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 1 T-III|     swear, your heart is made of stone.~What further reach is left
 2  T-IV|       his crook, or sitting~on a stone, soothes his flock with
 3  T-IV|         soil,~it wears away hard stone, and solid steel:~it even
 4  ExII|      sense of feeling, turned to stone by her sorrows!~And you,
 5  ExII|         wishes in vain to become stone.~Let Medusa herself appear
 6   ExI|       falling water~carves out a stone with its constant dripping,~
 7 ExIII|     white from the colour of the stone,~is darkened, reddened by
 8  ExIV|          decay consumes iron and stone,~and nothing has greater
 9  ExIV|         Drops of water carve out stone, a ring’s thinned by use,~
10  IBIS|          rolls and retrieves his stone:~and Ixion, beaten, driven
11  IBIS|        his tender head on a hard stone.~Then to make his eyelids
12  IBIS|         be hardened ~to standing stone, or Battus harmed by his
13   Ind|          his ships was turned to stone. His orchards were famous.
14   Ind|      called Delphicus. The navel stone in the precinct at Delphi
15   Ind|      face turned the onlooker to stone. She was killed by Perseus,
16   Ind| transform those she looked at to stone including many of the Ethiopians,
17   Ind|    killed, and she was turned to stone and set on top of a mountain
18   Ind|      weeps eternally. (A natural stone feature exists above the
19   Ind|      Happy in becoming senseless stone.~Ibis:541-596 Turned to
20   Ind|           Ibis:541-596 Turned to stone.~ ~Nireus~Book EIV.XIII:
21   Ind|          continually roll a huge stone up a hill in Hades, from
22   Ind|         river dissolve glass and stone etc.~Book TI.II:1-74 Ibis:
23   Ind|         pair of sandals, under a stone (The Rock of Theseus) as
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