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  1. choices-stories-you-play.fandom.com › wiki › Blades_of_Light_and_Shadow,_Book_2Blades of Light and Shadow, Book 2 Choices

    This page contains the choices in Blades of Light and Shadow, Book 2 and their outcomes. This game revolves heavily around the choices you make. They can improve or decrease relationships with the characters, as well as increase XP, which allows you to level up and learn new skills.

  2. Blades of Light and Shadow, Book 2 is the second book of the Blades of Light and Shadow series. It succeeds its first book, Blades of Light and Shadow, Book 1. After your triumph against the Dreadlord, you're taken prisoner by a new foe who's hell-bent on using your blood to conquer the Realm of...

  3. Choices: Stories You Play. Alpha, Book 2 is the second book of the Alpha series. It succeeds its first book, Alpha, Book 1. Visit the soundtrack page for more soundtracks from Choices. On February 12, 2024, PB announced that Chapter 20 is the Book finale, meaning that there will be a sequel. [1]

  4. The story of Tereus and Philomela: summary. Philomela and Procne were sisters, daughters of Pandion, King of Athens. A Thracian man, Tereus, married Procne. However, Tereus desired his sister-in-law, Philomela, and he took her by force.

  5. Story of Philomela (The Nightingale in Greek Mythology) Procne, the elder of the two sisters, was married to Tereus of Thrace, a son of Ares, who proved to have inherited all his father’s detestable qualities. The two had a son, Itys, and when he was fve years old Procne, who had all this while been living in Thrace separated from her family, ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PhilomelaPhilomela - Wikipedia

    The most complete and extant rendering of the story of Philomela, Procne, and Tereus can be found in Book VI of the Metamorphoses of the Roman poet Ovid (Publius Ovidius Naso) (43 BC – 17/18 AD), where the story reaches its full development during antiquity. [7]

  7. Philomelas rape, mutilation, revenge with her sister Procne/Progne, and her metamorphosis into the nightingale are the subjects of or models for various retellings and allusions, and matched only in reference to rape mythology by the legendary Lucrece (discussed in the following chapter).

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