The Student's Mythology. White Catherine Ann

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The Student's Mythology - White Catherine Ann

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man. His mother, Meganira, wondered at this, and resolved to discover the cause. She watched Ceres at night, and when she saw her covering Triptol´emus with living coals, she cried out in terror, and rushed into the room to save him. Ceres punished her curiosity with death, but she adopted Triptol´emus, and sent him through the world to teach mankind the use of corn. He executed the commands of Ceres, and wherever he went, instructed men in sowing, reaping, and other arts of husbandry. Triptol´emus is usually represented as a young man, seated in a splendid chariot drawn by flying serpents.

      Ques. What sacrifices were offered to Ceres?

      Ans. Young heifers, swine and ears of corn, wine, milk and honey were used in the libations.

      Ques. What were the Ambarvalia?

      Ans. They were feasts kept in the beginning of harvest, preparatory to reaping. The animal to be offered in sacrifice, was led around the fields, the husbandmen and country rustics following with shouts and songs. Virgil says of these festivities:

      Let ev’ry swain adore her power divine,

      And milk and honey mix with sparkling wine;

      Let all the choir of clowns attend this show,

      In long procession, shouting as they go;

      Invoking her to bless their yearly stores,

      Inviting plenty to their crowded floors.

      Thus in the spring, and thus in summer’s heat,

      Before the sickles touch the rip’ning wheat,

      On Ceres call; and let the lab’ring hind

      With oaken wreaths his hollow temples bind;

      On Ceres let him call, and Ceres praise,

      With uncouth dances, and with country-lays.

Georg. I.

      CHAPTER XVIII

THEMIS—ASTRÆA—NEMESIS

      Ques. Who was Themis?

      Ans. She instructed both gods and men, and was generally considered the goddess of law and justice. Her origin is uncertain; but she is said to have been a Titaness.

      Ques. Who was Astræ´a?

      Ans. She was also goddess of justice; according to some, she was the daughter of Jupiter and Themis. When the Titans took up arms against Jupiter, Astræ´a descended to earth, and mingled with the human race. This intercourse was uninterrupted during the Golden Age; in the Silver Age, Astræ´a dwelt in the mountains, and descended only amid the shades of evening, when she was unseen by men. When the Brazen Age commenced, she fled altogether from the human race, being the last among the Immortals to abandon the earth. Jupiter then changed her into the constellation Virgo, one of the signs of the zodiac. This constellation is represented by the figure of a woman holding scales in one hand, and a sword in the other. The scales have been variously explained, but they are generally supposed to be an emblem of justice. According to some, Erigo´ne, a maiden who hung herself in despair, at the death of her father, was changed into the constellation Virgo.

      Ques. Who was Nem´esis?

      Ans. She was the daughter of Night, and the goddess of just vengeance. It was her office to follow and punish guilty men. She had wings, but generally went on foot, which signifies that the punishment of crime, although sure, is generally slow. An ancient poet says:

      “Vengeance divine to punish sin moves slow;

      The slower is its pace, the surer is its blow.”

      Ques. What do you say of the temple of Nem´esis at Rhamnus?

      Ans. This temple was but a short distance from the plain of Marathon. The Persians had brought with them a great block of Parian marble for the trophy which they intended to erect in honor of their expected victory. This marble fell into the hands of the Athenians, and a sculptor, said by some to have been Phidias, afterwards carved from it a beautiful statue of Nem´esis, which was placed in the temple of Rhamnus. A fragment was found in the ruins of this edifice, which is supposed to be the head of this statue; and has been presented as such to the British Museum.

      CHAPTER XIX

THE MUSES

      Ques. Who were the Muses?

      Ans. They were the daughters of Jupiter and Mnemo´syne, and were supposed to preside over the liberal arts and sciences.

      Ques. How many Muses were there?

      Ans. They were nine in number, and each presided over some particular department of literature, art or science. Their names were:

      Calli´ope, who was the Muse of epic poetry, she holds in her hand a roll of parchment, or a trumpet.

      Clio presided over history. She holds a half opened scroll.

      Melpo´mene was the Muse of tragedy. She leans on a club, and holds a tragic mask.

      Euter´pe was the patroness of music. She holds two flutes.

      Er´ato inspired those who wrote of love. She plays on a nine-stringed lyre.

      Terpsich´ore presided over choral dance and song. She appears dancing, and holds a seven-stringed lyre.

      Ura´nia, the Muse of astronomy, holds a globe, and traces mathematical figures with a wand.

      Thalia, the Muse of comedy, holds in one hand a comic mask, in the other a crooked staff.

      Polyhym´nia presided over eloquence. She holds her fore-finger to her lips, or carries a scroll.

      The Muses are sometimes represented as crowned with palms, and seated in the shade of an arbor, playing upon different instruments; or again, as dancing in a circle with joined hands, while Apollo is seated in their midst.

      Ques. How have some writers accounted for the number of Muses?

      Ans. They say that in ancient times there were but three Muses. The citizens of Sicyon employed three sculptors to execute statues of these goddesses, promising to choose from among the nine images, those which they should consider the most beautiful. When the statues were finished, they were found to be so skillfully wrought, that it was impossible to make a choice. They were all placed in the temple, and the poet Hesiod afterwards assigned them names and attributes.

      Ques. What punishment did the Muses inflict on the nine daughters of Pierus, king of Æmathia?

      Ans. These maidens challenged the Muses to a contest in music; they were defeated and transformed into magpies by the indignant goddesses. Tham´yris, a musician of Thrace, was struck blind for the same offence.

      CHAPTER XX

Gods of the Woods, and Rural DeitiesPAN

      Ques. Who was Pan?

      Ans. He was a woodland deity, and was honored by the Romans as the god of shepherds and the patron of fishing and fowling. The Latins sometimes called him Incubus or the “Nightmare,” and at Rome he was worshipped as Lupercus, or Lynceus. His origin is uncertain, but he is said by some authors to have been a son of Mercury and a nymph of Arcadia.

      Ques. How is Pan represented?

      Ans. As half man, and half goat, having a human head ornamented

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