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14. (1895) The youth’s dictionary of mythology for boys and girls

Suppose that one could fix upon the terminal point, we would still fancy something beyond that, and then some period still more remote would present itself, and so on ad infinitum. […] The earliest altars were merely heaps of earth or turf or rough unhewn stone; but as the mode of sacrificing became more ceremonious grander altars were built. […] He had seven daughters by his wife Pleione, they were called by one common name, Pleiades; and by his wife Æthra he had seven more, who were, in the same manner, called Hyades. […] A son of Vulcan, who married Lathæa, a woman who thought herself more beautiful than the goddesses, and as a punishment she and her husband were turned into stone statues. […] With reference to this God, nothing can be more appropriate than St.

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