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12. (1895) The youth’s dictionary of mythology for boys and girls

But when he languished and died she pined away from grief and died also, preserving nothing but her voice, which repeats every sound that reaches her. […] They petrified every one they looked at. […] The Grecian sun-god, or charioteer of the sun, who went home every evening in a golden boat which had wings. […] To every deity a distinct victim was allotted, and the greatest care was always taken in the selection of them. […] A festival held every nine years at Delphi in honor of Apollo, at which the victory of that god over the Python was grandly represented.

13. (1838) The Mythology of Ancient Greece and Italy (2e éd.) pp. -516

As our silence is made an argument against us, it becomes every author to take an opportunity of expressing his sentiments on it. […] At a distance of several miles from the chief town, he says, lay a sacred grove, composed of trees of every kind, tall cypresses, laurels, myrtles, palms, and every species of fruit-tree, amidst which ran rivulets of the purest water. […] Eôs, Helios, and Selene rose every day out of the Ocean-stream, and drove in their chariots through the air, shedding their cheering beams abroad. […] It was evening ; they sought for hospitality, but every door was closed against them. […] Of this there were two kinds, the Small, celebrated every seven, the Great, every sixty years.

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