They were represented in a chariot drawn by two wild horses, whose names were Flight and Terror. […] Time has robbed me of my beauty; I only see in this mirror that I am no longer young; I will bestow it upon her whose beauty never fades, and whose youth is immortal. […] Polyhymnia, whose name signifies many songs, presides over miscellaneous poetry, and the ode. […] In a lake whose waters approached to his lips, he stood burning with thirst without the power to drink. […] Next followed the vestals, attended by boys and girls whose parents were living.