denotes an ill grounded terror or fright. Polybius says, it originates from Pan, one of the captains of Bacchus, who with a few men put a numerous enemy to rout, by a noise which his followers raised in a rocky valley, favoured with a great number of echoes. This stratagem making their number appear far greater than it was, the enemy quitted a very commodious encampment. Panicle, encampment, and fled. Hence all ill-grounded fears have been called panics, or panic-fears; and it was this that gave occasion to the fable of the nymph Echo's being beloved by the god Pan. Others derive the origin of it hence; that in the wars of the Titans against the gods, Pan was the first who struck terror into the hearts of the giants. Theon or Aratus says, he did it by the means of a sea-shell, which served him for a trumpet, whereof he was the inventor.