Venilia
A Roman divinity connected with the winds (yenti) and the sea. Virgil and Ovid describe her as a nymph, a sister of Amata, and the wife of Faunus, by whom she became the mother of Turnus, Jutuma, and Canens. (Metamorphoses by Ovid xiv; The Aeneid by Virgil x.)
From Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and MythologyFrom Metamorphoses by Ovid xiv
Where shady Farfar rustles in the reeds: And those that love the lakes, and homage owe To the chaste Goddess of the silver bow. In vain each nymph her brightest charms put on, His heart no sov'reign would obey but one. She whom Venilia, on Mount Palatine, To Janus bore, the fairest of her line. Nor did her face alone her charms confess, Her voice was ravishing, and pleas'd no less.