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| Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus On the pallium IntraText - Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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1 4, 9 | see (them to be) matrons!~10.
2 5, 5 | citron-wood for more than £4000 and Asinius Gallus to pay
3 5, 6 | single mullet at nearly £50; which led Aesopus the actor
4 5, 5 | a tray of the weight of 500 lbs.!--a tray indispensable,
5 4, 7 | sister and afterwards men.~8.
6 5, 6 | of the value of nearly £800, made up of birds of the
7 4, 8 | clothe themselves as you do.~9.
8 2, 6 | densely packed, in another abandoning their posts; in order that
9 4, 9 | be approached, they have abjured stole, and chemise, and
10 6, 1 | whereof moral improbity absolutely blushes.~2.
11 2, 4 | expiated by the treacherous absorption of one single camp! Many
12 4, 10| mysteries of) Ceres; while, on account of an opposite hankering
13 4, 10| much more should you then accuse and assail it with your
14 2, 7 | estate of this empire; every aconite of hostility eradicated;
15 | across
16 5, 6 | 50; which led Aesopus the actor to preserve in his pantry
17 4, 1 | provinces which nature adapted rather for surmounting by
18 5, 3 | encloses: in other respects it adheres to the shoulder; it has
19 2, 7 | In truth, our orb is the admirably cultivated estate of this
20 3, 4 | From whatever beginning you admit him as springing, naked
21 2, 1 | those cars are) it must be admitted, for even huger fables.
22 4, 3 | maternal dread did so: and yet adoration is offered by you to me,
23 3, 7 | subsequently with a view to adorning withal, ay, and inflating
24 2, 2 | too. Of the rest of her adornment also, what is there which
25 4, 9 | extinguishes her proper adornments, another blazes forth such
26 2, 3 | the shivering shock of the Adriatic and the Tyrrhenian seas,
27 5, 6 | forcemeats to raise them to an adulterous flavour; which led Asinius
28 5, 3 | in shoes. These (pleas I advance) for the Mantle in the meantime,
29 3, 7 | learned (when he was now advanced in years) their alphabet
30 4, 3 | of any note, would have adventured her shoulders beneath the
31 4, 10| attire. Lower your eyes, I advise you, (and) reverence the
32 5, 6 | at nearly £50; which led Aesopus the actor to preserve in
33 5, 5 | good health upon public affairs, and states, and empires,
34 4, 6 | withal (I believe) themselves affect somewhat of that kind.~7.
35 4, 6 | blown to (the flame of) affectation, forthwith, by the blaze
36 4, 6 | manhood is preserved. Every affection is a heat: when, however,
37 4, 10| commends Saturn (to the affections of others). When this Mantle
38 3, 6 | of the fact) that shrubs afford you clothing, and the grassy
39 | against
40 3, 3 | boot, yet never fainting; agape he feeds; heaving, bellowslike,
41 3, 6 | drawing them through the air, she distends more skilfully
42 4, 10| the overseer of brothels airs her swelling silk, and consoles
43 2, 7 | delightsome beyond the orchard of Alcinous and the rosary of Midas.
44 3, 5 | the Egyptians narrate, and Alexanderdigests, and his mother reads--touching
45 4, 8 | garments, therefore, as alienate from nature and modesty,
46 4, 10| while for the sake of an all-white dress, and the distinction
47 3, 2 | wholly changes what has been allotted him--his hide and his age:
48 2, 2 | pathways of her streams by alluvial formation?~3.
49 3, 7 | advanced in years) their alphabet and speech--the self-same
50 5, 5 | every boundary-stone or altar it is my wont to prescribe
51 3, 2 | observe, is of an annual sex, alternately masculine and feminine.
52 3, 6 | Miletus, and Selge, and Altinum, or of those for which Tarentum
53 | ALWAYS
54 3, 3 | but drags, his footstep amazedly, and moves forward,--he
55 4, 3 | the jaw-teeth overshadowed amid the forelocks, the whole
56 3, 5 | the time of Osiris, when Ammon, rich in sheep, comes to
57 5, 1 | diadem and sceptre? Did Anacharsis change otherwise, when to
58 2, 1 | discharges it. See to it Anaximander, if he thinks there are
59 6, 2 | studies is covered by my four angles. 'True; but all these rank
60 5, 2 | carrying it? If you shall answer negatively, I will follow
61 2, 1 | substances and offices, answerable to the form of that which
62 6, 1 | With speech,' says (my antagonist), 'you have tried to persuade
63 2, 6 | Archias, fortify Syracuse. But antiquity is by this time a vain thing (
64 5, 7 | and the intemperance of an Antony. And remember that these,
65 | anywhere
66 5, 7 | silent as to the Neros and Apicii and Rufi. I will give a
67 4, 7 | purple. If a philosopher (appears) in purple, why not in glided
68 3, 5 | nor does their knowledge appertain to all. Come, let us hear
69 4, 1 | the Mantle! To the Mantle appertains this whole Asiatic practice!
