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ACCOUNT OF THE PRINCIPAL HEATHEN GODS. 277

represented as a beautiful young man, without a beard, and with graceful hair. Mercury, a son of Jupiter, was the messenger of the gods; and is therefore represented with wings to his cap and his feet. He was said to be the inventor of letters, and hence he is the god of eloquence; and was the god of trade, and thence also of thieves. He was called also Her'mes; and is represented as carrying a wand, called cadu'ceus, with two serpents twisting round it. Vulcan, the god of fire and of smiths, was the artificer of heaven; and made the thunderbolts of Jupiter, and the armour and palaces of the gods. It is said that one of his principal forges was within Mount Etna. He is called also Mul'ciber.

The foregoing are the principal gods, but there were many of a second or still lower order. Bac'chus was the god of wine, and was crowned with leaves of the vine and the ivy. E'olus was the god of the winds: the north wind was called Bo'reas, the south wind Au'ster, the east wind Eu'rus, and the west wind Zeph'yrus. Mo'mus was the

god of satire, and likewise of laughter and jokes. Plu'tus was the god of riches. Hy'men was the god of marriage: he is represented with the burning torch. Cu'pid was the god of love: he is represented as a beautiful child, but blind or hoodwinked, and carries a bow and arrows. Ja'nus, a god with two faces, looking forward and backward, had a temple which was open in time of war, and shut in peace. Escula'pius was an inferior god of medicine, below Apollo: he is represented as accompanied by a serpent, which was thought the most long-lived of all animals. Pan was the god of shepherds; and he is represented as having horns, and as carrying the musical instrument, now called Pan's pipes. There were other rural deities called Sat'yrs, Fauns, and Syl'vans: their figures were half man and half goat, and they dwelt chiefly in forests. Every river also was supposed to have its own god; who was drawn with a long beard, a crown of reeds, and leaning on an urn. There were likewise a great number of demi-gods, or half-gods; the principal one of these was Her'cules; who was accounted the god of strength, from his having performed some wonderful undertakings, called his Twelve Labours. He is represented leaning on a large club, and wearing a lion's skin.

278 ACCOUNT OF THE PRINCipal heathen GODDESSES.

LESSON 128.

Account of the principal Heathen Goddesses.

JU'NO was the wife of Ju'piter, and was of course the queen of heaven. She is represented as drawn by peacocks in a chariot of gold. Her favourite messenger was I'ris the goddess of the rainbow. Miner'va, a daughter of Jupiter, was the goddess of wisdom and of war. She was represented in complete armour, bearing a shield, called ægis, with a head on it, so terrible, that every one who looked on it was turned into stone. She was likewise the patroness of spinning, needle-work, and embroidery. She was called also Pal'las, and her principal emblem was the owl. Dian'a was the twin sister of Apollo; and as he drove the chariot of the sun, so she presided in that of the moon. She was the goddess of hunting; and is drawn as carrying a bow and arrows, with a half moon as an ornament on her forehead, and attended by several nymphs as her companions, and by her hounds. She is called also Phoebe; and Cyn'thia, from having been born on Mount Cynthus, and she had a very famous temple at Ephesus, which is mentioned in the New Testament, in the 19th chapter of the Acts.

Venus was the goddess of beauty and of love; and the wife of Vulcan, and mother of Cupid; her chariot was drawn by doves, and the myrtle was sacred to her. She was said to have sprung from the sea, near the island of Cythe'ra; and her most celebrated temple was at the city of Pa'phos, in the island of Cyprus; hence she is called also Cythere'a; and the Pa'phian, or the Cyp'rian, goddess. Ves'ta was the goddess of the earth and of fire. In her temple at Rome, a perpetual fire was maintained, which was kindled from the rays of the sun, and was constantly watched by priestesses chosen from the most noble families. They were called vestal virgins, and had very great honours and privileges. Ce'res was the goddess of corn and of harvest. Cyb'ele was one of the most ancient of the goddesses, being the wife of Saturn; and in some respects represents the earth. She is displayed as crowned with towers, holding a key in her hand, and drawn in her chariot by lions. Pros'erpine was the wife of Pluto, and of course the queen of the infernal regions. She was the daughter of Ceres. Amphi

ACCOUNT OF THE PRINCIPAL HEATHEN GODDESSES. 279

tri'te was the wife of Neptune. Her sister was The'tis, another sea-goddess; and hence, when the sun sets, she is said to sink into Thetis's lap. The foregoing are the principal goddesses.

