Euterpe, the graceful “Mistress of Song,” was represented with a flute, and garlands of fragrant flowers. […] Venus, goddess of beauty, is represented either entirely nude, or with some scanty drapery called a “cestus.” […] He is generally represented as a sleeping child of great corpulence, and with wings. […] This temple is hexagonal, and on each side a flying figure of one of the winds is represented. […] Boreas, rough and shivering too, was the father of rain, snow, hail, and tempests, and was therefore generally represented as veiled in impenetrable clouds.