Book,  Par.

1    II,     15|   assembled in a forest sacred to Hercules, and would venture on a
2    II,     78|     nearest mouth, dedicated to a Hercules who, the natives say, was
3   III,     86| Subsequently by the permission of Hercules, when he was subduing Lydia,
4    IV,     54|      loftiest aspirations, and so Hercules and Bacchus among the Greeks
5    IV,     59|          among the descendants of Hercules, in which the territory
6   XII,     15|           with special worship of Hercules, who at a stated time bids
7   XII,     28|        embrace the great altar of Hercules; then, at regular intervals,
8    XV,     51|          to the visibly appearing Hercules, the temple of Jupiter the
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