70 4, 8 | effeminacy, he would hear applied to himself that which the
71 5, 5 | slothful encrustation. I apply the cauterizing iron to
72 3, 3 | chameleon, you will at once apprehend something yet more huge
73 4, 10| without hesitation have appropriated) hands privy to all that
74 4, 2 | attire? The transfer of dress approximates to culpability just in so
75 2, 1 | prates in the ears of Midas, apt (as those cars are) it must
76 3, 5 | workshop was presided over by Arachne.~6.
77 2, 4 | Where Jordan's river is the arbiter of boundaries, (behold)
78 2, 6 | again, the Corinthians with Archias, fortify Syracuse. But antiquity
79 4, 6 | blaze of glory, it is an ardour. From this fuel, therefore,
80 6, 2 | are conducted into the arena in togas. This, no doubt,
81 6, 2 | trainer in the rudiments of arithmetic, the grammarian, the rhetorician,
82 4, 10| necklaces, and inserts in the armlets (which even matrons themselves
83 | around
84 5, 1 | uptaking: it needs no tedious arrangement. Accordingly, there is no
85 4, 10| the garments in which you array your gods and goddesses,
86 3, 4 | due preparation, we might arrive at man. From whatever beginning
87 5, 1 | is no necessity for any artist formally to dispose its
88 6, 2 | boast. Other scientific arts of public utility I boast.
89 2, 4 | Gomorrah is no more; and all is ashes; and the neighbour sea no
90 4, 1 | Mantle appertains this whole Asiatic practice! What hast thou,
91 5, 2 | short, I will persistently ask your own conscience, What
92 4, 9 | yet do but look with eyes askance, (and) you will at once
93 4, 10| should you then accuse and assail it with your eyes, as being
94 2, 5 | ancient profane authorities assert. Beyond his time the pen
95 3, 5 | thins out the thread by assiduous traction, wove it into the
96 6, 2 | for she is not the only associate whom I boast. Other scientific
97 4, 10| their vanities, then most assuredly is the Mantle, above all
98 2, 5 | you (heathens). From the Assyrians, it may be, the histories
99 6, 2 | musical timebeater, the astrologer, and the birdgazer. All
100 4, 4 | coarse ruggedness of his athlete's cloak with some superfinely
101 4, 1 | thou, Europe, to do with athletic refinements, which thou
102 2, 3 | proved) no liar; when in the Atlantic (the isle) that was equal
103 2, 1 | of diversities, and whose attemperation is the result of vicissitudes.~
104 4, 9 | Severus pressed upon the grove attention of the senate--matrons stoleless
105 4, 2 | s self," says (Homer), "attracteth the hero."~3.
106 4, 10| Bellona's temple; while the attraction of surrounding themselves
107 3, 3 | forthwith laugh at the egregious audacity of the name, in as much
108 5, 6 | sake of food; which led Aufidius Lurco to be the first to
109 2, 7 | either produced, or else augmented, or else restored! While
110 4, 9 | inflicted by the decrees of the augur Lentulus upon any matron
111 4, 10| your gods and goddesses, an august robe; and, above all the
112 2, 7 | While God favours so many Augusti unitedly, how many populations
113 2, 5 | as the ancient profane authorities assert. Beyond his time
114 1, 3 | much doth Time's long age avail to change!"~Thus, in short,
115 | away
116 3, 7 | view to adorning withal, ay, and inflating it, where
117 4, 7 | that at the bottom of his Bacchantian raiment he might make some
118 1, 3 | which Laberius (calls)~"Back-twisted-horned, wool-skinned, stones-dragging,"~
119 1, 1 | folds, they stood on men's backs with quadrate symmetry.
120 3, 6 | those for which Tarentum or Baetica is famous, with nature for
121 2, 7 | splendour! how many barbarians baffled! In truth, our orb is the
122 5, 5 | weight. I fear lest that balance be small, when a Drusillanus (
123 4, 3 | I hope, was effected by balsam and fenugreek-salve: I suppose
124 4, 4 | the traces left by (the bands of) the cestus, but likewise
125 2, 7 | ancient splendour! how many barbarians baffled! In truth, our orb
126 4, 1 | plumes, learn to bid the barber shave their skin close,
127 4, 6 | a transparent texture he bared; punting still after the
128 3, 7 | speech--the self-same Cato, by baring his shoulder at the time
129 6, 1 | infancy or else checked by bashfulness, for life is content with
130 1, 3 | does military service in battering walls--never before poised
131 4, 2 | The clarion had sounded of battle: nor were arms far to seek. "
132 4, 2 | at all events was already be-haired, he at all events had already
133 1, 3 | stones-dragging,"~but a beam-like engine it is, which does
134 3, 3 | think? No. There is another beastling which the versicle fits;
135 | becomes
136 4, 2 | to consult the mirror, to bedizen his neck; effeminated even
137 5, 6 | should have supped more beggarly than his father.~7.
