Book, Paragraph

 1 III,  10|   about among the goddesses, virgin and matron, those parts
 2  IV,  14|      the first of whom is no virgin but the mother of Apollo
 3  IV,  26|      to have robbed of their virgin purity Amphitrite, Hippothoe,
 4  IV,  29|      wars of Minerva and the virgin Diana; by what stratagems
 5   V,   7| flowers the sacred pine. The virgin who had been the bride,
 6   V,  19| golden apples taken from the virgin Hesperides.
 7   V,  31|     hand, fathers with their virgin daughters? was it not you?
 8  VI,   6|       What say you as to the virgin daughters of Coleus? are
 9 VII,  18| unshorn lambs, this one with virgin heifers, that one with horned
10 VII,  22|     pregnant sow; but to the virgin Minerva is slain a virgin
11 VII,  22|    virgin Minerva is slain a virgin calf, never forced by the
12 VII,  22|  think that neither should a virgin have been sacrificed to
13 VII,  22|    have been sacrificed to a virgin, that the virginity might
14 VII,  22|   the Tritonian goddess is a virgin it is therefore fitting
15 VII,  22|    is therefore fitting that virgin victims be sacrificed to
16 VII,  22|      more prolific; pure and virgin heifers to Minerva because
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