Like Hercules, Gilgamesh figured chiefly in legendary narrative as a mightyhero.
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Excited with wrath, that mightyhero crushed the steeds and the car of Kritavarma.
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Oh, Cecrops, mightyhero with the tail of a dragon!
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A mightyhero in Greek and Roman mythology.
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They take no wild warrior, no mightyhero to be their messenger, but crown this gentle head.
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They take no warrior wild, no mightyhero to be their messenger to men, but crown this gentle head.
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But Hercules, that mightyhero, threw his huge arms over the brawny neck of the bull, and dragged him about.
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And what do the successors of the mightyhero and genius think now in regard to the origin of the human race?
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The battle then that took place there between thy warriors and that mightyhero, viz., the diadem-decked son of Pandu became awful.'
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Three times the mightyhero challenged some one to come forward as a champion for the accused girl, but no one stirred.
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The legendary account of the conquest of Peloponnesus ran as follows:-TheDorians were led by the Heraclidae, or descendants of the mightyhero Hercules.
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In sooth, he was a mightyhero, and yet the ballads refer to him as a "slight fellow," even "a bag of bones."
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Our certainty is of Christ, that mightyHero who overcame the Law, sin, death, and all evils.
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'Having said this much, that slayer of foes, the son of the Pancala king, assailed with strength by that mightyhero, became silent.