138 3, 3 | living pellicle. His headkin begins straight from his spine,
139 6, 2 | thee, ever since thou hast begun to be a Christian's vesture!~
140 | behind
141 2, 6 | the Peloponnesus for the behoof of Temenus. So, again, the
142 4, 3 | ought the truth to have been belied, nor the deception confessed.
143 4, 6 | that philosophers withal (I believe) themselves affect somewhat
144 5, 6 | expose slaves to fill the bellies of sea-eels. Delighted,
145 4, 10| head, others run mad in Bellona's temple; while the attraction
146 3, 3 | agape he feeds; heaving, bellowslike, he ruminates; his food
147 2, 5 | from Ninus the progeny of Belus, onwards; if indeed Ninus
148 5, 7 | and exsuppurate, save a bemantled speech?~
149 5, 4 | no constant wearer out of benches, no wholesale router of
150 2, 4 | behold) a vast waste, and a bereaved region, and bootless land!
151 | besides
152 4, 10| themselves would, of the guerdons bestowed upon brave men, without
153 4, 1 | horsetail plumes, learn to bid the barber shave their skin
154 6, 2 | the astrologer, and the birdgazer. All that is liberal in
155 5, 6 | nearly £800, made up of birds of the selfsame costliness (
156 2, 6 | Africa; the Phrygians give birth to the Romans; the seed
157 3, 4 | from the confines of his birthplace because he had sinned, he
158 4, 6 | affectation, forthwith, by the blaze of glory, it is an ardour.
159 4, 9 | proper adornments, another blazes forth such as are not hers.
160 1, 1 | times of peace" and plenty. Blessings rain from the empire and
161 1, 1 | ennobled by ancient memories, blest with modern felicities,
162 4, 3 | Hydra's and of the Centaurs' blood upon the shafts was gradually
163 3, 1 | the choicest; nay, in the bloom of his neck richer than
164 4, 6 | heat: when, however, it is blown to (the flame of) affectation,
165 5, 6 | taste some savour of the bodies of his own slaves. I will
166 4, 7 | carried Empedocles down bodily to the secret recesses of
167 4, 9 | stole, and chemise, and bonnet, and cap; yes, and even
168 3, 3 | a step: ever fasting, to boot, yet never fainting; agape
169 2, 4 | and a bereaved region, and bootless land! And once (there were
170 5, 2 | the shape of effeminate boots!~3.
171 4, 2 | effeminated even as to his ear by boring, whereof his bust at Sigeum
172 5, 4 | be the sentiment. None is born for another, being destined
173 4, 6 | dissculptured with scaly bosses, by covering it with a transparent
174 4, 7 | indeed, in order that at the bottom of his Bacchantian raiment
175 5, 2 | than in a shoe with feet bound? A mighty munition for the
176 2, 4 | river is the arbiter of boundaries, (behold) a vast waste,
177 5, 5 | public. From any and every boundary-stone or altar it is my wont to
178 4, 2 | patiently, if it were in a boy's case, his mother's solicitude;
179 4, 4 | course, not only cover with bracelets the traces left by (the
180 4, 3 | still to reek with their brains when it was being pestered
181 2, 7 | eradicated; and the cactus and bramble of clandestinely crafty
182 4, 8 | freedmen in equestrian garb, branded slaves in that of gentlemen,
183 4, 10| the guerdons bestowed upon brave men, without hesitation
184 4, 7 | indeed, and shod himself in brazen sandals." Worthily, indeed,
185 3, 2 | albeit not in the same breath as the peacock; for he too
186 2, 2 | while at one time, the breezes equably swaying it, tranquillity
187 2, 2 | sprinkling, and then again brilliance. So, too, the sea has an
188 3, 6 | fleeces, inasmuch as the more brilliant shells of a mossy wooliness
189 4, 10| themselves with a tunic more broadly striped with purple, and
190 4, 10| And, while the overseer of brothels airs her swelling silk,
191 4, 8 | now that the contracted brow of censorial vigilance is
192 4, 4 | an incredible mutation--bruised within his skin and without,
193 1, 1 | neck in the gripe of the buckle, used to repose on the shoulders.~
194 4, 8 | clowns in that of city-folk, buffoons in that of lawyers, rustics
195 3, 3 | in a vineyard, his whole bulk sheltered beneath a vine
196 5, 1 | thus clothe the man with a burden!~2.
