1. p. 40.
[Greek: Mounopa straton Arimaspon.] AEschyl. Prineth. p. 49.
[563] [Greek: Ton gar basilea kai kurion Osirin ophthalmoi kai skeptroi
graphousin.] Plutarch. Isis et Osiris. p. 354.
[564] Lycophron. v. 328. See Suidas.
[Greek: Philochoros Tritopatoras panton gegonenai protous.] Etymolog. Mag.
See Meursii not. in Lycophron. v. 328. [Greek: Rhaisei tripatrou phasganoi
Kandaonos.]
[565] Iliad. [Sigma]. v. 382. and [Xi]. v. 275. See Pausan. l. 9. p. 781.
[566] Nonni Dionysiaca. l. 29. p. 760.
The Graces and the Furies (Charites et Furiae) were equally denominated from
the Sun, and fire; and in consequence of it had joint worship in Arcadia.
Pausan. l. 8. p. 669. Charis, [Greek: Charis], of the Greeks, was the same
personage as Ceres of the Romans. She was also called Damater, and esteemed
one of the Furies. Pausan. l. 8. p. 649.
[567] Pausanias. l. 9. p. 781. So Coronis is said to have been the daughter
of Phlegyas. Pausan. l. 2. p. 170: and Cronus the son of Apollo. l. 2. p.
123. Chiron the son of Saturn; Charon the son of Erebus and night. The hero
Charisius, the son of Lycaon, which Lycaon was no other than Apollo, the
God of light. These were all places, but described as personages; and made
the children of the Deity, to whom they were sacred.
[568] [Greek: Deinous Theois te hiera kataskeuasasthai, kai basileia
anthropois; kai gar toi Apolloni ton Naon oikodomesanto ton en Delphois,
kai Huriei ton Thesauron.] Pausan. l. 9. p. 785.
Turres, ut Aristoteles, Cyclopes (invenerunt). Pliny. l. 7. c. 56.
[569] Virgil. AEn. l. 6. v. 630.
[570] Lutatius Placidus in Statii Thebaid. l. 1. p. 26.
[571] [Greek: Tas Huakinthou koras--epi ton Geraistou tou Kuklopos taphon
katesphaxan.] Apollodorus. l. 3. p. 205.
[572] Hercules furens. Act. 4. v. 996.
[573] Nonni Dionysiaca. l. 41. p. 1068.
Euripides styles the walls of Argos [Greek: Ourania]:
[Greek: 'Ina teichea laina, Kuklopei', ourania nemontai.] Troades. v. 1087.
[574] Pausanias. l. 2. p. 146.
[575] Seneca Thyestes. Act. 2. v. 406.
[576] [Greek: Entos de tou Isthmou tes Troizenos homoros estin Hermione;
Oikisten de tes archaias poleos Hermioneis genesthai phasin Hermiona
Europos.] Pausanias. l. 2. p. 191.
[577] Strabo. l. 8. p. 573. It was inhabited by people particularly styled
[Greek: Halieis], or men of the sea; who were brought thither by Druops
Arcas.
[578] Pausan. l. 2. p. 147. [Greek: Kuklopon men estin ergon.] p. 169
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