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  1. Episode Guide

    • 1. P.M. Turn Mar 10, 1993
      • The lives of three rookie policewomen fresh out of the academy.
      • Molly is sexually harassed; Lynn fears her lack of physical strength makes her an inferior cop.
    • 3. Jumper Mar 24, 1993
      • Sarah intervenes in an attempted suicide on a bridge, while Cary and Dan anxiously watch.
  2. Apr 16, 2015 · In art, sirens usually appear as birds with the head of a woman. Origins & Attributes of Sirens. The Sirens were hybrid creatures with the body of a bird and the head of a woman, sometimes also with human arms. One tradition states their origin as companions of Persephone and, failing to prevent her rape, they were transformed into Sirens as ...

  3. Jul 15, 2020 · Another famous ship in Greek mythology passed by the Sirens without being drawn to the rocks. The hero Jasons’s voyage aboard the Argo, which was heavily influenced by the older story of Odysseus’s voyage, also took him past the Sirens after departing Circe’s island.

  4. Jun 18, 2017 · The Sirens appear in Greek’s oldest works of literature. Homer, Virgil, Pliny the Elder, Ovid, Seneca, and Hesiod all describe these bewitching singers. By the end of the Greek period, Grecian scholars had concluded that the women were no more than fable—yet their legend lived on for centuries after the Greek civilization crumbled away.

  5. The Sirens stand out as one of the most captivating and mysterious creatures in legend. These half-bird, half-woman entities are renowned for their irresistibly sweet melodies, which lure unsuspecting sailors towards perilous fates. The Sirens’ appearance has been a subject of great artistic licence and interpretation throughout history.

  6. Nov 30, 2023 · In Greek mythology, the Sirens were dangerous creatures, often portrayed as part-woman and part-bird. They were known for their enchanting and irresistible singing voices that lured sailors to their doom. The most well-known story featuring the Sirens is found in Homer's epic poem, the 'Odyssey.' The theme of the Sirens has persisted in art, literature,

  7. Dec 9, 2020 · The Sirens were half-woman and half-bird, although they are sometimes wrongly associated with mermaids (so half-woman and half-fish), probably because of their proximity to the sea (although they were strictly land-based, they tended to hang about down on the shore so they could attract the passing boats full of hapless sailors).

  8. SIRENS HANDMAIDENS OF PERSEPHONE. Euripides, Helen 167 ff (trans. Vellacott) (Greek tragedy C5th B.C.) : "[Helene of Troy speaks :] ‘Winged maidens, virgin daughters of Gaia (Gaea, Earth), the Seirenes (Sirens), may you come to my mourning with Libyan flute or pipe or lyre, tears to match my plaintive woes; grief for grief and mournful chant for chant, may Persephone send choirs of death in ...

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