197 2, 6 | washed away, the heaven burned down, the earth undermined,
198 2, 4 | cloud overcast Etruria, burning down her ancient Volsinii,
199 5, 4 | from the populace. My only business is with myself: except that
200 4, 3 | his gory mangers? where Busiris and his funereal altars?
201 4, 2 | ear by boring, whereof his bust at Sigeum still retains
202 5, 5 | which led M. Tullius to buy a circular table of citron-wood
203 2, 7 | hostility eradicated; and the cactus and bramble of clandestinely
204 4, 9 | You have to behold what Caecina Severus pressed upon the
205 4, 5 | concerning some of your Caesars, equally lost to shame;
206 1, 3 | not that which Laberius (calls)~"Back-twisted-horned, wool-skinned,
207 2, 2 | the semblance of probity, calm gives it the semblance of
208 3, 4 | events and ungarmented he came from his fashioner's hand:
209 2, 4 | absorption of one single camp! Many other such detriments
210 2, 4 | ancient Volsinii, to teach Campania (all the more by the ereption
211 5, 4 | I am not odorant of the canals, am not odorant of the lattices,
212 4, 5 | mandate have been given to canine constancy to point to a
213 | cannot
214 4, 9 | chemise, and bonnet, and cap; yes, and even the very
215 4, 10| robe; and, above all the caps and tufts of your Salii
216 4, 6 | degraded himself into the captive trousers! The breast dissculptured
217 2, 6 | refer to), when our own careers are before our eyes.~7.
218 4, 7 | testify--but would have carried Empedocles down bodily to
219 5, 2 | laded? wearing a garment, or carrying it? If you shall answer
220 2, 1 | of Midas, apt (as those cars are) it must be admitted,
221 4, 9 | any matron who had thus cashiered herself was the same as
222 4, 10| striped with purple, and casting over their shoulders a cloak
223 2, 4 | the repetition of such catastrophes)! Would that Asia, withal,
224 5, 7 | and Rufi. I will give a cathartic to the impurity of a Scaurus,
225 4, 4 | mimographer Lentulus in his Catinensians--did, of course, not only
226 3, 7 | and speech--the self-same Cato, by baring his shoulder
227 2, 4 | were by this time without cause for anxiety about the soil'
228 5, 5 | encrustation. I apply the cauterizing iron to the ambition which
229 3, 2 | confinement; crawls into a cave and out of his skin simultaneously;
230 5, 6 | flavour; which led Asinius Celer to purchase the viand of
231 4, 7 | madly thought himself a celestial being might, as a god, salute
232 4, 8 | that the contracted brow of censorial vigilance is long since
233 4, 3 | the) Hydra's and of the Centaurs' blood upon the shafts was
234 2, 3 | of Italy, severed to the centre by the shivering shock of
235 4, 10| into (the mysteries of) Ceres; while, on account of an
236 4, 9 | fornication; inasmuch as certain matrons had sedulously promoted
237 4, 10| superstition simple and unaffected? Certainly, when first it clothes this
238 4, 4 | left by (the bands of) the cestus, but likewise supplanted
239 2, 6 | Romans; the seed of the Chaldeans is led out into Egypt; subsequently,
240 5, 4 | Now, however, it challenges you on the score of its
241 3, 5 | softness of a ram which he had chanced to stroke, flayed a little
242 4, 3 | confessed. Each fashion of changing was evil: the one opposed
243 2, 4 | quailed before the devouring chasm, expiated by the treacherous
244 4, 9 | of publicly slaughtered chastity, yet do but look with eyes
245 6, 1 | impeded by infancy or else checked by bashfulness, for life
246 4, 9 | have abjured stole, and chemise, and bonnet, and cap; yes,
247 4, 1 | the tweezers to weed their chin so thievishly? A prodigy
248 1, 2 | State, indeed, of her own choice hastened to effect a change;
249 3, 1 | a garment indeed of the choicest; nay, in the bloom of his
250 1, 3 | of her engine after the choleric fury of the head-avenging
251 6, 2 | thou hast begun to be a Christian's vesture!~
252 1, 3 | suspend it on a dividing cincture; and the redundancy of your
253 5, 5 | led M. Tullius to buy a circular table of citron-wood for
254 5, 3 | be effected by a single circumjection, and one in no case inelegant:
255 3, 3 | is hard for him; but, in circumspection, his eyes are outdarting,
256 1, 2 | State used to clothe (her citizens); and wherever else in Africa
257 5, 5 | buy a circular table of citron-wood for more than £4000 and
258 3, 7 | Greeks to extrusion from the city, but learned (when he was
259 4, 8 | freeborn, clowns in that of city-folk, buffoons in that of lawyers,
260 5, 2 | gown? Do you feel yourself clad, or laded? wearing a garment,
261 2, 7 | the cactus and bramble of clandestinely crafty familiarity wholly
