In Greek mythology, a son of the Trojan king Tros.
1 Jubilant with power, Ganymedes launched a direct attack on the palace.
2 Ganymedes had divided the water flow, protecting his own, and pumping seawater into ours.
3 Ganymedes had been dead already, the broken creature I had seen in the Forum.
4 They are Ganymedes , borrowed from mythology, not from the Bible.
5 Whose cigars ever equalled thine, thou prince of Ganymedes ?
6 Within a few days the furious ingenuity of Ganymedes was manifested directly in our water supply.
7 One had but to express a preference to have half-a-dozen plates pressed upon one by smiling Ganymedes .
8 Dragging by me in chains was Ganymedes .
9 There's the Gallic chieftain Vercingetorix, and little Juba, son of the Numidian king, and Ganymedes , Arsinoe's accomplice.
10 That night she escaped from the palace, accompanied by her eunuch-tutor Ganymedes , and went to join Achillas and his forces.
11 O'Brien enacted Ganymede, and was perhaps more liberal than other latter-day Ganymedes to whose services Mrs. Talboys had been accustomed.
12 As if to prove the point, Ganymedes , Arsinoe's ex-tutor and the new royal commander, set his men to work digging deep wells.
13 Ganymedes is represented as a youth of exquisite beauty, with short golden locks, delicately chiselled features, beaming blue eyes, and pouting lips.
14 They stated that the whole population was turning against Arsinoe and Ganymedes and wanted to follow Ptolemy instead, were he released to them.
15 For you conceive of your future life as one continual feast; and the smiling attendance of gracious Ganymedes gives a charming finish to the picture.
16 ( Ganymedes may or may not have known this to be an old trick of Caesar's, who had similarly annoyed Pompey.)
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