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570 And thus adorn'd with gawdy Pomp and Show,
Goes thro' our Towns, and as fhe paffes thro',
The VULGAR fear, and all with Rev'rence bow.
Concerning her FOND SUPERSTITION frames
A thousand odd Conceits, a thousand Names;

NOTES.

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And

Crowns or Garlands, which it | Life of all Things is preferv'd was the Custom to give, as To- by the Affiftance of the Earth. kens or Badges of Honour, to III Rhea, from pew, to flow, fuch as had diftinguish'd them- becaufe the Earth abounds with felves in any Action, or done all good Things. IV. Berecynany fignal Service to the Repub-thia, from Berecynthus, a Caftle lick. Among the reft there was of Phrygia, on the Banks of the the Corona Muralis, the Mural River Sagaris, or a Hill of PhryCrown, which was given by the gia of the fame Name, near the Emperour, or General of an River Marfyas. V. Vesta, à Army, to him who firft fcal'd vehendo, because the Poets the Walls of a Town that was feign'd her to be carry'd in a befieg'd. It was made of Gold, Chariot. VI. Peffinuntia, from and had Spikes that imitated the Peffinus,a City of Phrygia where Battlements or Pinnacles of she was honour'd. VII. Fauna, Walls and Towers. Ovid, in à favendo, becaufe the Earth is the Place above cited, gives the beneficial to all Animals. VIII. fame Reafon why the Antients Fatua, à fando, becaufe, as the crown'd the Image of the Earth fame Macrobius fays, Infants newith a Mural Crown: ver fpeak till they can fet their Feet to the Earth. IX. Pales, because she was the Goddefs Paftorum & Pabulorum, of Shepherdsand Pafturage. X. Dindyme & Dindymene, from Dindymus, a Mountain of Phrygia. Virgil.

Turrifera caput eft onerata figura: An primis turres urbibus illa dedit?

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Alma Parens Idea Deum, cui
Dindyma cordi,.
Turrigeræque urbes, bijugique
ad fræna leones.
En. 10. V. 252.

.

574. A thousand Names] Cybele, the Mother of the Gods was Daughter of Minos, King of Crete, and Wife of Saturn. The Antients call'd her by feveral Names. I. Cybele, either from Cybelus, a Hill in Phrygia, where in her Infancy fhe was ex- XI. Idea Mater, from Ida, a pos'd to wild Beafts; or from Hill and Town of the fame Rubber, which fignifies to throw Name in Phrygia, where her and fet upon the Head, becaufe Rites were firft inftituted. XII. of the frequent Turning and fan-Phrygia Mater; becaufe fhe was taftick Motions of their Heads, generally worship'd throughout which her Priefts were oblig'd that Countrey. But Faber to obferve and practife in her on this Paffage of Lucretius Rites and Ceremonies: And 'tis gives another Etymology to probable fhe had this Name from thefe two laft Names of the both; for the Greeks call'd her Great Mother, and diffents from Kubean, and KuC Cn. II. Ops: all others, and even from Luquod ipfius auxilio vita conftet, cretius himself. These are his fays Macrobius: because the Words: "Io fignifies moun

tainous

575 And give her a large Train of PHRYGIAN Dames: Because in PHRYGIA Corn at first took Birth, And thence was fcatter'd o'er the other Earth: They eunuch all her Priefts, from whence 'tis fhewn, That they deserve no Children of their own, 580 Who or abuse their Sires, or disrespect,

Or treat their MOTHERS with a cold Neglect ;

NOTES.

