Page:Three Books of Occult Philosophy (De Occulta Philosophia) (1651).djvu/568



And Ovid in his Metamorphosis sings thus,

"A feast was kept, wherein Aeacides For Cicnus death with heifers blood did please Propitious Pallas, when the entralls laid On burning altars, to the Gods convaid An acceptable smell; a part addrest To sacred use, the board receiv'd the rest."

In like manner the representations, resemblances, Idols, Statues, Images, Pictures, made after the similitudes of the Gods, or dedicated to them, are called sacred, even as Orpheus singeth in his hymn to Lycian Venus,

"The chieftains that the sacred things protect Of our country, did for our town erect A Sacred Statue -"

And Virgil.

"O father, take the household gods, and hold Them in thy sacred hands -"

Hence divine Plato in his eleventh book of Lawes, commanded that the sacred Images and Statues of the Gods should be honoured, not for themselves, but because they represent the Gods to us, even as the ancients did worship that Image of Jupiter, thus interpreting it: for in that he bares the resemblance of a man, was signified that he is a mind which produceth all things by his seminary power; he is feigned to sit, that his immutable and constant power might he expressed; he hath the upper parts bare and naked, because he is manifest to the intelligences and the superiors; but the lower parts are covered, because he is hid ftom the inferior creatures: he holdeth a scepter in his left hand, because in these parts of the body the most spiritual habitation of life is found. For the Creator of the intellect is the King and the vivifying spirit of the world; but in his right hand he holdeth forth both an Eagle and victory; the one, because he is Lord of