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(theog. ; comp. apollod. ii. . § , iii. . § .) notwithstanding the confusion of the two beings in later writers, the original meaning of typhaon was preserved in ordinary life.
(hes. theog. , &c.) he begot the winds, whence he is also called the father of the harpies (val. flacc. iv. ), but the beneficent winds notus, boreas, argestes, and zephyrus, were not his sons. (hes. theog. , &c.) aeschylus and pindar describe him as living in a cilician cave....
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