262 4, 2 | restored him his sex. The clarion had sounded of battle: nor
263 5, 5 | and he withal a slave of Claudius!) constructs a tray of the
264 5, 6 | land-monsters, toothless, clawless, hornless: it was his pleasure
265 3, 2 | skin simultaneously; and, clean shorn on the spot, immediately
266 5, 3 | shoeing is worn, it is a most cleanly work; or else the feet are
267 4, 4 | Tirynthian --the pugilist Cleomachus--subsequently, at Olympia,
268 4, 7 | the secret recesses of the Cloacinae; in order that he who had
269 4, 1 | barber shave their skin close, and to exempt their crown
270 2, 2 | patent to eyes that are closed, or utterly Homeric. Day
271 1, 1 | either shoulder, and meeting closely round the neck in the gripe
272 6, 2 | boast. From my store are clothed the first teacher of the
273 4, 8 | in that of the freeborn, clowns in that of city-folk, buffoons
274 4, 3 | Geryon, triply one? The club preferred still to reek
275 4, 3 | ought to blush at,--that Clubshaftandhidebearer, who exchanged for womanly
276 4, 4 | likewise supplanted the coarse ruggedness of his athlete'
277 3, 6 | it, the threads which you coil are forthwith instinct with
278 5, 2 | not find it expedient, in cold and heat, to stiffen with
279 4, 3 | mane, too, submitted to the comb) for fear of getting her
280 4, 8 | to himself that which the comedian says "What sort of a cloak
281 4, 4 | of Novius, and deservedly commemorated by the mimographer Lentulus
282 4, 10| cloak of Galatian scarlet, commends Saturn (to the affections
283 5, 5 | foils, gowns have done the commonwealth more hurt than cuirasses.
284 2, 6 | other time by the turn of compensation. For in primitive days not
285 4, 2 | whence, too, was derived the composition of his name, because he
286 5, 3 | Crates. Nowhere is there a compulsory waste of time in dressing
287 2, 6 | Temenus. So, again, the Ionian comrades of Neleus furnish Asia with
288 4, 8 | so far as reprehension is concerned, promiscuous usage offers
289 4, 5 | they set up a muttering concerning some of your Caesars, equally
290 2, 3 | waters. To this day marine conchs and tritons' horns sojourn
291 1, 2 | your inauguration,--while concord lends her aid, the gown
292 1, 3 | whatever other garment social condition or dignity or season clothes
293 1, 3 | be worn by all ranks and conditions among you, you not only
294 6, 2 | ignominious following, are conducted into the arena in togas.
295 6, 1 | cannot? Grand is the benefit conferred by the Mantle, at the thought
296 5, 5 | will be more felicitous in conferring good health upon public
297 4, 3 | belied, nor the deception confessed. Each fashion of changing
298 3, 2 | he squeezes himself into confinement; crawls into a cave and
299 3, 4 | on being driven from the confines of his birthplace because
300 2, 2 | stars--distinct in their confusion--sometimes drop, sometimes
301 5, 2 | garment the dolling whereof congratulates a man more than the gown'
302 5, 2 | persistently ask your own conscience, What is your first sensation
303 5, 4 | teacherhood of Quietude, who have consecrated that Quietude with the name
304 4, 2 | manhood to some one, when he consents to wear the flowing stole,
305 5, 3 | even in the dolling it is consigned to no cross until the morrow.
306 2, 1 | it is a "world," it will consist of diverse substances and
307 5, 6 | as the mullet aforesaid), consisting of all the songsters and
308 5, 3 | seeing that its whole art consists in loosely covering. That
309 4, 10| airs her swelling silk, and consoles her neck--more impure than
310 4, 7 | but gold, is by no means consonant with Greek habits. Some
311 4, 5 | have been given to canine constancy to point to a Caesar impurer
312 5, 4 | odorant of the lattices, am no constant wearer out of benches, no
313 5, 5 | withal a slave of Claudius!) constructs a tray of the weight of
314 4, 2 | to cultivate his skin, to consult the mirror, to bedizen his
315 2, 6 | themselves, (the earth) consulted to weed and scrape her copiousness (
316 6, 1 | bashfulness, for life is content with an even tongueless
317 2, 3 | whirling backwards the contentious encounters of the mains,
318 2, 4 | The continent as well suffers from heavenly
319 4, 8 | wasting?" For, now that the contracted brow of censorial vigilance
320 4, 3 | opposed to nature, the other contrary to safety. Still more disgraceful
321 5, 6 | course) were to be forthwith cooked, that in their entrails
322 2, 6 | consulted to weed and scrape her copiousness (of inhabitants), in one
323 2, 6 | new cities: so, again, the Corinthians with Archias, fortify Syracuse.