Their

Confulitur Pan: Divumque accerfite Matrem,

Inquit; in Idao eft invenienda Mittuntur Proceres: Phrygiæ jugo: tunc Sceptra tenebat Attalus, &c.

tainous and woody Places, as we and to them King Attalus gave find in Hefychius,Euftathius,and the Image of the Idæan Mother, Herodotus in Melpomene, Sect. which they brought into the 259. Whence I is us'd to figni- City: And this was only a fy Wood or Timber for build-rough unpolish'd Stone, which ing. Now Men firft fed upon the Phrygians worship'd for the Acorns; the Oak was their Idaan Mother, T. Liv. Lib. 2. Storehouse, and fupply'd them Ovid. Faft. 4. with Provifions, from hence therefore the Mother of the Gods was call'd Idæa. But after the Ufe of Wheat was invented, she was call'd, guya, Phrygia; for they were wont, φρύγειν, το parch their Wheat. We may obferve that Lucretius fays, thefe Appellations were given herfrom the antient Ceremonies of her Myfteries: To which I add out of Virgil and others, That thofe Ceremonies were firft brought from Crete to the Shores of the Hellefpont: but the Cretans had all these Cuftoms and Rites from the Syrians. Thus Faber: to whofe Opinion many Things might be objected, if it were worth the while; but what Troops.:

575. Phrygian Dames] Phrygiafque cater vas-Dant Comites, fays Lucretius; and with our Tranflatour's Leave, he should, not have made them all Women; for no Doubt but both Sexes affifted at the Proceffion. Fayus is as much mistaken the other way; they were regular and arm'd for he calls them Legions; as if

fhould we be the worfe, if we 1576. Phrygia] i. e. dry or were ignorant of all the Etymo-burning from pguyen, torrere, logies of the Heathen Gods? Iar from Phrygius, a River that will only add, that the Image divides it from Caria; or from of this Idean Mother was Phrygia, the Daughter of Cebrought out of Phrygia to crops. A Countrey in Afia, Rome, at the Time when Han-bounded with Caria,Myfia,Lydia nibal infefted Italy: For the and Bithynia: it is divided into Romans had found in the Books the greater and the leffer, which of the Sibyls, that they should last call'd Troas, was of old the be able to drive away their fo-Kingdom of the Trojans. reign Enemy, if the Idæan Mo- 578. They eunuch, &c.] The ther were brought to Rome: Upon which M. Valerius Levinus, Cæcilius Galba, Cn. Tremellus Flaccus, and M. Valerius Falco, were fent into Phrygia,

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Priefts of Cybele were call'd Galli, from Gallus a River of Phrygia; of whofe Waters they had no fooner tafted, than they were feiz'd with Madness, and

made

Their Mothers, whom they fhould adore..

Amidft her Pomp fierce DRUMS and CYMBALS beat, And the hoarfe HORNS with rattling Notes do threat. 585 The PIPE with PHRYGIAN Airs difturbs their Souls, Till, Reafon overthrown, mad Paffion rules,

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King grew vain, Fought all his Battels o'er again,

made Eunuchs of themselves. | Pleas'd with the Sound, the This Story, how strange and ridiculous foever it may feem, is related by St. Jerome. And Tertullian in Apologetico, Sect. 25. calls the venerable and reverend High-Prieft of this Goddess, Archigallus, Archeunuch. See more of them in Ovid, Faft. 4. where he calls them Semi-máres, Half-men.

582. Their Mothers, &c.] He bestowsDivinity on the Mothers, of whom we puny Creatures are born; and afferts, that the Children who are guilty of Undutifulness or Impiety towards their Parents, are unworthy to be Parents themselves.

And thrice he routed all his
Foes, and thrice he flew the
(flain.
The Mafter faw the Madness
rife,

His glowing Checks, his ardent
Eyes;

And while he Heav'n and Earth
defy'd,

Chang'd his Hand, and check'd his Pride.

