only four in number, but were, afterwards, increased to seven.</p>
<q>At what age were they consecrated to Vesta, and how long did their time of service last?</q>
<p>The Roman virgins, destined for the service of Vesta, were chosen between the age of six and ten years. The time of their consecration to the goddess lasted thirty years, and it was not till after this term that they were free from their priesthood, and at liberty to marry. During the first ten years, they were instructed in the duties of their profession, practised them during the second ten, and in the last ten years, instructed the novices.</p>
<q>What was the principal duty of these virgins?</q>
<p>The chief employment of the vestals consisted in constantly maintaining the sacred fire, which burned in honour of Vesta. This fire was renewed by the rays of the sun, yearly, during the kalends of March, or latter part of February.</p>
<q>What degree of importance was attributed to the preservation of this fire?</q>
<p>It was considered as being so important, that when it happened to expire, all public spectacles were forbidden till the crime was expiated.</p>
<p>This event was the subject of general mourning, and considered as a most direful presage. If either of the Vestal virgins had neglected her duty, or violated her vows, nothing could save her from the dreadful death of being buried alive.</p>
<q>What was the temple of Vesta supposed to contain?</q>
<p>It was said to contain, besides the consecrated fire, the Palladium, or sacred image of Minerva, and the Lares and Penates, or household gods, which Æneas saved from the destruction of Troy, and brought to Italy.</p>
<q>Whence did the Romans derive this worship of Vesta?</q>
<p>It is certain that the worship of Vesta, or of fire, was brought by Æneas from Phrygia; but the Phrygians received it originally from the East. The Chaldeans held fire in great veneration, and worshiped it as an emblem of the Deity. Zoroaster taught the Persians to venerate the Sun as the most glorious image of the Supreme Being, and to regard fire as the most striking emblem of his beneficent influence. The sacred fire, drawn from sun-beams, accompanied the Persian Monarchs in their wars; and their utter abhorrence of any other representation of the Divinity, instigated them to demolish the Grecian temples and statues of the Gods.</p>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. V. [Jupiter.]</head>
<figure>
<graphic url="http://obvil.github.io/mythographie/images/hort_new-pantheon_1836_img014.png"/>
</figure>
<q><hi rend="sc">What</hi> was the idea which the Pagans entertained concerning Jupiter?</q>
<p>The generality of their philosophers supposed Jupiter the greatest of the Gods, to be the purest air, the æther: and Juno his wife, the grosser air which surrounds the earth.</p>
<p>Those who looked upon him as an animated God, as one of those men whose illustrious actions had procured him divine honours, contradicted themselves most egregiously: sometimes describing him as absolute sovereign of Gods and men; as the principle of all justice; and not unfrequently as the weakest and most criminal of mortals. He was supposed to be the master of the air, the clouds, the thunder and lightning; the God of foresight; the patron of strangers; the guardian of the rights of hospitality; the peculiar judge and protector of sovereigns and magistrates.</p>
<q>Were there not different Jupiters among different nations?</q>
<p>Yes; and this circumstance renders his history the more obscure. The first of them, is the Jupiter Ammon of the Libyans, who, there is reason to believe, was Ham, one of the sons of Noah. His temple, the ruins of which are still to be seen, was in an Oasis, or island of verdure, in the desert, west of Egypt. Jupiter Serapis, worshiped in Egypt, is also very ancient. Jupiter Belus, mentioned by Herodotus, was the Jupiter of the Assyrians. In short, almost every nation had its own Jupiter. The Ethiopians called him Assabinus; the Gauls, Taranus; the inhabitants of the lower Nile, Apis. The Romans considered him as the peculiar guardian God of their empire. They styled him Jupiter Capitolinus, from his chief temple on the Capitoline hill; Jupiter Tonans, or Thunderer; Jupiter Fulminans, or Fulgurator, Scatterer of the Lightning, Hurler of the Thunderbolts.</p>
<q>What was the fabulous history of this God?</q>
<p>Jupiter having been saved from the devouring fury of his father Saturn, by the address of Rhea his mother, as has before been recounted, and nourished by the milk of the goat Amalthea, delivered his brothers and sisters from prison, made war upon Saturn, and being furnished with thunderbolts by the Cyclops, and aided by Neptune and Pluto, vanquished and precipitated him into the lowest depths of Tartarus. Dividing the empire of the universe into three parts, he retained Heaven for himself, entrusted the Sea to Neptune, and allotted to Pluto the infernal regions.</p>
<q>How do the learned explain this celebrated division of the universe?</q>
<p>They almost all agree in regarding it as a confused tradition of the repeopling the world after the deluge, as related in the book of Genesis. Noah divided the earth among his three sons, Shem, Ham, and Japhet. Ham went into Africa: and there is great probability that he was the person afterwards known under the name of Jupiter Ammon. Japhet had for his share the maritime parts of Asia, with the Archipelago and Europe, which caused him to be accounted, in aftertimes, the God of the sea. Shem had the rest of Asia, where the worship of fire became almost general, and this occasioning conflagrations of many cities, procured him the name of God of the infernal Regions.</p>
<q>What was the real history of Jupiter?</q>
<p>His father, Saturn, who reigned over a very large empire, being suspicious of his children, caused them all to be confined. Rhea, Jupiter’s mother, had the address to save him, and sent him from Arcadia, where he then was, into Crete, to the recesses of Mount Ida. The Titans revolted against Saturn and imprisoned him; Jupiter leaving Crete, defeated them, re-established his father, and returned victorious. Saturn, again growing jealous of Jupiter, came to attack him in Crete, but being driven back into Greece, and defeated even there, he fled into Italy, where he was kindly received by Janus. Exciting the ‘Titans against his son, and being again beaten, he tied with them into Spain. Jupiter followed them thither, gave them another defeat, and thus terminated the war, after it had lasted ten years. Becoming master of such a mighty empire, he found it necessary to appoint governors to assist him. Of these, Atlas, who was set over the frontiers of Africa, became so famous there, that he gave name to the chain of mountains extending to the sea; which appellation they still retain; and the ocean that washes them was called the Atlantic Ocean. Jupiter ended his days in his favourite island Crete, having lived 120 years, and reigned 60, after the defeat of the Titans.</p>
<q>What were the principal names of this God?</q>
<p>He was called Jou, that is, young, from being the youngest of Saturn’s sons, and from gaining great reputation in his youth. Afterwards Pater, or father, was added to it; whence was formed Joupater and Jupiter. He was also called Zeus; Optimus Maximus, or the Best, and Greatest; Jove; King of Gods and Men; All-powerful; Diespater, or Father of Day; Pluvius, as commanding the rain. The Thunderer as master of the thunder and lightning.</p>
<q>What was the worship offered to this Divinity?</q>
<p>It was the most solemn of any paid to the heathen Deities; and, among different nations, greatly diversified. The victims most commonly offered to Jupiter were a goat, a sheep, or a white bull, with gilded horns; and, not unfrequently, only flour, salt, or incense. The oak and the olive were consecrated to him. He had three oracles, much celebrated; that of Dodona, that of Trophonius, and that of Ammon, in Lybia.</p>
<q>What was his character?</q>
<p>In their extreme blindness, the heathens, though ascribing to him power, wisdom, and justice, yet intermingled, in his character, many shameful vices and weaknesses of mortality. In his real history, as an earthly monarch, he would have been a truly illustrious Prince, had he not been excessively addicted to pleasure, and indulgent to his vicious passions.</p>
<q>In what manner was Jupiter represented?</q>
<p>Jupiter was generally represented seated on a throne, under the figure of a majestic man, with a venerable beard. In his right-hand, holding the thunder; in his left, a sceptre made of cypress wood, expressive of durability, and the image of victory; treading the Titans under his feet, and having an eagle near him with extended wings. The upper part of his body was naked, the lower part clothed. The throne denoted the stability of his empire; the upper part of his body, being uncovered, signified that he was visible to superior beings, and the celestial regions, while the long garments robing the lower part, expressed his invisibility to mortals. The sceptre was emblematical of his irresistible power; and the eagle with outstretched wings, of his sovereignty over the heavens.