Flo'ra was the goddess of flowers, and Pomo'na was the goddess of fruits. Bello'na was an inferior goddess of war. Auro'ra was the goddess of the morning, or rather of daybreak. The'mis, the sister of Sa'turn, was the goddess of righteousness and justice: her daughter Astre'a also represents justice; she is sometimes called the Virgin, and in this character has a place among the stars, being denoted by the constellation Vir'go, or the Virgin. Hyge'ia was the goddess of health. He'be was the goddess of youth, and was cup-bearer to Jupiter. A'te was the goddess of mischief. The Muses were nine virgin-goddesses who presided over every kind of learning, and in that character attended on Apollo. They were sisters; the principal of them were Cli'o, who was the muse of history; Thali'a, of comedy, Melpomene, of tragedy; Terpsic'hore, of dancing; and Ura'nia, of mathematics and astronomy. They are sometimes called merely the Nine, in reference to their number.

In

Parnas'sus and Hel'icon were two mountains sacred to Apollo and the Muses; at the feet of which flowed two streams, whose waters were supposed to communicate the inspiration of prophecy, or of poetry. Peg'asus was a winged horse of the Muses. The Graces were three sisters, who were supposed to give its attractive charms to beauty of every kind, and to dispense the gift of pleasing. The Furies were three sisters of a very different character; they were the most deformed and horrible of all the deities. stead of hair, they had snakes hanging from their heads. They carried chains, and whips with lashes of iron or of scorpions in one hand, and lighted torches in the other. They were the bearers of the vengeance of heaven. Destinies or Fates, were also three sisters, of whom one was represented as holding a distaff; another drawing from it a thread, signifying the life of man; and the third with a pair of shears, ready to cut the thread whenever she should choose. The Dry'ads and Ham'adryads were rural goddesses, each having a single tree in her charge. The Na'iads were goddesses presiding over springs, wells, and foun

The

280

HARMONY OF SCIENCE AND CHRISTIANITY.

tains; each, in the same manner, having one under her care. The Ne'reids were inferior goddesses of the sea. From BALDWIN'S PANTHEON.

LESSON 129.

Harmony of Science and Christianity.

AFTER all the attacks of infidelity, and of theoretical philosophy, the religion of Christ, when contemplated through the medium of science, has had a complete and victorious triumph. It has been often objected to Christianity, that it is unfavourable to the progress of knowledge; that it discourages scientific enterprises; that it is inimical to free inquiry, and has a tendency to keep the minds of men in blindness and thraldom. The history of Christianity, since the Reformation at least, demonstrates that the very reverse of what the objection states is the truth. Christian nations have been, of all others, most remarkable for favouring the advancement of liberal knowledge. In those countries in which religion has existed in its greatest purity, and has enjoyed the most general prevalence, literature and science have been most extensively and successfully cultivated. It is also worthy of remark, that, among all the professions denominated learned, the clerical profession may be considered as having furnished as many, if not more authors of distinction than any other. And if we join to the clergy, those lay authors who have been no less eminent as Christians than as scholars, the predominance of learning and talents on the side of religion will appear too great to admit of comparison. The discoveries made in mechanical and chemical philosophy have served to elucidate and confirm various parts of the Christian Scriptures. Every sober and welldirected inquiry into the natural history of man, and of the globe we inhabit, has been found to corroborate the Mosaic history, and the reports of voyagers and travellers have served to illustrate the sacred records, and to confirm the faith of Christians. Never was there a period in which so much light and evidence in favour of revelation were drawn from the inquiries of philosophy as in the present era; nor

THE INFLUENCE OF AN EARLY TASTE For reading. 281

was it ever rendered so apparent, that the information and the doctrines contained in the sacred volume perfectly harmonize with the most authentic discoveries, and the soundest principles of science.

QUESTIONS.-1. For what have christian nations been remarkable? 2. What is said of the predominance of learning on the side of religion? 3. To what purpose have discoveries in philosophy been subservient? 4. What is the character of the present period?

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LESSON 130.

The Influence of an early Taste for Reading. THERE is, perhaps, nothing that has a greater tendency to decide favourably or unfavourably respecting a man's future intellect than the question, Whether or not he be impressed with an early taste for reading.

Books are the depository of every thing that is most honourable to man. He that loves reading has every thing within his reach. He has but to desire, and he may possess himself of every species of wisdom to judge, and power to reform.

The chief point of difference between the man of talent and the man without, consists in the different ways in which their minds are employed during the same interval: they are obliged, we will suppose, to walk from Temple-bar to Hyde-park Corner: the dull man goes straight forward, he has so many furlongs to traverse: he observes whether he meets any of his acquaintance; he inquires respecting their health and their family; he glances his eye, perhaps, at the shops as he passes; he admires, perchance, the fashion of a buckle, and the metal of a tea-urn. If he experience any flights of fancy, they are of a short extent; of the same nature as the flights of a forest bird clipped of his wings, and condemned to pass the rest of his life in a farm-yard.

On the other hand, the man of talent gives full scope to his imagination. Unindebted to the suggestions of surrounding objects, his whole soul is employed. He enters into nice calculations; he digests sagacious reasonings. In imagination he declaims, or describes, impressed with the deepest sympathy or elevated to the loftiest rapture. He

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