A Mufician in Denmark by the fame Art, enrag'd King Ericius even to the ftriking of all his 585. The Pipe, &c.] The Friends about him: PythagoPhrygian Mufick was a Sort of ras taught a Woman to ftop by Enthufiaftick Harmony, and ve- the fame Means the Fury of a ry proper to excite the Paffions Young Man, who came to fet her of the Mind, and to fwell the House on Fire; and his Scholar Soul to Rage and Fury. Macro- Empedocles hinder'd another bius in his fecond Book on the from murdering his Father, when Dream of Scipio, chap. 3. fpeak- the Sword was drawn for that ing of the Power and Force of Purpose: The Fiercenefs even Mufick, fays: Ita omnis habitus of the Nature of Achilles was alanimæ cantibus gubernatur, ut lay'd by playing on the Harp; & ad bellum progreffui & item for which Reafon Homer gives receptui canatur; cantu & exci-him nothing elfe out of the tante & rurfus fedante virtutem: Spoils of Eetion: Damon by dat fomnos adimitque; nec non Mufick reclaim'd wild and drun curas & immittit & retrahit: ken Youths to Sobriety and iram fuggerit, clementiam fua- Temperance, and Afclepiades det, corporum quoque morbis reduc'd even feditious Multitudes medetur: And all who are con- to Temper and Reafon. And verfant among Authours, meet thus too thefe effeminate Priests with fo many Inftances of the a- of Cybele were animated by mazing Effects of Harmony,that their Phrygian Airs to cut and there is no room to doubt of the hack their own Flesh, as our Truth of them. Timotheus by Poet obferves of them v. 594. Mufick enflam'd Alexander to Many more Examples of this what Degrees he pleas'd, and Nature may be feen in Gronovicool'd him again as eafily: which us, Lib. II. Obfervation. cap. 1. Dryden defcribing fays admira-Nor is it wonderful that fuddain Paffions should be rais'd and fup prefs d

bly;

prefs'd by Mufick; (for which the Experiments of which are too Reafon Pindar fays to his Harp, notorious to be deny'd or eluded; * αίχματον κεραυνὸν σβέννυεις, and therefore afford a probable thou quencheft the raging Thun- Argument, that other Diseases der) but that it should cure fetl'd might naturally be expell'd fo Difeafes in the Body, is what we too; but that we have either loft fhould hardly believe, if we had or not yet found out the Art. not both human and divine Te- For the Explication of the Reaftimony for it. Plin. lib. 28. fon of thefe furprizing Effects of cap. 1. Dixit Homerus proflu- Mufick, the Magicians fly to vium fanguinis vulnerato femore their Calcodea; the Platonists Ulyffem inhibuiffe Carmine: to their Anima Mundi; the Theophraftus Ifchiadicos fanari: Rabbies to Fables and Prodigies Cato prodidit luxatis membris too trivial to deferve repeating. carmen auxiliari, Mar. Varro Baptifta Porta, in his Natural podagris. Where the Word Car Magick, feems to afcribe it to men must be understood as the magical Power of the Inftrujoin'd with Mufical Notes. For ment, rather than of the Mufick: the Cure of the Sciatica, Theo- for he fays, that Madness is to be phraftus commends the Phrygian cur'd by the Harmony of a Pipe Mufick upon the Pipe; and made of Hellebore; because the A. Gellius for giving Eafe to it, Juice of that Plant is held good ut memoriæ proditum eft, fays for the fame Purpose: and the he, as it is reported. Apollonius Sciatica, by a mufical Inftrument in his Book de Miris, peaks to made of Poplar; because of the this Purpose: It deferves Admi-Virtue of the Oil, that is extraration, what Theophraftus &ted from that Tree, in mitigawrites in his Treatife of Enthufi- ting thofe Kinds of Pains. But asm, that Mufick cures many thefe, and many fympathetical Paffions and Diseases both of the Experiments are fo falfe, that we Mind and Body. have Reafon to wonder at the Καθάπερ λειποθυμίας, φόβες, καὶ τὰς ἐπὶ Negligence, or rather Impudence of those that E volas & avolas usá- Mirand. fays, That Mufick report them. Picus σεις, ἰάσαι τὰ φησὶν ἡ καταύλησις moves the Spirits to ad upon the ἰχιάδα κ ἐπιληψία». And the Soul, as Medicines do to operate fame Authour witneffes, that upon the Body; and that it cures many in his Time, efpecially the the Body by the Soul, as Phyfick Thebans, us'd the Pipe for the does the Soul by the Body. Bur Cure of feveral Difeafes: and the true natural Reason may be, this Galen calls xalauner T TÓT, that in the fame Manner as mu fuper loco affecto tibia canere, or fical Sounds move the outward loca dolentia decantare. So Ze- Air, fo that does the inward, and nocrates is faid to have cur'd that moves the Spirits, and they Madmen, Tarpander and Arion the Humours, which are the divers other Maladies: But were Seats of Difeafes, by Condenfait not for the Example of David, tion, Rarefaction, Diffipation (which we find in 1.Sam. 16.) or Expulfion of Vapours, and by vertue of the Sympathy of Proportion, which allies them to

