Book, Paragraph

1  II,  70| Mercury, Apollo, Hercules, the Muses, the Tyndarian brothers,
2 III,  37|       told by Mnaseas that the Muses are the daughters of Tellus
3 III,  38|        and destroys six divine Muses, if they are certainly nine;
4 III,  38|       thinks that they are the Muses, agreeing with Aelius; Varro
5 III,  44|         The Novensiles are the Muses, in truth they are the Trebian
6  IV,  15| Castors and the same number of Muses, three winged Cupids, and
7  IV,  24|      us, who declares that the Muses were the handmaids of Megalcon,
8  VI,  11|        instead of Mars, as the muses of Varro point out; and,
9  VI,  25|    gods, with her timbrel; the Muses, with their pipes and psalteries;
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