| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
| Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus On the pallium IntraText - Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
bold = Main text
Chap. Par. grey = Comment text
1001 1, 1 | piping times of peace" and plenty. Blessings rain from the
1002 3, 5 | persistently tries and (as the pliancy of the material invited
1003 3, 1 | yet the peacock withal has plumage for a garment, and a garment
1004 4, 1 | made longer by horsetail plumes, learn to bid the barber
1005 5, 6 | Equally do I plunge the scalpel into the inhumanity
1006 6, 2 | sophist, the medical man, the poet, the musical timebeater,
1007 1, 3 | battering walls--never before poised by any, the redoubted Carthage,~"
1008 3, 2 | languishes--from the effect of the poison--into youth.~3.
1009 5, 6 | inhumanity which led Vedius Pollio to expose slaves to fill
1010 2, 4 | more by the ereption of her Pompeii) to look expectantly upon
1011 1, 2 | and his rough jests, after Pompeius and his triple altars, and
1012 5, 4 | have withdrawn from the populace. My only business is with
1013 4, 9 | street-walkers, the shambles of popular lusts; also at the female
1014 2, 7 | Augusti unitedly, how many populations have been transferred to
1015 2, 7 | How large a portion of our orb has the present
1016 1, 2 | when Scipio put in at her ports she might already beforehand
1017 3, 4 | waiting for permission, he possesses himself, by a premature
1018 2, 6 | Jewish race. So, too, the posterity of Hercules, in like wise,
1019 2, 6 | another abandoning their posts; in order that thence (as
1020 5, 5 | frame dishes of an hundred pounds' weight. I fear lest that
1021 4, 1 | appertains this whole Asiatic practice! What hast thou, Libya,
1022 4, 2 | what kind of thing is it to practise Greekish depilation more
1023 4, 9 | being impediments to the practising of prostitution. But now,
1024 5, 4 | platforms, hover about no praetorian residences; I am not odorant
1025 3, 7 | shoulder at the time of his praetorship, showed no less favour to
1026 2, 7 | and the rosary of Midas. Praising, therefore, our orb in its
1027 2, 1 | the Meropes, as Silenus prates in the ears of Midas, apt (
1028 1, 2 | him in the way of dress, precocious in her Romanizing. To you,
1029 2, 6 | itself. But I prefer, at the present time, joyous
1030 3, 4 | possesses himself, by a premature grasp, of wisdom. Then and
1031 5, 4 | keep no obsequious vigil, preoccupy no platforms, hover about
1032 3, 4 | in order that, after due preparation, we might arrive at man.
1033 5, 5 | or altar it is my wont to prescribe medicines to morals--medicines
1034 3, 6 | species of wormling it is--presently reproduces safe and sound (
1035 5, 6 | led Aesopus the actor to preserve in his pantry a dish of
1036 4, 6 | clothing, even while manhood is preserved. Every affection is a heat:
1037 3, 5 | more diligent workshop was presided over by Arachne.~6.
1038 4, 3 | events (if the spot has any presiding genius), groaned: for then
1039 4, 9 | behold what Caecina Severus pressed upon the grove attention
1040 3, 3 | grand name. If, without previously knowing him, you hear tell
1041 1, 2 | Its counterpart is now the priestly dress, sacred to AEsculapius,
1042 2, 6 | of compensation. For in primitive days not only was the earth,
1043 1, 1 | MEN of Carthage, ever princes of Africa, ennobled by ancient
1044 3, 5 | it into the shape of the pristine net which he had joined
1045 4, 9 | they used to be kept in privacy and secrecy even in public.
1046 4, 10| distinction of a fillet, and the privilege of a helmet, some are initiated
1047 4, 10| have appropriated) hands privy to all that is shameful, (
1048 2, 2 | gives it the semblance of probity, calm gives it the semblance
1049 1, 1 | in that they were neither prodigally long across the shins, nor
1050 4, 1 | their chin so thievishly? A prodigy it is, that all this should
1051 2, 7 | our existing empire either produced, or else augmented, or else
1052 2, 5 | kingdom, as the ancient profane authorities assert. Beyond
1053 6, 2 | the question of her own profitableness; for she is not the only
1054 2, 5 | mutations, from Ninus the progeny of Belus, onwards; if indeed
1055 5, 1 | disarrangement, to make one part prominent on the left, but (making
1056 4, 8 | reprehension is concerned, promiscuous usage offers to our gaze
1057 4, 9 | certain matrons had sedulously promoted the disuse of garments which
1058 3, 7 | followed in the wake--have promulgated the various forms of garments.