<author key="Homère">Homer</author> describes him with black eyebrows and curling hair; his head surrounded with clouds, and shaking the heavens with his nod; the eagle placed at his feet; the winged thunderbolt in his hand; by his side, respect and equity; before him, two urns of good and evil, which he distributes at pleasure to mankind. His thunderbolt was composed of hail, rain, fire, and wind, intermixed with lightning, terror, noise, and wrath.</p>
<quote>
<l>He whose all conscious eyes the world behold,</l>
<l>Th’ eternal Thunderer sits enthron’d in gold.</l>
<l>High heaven the footstool of his feet he makes,</l>
<l>And, wide beneath him, all Olympus shakes.</l>
<l>He speaks, and awful bends his sable brows,</l>
<l>Shakes his ambrosial curls and gives the nod;</l>
<l>The stamp of fate and sanction of the God;</l>
<l>High heav’n, with trembling, the dread signal takes,</l>
<l>And all Olympus to the centre shakes.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pope">Pope</author>’s
<author key="Homère">Homer</author>’s <title>Iliad</title>.</bibl>
</quote>
<quote>
<l>Then spake th’ almighty Father as he sate</l>
<l>Enthron’d in gold; and closed the great debate:</l>
<l>Th’ attentive winds a solemn silence keep;</l>
<l>The wondering waves lie level on the deep;</l>
<l>Earth to the centre shakes; high heav’n is awed,</l>
<l>And all th’ immortal pow’rs stand trembling at the God.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pitt">Pitt</author>’s
<author key="Virgile">Virgil</author>.</bibl>
</quote>
<quote>
<l>Great Jove himself, whom dreadful darkness shrouds,</l>
<l>Pavilion’d in the thickness of the clouds,</l>
<l>With lightning arm’d, his red right hand puts forth,</l>
<l>And shakes, with burning bolts, the solid earth;</l>
<l>The nations shrink appall’d; the beasts are fled:</l>
<l>All human hearts are sunk and pierc’d with dread;</l>
<l>He strikes vast Rhodope’s exalted crown,</l>
<l>And hurls huge Athos and Ceraunia down.</l>
<l>Thick fall the rains; the wind redoubled roars;</l>
<l>The God now smites the woods, and now the sounding shores.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pitt">Pitt</author>’s
<author key="Virgile">Virgil</author>.</bibl>
</quote>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. VI. [Juno.]</head>
<figure>
<graphic url="http://obvil.github.io/mythographie/images/hort_new-pantheon_1836_img022.png"/>
</figure>
<q><hi rend="sc">Who</hi> was Juno?</q>
<p>The daughter of Saturn; the sister and wife of Jupiter. She was called by the Greeks Hera, or Mistress: or Megale, the Great. The Romans gave her the name of Juno Matrona, or the Matron; Juno Regina, or the Queen; Juno Moneta, the Admonisher.</p>
<q>Where was she born?</q>
<p>Several cities disputed the honour of having given birth to this goddess: principally, Samos, and Argos, where she was more particularly worshiped.</p>
<q>Who were her children?</q>
<p>Hebe, Mars, and Vulcan.</p>
<q>What was her character?</q>
<p>She was haughty and jealous, frequently quarreling with her husband Jupiter, and implacable in her anger.</p>
<q>Under what figure was she generally represented?</q>
<p>As a majestic woman, seated upon a throne, holding, in one hand, a sceptre, and in the other, a spindle; wearing a radiant crown, and sometimes having her head encircled with a rainbow. Near her was generally placed her favourite bird, the peacock. In her temple at Argos, was her statue of gold and ivory, of prodigious size, above which were placed the Hours and Graces.</p>
<q>What were her attributes and worship? </q>
<p>This goddess presided over empires and riches, and her worship was very solemn and universal in the heathen world. Young geese, and the hawk, as well as the peacock, were esteemed sacred to her. Of plants, the dittany and poppy were offered to her. In her sacrifices, an ewe lamb was the ordinary victim. She was regarded as the protectress of married women, and invoked by them under the name of Juno Lucina.</p>
<quote>
<label>Juno’s Chariot.</label>
<l>She speaks; Minerva burns to meet the war,</l>
<l>And now heav’n’s empress calls her blazing car.</l>
<l>At her command rush forth the steeds divine;</l>
<l>Rich with immortal gold their trappings shine.</l>
<l>Bright Hebe waits; by Hebe ever young,</l>
<l>The whirling wheels are to the chariot hung.</l>
<l>On the bright axle turns the bidden wheel</l>
<l>Of sounding brass; the polished axle, steel.</l>
<l>Eight brazen spokes in radiant order flame;</l>
<l>The circles gold, of uncorrupted frame,</l>
<l>Such as the heavens produce: and round the gold;</l>
<l>Two brazen rings of work divine were roll’d.</l>
<l>The bossy naves, of solid silver, shone;</l>
<l>Braces of gold suspend the moving throne.</l>
<l>The car, behind, an arching figure bore;</l>
<l>The bending concave form’d an arch before.</l>
<l>Silver the beam, th’ extended yoke was gold,</l>
<l>And golden reins the immortal coursers hold;</l>
<l>Herself, impatient, to the ready car</l>
<l>The coursers joins, and breathes revenge and war.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pope">Pope</author>’s
<author key="Homère">Homer</author>’s <title>Iliad</title>.</bibl>
</quote>
<q>What were the offices of Hebe?</q>
<p>She was the blooming Goddess of youth; and was cup-bearer to Jupiter, until by an unfortunate fall, having displeased him, she was deprived of that honour. Ganymede, the beautiful son of Tros, king of Troy, was substituted in her place.</p>
<q>Who was Iris?</q>
<p>The attendant of Juno, as Mercury was of Jupiter. She is represented as being extremely beautiful; descending upon the rainbow, with expanded wings; a blaze of glory round her head; and clothed in floating robes of brilliant and varying colours. Her peculiar offices were, to convey the commands of Juno; to create dissensions; and to release the souls of females struggling in the pangs of death. She is the personification of the rainbow.</p>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. VII. [Ceres.]</head>
<figure>
<graphic url="http://obvil.github.io/mythographie/images/hort_new-pantheon_1836_img036.png"/>
</figure>
<q><hi rend="sc">Who</hi> was Ceres?</q>
<p>Ceres was the daughter of Saturn and Cybele, and was supposed to be the first who cultivated the earth.</p>
<q>What was her history?</q>
<p>Pluto, her brother, having carried off her daughter Proserpine, and taken her to the infernal regions, Ceres complained of this act of violence to Jupiter, who decreed that she should go and demand her daughter, and that Pluto should be compelled to restore her, provided she had neither eaten nor drunken during her residence in his dominions. Unfortunately she had taken part of a pomegranate, which was perceived and discovered} by Ascalaphus. This so irritated Ceres that she threw some of the water of Phlegethon into the informer’s face, and changed him into an owl, the harbinger of misfortune. Minerva afterwards took the owl under her protection, because it is a watchful bird and discerns objects in the dark. An allegory, expressive of wisdom, being always vigilant and guarded against surprise.</p>
<q>What appears to be the meaning of the Fable?</q>
<p>By the advice of Ascalaphus, Proserpine consented to marry Pluto, which was the cause of much regret to Ceres. Ascalaphus, thereupon, became the object of her vengeance; but his prudence and wisdom engaged Minerva to take him under her protection. Jupiter, to comfort and appease Ceres, ordained that Proserpine should pass only one half of the year in the infernal regions, and the other in heaven. Proserpine was frequently considered as being the moon, and this fable might be intended to express her time of disappearing.</p>
<q>Under what figure was Ceres represented?</q>
<p>Under that of a tall majestic woman, with yellow hair, surmounted by ears of corn, her right-hand, filled with poppies and wheat, and her left, grasping a lighted torch.</p>
<q>What were her attributes?</q>
<p>She is the goddess of fruits; for her very name is derived from the care she was supposed to take in producing and preserving the fruits of the earth. She is said to have taught the art of tilling the earth, and sowing corn, and making bread.</p>
<q>What were the sacrifices offered to this Goddess?</q>
<p>Swine, because they destroy the productions of the earth; and garlands, composed of ears of corn, were offered to her. The husbandmen carried through the fields, a sow big with young, or a cow-calf, at the beginning of harvest, with dancing and shouts of joy. One of them, adorned with a crown, sang the praises of Ceres; and after they had offered an oblation of wine mixed with honey and milk, before they began to reap, they sacrificed the sow.</p>
<quote>
<l>To Ceres bland, her annual rites be paid,</l>
<l>On the green turf, beneath the fragrant shade;</l>
<l>When winter ends and spring serenely shines,</l>
<l>Then fat the lambs, then mellow are the wines:</l>
<l>Then sweet are slumbers on the flowery ground;</l>
<l>Then with thick shades are lofty mountains crown’d.</l>
<l>Let all the hinds bend low at Ceres’ shrine;</l>
<l>Mix honey sweet, for her, with milk and mellow wine</l>
<l>Thrice lead the victim the new fruits around,</l>
<l>And Ceres call, and choral hymns resound.</l>
<l>Presume not, swains, the ripened grain to reap,</l>
<l>Till crowned with oak in antic dance you leap,</l>
<l>Invoking Ceres; and in solemn lays,</l>
<l>Exalt your rural queen’s immortal praise.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pitt">Pitt</author>’s
<author key="Virgile">Virgil</author>.</bibl>
