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4. (1883) A Hand-Book of Mythology for the Use of Schools and Academies

She was believed to preside over witchcraft and enchantment, and to haunt sepulchres, the point where two roads cross, and lonely spots where murders had been committed. […] Dreading the anger of her father, she fled to Sicyon*, where she married Epopeus*. […] Heracles took it to Mycenæ, where it was set free by Eurystheus. […] At length he arrived at Mycenæ, where Eurystheus sacrificed the oxen to Hera. […] The Argonauts next arrived in Bebrycia, where Amycus* reigned.

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