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It is open to all to receive whichever he may prefer of these two
traditions; my own opinion about them has been already declared. If
indeed these gods had been publicly known, and had grown old in
Greece, as was the case with Hercules, son of Amphitryon,
Bacchus, son of Semele, and Pan, son of Penelope, it might have
been said that the last-mentioned personages were men who bore the
names of certain previously existing deities. But Bacchus, according
to the Greek tradition, was no sooner born than he was sewn up in
Jupiter's thigh, and carried off to Nysa, above Egypt, in
Ethiopia; and as to Pan, they do not even profess to know what
happened to him after his birth. To me, therefore, it is quite
manifest that the names of these gods became known to the Greeks after
those of their other deities, and that they count their birth from the
time when they first acquired a knowledge of them. Thus far my
narrative rests on the accounts given by the Egyptians.
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