324 4, 3 | they should perchance sew a coronet! No sober woman even, or
325 2, 1 | world" will exist whose corporate structure is the result
326 4, 8 | rustics in regimentals; the corpse-bearer, the pimp, the gladiator
327 5, 6 | of birds of the selfsame costliness (as the mullet aforesaid),
328 5, 6 | he swallowed down pearls--costly even on the ground of their
329 4, 7 | muddy feet--as the Platonic couches testify--but would have
330 1, 2 | Its counterpart is now the priestly dress,
331 4, 4 | did, of course, not only cover with bracelets the traces
332 6, 2 | is liberal in studies is covered by my four angles. 'True;
333 5, 3 | inelegant: thus it wholly covers every part of the man at
334 3, 7 | materials--first with a view to coveting humanity, where Necessity
335 2, 7 | bramble of clandestinely crafty familiarity wholly uptorn;
336 5, 3 | be double, like that of Crates. Nowhere is there a compulsory
337 3, 2 | himself into confinement; crawls into a cave and out of his
338 3, 3 | though in far more minute creatures the body is liquefied, The
339 3, 2 | that when he has felt the creeping of old age throughout him,
340 1, 1 | and pleasure to find in criticising dress. These are the "piping
341 5, 3 | dolling it is consigned to no cross until the morrow. If any
342 4, 1 | close, and to exempt their crown alone from the knife? Whence
343 6 | FURTHER DISTINCTIONS, AND CROWNING GLORY, OF THE PALLIUM.~1.
344 5, 5 | commonwealth more hurt than cuirasses. Moreover, I flatter no
345 4, 2 | of dress approximates to culpability just in so far as it is
346 4, 2 | stole, to dress his hair, to cultivate his skin, to consult the
347 2, 7 | our orb is the admirably cultivated estate of this empire; every
348 5, 7 | Scaurus, and the gambling of a Curius, and the intemperance of
349 6, 1 | tongueless philosophy--my very cut is eloquent. A philosopher,
350 4, 7 | tinkling sound, did he walk in cymbals! But if, at that moment,
351 4, 8 | if a man were to wear a dainty robe trailing on the ground
352 2, 3 | some particular) spot is damaged; when among her islands
353 5, 5 | fortunes did they value woody dapplings!), or, again, Sulla to frame
354 1, 3 | Roman, is doing his deeds of daring against the ramparts which
355 5, 1 | massed boss; subsequently, at daybreak, first gathering up by the
356 2, 6 | compensation. For in primitive days not only was the earth,
357 2, 4 | soil experiences a living death! Such a cloud overcast Etruria,
358 4, 3 | have been belied, nor the deception confessed. Each fashion
359 4, 9 | penalty inflicted by the decrees of the augur Lentulus upon
360 5, 4 | publicity. But you will decry me as indolent. Forsooth, '
361 1, 3 | turned~Roman, is doing his deeds of daring against the ramparts
362 5, 3 | meantime, in so far as you have defamed it by name.~4.
363 5 | MANTLE. IT PLEADS IN ITS OWN DEFENCE.~1.
364 4, 6 | Doffing the triumphal mail, he degraded himself into the captive
365 4, 1 | nevertheless Greek to a degree, even in points not honourable?
366 6, 2 | better philosophy has now deigned to honour thee, ever since
367 1, 2 | and Caesar and his long delays, when Statilius Taurus reared
368 4, 6 | unless he had likewise found delight in a highly inflated garb:
369 2, 7 | uptorn; and (the orb itself) delightsome beyond the orchard of Alcinous
370 2, 3 | when among her islands Delos is now no more, Samos a
371 3, 3 | moves forward,--he rather demonstrates, than takes, a step: ever
372 2, 1 | to unity, are diverse by demutation. In short, it is their vicissitudes
373 2, 6 | inhabitants), in one place densely packed, in another abandoning
374 2, 2 | would nearly be ready to deny her identity, when, remembering
375 4, 3 | and smoothening down and deodorization (which in Omphale's house,
376 4, 3 | hide has inferentially depicted.~4.