</quote>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. VIII. Of Apollo and of the Sun.</head>
<q><hi rend="sc">Were</hi> Apollo, and Sol or the Sun, considered to be the same?</q>
<p>The Greeks and Romans confounded the Sun with Apollo; but ancient monuments prove that they should be distinguished from each other.</p>
<q>Under what figures are they represented?</q>
<p>Apollo is always represented as a young man, having a bow or lyre in his hand; while the Sun is depicted with his head surrounded with rays, holding in one hand a globe.</p>
<q>By what people was the Sun worshiped?</q>
<p>The adoration of the Sun is the first idolatrous worship known.</p>
<p>The Egyptians, Phenicians, Arabians, and Persians, adored the Sun, long before the Apollo of the Greeks was known. The Chaldeans called him Belus; the Egyptians, Osiris; the Ammonites, Moloch; the Persians, Mythras.</p>
<q>What were the attributes of Sol?</q>
<p>He was considered as ruling over the various changes of the year, attended by the months and hours; he is represented riding in a chariot drawn by four horses, Eous, Pyrois, Ethon, and Phlegon; Greek words, signifying red, luminous, hot, and loving the earth. The first denotes the rising of the Sun, whose rays are then red; the second, the period when he acquires a brighter colour; the third, signifies noon, when he is in all his glory; and the fourth, the time of his setting, when he appears to approach the earth.</p>
<quote>
<label>The palace of the Sun.</label>
<l>The Sun’s bright palace on high columns rais’d,</l>
<l>With burnish’d gold and flaming jewels blaz’d.</l>
<l>The folding gates diffus’d a silver light,</l>
<l>And with a milder gleam refresh’d the sight.</l>
<l>Of polish’d iv’ry was the covering wrought,</l>
<l>The matter rival’d not the Sculptor’s thought,</l>
<l>For in the portal was display’d on high,</l>
<l>(The work of Vulcan) a fictitious sky.</l>
<l>A waving sea the inferior earth embrac’d,</l>
<l>And Gods and Goddesses the water grac’d.</l>
<l>On earth, a different landscape courts the eyes,</l>
<l>Men, towns, and beasts in distant prospects rise;</l>
<l>And nymphs and streams and woods and rural deities.</l>
<l>O’er all, the heaven’s refulgent image shines,</l>
<l>Oh either gate were six engraven signs.</l>
<l>The God sits high exalted on a throne</l>
<l>Of blazing gems with purple garments on.</l>
<l>The Hours in order, rang’d on either hand,</l>
<l>And Days and Months and Years and Ages stand.</l>
<l>Here Spring appears with flowery chaplets bound;</l>
<l>Here Summer with her wheaten garlands crown’d;</l>
<l>Here Autumn the rich trodden grapes besmear,</l>
<l>And hoary Winter shivers in the rear.</l>
</quote>
<ab type="ornament">———</ab>
<quote>
<label>Chariot and horses of the Sun.</label>
<l>A golden axle did the car uphold<hi rend="i">;</hi></l>
<l>Gold was the beam; the wheels were orbed with gold;</l>
<l>The spokes in rows of silver pleased the sight,</l>
<l>The seat with party-colour’d gems was bright;</l>
<l>Apollo shone amid the glare of light:</l>
<l>He bade the nimble Hours, without delay,</l>
<l>Bring forth the steeds; the nimble Hours obey.</l>
<l>From their full racks the gen’rous steeds retire,</l>
<l>Dropping ambrosial foam and snorting fire,</l>
<l>And now the fiery horses neigh’d aloud,</l>
<l>Breathing out flames and pawing where they stood.</l>
<l>They spring together forth, and swiftly bear</l>
<l>The bounding car through clouds and yielding air.</l>
<l>With winged speed, outstrip the eastern wind,</l>
<l>And leave the breezes of the morn behind.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Ovide">Ovid</author>’s <title>Metamorphoses</title>,</bibl>
</quote>
<q>Who were the children of the Sun?</q>
<p>The Sun was supposed to have many children; the most celebrated of whom were, Aurora, Circe, and Phaeton. Aurora, every morning, opens the gates of heaven, precedes her father, and announces his return. She petitioned the Gods to bestow immortality upon Tithonus, son of Laomedon, king of Troy, whom she had married, forgetting to request perpetual youth to be granted with it. Consequently, Tithonus was burthened with all the infirmities of old age, while Aurora still flourished in full bloom. He intreated Aurora to obtain a reversion of this fatal gift, and permission to die.</p>
<p>This beautiful allegory is intended to paint, in striking colours, the imprudence of many of our wishes, and to shew that were they all to be granted, they would frequently be productive of misery instead of happiness.</p>
<q>What is the history of Phaeton?</q>
<p>In order to prove that he was really the child of the Sun, Phaeton demanded of his father, to drive the chariot of light for one day. The Sun having sworn to grant whatever Phaeton should ask, could not refuse. In vain did he give to the rash youth, the most prudent directions for the management of the horses. They soon perceived the weakness and inexperience of the charioteer: quitted the usual track, and involved earth and heaven in one general conflagration. To save the world from absolute destruction, Jupiter hurled his dreadful thunderbolt, dashed Phaeton lifeless from the car into the river Po, in Italy, and scattered the fiery coursers. His sisters, called the Heliades, or daughters of the Sun, stood weeping in mournful silence round the body of their beloved brother, till they were changed into poplars and their tears became amber. His friend and relative, Cycnus, likewise, died of grief, and was metamorphosed into a swan.</p>
<quote>
<label>The Fall of Phaeton.</label>
<l>Jove call’d to witness every power above,</l>
<l>And e’en the God whose son the chariot drove,</l>
<l>That what he acts, he is compell’d to do,</l>
<l>Or universal ruin must ensue.</l>
<l>Straight he ascends the high ethereal throne,</l>
<l>Whence fierce he us’d to dart his thunder down;</l>
<l>Whence his dread show’rs and storms he used to pour;</l>
<l>Then aiming at the youth with lifted hand</l>
<l>Full at his head he hurl’d the flaming brand,</l>
<l>In awful thunderings —</l>
<l>At once from life and from the chariot driv’n,</l>
<l>The ambitious boy fell thunderstruck from heav’n;</l>
<l>The coursers started with a sudden bound,</l>
<l>And flung the reins and chariot to the ground:</l>
<l>The studded harness from their necks they broke,</l>
<l>Here fell a wheel, and here a silver spoke;</l>
<l>Here, the bright beam and axle torn away,</l>
<l>And scatter’d o’er the earth, the shining fragments lay.</l>
<l>The breathless Phaeton, with flaming hair,</l>
<l>Shot from the chariot, like a falling star;</l>
<l>Till on the Po his blasted corpse was hurl’d,</l>
<l>Far from his country in the western world.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Ovide">Ovid</author>’s <title>Met.</title></bibl>
</quote>
<q>What was the history of Circe?</q>
<p>Circe was a most skilful sorceress, who poisoned her husband, a king of the Sarmatians. For this horrible action, she was banished by her subjects, and flying into Italy, established herself upon the promontory Circeum. She fell in love with Glaucus, a sea god, who, preferring a sea nymph, called Scylla, Circe transformed her into a sea monster, by poisoning the water, in which she was accustomed to bathe. She is said to have changed men into beasts, and to have drawn down the stars from heaven, by her powerful incantations. Circe was the emblem of voluptuousness; which, by this allegory the poets taught, degraded those into brute beasts who became its slaves, although their genius and talents might have been bright, as the stars in the firmament.</p>
<quote>
<label>Circe.</label>
<l>The Palace in a woody vale they found.</l>
<l>High rais’d of stone; a shady space around,</l>
<l>Where mountain wolves and brindled lions roam,</l>
<l>By magic tam’d, familiar to the dome.</l>
<l>With gentle blandishment, our men they meet,</l>
<l>And wag their tails, and fawning lick their feet.</l>
<l>Now on the threshold of the dome they stood,</l>
<l>And heard a voice resounding thro’ the wood.</l>
<l>Placed at her loom, within, the Goddess sung,</l>
<l>The vaulted roofs and solid pavement rung.</l>
<l>On thrones around, with downy coverings trac’d,</l>
<l>With semblance fair, th’ unhappy men she plac’d.</l>
<l>Milk newly press’d, the sacred flour of wheat,</l>
<l>And honey fresh and Pramnian wines, the treat.</l>
<l>But venom’d was the bread, and mix’d the bowl,</l>
<l>With drugs of force to darken all the soul.</l>
<l>Soon, in the luscious feast, themselves they lost,</l>
<l>And drank oblivion of their native coast.</l>
<l>Instant her circling wand the Goddess waves,</l>
<l>To hogs transforms them; whom the sty receives.</l>
<l>No more was seen the human form divine,</l>
<l>Head, face, and members, bristle into swine.</l>
<l>Still curst with sense, their minds remain alone,</l>
<l>And their own voice affrights them when they groan.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pope">Pope</author>’s
<author key="Homère">Homer</author>’s <title>Odyssey</title>.</bibl>
</quote>
<quote>
<l>Now by rich Circe’s coast they bend their way,</l>
<l>Circe, fair daughter of the God of day.</l>
<l><hi rend="i">A</hi> dangerous shore; the echoing forests rung,</l>
<l>While at the loom the beauteous Goddess sung,</l>
<l>Bright cedar brands supply her father’s rays,</l>
<l>Perfume the dome, and round the palace blaze.</l>
<l>Here, wolves with howlings scare the naval train,</l>
<l>And lions roar, reluctant to the chain.</l>
<l>Here, growling bears and swine their ears affright,</l>
<l>And break the solemn silence of the night.</l>
