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- Chapter XV. -The Constellations And The Genii Very Indifferent Gods The Roman Monopoly Of Gods Unsatisfactory. Other Nations Require Deities Quite As Much.
Chapter XV.--The Constellations and the Genii Very Indifferent Gods The Roman Monopoly of Gods Unsatisfactory. Other Nations Require Deities Quite as Much.
Men sacrifice [1066] to the same Genii, whilst they have altars or temples in the same places; but to others besides, when they dwell in a strange place, or live in rented houses. [1067] I say nothing about Ascensus, who gets his name for his climbing propensity, and Clivicola, from her sloping (haunts); I pass silently by the deities called Forculus from doors, and Cardea from hinges, and Limentinus the god of thresholds, and whatever others are worshipped by your neighbours as tutelar deities of their street doors. [1068] There is nothing strange in this, since men have their respective gods in their brothels, their kitchens, and even in their prison. Heaven, therefore, is crowded with innumerable gods of its own, both these and others belonging to the Romans, which have distributed amongst them the functions of one's whole life, in such a way that there is no want of the other [1069] gods. Although, it is true, [1070] the gods which we have enumerated are reckoned as Roman peculiarly, and as not easily recognised abroad; yet how do all those functions and circumstances, over which men have willed their gods to preside, come about, [1071] in every part of the human race, and in every nation, where their guarantees [1072] are not only without an official recognition, but even any recognition at all?