377 4, 2 | it to practise Greekish depilation more than Greekish attire?
378 1, 2 | the infinity of age, not (deposing you) from your height of
379 1, 3 | are unmindful of, but even deride. For my own part, I wonder
380 4, 1 | difficulties of the soil, derive the pursuits of the wrestling-ground--
381 4, 2 | beasts (whence, too, was derived the composition of his name,
382 1, 2 | sublimer people it should descend to embrace Carthaginians!~
383 4, 3 | was in Omphale's silk, the description of Omphale in Hercules'
384 4, 4 | Fullers" even of Novius, and deservedly commemorated by the mimographer
385 3, 2 | The serpent, too, deserves to be mentioned, albeit
386 5, 4 | born for another, being destined to die for himself. At all
387 2, 4 | single camp! Many other such detriments besides have made innovations
388 3, 6 | webs of spiders, and then devours. In like manner, if you
389 5, 1 | Mantle?" Why, what if from diadem and sceptre? Did Anacharsis
390 3, 6 | more skilfully than the dial-like webs of spiders, and then
391 5, 4 | another, being destined to die for himself. At all events,
392 4, 1 | rolling in sand, and the dry dietary? Whence comes it that some
393 4, 2 | There is a wide enough difference between the honour due to
394 4, 1 | surmounting by hard struggling the difficulties of the soil, derive the
395 3, 5 | Minerva; whereas a more diligent workshop was presided over
396 5, 5 | ought to have been erected a dining-room too.~6.
397 4, 7 | But if, at that moment, Diogenes had been barking from his
398 4, 3 | of Hercules. Where were Diomed and his gory mangers? where
399 2, 2 | veins of her fountains by disappearance, and the pathways of her
400 5, 1 | boss, and rearranging any disarrangement, to make one part prominent
401 2, 1 | which we inhabit) meantime discharges it. See to it Anaximander,
402 6, 2 | fellowship with a divine sect and discipline. Joy, Mantle, and exult!
403 2, 3 | when that total swoop of discission, whirling backwards the
404 2, 1 | vicissitudes which federate the discord of their diversity. Thus
405 4, 3 | contrary to safety. Still more disgraceful was the case when lust transfigured
406 5, 6 | preserve in his pantry a dish of the value of nearly £
407 5, 5 | or, again, Sulla to frame dishes of an hundred pounds' weight.
408 2, 2 | resplendent with serenity, now dismal with cloud; or else rain-showers
409 5, 1 | for any artist formally to dispose its wrinkled folds from
410 4, 6 | captive trousers! The breast dissculptured with scaly bosses, by covering
411 3, 6 | them through the air, she distends more skilfully than the
412 2, 2 | monthly phases. The stars--distinct in their confusion--sometimes
413 4, 10| all-white dress, and the distinction of a fillet, and the privilege
414 6 | VI. FURTHER DISTINCTIONS, AND CROWNING GLORY, OF
415 4, 9 | sedulously promoted the disuse of garments which were the
416 3, 1 | any train; many-coloured, diverse-coloured, and versi-coloured; never
417 2, 1 | structure is the result of diversities, and whose attemperation
418 1, 1 | even a girdle arranged to divide the folds, they stood on
419 1, 3 | long, you suspend it on a dividing cincture; and the redundancy
420 4, 6 | conquered by Median garb. Doffing the triumphal mail, he degraded
421 1, 3 | ram, now turned~Roman, is doing his deeds of daring against
422 1, 3 | strange" ingenuity:~"so much doth Time's long age avail to
423 6, 2 | arena in togas. This, no doubt, will be the indignity implied
424 3, 3 | raises from the ground, but drags, his footstep amazedly,
425 3, 6 | fleecy threads) which, by drawing them through the air, she
426 4, 3 | than when some maternal dread did so: and yet adoration
427 1 | I. TIME CHANGES NATIONS'DRESSES AND FORTUNES.~1.
428 5, 3 | compulsory waste of time in dressing yourself (in it), seeing
429 3, 4 | subsequently, on being driven from the confines of his
430 2, 2 | their confusion--sometimes drop, sometimes resuscitate,
431 5, 5 | balance be small, when a Drusillanus (and he withal a slave of
432 4, 1 | rolling in sand, and the dry dietary? Whence comes it
433 3, 3 | revolving points of light. Dull and weary, he scarce raises
434 1, 3 | the Carthaginians stood dumbfounded as at a "novel" and "strange"
435 5, 4 | withal. "I," it says, "owe no duty to the forum, the election-ground,
436 3, 6 | famous, with nature for their dyer: but (I speak of the fact)
437 | Each
438 2, 3 | foreigners on the mountains, eager to prove to Plato that even
439 4, 2 | effeminated even as to his ear by boring, whereof his bust
440 2, 4 | God is a Judge, impiety earned showers of fire: Sodom's
441 2, 1 | as Silenus prates in the ears of Midas, apt (as those
442 2, 3 | undulated. But withal, by ebbing out, her orb again underwent
443 3, 1 | back more gilded than any edging, and in the sweep of his
444 4, 8 | ground with Menander-like effeminacy, he would hear applied to
445 5, 2 | provided in the shape of effeminate boots!~3.