<l>These once were men; But Circe’s charms confine,</l>
<l>In brutal shapes, the human form divine.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pitt">Pitt</author>’s
<author key="Virgile">Virgil</author>.</bibl>
</quote>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. IX. [Apollo.]</head>
<figure>
<graphic url="http://obvil.github.io/mythographie/images/hort_new-pantheon_1836_img044.png"/>
</figure>
<q><hi rend="sc">Who</hi> was Apollo?</q>
<p>The son of Jupiter and Latona.</p>
<p>Juno, incessantly pursuing her rival Latona, prevailed upon the Earth to afford her no asylum. Upon this, Latona took refuge in a floating island of the Archipelago, called Delos, which was frequently covered by the waves. Moved with compassion for her hapless fate, Neptune secured the island from being inundated, and rooted it firmly in the sea. Therein were born Apollo and Diana, her twin children.</p>
<q>What were the names of Apollo?</q>
<p>He was called Delos, from the island in which he was born. Phœbus, a word signifying light and life. Pythius, from the dreadful serpent Python, which he killed with his arrows; Cynthius, from Mount Cynthus, in Delos; Delphicus from Delphi: Nomius, or law-giver; and Paean, from his mitigating pain, or from his great skill in hunting.</p>
<q>What were the attributes of Apollo?</q>
<p>He was supposed to preside over music, physic, poetry, and rhetoric; to teach the art of divination, or foretelling future events; and that of archery. He was esteemed capable of inflicting, as well as of removing, pestilential disorders. The laurel was dedicated to him.</p>
<q>What were his actions?</q>
<p>Among many absurd and immoral actions ascribed to him, as well as to the other heathen divinities, the following exploits are said to have been performed by Apollo. He destroyed the Cyclops, huge one-eyed giants, who forged Jupiter’s thunder-bolts, in order to revenge the death of his son Esculapius, who was killed by thunder, for having, by his great skill in physic, prevented men from dying, and thus depopulated the infernal regions. For this, Apollo was banished from the celestial realms, and forced, for a time, to undergo many trials and difficulties on earth. During his banishment, he invented the harp.</p>
<p>It is asserted by the poets, that he raised the walls of Troy by the music of his harp; and that a stone upon which he laid his lyre, became so melodious, that whenever it was stricken, it sounded like that instrument. Having unfortunately killed a very beautiful boy, called Hyacynthus, by the blow of a quoit, he caused to spring up from his blood, the flower called after his name.</p>
<p>Apollo was challenged to a musical contest by a satyr named Marsyas. He flayed him alive for his presumption, and afterwards metamorphosed him into a river in Phrygia, called, after him, Marsyas.</p>
<p>Midas, king of Phrygia, having determined the victory in favour of the god Pan, who also contended with Apollo for the prize of music, Apollo stretched his ears to the length and shape of asses’ ears, Midas’s barber necessarily discovering the secret, was bribed by him not to publish it; but being unable to retain so great a prodigy, he digged a hole in the earth, and whispering into it this sentence, “Midas has the ears of an ass,” filled it again. The reeds which grew out from the spot, when moved by the wind, uttered the fatal secret, “Midas has the ears of an ass.” A number of other stories, equally ridiculous, are told of Apollo.</p>
<q>In what manner was the Priestess of Apollo represented as uttering the oracles of the god?</q>
<p>She was, with great apparent reluctance, placed by the priests upon the sacred tripod, a kind of three-legged stool. A fit of phrenzy then seemed to seize her. She was violently convulsed, her hair stood erect, her mouth foamed, and whirling rapidly round, she appeared to pronounce involuntarily, frequently in verse, disjointed sentences, which contained the oracle. This was a contrivance of the priests; either by intoxicating the woman, by raising her emotions to a high degree of enthusiasm, or, as it was asserted, by placing her so as to inhale a mephitic vapour, which issued from a cavern under the temple at Delphos.</p>
<quote>
<label>Phœbus.</label>
<l>Phœbus, himself, the rushing battle led;</l>
<l>A veil of clouds involv’d his radiant head:</l>
<l>High, held before him, Jove’s enormous shield</l>
<l>Portentous shone, and shaded all the field,</l>
<l>Vulcan to Jove th’ immortal gift consign’d,</l>
<l>To scatter hosts and terrify mankind.</l>
<l>As long as Phœbus bears unmov’d the shield,</l>
<l>Sits doubtful conquest hovering o’er the field;</l>
<l>“But when, aloft, he shakes it in the skies,</l>
<l>Shouts in their ears, and lightens in their eyes,</l>
<l>‘Deep horror seizes ev’ry Grecian breast,</l>
<l>Their force is humbled, and their fear confest.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pope">Pope</author>’s
<author key="Homère">Homer</author>’s <title>Iliad</title>.</bibl>
</quote>
<quote>
<label>Apollo inflicting a pestilence upon the Greeks.</label>
<l>Apollo heard. The favouring power attends,</l>
<l>And from Olympus’ lofty tops descends</l>
<l>Pent was his bow, the Grecian hearts to wound,</l>
<l>Pierce as he mov’d his silver shafts resound.</l>
<l>Breathing revenge, a sudden night he spread,</l>
<l>And gloomy darkness roll’d around his head.</l>
<l>The fleet in view, he twang’d his deadly bow;</l>
<l>And hissing fly the feather’d fates below.</l>
<l>On mules and dogs, the infection first began;</l>
<l>And last the vengeful arrows fixed on man.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pope">Pope</author>’s
<author key="Homère">Homer</author>’s <title>Iliad</title>.</bibl>
</quote>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. X. The Muses.</head>
<q><hi rend="sc">Who</hi> were the Muses?</q>
<p>Daughters of Jupiter and Mnemosyne, or memory; mistresses of the sciences, patronesses of poetry and music, companions of Apollo, directresses of the feasts of the gods.</p>
<q>How are they represented?</q>
<p>As nine beautiful virgins, sometimes dancing in a ring, around Apollo, sometimes playing on various musical instruments, or engaged in scientific pursuits. They are called Muses, from a Greek word, signifying to meditate, to inquire.</p>
<q>What are the proper names of the Muses?</q>
<p>They had, each, a name derived from some particular accomplishment of mind, or branch of science.</p>
<p>The first of the Muses, Clio, derived her name from the Greek word, signifying glory, renown. She presided over history. She was supposed to have invented the lyre, which she is frequently depicted as holding in her hand, together with the plectrum, the instrument with which the ancients struck their harp or lyre.</p>
<p>Thalia presided over comedy. Her name signifies the blooming. She is represented reclining on a pillar, holding in her hand a mask.</p>
<p>Melpomene presided over tragedy. She is generally seen with her hand resting upon the club of Hercules; because the object of tragedy was to represent the brilliant actions, and the misfortunes of heroes.</p>
<p>Euterpe was the patroness of instrumental music. Her name signifies the agreeable. She is always depicted as surrounded with various instruments of music.</p>
<p>Terpsichore, or the amusing, presided over the dance. She has always a smiling countenance; and one foot lightly touching the earth, while the other sports in air.</p>
<p>Erato. Her name is derived from the Greek word signifying love. She is the inspirer or light poetry: and of the triumphs and complaints of lovers.</p>
<p>Polyhymnia, as her name signifies, presides over miscellaneous poetry, and the ode.</p>
<p>Urania, or the heavenly, was esteemed the inventress of astronomy. In her hand she holds a globe, which sometimes appears placed on a tripod, and then she grasps a scale, or a pair of compasses.</p>
<p>Calliope owes her name to the majesty of her voice. She presided over rhetoric and epic poetry.</p>
<q>Had the Muses any other names?</q>
<p>They had names common to them all. Heliconides, from Mount Helicon in Boeotia. Parnassides, from the mountain Parnassus in Phocis. Citherides, from mount Citheron. Aonides, from the country Aonia. Pierides, from Pieria in Thrace. Pegasides and Hippocrenides, from the famous fountain Hippocrene, formed by a kick of the winged horse Pegasus. Aganippides, from the fountain Aganippe, and Castalides from another fountain, at the foot of Parnassus, called Castalius.</p>
<p>The Muses are frequently represented surrounding Apollo, on Mount Parnassus or Helicon; while Pegasus, with extended wings, springs forwards into the air and at his foot gushes forth the fountain Hippocrene.</p>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. XI. Diana.</head>
<q><hi rend="sc">Who</hi> was Diana?</q>
<p>The sister of Apollo, daughter of Jupiter and Latona.</p>
<q>What were her names?</q>
<p>The Egyptians called her Isis. Among the Greeks, Diana or Phebe was honoured under three different characters, and <hi rend="i">was</hi> therefore called the triform Goddess. As a celestial divinity she was Luna, the Moon; as a terrestrial Goddess, Diana, or Dictynna; and in the infernal regions, Hecate.</p>
<q>What were her offices?</q>
<p>She was the goddess of chastity, of the chace, and of woods. In heaven, she was supposed to enlighten by her rays; on earth, to restrain the wild animals by her bow and dart; and in the realms below, to keep in awe the shadowy multitudes of ghosts.</p>
<q>How was she represented?</q>
