Book, Paragraph

 1  II,  65|       health, Neptune one thing, Juno another, that Fortune, Mercury,
 2  II,  70|         the lord of the sea, nor Juno, nay more, no one inhabited
 3  II,  70|      that Memory, Alcmena, Maia, Juno, Latona, Leda, Dione, and
 4 III,   6|        says, and Janus, Minerva, Juno, Apollo, Venus, Triptolemus,
 5 III,  10| influences, imploring the aid of Juno Lucina. Is it not much better
 6 III,  21|        do they bring forth, that Juno may soothe, and Lucina abridge
 7 III,  23| destroyed by most hurtful frost? Juno presides over childbirth,
 8 III,  30|   similar mode of thought remove Juno from the list of gods? For
 9 III,  40|           who said that Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva were the dii
10  IV,  22|       with strange nuptials? Did Juno not suffice him; and could
11  IV,  25|      that father Dis and queenly Juno were wounded by Hercules?
12  VI,   3|     temple of Mars, this that of Juno and of Venus, this that
13  VI,   3|       the house of Mars, this of Juno and Venus, Apollo dwells
14  VI,  11|       Samians a plank instead of Juno, as Aethlius relates: and
15  VI,  23|    family? Where was the queenly Juno when a violent fire destroyed
16  VI,  25|       thunderbolt; the cestus of Juno, or the maiden lurking under
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