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ritual · roman

Prayer to Venus Verticordia, Fortuna Virilis

Venus Verticordia · Fortuna Virilis
Duly do you worship the goddess, you Latin mothers and brides, and you too who wear not the fillets and long robe. Take off the golden necklaces from the marble neck of the goddess; take off her gauds; the goddess must be washed from top to toe. Then dry her neck and restore to it her golden necklaces; now give her other flowers, now give her the fresh-blown rose. You too she herself bids bathe under the green myrtle, and there is a certain reason for her command; learn what it is. Naked, she was drying on the shore her oozy locks, when the satyrs, a wanton crew, espied the goddess. She perceived it, and screened her body by myrtle interposed: that done, she was safe, and she bids you do the same. Learn now why you give incense to Virile Fortune in the place which reeks of warm water. All women strip when they enter that place, and every blemish on the naked body is plain to see; Virile Fortune undertakes to conceal the blemish and to hide it from the men, and this she does for the consideration of a little incense. Nor grudge to take poppy pounded with snowy milk and liquid honey squeezed from the comb; when Venus was first escorted to her eager spouse, she drank that draught: from that time she was a bride. Propitiate her with supplications; beauty and virtue and good fame are in her keeping. In the time of our forefathers Rome had fallen from a state of chastity, and the ancients consulted the old woman of Cumae. She ordered a temple to be built to Venus, and when that was duly done, Venus took the name of Changer of the Heart from the event. Fairest of goddesses, ever behold the sons of Aeneas with look benign, and guard your offspring's numerous wives.
Fons · Source
AuthorOvid
WorkFasti
SectionIV (Veneralia section, April 1)
Periodearly 1st c. AD
OccasionVeneralia (April 1) — ritual instructions and invocation for Roman matrons and brides washing the statue of Venus Verticordia, with rites to Fortuna Virilis at the baths
Classificatio · Taxonomy
Cultureroman
Formritual
DeitiesVenus Verticordia, Fortuna Virilis
Functionsinvocation · petition
Spheredomestic