<p>Under the figure of a very tall and beautiful young virgin, in a hunting dress; a bow in her hand, a quiver of arrows suspended across her shoulders, and her forehead ornamented with a silver crescent. Sometimes she appears in a chariot of silver, drawn by hinds.</p>
<q>Where were situated her most celebrated temples?</q>
<p>She had two temples famous in history. The first was that of Ephesus, one of the seven wonders of the world. This was burnt to the ground the very day on which Alexander the Great was born. A man, named Erostratus, wishing to make his name immortal, set fire to this magnificent temple; imagining that such an action would necessarily transmit his name to posterity.</p>
<p>It was this temple which is mentioned in the <title>Acts of the Apostles</title>, by selling silver models of which, the silversmiths of Ephesus made great profit; which, being in danger of losing by the introduction of Christianity, they excited a furious tumult against its first preachers.</p>
<p>The second temple of celebrity was in Taurica Chersonesus. This was infamous for human victims being therein sacrificed to Diana. All strangers, whether landing there, by choice, or driven by storms, were cruelly immolated.</p>
<p>Orestes and Pylades, so celebrated for their extraordinary friendship, killed the high priest Thoas, and brought the statue of the goddess into Italy.</p>
<q>What is the history of this goddess?</q>
<p>It is full of absurdities not worth noticing. In her, is allegorised the moon, and by the silver chariot, its mild reflected light.</p>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. XII. Bacchus.</head>
<figure>
<graphic url="http://obvil.github.io/mythographie/images/hort_new-pantheon_1836_img046.png"/>
</figure>
<q><hi rend="sc">Who</hi> was Bacchus?</q>
<p>The son of Jupiter and Semele; god of wine.</p>
<q>How was he represented?</q>
<p>Sometimes, as an aged man with a venerable beard; sometimes, as a young man with horns, a red face, a body bloated, and puffed up; but more frequently, as most beautiful and effeminate, having long flowing hair. He rides in a chariot drawn by tigers and lions, or lynxes and panthers; his head is crowned with ivy or vine leaves, and in his hand is a thyrsus or javelin, entwined with branches of the same plants, and a cantharus or ancient cup.</p>
<q>What were the various names by which he was distinguished?</q>
<p>Bacchus, from a Greek word, signifying to revel.</p>
<p>Biformis, because he was accounted both bearded and beardless; or, because wine renders some cheerful and gay, and others morose and dull.</p>
<p>Dionysius, from his father Jupiter; or, from the nymphs called Nysæ, by whom he was nursed.</p>
<p>Brisæus, from the use of grapes and honey.</p>
<p>Nictilius, because his feasts were celebrated in the night by torch light.</p>
<p>Euvyhe, an expression signifying well done, son! which his father Jove frequently addressed to him during the war of the Giants and the Gods.</p>
<q>What were the actions of Bacchus?</q>
<p>He taught the art of cultivating the vine of making wine; of preparing honey for use. He invented commerce and navigation. Ha brought men from a savage to a civilized state. He subdued India, Phrygia, Egypt, Syria, and all the East. He is said, by the poets of antiquity, to have performed a number of strange absurdities; such as bestowing on Midas, king of Phrygia, to whom Apollo presented the pair of ass’s ears, the fatal gift of turning everything he touched into gold.</p>
<p>In consequence of this, Midas being almost starved to death, entreated the God to deprive him of the dangerous influence. This was effected by his washing in the river Pactolus, which, ever after, retained the reputation of possessing golden streams and golden sands.</p>
<q>What were the sacrifices of this divinity?</q>
<p>The fir, the ivy, the fig, the vine, were consecrated to Bacchus. The goat was slain in his sacrifices, because peculiarly destructive to vines; and the Egyptians immolated swine to his honour.</p>
<q>What were the feasts of Bacchus?</q>
<p>The various festivals of the God of wine were celebrated, as may well be supposed, with riot and excess. His priestesses, called Bacchantes, Bassarides, Thyades, and Menades, ran wild upon the mountains disguised in tiger skins, with disheveled hair and torches, or thyrsi, in their hands. Nothing could be more absurd, impious, and licentious, than these horrid festivals, which were named Bacchanalia, Dionysia, Triterica, and Orgia; whence riotous meetings are frequently called orgies.</p>
<quote>
<label>Bacchus.</label>
<l>Bacchus, on thee we call, in hymns divine,</l>
<l>And hang thy statues on the lofty pine.</l>
<l>Hence, plenty ev’ry laughing vineyard fills,</l>
<l>Through the deep valleys and the sloping hills.</l>
<l>Where’er the God inclines his lovely face,</l>
<l>More luscious fruits the rich plantations grace.</l>
<l>Then let us Bacchus’ praises duly sing,</l>
<l>And consecrated cakes and chargers bring;</l>
<l>Dragg’d by their horns, let victim goats expire;</l>
<l>And roast on hazel spits before the sacred fire.</l>
<l>Come, sacred Sire, with luscious clusters crown’d,</l>
<l>Let all the riches of thy reign abound;</l>
<l>Each field replete, with blushing autumn, glow,</l>
<l>And in deep tides, by thee, the foaming vintage flow.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pitt">Pitt</author>’s
<author key="Virgile">Virgil</author>.</bibl>
</quote>
<q>What appears to be the true history of Bacchus? </q>
<p>The best historians,
<author key="Hérodote">Herodotus</author>,
<author key="Plutarque">Plutarch</author>, and
<author key="Diodore de Sicile">Diodorus Siculus</author>, assert that he was born in Egypt, and educated at Nysa, a city in Arabia Felix; whither he had been sent by his father, Jupiter Ammon. From them it appears that the Bacchus of the Greeks was no other than the famous Osiris, conqueror of India. This Bacchus is supposed, by many learned men, to be Moses. Both are represented as born in Egypt, and exposed in their infancy upon the Nile. Bacchus was educated at Nissa or Nysa, in Arabia, and in the same country Moses passed forty years. Bacchus, when persecuted, retired to the borders of the Red Sea; and Moses fled with the Israelites, from the Egyptian bondage, beyond the same sea. The numerous army of Bacchus, composed of men and women, passed through Arabia in their journey to India. The army of the Jewish legislator, composed of men, women, and children, was obliged to wander in the desert, long before they arrived in Palestine, which, as well as India, is part of the continent of Asia. The fable represents Bacchus with horns, which may be supposed to allude to the light that is said to have shone around the countenance of Moses, who, in old engravings, is frequently represented with horns. Moses received the Jewish law on Mount Sinai. Bacchus was brought up on Mount Nysa. Bacchus, armed with his thyrsus, defeated the giants. The miraculous rod of Moses was the means of destroying the descendants of the giants. Jupiter was said to have sent Bacchus into India to exterminate a sinful nation; and it is recorded, that Moses was commanded, by the true God, to do the same in Palestine. The god Pan gave Bacchus a dog to accompany him in his travels; Caleb, which, in Hebrew, signifies a dog, was the name of the faithful companion of Moses. Bacchus, by striking the earth with his thyrsus, produced rivers of wine. Moses, by striking the rock with his miraculous rod, caused water to gush out to satisfy the raging thirst of the Israelites. Others have
regarded Bacchus as being the same with Nimrod, the first ambitious conqueror, and enslaver of men; that mighty hunter before the Lord.</p>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. XIII. Minerva.</head>
<figure>
<graphic url="http://obvil.github.io/mythographie/images/hort_new-pantheon_1836_img052.png"/>
</figure>
<q><hi rend="sc">Who</hi> was Minerva?</q>
<p>The goddess of wisdom and deliberate courage, and the patroness of the arts.</p>
<q>What was the poetical fiction concerning her birth?</q>
<p>Jupiter being tormented with an excessive pain in his head, applied to Vulcan to open it with a keen axe; and upon his doing so, Minerva instantly sprang forth, a goddess armed.</p>
<q>How was this Deity represented?</q>
<p>As a beautiful woman of threatening aspect, armed with a golden helmet and breast-plate; in her right hand, brandishing a beaming lance; in her left, bearing the buckler, called Egis, from being covered with the skin of the Goat Amalthea, by whose milk Jupiter was nourished; having, as a boss, the terrific head of the Gorgon Medusa, encircled by snakes instead of hair, which turned into stone all who beheld it. A cock, the emblem of valour, stood on one side of her; and on the other, the owl, the emblem of meditation. A crown of olive was entwined around her helmet, because she taught the use of that fruit.</p>
<q>What other names were given her, besides that of Minerva?</q>
<p>She was called Athena, from being the tutelary goddess of Athens; Pallas, from the Greek word, signifying the brandishing a javelin; Parthenos, or the Virgin; Tritonia, from the lake Triton; Ergatis, the Workwoman, from her having invented various arts, especially weaving and spinning; Glaukopis, or Blue-eyed.</p>
<q>Where was she principally worshiped?</q>
<p>At Athens; where a most magnificent temple was erected in honour of her, which was adorned with her famous statue, made of gold and ivory, by the celebrated Phidias. This temple, the ruins of which still remain; to charm the eye of taste, was called the Parthenon, from her name of Parthenos. There, likewise, the annual festival, called Panathena, was instituted for the same purpose.</p>
