Casta′lia. One of the fountains in Mount Parnassus, sacred to the Muses.
Casta′li′des, a name of the Muses, from the fountain Castalia or Castalius.
Cas′tor, son of Jupiter and Leda, twin brother of Pollux, noted for his skill in horsemanship. He went with Jason in quest of the Golden Fleece.
Cau′ther, in Mohammedan mythology, is the lake of paradise, whose waters are as sweet as honey, as cold as snow, and as clear as crystal; and any believer who tastes thereof is said to thirst no more.
Cel′eno was one of the Harpies, progenitor of Zephyrus, the west wind.
Cen′taur. A huntsman who had the fore-part like a man, and the remainder of the body like a horse. The Centauri lived in Thessaly.
Cep′halus was married to Procris, whom he accidentally slew by shooting her, while she was secretly watching him, he thinking she was a wild beast. Cephalus was the type of constancy.
Cerau′nius. A Greek name of Jupiter, meaning The Fulminator, from his thunderbolts.
Cer′berus. Pluto’s famous three-headed dog, which guarded the gate of the infernal regions, preventing the living from entering, and the inhabitants from going out.
“Three-headed Cerberus, by fate