[108]
Nor is it the Sicilians only, but even all other tribes and nations greatly
worship Ceres of Enna. In truth, if initiation into those sacred
mysteries of the Athenians sought for with the greatest avidity, to which people
Ceres is said to have come in that long
wandering of hers, and then she brought them corn. How much greater reverence ought
to be paid to her by those people among whom it is certain that she was born, and
first discovered corn. And, therefore, in the time of our fathers, at a most
disastrous and critical time to the republic, when, after the death of Tiberius
Gracchus, there was a fear that great dangers were portended to the state by various
prodigies, in the consulship of Publius Mucius and Lucius Calpurnius, recourse was
had to the Sibylline books, in which it was found set down, “that the most
ancient Ceres ought to be
appeased.” Then, priests of the Roman people, selected from the most
honourable college of decemvirs, although there was in our own city a most beautiful
and magnificent temple of Ceres,
nevertheless went as far as Enna. For such
was the authority and antiquity of the reputation for holiness of that place, that
when they went thither, they seemed to be going not to a temple of Ceres, but to Ceres herself.
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