Book, Chapter

1    5, 132|     seemed to be inert. "My queen," I cried, "do not mock
2    5, 153|   gallant who had given the queen an apple. As beliefs of
3    5, 154|     was still adored as the queen of the earth, and the subject
4    5, 156|     Semiramis, that ancient queen who was the first to emasculate
5    6     |     was older, he loved the queen and, one day, in the senate,
6    6     |   Caesar, "I salute thee, O Queen!" His enemies maintained
7    6     |     at Cnidus.~"O Venus, my queen! to thee I call; lend me
8    6     | furnished the pleasure of a queen, the severity of one Lucretia
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