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2. (1832) A catechism of mythology

He is usually represented with two faces, that of an old man, looking towards the year that is past, and that of a young man, regarding the year that has just commenced. […] It also records that that prince had medals with two faces stamped, to announce that the totality of his states would be governed by the counsels of Saturn and himself. — See Fig. 2. […] They also affirm that Cybele gave her own name to that goddess, and that the Corybantes, her priests, took their names from Corybas. […]  3. — History informs us that Cybele was daughter to a king of Phrygia; and that she left that country for Latium, where she married Saturn. […] But if she lay aside that veil or that robe, she makes a sorry and despicable figure in society.

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