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14. (1836) The new pantheon; or, an introduction to the mythology of the ancients

Proserpine was frequently considered as being the moon, and this fable might be intended to express her time of disappearing. […] The Colossus of Rhodes, a statue of Apollo, seventy cubits high; striding across the mouth of the harbour; so that a large ship, under sail, might pass between its legs. […] But, yet at last, shall Arimanius fall Before his might, and evil be no more. […] He held in his hand a trumpet, the sound of which might be heard throughout all worlds. […] He shall come in might eternal,     He whom eye hath never seen.

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