Home1810 Edition

ACIS

Volume 8 · 208 words · 1810 Edition

in Mythology, the son of Faunus and the nymph Simaethis, was a beautiful shepherd of Sicily, who being beloved by Galatea, Polyphemus the giant was so enraged, that he dashed out his brains against a rock; after which Galatea turned him into a river, which was called by his name.

The Sicilian authors say, that Acis was a king of this Acknowledgment

This part of the island, who was slain by Polyphemus, one of the giants of Ætna, in a fit of jealousy.

river of Sicily, celebrated by the poets, running from a very cold spring, in the woody and shady foot of Mount Ætna, for the space of a mile eastward into the sea, along green and pleasant banks, with the speed of an arrow, from which it takes its name. Its waters are now impregnated with sulphureous vapours, though formerly they were celebrated for their sweetness and salubrity, and were held sacred by the Sicilian shepherds:

Quique per Ætnæos Acis petit aquora fines, Et dulci gratam Nereida perluit unda. Sil Ital.

It is now called Il Fiume Fredda, Aci, Iaci, or Chiachi, according to the different Sicilian dialects: Antonine calls it Acius. It is also the name of a hamlet at the mouth of the Acis.