1059 1, 2 | and Sentius Saturninus pronounced the solemn form of your
1060 3, 3 | For, whereas his colour is properly one, yet, whenever anything
1061 1, 1 | of the hue, and the due proportion of the size, in that they
1062 1, 1 | rejoice that times are so prosperous with you that you have leisure
1063 4, 3 | Lydia, that Hercules was prostituted in the person of Omphale,
1064 4, 9 | impediments to the practising of prostitution. But now, in their self-prostitution,
1065 5, 2 | the gown, most uncleanly protection to the feet, yes, and false
1066 4, 3 | womanly attire the whole proud heritage of his name! Such
1067 2, 3 | the mountains, eager to prove to Plato that even the heights
1068 2, 3 | and the Sibyl (is thus proved) no liar; when in the Atlantic (
1069 5, 2 | Venetian shoe-factories provided in the shape of effeminate
1070 5, 4 | enjoy in seclusion than in publicity. But you will decry me as
1071 4, 9 | such shameful spectacles of publicly slaughtered chastity, yet
1072 4, 4 | rivalled the Tirynthian --the pugilist Cleomachus--subsequently,
1073 4, 3 | gradually eradicated by the pumice-stone, familiar to the hair-pin!
1074 2, 1 | some other source, lest Punichood either blush or else grieve
1075 4, 6 | transparent texture he bared; punting still after the work of
1076 5, 6 | which led Asinius Celer to purchase the viand of a single mullet
1077 4, 10| fits on her impure leg the pure white or pink shoe; why
1078 5, 7 | would not easily find. These purulencies of a state who will eliminate
1079 1, 2 | in order that when Scipio put in at her ports she might
1080 6, 1 | is seen. My. very sight puts vices to the blush. Who
1081 1, 1 | extrinsically--itself too quadrangular--thrown back on either shoulder,
1082 1, 1 | stood on men's backs with quadrate symmetry. The garment of
1083 3, 3 | tardigrade field-haunting quadruped,~ Humble and rough."~The
1084 2, 4 | Africa had once for all quailed before the devouring chasm,
1085 5, 5 | flatter no vices; I give quarter to no lethargy, no slothful
1086 6, 2 | philosophy now see to the question of her own profitableness;
1087 2, 6 | the swarms of redundant races. The exuberance of the Scythians
1088 1, 1 | peace" and plenty. Blessings rain from the empire and from
1089 2, 2 | dismal with cloud; or else rain-showers come rushing down, and whatever
1090 5, 6 | the aid of forcemeats to raise them to an adulterous flavour;
1091 3, 3 | Dull and weary, he scarce raises from the ground, but drags,
1092 6, 2 | angles. 'True; but all these rank lower than Roman knights.'
1093 1, 3 | which used to be worn by all ranks and conditions among you,
1094 4, 1 | on their arms with such rapacity, the tweezers to weed their
1095 1, 3 | you, the mantle, at any rate, which used to be worn by
1096 2, 5 | however, who are habitual readers of divine histories, are
1097 4, 9 | order that they may the more readily be approached, they have
1098 5, 3 | easily it manages, easily readjusts itself: even in the dolling
1099 3, 5 | Alexanderdigests, and his mother reads--touching the time of Osiris,
1100 2, 2 | seasonably, you would nearly be ready to deny her identity, when,
1101 5, 2 | your threshold. There is really no garment the dolling whereof
1102 2, 6 | undermined, the sword shorn down, reappears at some other time by the
1103 5, 1 | scrutinizing the boss, and rearranging any disarrangement, to make
1104 4, 7 | down bodily to the secret recesses of the Cloacinae; in order
1105 4, 5 | eminence in lusts, no one would recognise as kings. But I must be
1106 1, 3 | the mantle, too, is not recognised.~
1107 2, 5 | may be, the histories of "recorded time" begin to open. We,
1108 2, 2 | ridges of her mountains by recursion, the veins of her fountains
1109 1, 3 | before poised by any, the redoubted Carthage,~"Keenest in pursuits
1110 5, 1 | beforehand, and then to reduce them to a more finished
1111 2, 7 | localities! how many peoples reduced! how many orders restored
1112 1, 3 | dividing cincture; and the redundancy of your now smooth toga~
1113 2, 6 | were made by the swarms of redundant races. The exuberance of
1114 4, 3 | club preferred still to reek with their brains when it
1115 2, 6 | this time a vain thing (to refer to), when our own careers
1116 4, 1 | Europe, to do with athletic refinements, which thou knowest not
1117 3, 3 | neck he has none: and thus reflection is hard for him; but, in
1118 2, 7 | orb has the present age reformed! how many cities has the
1119 4, 8 | that of lawyers, rustics in regimentals; the corpse-bearer, the
1120 1, 1 | with modern felicities, I rejoice that times are so prosperous
1121 2, 3 | seas, leaves Sicily as its relics; when that total swoop of
1122 5, 7 | intemperance of an Antony. And remember that these, out of the many (
1123 2, 2 | deny her identity, when, remembering her green, you behold her
1124 4, 10| for others,) of being a renouncer of your error.~
1125 4, 10| clothes this wisdom which renounces superstitions with all their
1126 2, 4 | mountains. But far be (the repetition of such catastrophes)! Would
1127 1, 1 | gripe of the buckle, used to repose on the shoulders.~2.
