Book,  Par.

 1   XII,     52|      son of Pharasmanes named Rhadamistus, tall and handsome, of singular
 2   XII,     52|     unawares, were better. So Rhadamistus pretended to be at feud
 3   XII,     54| especially understand. And so Rhadamistus having attempted the fortified
 4   XII,     54|      numbers of the enemy and Rhadamistus the orders of his father,
 5   XII,     55|  himself the father-in-law of Rhadamistus. "The Iberians," he said, "
 6   XII,     55|       messages he recommended Rhadamistus to hurry on the siege by
 7   XII,     56|                               Rhadamistus at first threw himself into
 8   XII,     56|   them slain before his face. Rhadamistus too, seemingly mindful of
 9   XII,     57|      minds of the barbarians. Rhadamistus might retain his ill-gotten
10   XII,     58|       defenceless, he went to Rhadamistus, whose gifts so completely
11   XII,     59|      king, and was invaded by Rhadamistus, who was now fiercer than
12   XII,     60|                               Rhadamistus had no means of escape but
13  XIII,      7|    from which they had driven Rhadamistus, who, having often possessed
14  XIII,     45|    after having slain his son Rhadamistus as a traitor to prove his
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