446 4, 2 | mirror, to bedizen his neck; effeminated even as to his ear by boring,
447 4, 4 | Olympia, after losing by efflux his masculine sex by an
448 3, 1 | than any purple, and in the effulgence of his back more gilded
449 3, 3 | will forthwith laugh at the egregious audacity of the name, in
450 2, 6 | Chaldeans is led out into Egypt; subsequently, when transferred
451 3, 5 | store--(a store) which the Egyptians narrate, and Alexanderdigests,
452 5, 4 | no duty to the forum, the election-ground, or the senate-house; I
453 5, 1 | them to a more finished elegance, and to assign to the guardianship
454 5, 7 | purulencies of a state who will eliminate and exsuppurate, save a
455 6, 1 | philosophy--my very cut is eloquent. A philosopher, in fact,
456 1, 2 | people it should descend to embrace Carthaginians!~ 3.
457 4, 7 | testify--but would have carried Empedocles down bodily to the secret
458 5, 5 | affairs, and states, and empires, than your works are. Indeed,
459 2, 6 | greater part of her circuit, empty and uninhabited; but if
460 5, 3 | shoulder it either exposes or encloses: in other respects it adheres
461 5, 5 | Indeed, if I proceed to encounter you with naked foils, gowns
462 2, 3 | backwards the contentious encounters of the mains, invested the
463 5, 5 | no lethargy, no slothful encrustation. I apply the cauterizing
464 | end
465 5, 4 | better life you would more enjoy in seclusion than in publicity.
466 1, 1 | ever princes of Africa, ennobled by ancient memories, blest
467 3, 7 | With the word the garment entered. And accordingly the very
468 2, 1 | the stated function of entire nature. The very world itself (
469 5, 6 | forthwith cooked, that in their entrails he himself withal might
470 5, 4 | events, when we come to the Epicuri and Zenones, you give the
471 5, 4 | and Zenones, you give the epithet of 'sages' to the whole
472 2, 2 | at one time, the breezes equably swaying it, tranquillity
473 2, 3 | Atlantic (the isle) that was equal in size to Libya or Asia
474 4, 8 | to our gaze freedmen in equestrian garb, branded slaves in
475 1, 3 | the first of all to have equipped for the oscillatory work
476 2, 2 | behold her yellow, and will ere long see her hoary too.
477 2, 4 | Campania (all the more by the ereption of her Pompeii) to look
478 4, 10| being a renouncer of your error.~
479 1, 3 | against the ramparts which erst were his own, forthwith
480 2, 4 | death! Such a cloud overcast Etruria, burning down her ancient
481 4, 1 | hast thou, Libya, and thou, Europe, to do with athletic refinements,
482 1, 3 | the face of a more ancient evidence (of your forgetfulness).
483 4, 9 | garments which were the evidences and guardians of dignity,
484 4, 3 | fashion of changing was evil: the one opposed to nature,
485 3, 5 | stroke, flayed a little ewe; and, while he persistently
486 3, 3 | size, one of the moderate exceedingly, but a grand name. If, without
487 | except
488 4, 3 | Clubshaftandhidebearer, who exchanged for womanly attire the whole
489 4, 1 | their skin close, and to exempt their crown alone from the
490 1, 2 | your injury resulted, as exempting you from the infinity of
491 2, 1 | that every "world" will exist whose corporate structure
492 2, 6 | seized upon any part, it existed for itself alone. And so,
493 2, 7 | the triple power of our existing empire either produced,
494 2, 4 | of her Pompeii) to look expectantly upon her own mountains.
495 5, 2 | For who would not find it expedient, in cold and heat, to stiffen
496 5, 3 | the Mantle nothing is more expedite, even if it be double, like
497 2, 4 | sea no less than the soil experiences a living death! Such a cloud
498 2, 4 | before the devouring chasm, expiated by the treacherous absorption
499 6, 2 | forms of letters, the first explainer of their sounds, the first
500 5, 3 | The shoulder it either exposes or encloses: in other respects