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6. (1909) The myths of Greece and Rome

Longmans, Green and Co. for permission to include numerous quotations from Mr. […] This Typhœus was a giant, from whose trunk one hundred dragon heads arose; flames shot from his eyes, nostrils, and mouths; while he incessantly uttered such bloodcurdling screams, that the gods, in terror, fled from Mount Olympus and sought refuge in Egypt. […] Free us from this gloomy prison! […] Vainly Apollo strove to check the stream of blood which flowed from the ghastly wound. […] They break, and from their mist a lily form Rises from out the wave, in beauty warm.

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