1128 4, 8 | smoothed down, so far as reprehension is concerned, promiscuous
1129 3, 6 | wormling it is--presently reproduces safe and sound (the fleecy
1130 3, 2 | scales his years, too, are repudiated. The hyena, if you observe,
1131 5, 1 | another similar set of folds reserved for the back, and thus clothe
1132 5, 4 | hover about no praetorian residences; I am not odorant of the
1133 4, 1 | hirsute learn to teach the resin to feed on their arms with
1134 5, 3 | exposes or encloses: in other respects it adheres to the shoulder;
1135 2, 2 | circuit of the heaven is now resplendent with serenity, now dismal
1136 2, 2 | all of a sudden it heaves restlessly with mountain-waves. Thus,
1137 1, 2 | benefit in which your injury resulted, as exempting you from the
1138 2, 2 | sometimes drop, sometimes resuscitate, somewhat. The circuit of
1139 4, 2 | his bust at Sigeum still retains the trace. Plainly afterwards
1140 4, 10| eyes, I advise you, (and) reverence the garb, on the one ground,
1141 2, 2 | utterly Homeric. Day and night revolve in turn. The sun varies
1142 3, 3 | outdarting, nay, they are revolving points of light. Dull and
1143 6, 2 | arithmetic, the grammarian, the rhetorician, the sophist, the medical
1144 3, 5 | time of Osiris, when Ammon, rich in sheep, comes to him out
1145 3, 1 | in the bloom of his neck richer than any purple, and in
1146 2, 2 | interchanging mutation--the higher ridges of her mountains by recursion,
1147 4, 8 | the finger and expose to ridicule by a nod. Just so, if a
1148 5, 1 | formed, and, leaving the right shoulder free, heap it still
1149 4, 10| itself, arranged with more rigorous care, and sandals after
1150 6, 1 | not, when he sees his own rival? Who can bear to gaze ocularly
1151 4, 4 | again, he who had formerly rivalled the Tirynthian --the pugilist
1152 2, 4 | Palestine. Where Jordan's river is the arbiter of boundaries, (
1153 4, 3 | outraged visage, would have roared had it been able. Nemea,
1154 4, 2 | who had been reared by a rocky and wood-haunting and monstrous
1155 4, 1 | unction with mud, and the rolling in sand, and the dry dietary?
1156 1, 2 | dress, precocious in her Romanizing. To you, however, after
1157 2, 7 | orchard of Alcinous and the rosary of Midas. Praising, therefore,
1158 1, 1 | shoulder, and meeting closely round the neck in the gripe of
1159 5, 4 | of benches, no wholesale router of laws, no barking pleader,
1160 5, 1 | change otherwise, when to the royalty of Scythia he preferred
1161 6, 2 | the first trainer in the rudiments of arithmetic, the grammarian,
1162 5, 7 | the Neros and Apicii and Rufi. I will give a cathartic
1163 4, 4 | likewise supplanted the coarse ruggedness of his athlete's cloak with
1164 3, 3 | heaving, bellowslike, he ruminates; his food wind. Yet withal
1165 4, 10| covering upon the head, others run mad in Bellona's temple;
1166 2, 2 | or else rain-showers come rushing down, and whatever missiles (
1167 4, 8 | buffoons in that of lawyers, rustics in regimentals; the corpse-bearer,
1168 4, 10| your Salii and Flamines, a sacerdotal attire. Lower your eyes,
1169 1, 2 | now the priestly dress, sacred to AEsculapius, whom you
1170 3, 6 | is--presently reproduces safe and sound (the fleecy threads)
1171 4, 3 | nature, the other contrary to safety. Still more disgraceful
1172 6, 1 | to persuade me,--a most sage medicament.' But, albeit
1173 5, 4 | you give the epithet of 'sages' to the whole teacherhood
1174 4, 10| the caps and tufts of your Salii and Flamines, a sacerdotal
1175 4, 7 | celestial being might, as a god, salute first his sister and afterwards
1176 4, 1 | Roman fashion is (social) salvation to every one, are you nevertheless
1177 2, 3 | islands Delos is now no more, Samos a heap of sand, and the
1178 4, 10| Galatian scarlet, commends Saturn (to the affections of others).
1179 1, 2 | your ramparts, and Sentius Saturninus pronounced the solemn form
1180 5, 6 | forsooth, with his novel savagery, he kept land-monsters,
1181 5, 6 | withal might taste some savour of the bodies of his own
1182 4, 3 | then she looked around, and saw that she had lost her lion.