<q>How came the city of Athens to be so named after this Goddess?</q>
<p>The fable relates, that Minerva and Neptune disputing with each other the honour of giving a name to that city, the gods decided that whichsoever produced the most useful gift, should have that privilege. Neptune striking the ground with his trident, a fiery and beautiful horse sprang forth. Minerva produced an olive-tree in full bloom. The deities determined in favour of the latter, who consequently gave her own name to the city.</p>
<q>Of what is this goddess emblematical?</q>
<p>Of wisdom, prudence, conquest over vice and the passions.</p>
<q>What was the Palladium?</q>
<p>An image of Pallas, which was supposed to have fallen from the skies. This was preserved, with great vigilance, in the citadel of Troy, because an Oracle had declared, that, as long as it remained there, the city would be invincible against all the attacks of its enemies.</p>
<p>Diomed and Ulysses, two of the illustrious Grecian Heroes, contrived to convey the Palladium away by a bold stratagem, and Troy was taken. Eneas the valiant son of Venus, and the great ancestor of the Romans, is said, by some of their writers, to have recovered and brought it with him into Italy. They assert that this celebrated image was deposited in the temple of Vesta, as a pledge of the stability of the empire and dominion of Rome. Hence, the word Palladium is sometimes used figuratively, to signify the preservation or safeguard of any valuable object. As, for example, the palladium of British liberty.</p>
<quote>
<label>Minerva, arming.</label>
<l>Pallas disrobes, her radiant veil untied,</l>
<l>With flowers adorn’d, with art diversified;</l>
<l>The labour’d veil her heavenly fingers wove</l>
<l>Plows on the pavement of the court of Jove.</l>
<l>Now heav’n’s dread arms her mighty limbs invest,</l>
<l>Jove’s cuirass blazes on her ample breast;</l>
<l>Deck’d in sad triumph for the mournful field,</l>
<l>O’er her broad shoulders hangs his horrid shield,</l>
<l>Dire, black, tremendous! Round the margin roll’d,</l>
<l>A fringe of serpents, hissing, guards the gold:</l>
<l>Here all the terrors of grim war appear,</l>
<l>Here rages Force, here tremble Flight and Fear,</l>
<l>Here storm’d Contention, and here Fury frown’d,</l>
<l>And the dire orb portentous Gorgon crown’d.</l>
<l>The massy golden helm she next assumes,</l>
<l>That dreadful nods with four o’er shading plumes;</l>
<l>So vast, the broad circumference contains</l>
<l>A hundred armies on a hundred plains.</l>
<l>The Goddess thus th’ imperial car ascends;</l>
<l>Shook by her arm the mighty jav’lin bends,</l>
<l>Ponderous and huge, that when her fury burns,</l>
<l>Proud tyrants humbles, and whole hosts overturns.</l>
<l>Swift at the scourge th’ ethereal coursers fly,</l>
<l>While the smooth chariot cuts the liquid sky.</l>
<l>Heav’n’s gates spontaneous open to the pow’rs,</l>
<l>Heav’n’s golden gates, kept by the winged Hours,</l>
<l>Commission’d in alternate watch they stand,</l>
<l>The sun’s bright portals and the skies command,</l>
<l>Involve in clouds th’ eternal gates of day,</l>
<l>Or the dark barrier roll with ease away.</l>
<l>The sounding hinges ring: on either side</l>
<l>The gloomy volumes, pierc’d with light, divide.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pope">Pope</author>’s
<author key="Homère">Homer</author>’s <title>Iliad</title>.</bibl>
</quote>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. XIV. Mars, Bellona, Victory.</head>
<figure>
<graphic url="http://obvil.github.io/mythographie/images/hort_new-pantheon_1836_img056.png"/>
</figure>
<q><hi rend="sc">Who</hi> was Mars?</q>
<p>The son of Jupiter and Juno, the fierce, inexorable God of war and carnage.</p>
<q>How was he depicted?</q>
<p>As a formidable armed warrior, breathing death and destruction. He rides in a chariot drawn by horses, which are driven by a distracted woman. Discord flies before them in tattered garments.</p>
<p>Clamour and Anger, Fear and Terror, attend his progress. The dog, for his vigilance in pursuit of prey; the wolf, for his fierceness; the raven, because he follows embattled armies to feast upon the slain; the cock, for his wakefulness, whereby he prevents surprise; are consecrated to the furious God of battle.</p>
<q>What were his titles?</q>
<p>Mars; Ares, or injury, calamity; from which name, the hill at Athens, which was the assembling place of that court of judicature so renowned for its justice, was called Areopagus; Gradivus, in peace; Quirinus, in war; Sylvester, when invoked to protect cultivated lands from the ravages of war; and Corythaix, or Shaker of the Helmet.</p>
<q>Where were his temples and what were his priests called?</q>
<p>He had several temples at Rome, and among the Greeks and other warlike nations. His priests, at Rome, were called Salii, and had the care of the Ancilia, or sacred shields.</p>
<q>What was the origin of these Ancilia?</q>
<p>A shield being found, of a form, till then, unknown, was supposed to have fallen from heaven. The oracle was consulted, and declared that the empire of the world was destined for that city which should preserve this shield.</p>
<p>Numa Pompilius, second king of Rome, in order to secure it from being lost, caused several shields to be made, so exactly like it, that it was almost impossible to distinguish the original. Their form was oval. Their number was twelve; as was that of the priests at first, though afterwards increased to twenty-four.</p>
<q>Who is Mars supposed to represent in real history?</q>
<p>There were many princes of this name, and almost every nation had its own Mars. The original Mars is supposed to be Belus,</p>
<q>Who was Bellona?</q>
<p>She was the sister of Mars, the goddess of war and cruelty, called by the Greeks Enyo. She is described as preparing the chariot and horses of Mars for battle, and with disheveled hair driving them. She had a temple at Rome, and her priests offered to her, as a sacrifice, blood which flowed from wounds they inflicted upon themselves.</p>
<q>Who was Victory?</q>
<p>The daughter of Styx and Acheron. She had several temples in Greece and Rome. Games were instituted to her honour. She was represented as flying in air, holding a crown, a branch of palm, a globe; and sometimes she was depicted as an eagle.</p>
<quote>
<label>Mars and Minerva in battle and discord.</label>
<l>Loud clamours rose from various nations round,</l>
<l>Mix’d was the murmur and confused the sound.</l>
<l>Each host now joins, and each a God inspires,</l>
<l>These Mars incites, and chose Minerva fires.</l>
<l>Pale flight around, and dreadful terror reign,</l>
<l>And Discord, raging, bathes the purple plain.</l>
<l>Discord, dire sister of the slaughtering power,</l>
<l>Small at her birth, but rising every hour,</l>
<l>While scarce the skies her horrid head can bound,</l>
<l>She stalks on earth and shakes the world around.</l>
<l>The nations bleed where’er her steps she turns,</l>
<l>The groan still deepens, and the combat burns.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pope">Pope</author>’s
<author key="Homère">Homer</author>’s <title>Iliad</title>.</bibl>
</quote>
<quote>
<label>Mars wounded.</label>
<l>Now rushing fierce, in equal arms appear,</l>
<l>The daring Greek; the dreadful God of war.</l>
<l>Full at the chief, above his courser’s head,</l>
<l>From Mars’ arm th’ enormous weapon fled:</l>
<l>Pallas oppos’d her hand, and caus’d to glance,</l>
<l>Far from the car, the strong immortal lance.</l>
<l>Then threw the force of Tydeus’ warlike son;</l>
<l>The javelin hiss’d; the Goddess urg’d it on:</l>
<l>“Where the broad cincture girt his armour round,</l>
<l>It pierc’d the God: his groin receiv’d the wound.</l>
<l>From the rent skin the warrior tugs again</l>
<l>The smoking steel. Mars bellows with the pain;</l>
<l>Loud as the roar encount’ring armies yield,</l>
<l>When shouting myriads shake the thund’ring field.</l>
<l>Both armies start, and trembling gaze around,</l>
<l>And earth and heav’n re-echo to the sound.</l>
<l>As vapours blown by Auster’s sultry breath,</l>
<l>Pregnant with plagues, and shedding seeds of death,</l>
<l>Beneath the rage of burning Sirius rise,</l>
<l>Choke the parch’d earth and blacken all the skies;</l>
<l>In such a cloud the God from combat driv’n</l>
<l>High o’er the dusty whirlwind scales the heav’n.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pope">Pope</author>’s
<author key="Homère">Homer</author>’s <title>Iliad</title>.</bibl>
</quote>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. XV. Venus.</head>
<figure>
<graphic url="http://obvil.github.io/mythographie/images/hort_new-pantheon_1836_img060.png"/>
</figure>
<q><hi rend="sc">How</hi> was Venus, the goddess of love and beauty, produced?</q>
<p>She is represented by the poets as springing from the froth of the sea. A sea-shell gliding smoothly on the surface of the waves, is wafted by the gentle zephyrs to the foot of Mount Cythera. Here the goddess lands, and as she walks, flowers bloom beneath her feet. The rosy Hours, who were entrusted with her education, receive and conduct her to heaven.</p>
<q>What were her various names?</q>
