thology, as the firſt Cupid ſpringing from the Egg of Night, the marriage of Cupid and Pſyche, the j
Rape of Proferpine, the Congreſs of Jupiter and| Ne Juno, The Death and Reſuſcitation of Adonis, &«c. many of which are ingenioully explained in 20 Of BIC NOL Nu De M7 A EEE. London, 1778.“The Egyptians were poſleſled of many diſcoveries in philoſophy and chemiſtry
before the invention of letters; theſe were then 61 Gai
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expreffed in hieroglyphic paintings oi men and j"8
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animals; which after the diſcovery of the alpha-| En
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and became firſt the deities of Egypt, and after-| Ränbo
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wards of Greece and Rome. Alluſions to thoſe|-D6 0
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(ables were therefore thought proper ornaments Nr
to a philoſophical pocm, and are occaſionally in- 1 Vola
troduced either as repreſented by the poets, or Hat anf
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preſerved on the numerous gems and medallions|| 4
2 I 05| 10, 179,
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