μα

Whofe Lyre did Saul's

wild Rage controul, And tun'd the harsh Disorders of his Soul,

we should hardly be convinc'd of this Phyfick, unless in the particular Cure of the Tarantism ;

Man.

Thus they our Souls, thus they our Bodies win,

Not by their Force, but Party that's within;

Thus

They carry ARMS, thofe dreadful Signs of War,
To raise in impious Routs religious Fear.

When carry'd thus in Pomp, thro' Towns fhe goes, 590 And Health on all moft filently beftows;

NOTES.

With

Thus the ftrange Cure, on our | Ev'n Beauty Mufick is, tho' in

fpilt Blood apply'd,
Sympathy to the diftant Wound
does guide:

Thus when two Brethren Strings
are fet alike,
To move them both, but one
of them we strike, Cowl.

But for the producing of the defir'd Effect, Kircherus requires four Conditions: I. Harmony. II. Number and Proportion. III. Efficacious and pathetical Words join'd with the Harmony, which, by the Way,were fully and diftinctly understood in the Mufick of the Antients. And, IV. an adapting of all these to the Conftitution, Difpofition, and Inclination of the Patient. Of which, and all Things on this Subject, his Book de Arte magna Confoni & Diffoni, is well worth the diligent Reading. I will conclude this Remark with thefe excellent Verfes of an anonymous Poet,touching the Power of Mufick on the Mind of Man:

For Man may juftly tuneful
Strains admire;
His Soul is Mufick,

and his

Breaft a Lyre: A Lyre, which whilft its various

Notes agree, Enjoys the Sweets of its own Harmony.

In us rough Hatred with foft Love is join'd, And fprightly Hope with grov'ling Fear combin'd, To form the Parts of our harmonious Mind. What ravishes the Soul, what charms the Ear, Is Mufick, tho' a various Drefs it wear:

Difguife,

Too fine to touch the Ear, it ftrikes the Eyes,

And through them to the Soul the filent Stroke conveys. 'Tis Mufick. heav'nly, fuch as in a Sphere,

We only can admire, but can not hear.

Nor is the Power of Numbers lefs below;

are

By them all Humours yield, all Paffions bow, And ftubborn Crowds chang'd, yet know not how.. Let other Arts in fenfeless Matter reign,

Mimick in Brass, or with mix'd Juices ftain:

Mufick the mightyArtist Man; can rule,

As long as that has Numbers, he a Soul,

As much as Man can those mean Arts controul.

587. They carry Arms, &c.] With thefe Arms they did not only terrify and ftrike a Dread into the common People, but fometimes flightly wounded themfelves: Hence the Poet fays, V. 594. that they

Look dreadful gay in their own fparkling Blood.

590. And Health, &c] This Verfe contains a moft fharp Invective and Derifion. This Great Mother; a rough Stone, unpolish'd by Art, and not much given to tattle, did no doubt à world of Good; but even the her felf kept filent the Benefits the bestow'd, Lucretius says:

Mu

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