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 1   T-I|  semblance of a noisy funeral.~Women and men, children too, cried
 2  T-II|    enough?~Poetry made men and women want to know me,~but that
 3  T-II|      doing.~Often grave-browed women consider~naked girls positioned
 4  T-IV|        the noble gods, and the women with her, and the sinless~
 5   ExI| nobility.~Add that the younger women, the loyal granddaughters,~
 6 ExIII|       those virtues,~not a few women will carp at your deeds.~
 7 ExIII|       snakes,~but the first of women, in whom Fortune shows herself~
 8 ExIII|   produce coarse wool, and the women ~of Tomis have not yet learned
 9  IBIS|       no one pity:~let men and women take delight in your adversity.~
10  IBIS|       pyre, aged men, and then women:~like those we read of,
11  IBIS|        savage crowd of Lemnian women:~or the one, denounced for
12  IBIS|        flame.~May the Thracian women, thinking you Orpheus, ~
13   Ind|      Amazons~A race of warlike women living by the River Thermodon,
14   Ind|      See Euripides’ The Trojan Women and Racine’s Andromache.~
15   Ind|        Livia. Here the younger women of the house, and granddaughters
16   Ind|      childbirth, fertility and women generally. Traditionally
17   Ind|    king there when the Lemnian women murdered their menfolk because
18   Ind|       Ibis:365-412 The Lemnian women who killed their husbands.~ ~
19   Ind|     the poetess, whose love of women gave rise to the term lesbian. ~
20   Ind|        goddess of the mind and women’s arts (also a goddess of
21   Ind|    suggestion of realdivinewomen who helped his journey,
22   Ind|        turned from the love of women to that of young men. He
23   Ind|    written to exclude virtuous women and he ‘quotesArs Amatoria
24   Ind|      erotic relationships with women led to the term Sapphic,
25   Ind|      to woman-headed birds, or women with the legs of birds,
26   Ind|      was king when the Lemnian women murdered their menfolk because
27   Ind|        Book EIII.VIII:1-24 The women there have not learnt the
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