Chapter

 1      II| exclaiming concerning his own son:~ ~Alas! he falls, my most
 2      II|       Hercules; and though my son~ By Semele were Bacchus,
 3      II|   suffer'd, when Amphitryon's son~ Thro'her right breast a
 4      II|   arrow felt,~ When that same son of Aegis-bearing Jove~ Assail'
 5     III|    all things. Archelaus, the son of Apollodorus, an Athenian,
 6      IV|        Pythagoras the Samian, son of Mnesarchus, calls numbers,
 7      IV|    Epicurus, an Athenian, the son of Neocles, says that the
 8      IV|     Empedocles of Agrigentum, son of Meton, maintained that
 9      IX|       Hellenics, and by Apion son of Posidonius in his book
10       X|    the king's daughter as her son; and for the same reason
11      XV|     latterly addressed to his son Musaeus, and to the other
12    XVII|   sing the wrath of Achilles, son of Peleus," preferring,
13     XIX| PYTHAGORAS.~ ~And Pythagoras, son of Mnesarchus, who expounded
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