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[9]

The Trojan women are represented as already captives and lamenting. Andromache is in the painting, and near stands her boy grasping her breast; this child Lescheos says was put to death by being flung from the tower, not that the Greeks had so decreed, but Neoptolemus, of his own accord, was minded to murder him. In the painting is also Medesicaste, another of Priam's illegitimate daughters, who according to Homer1 left her home and went to the city of Pedaeum to be the wife of Imbrius, the son of Mentor.

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    • Walter Leaf, Commentary on the Iliad (1900), 13.173
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