<p>By the Eastern nations she was called Urania and Astarte. By the Greeks, the Romans, and others, Cythera, from the island to which she was first wafted in the sea-shell. Cypria, from Cyprus. Erycina, from mount Eryx, in Sicily. Idalia, from mount Idalus, in Cyprus. Acidalia, from a fountain of that name in Bœotia. Marina and Aphrodita, as produced from the foam of the sea; and Paphia, from Paphos. She had likewise the appellations of Mother; the Victorious; the Laughter-loving Goddess.</p>
<q>How is Venus generally depicted?</q>
<p>She is frequently represented borne in a spacious shell, sporting on the waves of the ocean; Cupids, Nereids, Dolphins, surround her. When she traverses the heavens, her chariot is drawn by doves and swans, accompanied by Cupid and the Graces. She is clothed in a light and airy manner, and wears round her waist the famous Cestus of love, a mysterious girdle, supposed to excite irresistible affection.</p>
<q>Where were her principal temples and what was her worship?</q>
<p>Temples were erected to her honour almost every where; but the most beautiful were those of Paphos, Gnidus, Amathus, Cythera, and Idalia. Cyprus was supposed to be her favourite residence. Her worship was various. In some places, only incense was consumed upon her altars; in others, a white goat was sacrificed. Women used frequently to consecrate their hair to this Goddess. The dove and the swan, the rose and the myrtle, were considered as sacred to her.</p>
<quote>
<label>Venus.</label>
<l>She said, and turning round, her neck she shew’d,</l>
<l>That with celestial charms divinely glow’d,</l>
<l>Her waving locks immortal odours shed,</l>
<l>And breath’d ambrosial scents around her head.</l>
<l>Her sweeping robe trail’d pompous as she trod,</l>
<l>And her majestic port confess’d the God.</l>
<l>To the soft Cyprian shores the Goddess</l>
<l>To visit Paphos and her blooming groves;</l>
<l>Where to her pow’r a hundred altars rise,</l>
<l>And breathing odours scent the balmy skies.</l>
<l>Conceal’d, she bathes in consecrated bow’rs,</l>
<l>The Graces unguents shed, ambrosial show’rs,</l>
<l>Unguents which charm the Gods: She, last, assumes</l>
<l>Her splendid robes; and full the Goddess blooms.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pitt">Pitt</author>’s
<author key="Virgile">Virgil</author>, and
<author key="Pope">Pope</author>’s
<author key="Homère">Homer</author>’s <title>Odyssey</title>.</bibl>
</quote>
<quote>
<label>Venus wounded.</label>
<l>Meanwhile (his conquest ravish’d from his eyes)</l>
<l>The raging chief in chase of Venus flies:</l>
<l>No Goddess she, commissioned to the field.</l>
<l>Like Pallas, dreadful with her sable shield<hi rend="i">;</hi></l>
<l>Or fierce Bellona thundering at the wall,</l>
<l>While flames ascend, and mighty ruins fall.</l>
<l>Through breaking ranks his furious course he bends,</l>
<l>And at the Goddess his broad lance extends.</l>
<l>Through her bright veil the daring weapon drove,</l>
<l>The ambrosial veil, which all the Graces wove:</l>
<l>Her snowy hand the razing steel profan’d,</l>
<l>And the transparent skin with crimson stain’d.</l>
<l>From the clear vein a stream immortal flow’d,</l>
<l>Such stream as issues from a wounded God;</l>
<l>Pure emanation! uncorrupted flood:</l>
<l>Unlike our gross, diseas’d terrestrial blood.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pope">Pope</author>’s
<author key="Homère">Homer</author>’s <title>Iliad</title>.</bibl>
</quote>
<q>Who was Cupid?</q>
<p>An allegorical representation, or emblem, of the passion of love. He was generally painted as a beautiful winged boy, with a bow and arrows, and very often with a bandage over his eyes. Ancient statues and intaglios sometimes represent him bestriding the back of a lion, and playing on a lyre; whilst the fierce savage turning his head, seems to listen to its harmonious chords.</p>
<p>Sometimes he appears mounted on a dolphin; and sometimes he is represented as breaking the winged thunderbolt of Jove. He was the son of Venus; his wife was Psyche; a Greek word, signifying Spirit, or Soul.</p>
<q>Who were the Graces?</q>
<p>They were supposed to give its attractive charms to beauty of every kind, and to dispense the gift of pleasing. They were supposed by some, to be the daughters of Jupiter and Juno; by others, of Jupiter and Eurynome; but the most general opinion was, that they were daughters of Venus and Bacchus: they were represented sometimes as being three, and sometimes four, in number; named Aglaia, Thalia, Euphrosyne, Pasithea. They were painted as beautiful young virgins, crowned with flowers, ears of corn, grapes, and olive branches; lightly drest in gauze robes, and in elegant attitudes.</p>
<p>The towns of Perinthe, Byzantium, Delphi, and many others in Greece and Thrace, raised temples to their honour. They presided also over friendship and gratitude; and were worshiped as pure and innocent.</p>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. XVI. Vulcan.</head>
<figure>
<graphic url="http://obvil.github.io/mythographie/images/hort_new-pantheon_1836_img064.png"/>
</figure>
<q><hi rend="sc">Who</hi> was Vulcan?</q>
<p>It appears that there were three of the name of Vulcan. The first was Tubalcain, mentioned by
<author key="Bible">Moses</author> as the inventor of forging metals. The second was one of the Egyptian kings, or rather, their first divinity. The third, the Grecian Vulcan, was a Titan prince, son of Jupiter, obliged, by disgrace, to take refuge in the Isle of Lemnos, where he established the art of working iron and brass.</p>
<q>What was his poetical history?</q>
<p>He was said by the poets to be the son of Jupiter and Juno. For having made the formidable thunderbolts, which Jupiter hurled at the giants attempting to scale the celestial region, Venus was bestowed upon him as a wife. Afterwards, misbehaving himself, Jupiter, with one kick of his foot, precipitated him from heaven. He fell upon the island of Lemnos, and was crippled by his fall. In the caves of that isle, and in the immense subterraneans of Mount Etna, he was supposed to follow his profession, assisted by the Cyclops, Giants with only one eye, and that in the middle of their foreheads.</p>
<quote>
<label>Vulcan.</label>
<l>Meanwhile the silver-footed dame</l>
<l>Reach’d the Vulcanian dome, eternal frame!</l>
<l>High eminent amid the works divine,</l>
<l>Where Heav’n’s far-beaming brazen mansions shine.</l>
<l>There, the lame architect, the Goddess found,</l>
<l>Obscure in smoke, his forges flaming round,</l>
<l>While, bathed in sweat, from lire to fire he flew;</l>
<l>And puffing loud, the roaring bellows blew.</l>
<l>Then from his anvil the lame artist rose;</l>
<l>Wide with distorted legs oblique he goes,</l>
<l>And stills the bellows, and (in order laid)</l>
<l>Locks in their chests his instruments of trade.</l>
<l>Then with a sponge the sooty workman drest</l>
<l>His brawny arms imbrown’d, and hairy breast.</l>
<l>With his huge sceptre grac’d, and red attire,</l>
<l>Came halting forth the sov’reign of the fire:</l>
<l>The monarch’s steps two female forms uphold.</l>
<l>That mov’d, and breath’d, in animated gold;</l>
<l>To whom were voice, and sense, and science giv’n</l>
<l>Of works divine (such wonders are in heav’n!)</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pope">Pope</author>’s
<author key="Homère">Homer</author>’s <title>Iliad</title>.</bibl>
</quote>
<q>What eminent works were ascribed to him?</q>
<p>He was the God of fire; the inventor and patron of the art of fabricating arms and utensils from metals. The famous palace of the Sun, the armour of Achilles and Eneas; the elegant necklace of Hermione; the beautiful crown of Ariadne; an animated brazen dog, and a woman of the same metal, who was likewise endowed with life by the fire which Prometheus stole from the chariot of the sun; these, all, were works of his art.</p>
<q>What were his various names?</q>
<p>Besides Vulcan, he was called Lemnius, Mulciber, and Tardipes.</p>
<q>Where were the principal temples and festivals of Vulcan?</q>
<p>At Athens and Rome, festivals were kept to his honour. Upon Mount Etna, a temple was dedicated to him, which was guarded by dogs, whose sense of smelling was said to be so exquisite, as to enable them to discern whether those who came thither were virtuous of vicious, and who fawned upon, or drove them away accordingly. The Romans in their most solemn treaties, invoked Vulcan the avenger; and the assemblies in which they discussed the most important affairs, were held in the temple of Vulcan. At Memphis, in Egypt, also, was a most magnificent edifice raised in honour of this God, before which stood a colossal statue seventy feet high.</p>
<q>What children had he?</q>
<p>Erictheus, fourth king of Athens, was his son, as were likewise Cacus, a horrid monster of cruelty, killed by Hercules, and Cœculus, a fierce and violent robber.</p>
<q>Who were the Cyclops?</q>
<p>They were the workmen of Vulcan, and made Jove’s thunderbolts. By some, they are said to be sons of Neptune, by others, of Cœlus and Terra. The chief of them were Brontes, Steropes, and Pyracmon.</p>
<quote>
<label>The Cyclops.</label>
<l>Amid th’ Hesperian and Sicilian flood,</l>
<l>All black with smoke, a rocky island stood,</l>
<l>The dark Vulcanian land the region of the God.</l>
<l>Here the grim Cyclops ply, in vaults profound,</l>
<l>The huge Æolian forge that thunders round.</l>
<l>Th’ eternal anvils ring, the dungeon o’er;</l>
<l>From side to side the fiery caverns roar.</l>
<l>Loud groans the mass beneath their ponderous blows,</l>
<l>Fierce burns the flame, and the full furnace glows.</l>
<l>To this dark region, from the bright abode,</l>
<l>With speed impetuous, flew the fiery God.</l>
<l>Th’ alternate blows the brawny brethren deal;</l>
