With Mars in Homer (Il. IV. 440) are coupled φόβος and Δ(ε)ιμος, Fear and Terror, as in this passage of Æschylus, and Ἔρις, Strife.
“Fear and Terror went with him, and Strife that rages without bound,
Strife of Mars the man-destroyer, sister and companion dear.”
And in Livy (I. 27), Tullus Hostilius being pressed in battle, “duodecim vovit Salios, fanaque Pallori et Pavori.”—Compare Cic. de Nat. Deor. III. c. 25. Enýo is coupled in Homer as a war-goddess with Athena—
“Well Tydides knew that Venus was no goddess made for war,
Not Athena, not Eýno city-sacking.”
In our language, we have naturalized her Roman counterpart Bellona.
“. . . the chariot of Adrastus.”
“Because it had been predicted that Adrastus alone should survive the war.”—Scholiast.