<l>Thick burst the sparkles from the tortur’d steel.</l>
<l>Huge strokes, rough Steropes and Brontes gave,</l>
<l>And strong Pyracmon shook the gloomy cave.</l>
<l>Before their sovereign came, the Cyclops strove</l>
<l>With eager speed, to forge a bolt for Jove,</l>
<l>Such as by heaven’s almighty lord are hurl’d,</l>
<l>All charg’d with vengeance, on a guilty world.</l>
<l>Beneath their hands, tremendous to survey!</l>
<l>Half rough, half form’d, the dreadful engine lay:</l>
<l>Three points of rain, three forks of hail conspire,</l>
<l>Three arm’d with wind; and three were barb’d with fire.</l>
<l>The mass they temper’d thick with livid rays,</l>
<l>Fear, Wrath, and Terror, and the lightning’s blaze.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pitt">Pitt</author>’s
<author key="Virgile">Virgil</author>.</bibl>
</quote>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. XVII. Mercury.</head>
<figure>
<graphic url="http://obvil.github.io/mythographie/images/hort_new-pantheon_1836_img068.png"/>
</figure>
<q><hi rend="sc">Who</hi> was Mercury?</q>
<p>There were two of that name; the Egyptian, and the Grecian Mercury. The most ancient of them, was the Thaut or Thot of the Egyptians, contemporary with Osiris. We meet with scarcely any personage in the ancient world more celebrated for great knowledge and admirable talents. To him the Egyptians were indebted for the flourishing state of their arts and commerce. He taught them geometry, and hieroglyphical characters.</p>
<p>He reformed their language; invented letters; regulated the harmony of their style; instructed them in astronomy; invented the lyre: and from his being the first who paid particular attention to eloquence, had the name of Hermes given to him, He is said to have left forty-two volumes of his works. These famous books have long been lost, and all that is known of them, is, that the first thirty-six contained the whole of the Egyptian philosophy, and the other six treated of medicine, surgery, and anatomy.</p>
<q>Who was the Grecian Mercury?</q>
<p>The son of Jupiter and Maia; the God of eloquence, of arts and sciences, and the messenger of Jupiter. He was the inventor of weights and measures, and conducted departing spirits to the infernal regions.</p>
<q>What were his names?</q>
<p>Mercury, from Mercatura, Commerce; Hermes, as the inventor of eloquence; Cyllenius, from Mount Cyllene, where he was born. Nomius, from his inventing laws. Camillus, from his office of minister to the Gods; and Vialis, because he presided over the formation of roads.</p>
<q>How was he depicted?</q>
<p>As a young man with a cheerful countenance, and lively eyes; wings were fixed to his cap and to his sandals; and in his hand was the caduceus, a wand, round which were entwined two serpents. The Egyptians gave him a face partly dark, and partly bright; to signify his being employed sometimes in heaven and sometimes in the infernal regions. His statues were frequently placed in the high roads, to point out the way to travellers.</p>
<quote>
<label>Mercury.</label>
<l>——— The God who mounts the winged winds,</l>
<l>Fast to his feet the golden pinions binds,</l>
<l>That high through fields of air his flight sustain,</l>
<l>O’er the wide earth, and o’er the boundless main.</l>
<l>He grasps the wand that causes sleep to fly,</l>
<l>Or in soft slumbers seals the wakeful eye;</l>
<l>Then shoots from heav’n to high Pieria’s steep,</l>
<l>And stoops incumbent on the rolling deep.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Homère">Homer</author>’s <title>Odyssey</title> —
<author key="Pope">Pope</author>.</bibl>
</quote>
<quote>
<label>Mercury and Atlas.</label>
<l>Swift at the word, the duteous Son of May</l>
<l>Prepares th’ almighty’s orders to obey;</l>
<l>First, round his feet the golden wings he bound,</l>
<l>That speed his progress o’er the seas profound,</l>
<l>And earth’s unmeasur’d regions as he flies,</l>
<l>Wrapt in a rapid whirlwind, down the skies.</l>
<l>Then grasp’d the wand; the wand that calls the ghosts</l>
<l>From hell, or drives ’em to the Stygian coasts,</l>
<l>Invites, or chases, sleep with wond’rous pow’r,</l>
<l>And opes those eyes that death had seal’d before.</l>
<l>Thus arm’d, on wings of wind sublimely rode</l>
<l>Thro’ heaps of opening clouds the flying God.</l>
<l>From far, huge Atlas’ rocky sides he spies,</l>
<l>Atlas, whose head supports the starry skies:</l>
<l>Beat by the winds and driving rains, he shrouds</l>
<l>His shady forehead in surrounding clouds;</l>
<l>With ice, his horrid beard is crusted o’er;</l>
<l>From his bleak brows, the gushing torrents pour;</l>
<l>Out-spread, his mighty shoulders heave below</l>
<l>The hoary piles of everlasting snow,</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pitt">Pitt</author>’s
<author key="Virgile">Virgil</author>.</bibl>
</quote>
</div>
<div>
<head>Chap. XVIII. Divinities of the Sea and Rivers.</head>
<q><hi rend="sc">What</hi> were the divinities of the waters?</q>
<p>Each river and fountain had its peculiar Divinity. The Egyptians held the Sea in abhorrence, and reserved all their veneration for their famous river Nile. The Indians paid divine honours to the Ganges, which, to this day, is accounted sacred by the Hindoos. Oceanus and Nereus, personifications of the ocean; and their daughters, seventy-two Oceanides, and fifty Nereides; and three thousand aquatic nymphs, were regarded as Divinities.</p>
<q>Who was Oceanus?</q>
<p>The son of Cœlus and Terra. He was justly regarded as the principal marine Divinity, as he represents the vast collection of waters which gird the earth. From him sprang Nereus and Doris, and from them the various tribes of water nymphs. Oceanus was represented as an old man sitting upon the waves, holding a pike, and near him a sea monster of indescribable form.</p>
<figure>
<graphic url="http://obvil.github.io/mythographie/images/hort_new-pantheon_1836_img074.png"/>
</figure>
<q>Who was Neptune?</q>
<p>The son of Saturn, brother of Jupiter. In the division of their father’s kingdom, the empire of the seas fell to his share. He was worshiped as the god of the seas. Amphitrite was his wife. He was represented with black hair and blue eyes, standing erect in a chariot formed of a vast shell drawn by seahorses; clothed in an azure mantle, and holding in his hand the trident which commanded the waves. Around him played the sea nymphs, and the Tritons sounding their trumpet of shells.</p>
<q>Were any other names given to this god?</q>
<p>Besides Neptune, the Greeks called him Poseidon; and the Romans, Consus, the God of Counsel. These latter called the games which they celebrated to his honour Consualia, when the horses and mules were exempted from labour, and crowned with garlands of flowers.</p>
<q>What were his offices?</q>
<p>He presided over the training of horses, having produced that animal by stamping his foot upon the ground, when he contested with Minerva the honour of giving a name to the city of Athens.</p>
<p>He was the ruler of the waters; the God of ships and of all maritime affairs, and his supreme command could raise the stormy waves, or calm the wildest fury of the tempest.</p>
<quote>
<label>The Gods descending to battle.</label>
<l>But when the Pow’rs, descending, swell the fight,</l>
<l>Then tumult rises; Rage and pale Affright,</l>
<l>Vary each face; then Discord sounds alarms;</l>
<l>Earth echoes and the nations rush to arms.</l>
<l>Now, through the trembling shores Minerva calls,</l>
<l>And now, she thunders from the Grecian walls.</l>
<l>Mars, hovering o’er his Troy, his terror shrouds</l>
<l>In gloomy tempests, and a night of clouds.</l>
<l>Now, through each Trojan heart he fury pours,</l>
<l>With voice divine from Ilion’s topmost tow’rs;</l>
<l>Now, shouts to Simois from her beauteous hill;</l>
<l>The mountain shakes, the rapid stream stands still.</l>
<l>Above, the Sire of Gods his thunder rolls,</l>
<l>And peals on peals, redoubled, rend the poles.</l>
<l>Beneath, stern Neptune shakes the solid ground;</l>
<l>The forests wave, the mountains nod around.</l>
<l>Through all their summits, tremble Ida’s woods;</l>
<l>And from their sources, boil their hundred floods.</l>
<l>Troy’s turrets totter on the rocking plain;</l>
<l>And the toss’d navies beat the heaving main.</l>
<l>Deep in the dismal regions of the dead,</l>
<l>Th’ infernal monarch rears his horrid head</l>
<l>Leaps from his throne, lest Neptune’s arm should lay</l>
<l>His dark dominions open to the day,</l>
<l>And pour in light on Pluto’s drear abodes,</l>
<l>Abhorred by men and dreadful ev’n to Gods.</l>
<bibl>
<author key="Pope">Pope</author>’s
<author key="Homère">Homer</author>’s <title>Iliad</title>.</bibl>
</quote>
<quote>
<label>Juno, Neptune, and Pallas, overthrowing Troy.</label>
<l>Where yon rude piles of shattered ramparts rise,</l>
<l>Stone rent from stone, in dreadful ruin lies,</l>
<l>And black with rolling smoke the dusty whirlwind flies</l>
<l>There, Neptune’s trident breaks the bulwarks down,</l>
<l>There, from her basis heaves the trembling town;</l>
<l>Heav’n’s awful queen, to urge the Trojan fate,</l>
<l>Here, storms tremendous at the Scæan gate:</l>
<l>Radiant in arms the furious goddess stands,</l>
<l>And from the navy calls her Argive bands.</l>
<l>On yon high tow’r, the martial maid behold,</l>
<l>With her dread Gorgon, blaze in clouds of gold.</l>
<l>And lo! the Gods with dreadful faces frown’d,</l>
<l>And lower’d, majestically stern, around.</l>
<l>Then, fell proud Ilion’s bulwarks, tow’rs, and spires;</l>
<l>Then, Troy, though rais’d by Neptune, sunk in fires.</l>