1183 3, 3 | been granted--as our common saying has it--to sport with his
1184 3, 2 | in a new youth: with his scales his years, too, are repudiated.
1185 5, 6 | Equally do I plunge the scalpel into the inhumanity which
1186 4, 6 | breast dissculptured with scaly bosses, by covering it with
1187 1, 1 | the shins, nor immodestly scanty between the knees, nor niggardly
1188 3, 3 | light. Dull and weary, he scarce raises from the ground,
1189 4, 10| shoulders a cloak of Galatian scarlet, commends Saturn (to the
1190 5, 7 | cathartic to the impurity of a Scaurus, and the gambling of a Curius,
1191 5, 1 | what if from diadem and sceptre? Did Anacharsis change otherwise,
1192 4, 2 | monstrous trainer in a stony school. You would bear patiently,
1193 6, 2 | associate whom I boast. Other scientific arts of public utility I
1194 1, 2 | change; in order that when Scipio put in at her ports she
1195 5, 4 | it challenges you on the score of its function withal. "
1196 2, 7 | you point the finger of scorn at a man?~
1197 2, 6 | earth) consulted to weed and scrape her copiousness (of inhabitants),
1198 5, 1 | first instance), and, again scrutinizing the boss, and rearranging
1199 5, 1 | when to the royalty of Scythia he preferred philosophy?
1200 2, 6 | races. The exuberance of the Scythians fertilizes the Persians;
1201 5, 6 | slaves to fill the bellies of sea-eels. Delighted, forsooth, with
1202 2, 3 | Adriatic and the Tyrrhenian seas, leaves Sicily as its relics;
1203 1, 3 | condition or dignity or season clothes you, the mantle,
1204 2, 2 | loving to clothe herself seasonably, you would nearly be ready
1205 5, 4 | you would more enjoy in seclusion than in publicity. But you
1206 4, 5 | Sardanapalus, and indeed a second Nero.~6.
1207 4, 9 | to be kept in privacy and secrecy even in public. But while
1208 4, 2 | at all events had already secretly given proof of his manhood
1209 3, 5 | But these are secrets, nor does their knowledge
1210 6, 2 | fellowship with a divine sect and discipline. Joy, Mantle,
1211 4, 9 | even the very litters and sedans in which they used to be
1212 4, 9 | inasmuch as certain matrons had sedulously promoted the disuse of garments
1213 2, 6 | birth to the Romans; the seed of the Chaldeans is led
1214 5, 3 | dressing yourself (in it), seeing that its whole art consists
1215 4, 2 | battle: nor were arms far to seek. "The steel's self," says (
1216 6, 1 | is heard so long as he is seen. My. very sight puts vices
1217 6, 1 | Who suffers not, when he sees his own rival? Who can bear
1218 4, 6 | inferior only to his glory--seething. He had conquered the Median
1219 2, 6 | any particular race had seized upon any part, it existed
1220 4, 2 | far to seek. "The steel's self," says (Homer), "attracteth
1221 4, 9 | lusts; also at the female self-abusers with their sex; and, if
1222 3, 3 | is able to effect a total self-mutation, and that is all. For, whereas
1223 4, 9 | prostitution. But now, in their self-prostitution, in order that they may
1224 3, 7 | alphabet and speech--the self-same Cato, by baring his shoulder
1225 5, 6 | made up of birds of the selfsame costliness (as the mullet
1226 3, 6 | the sheep of Miletus, and Selge, and Altinum, or of those
1227 4, 9 | the grove attention of the senate--matrons stoleless in public.
1228 5, 4 | election-ground, or the senate-house; I keep no obsequious vigil,
1229 5, 2 | conscience, What is your first sensation in wearing your gown? Do
1230 3, 7 | the very man who used to sentence Greeks to extrusion from
1231 5, 4 | used, of old, to be the sentiment. None is born for another,
1232 1, 2 | reared your ramparts, and Sentius Saturninus pronounced the
1233 2, 2 | is now resplendent with serenity, now dismal with cloud;
1234 4, 10| sandals after the Greek model, serve to flatter AEsculapius,
1235 1, 3 | is, which does military service in battering walls--never
1236 2, 6 | it were from grafts and settings) peoples from peoples, cities
1237 1, 2 | else in Africa Tyre (has settled).But when the urn of worldly
1238 2, 3 | formerly a side of Italy, severed to the centre by the shivering
1239 4, 9 | have to behold what Caecina Severus pressed upon the grove attention
1240 4, 3 | monsters, they should perchance sew a coronet! No sober woman
1241 1, 1 | hands, but, without being shadowed by even a girdle arranged
1242 4, 3 | Centaurs' blood upon the shafts was gradually eradicated
1243 4, 1 | Whence comes it that men shaggy and hirsute learn to teach
1244 | shall
1245 4, 9 | the street-walkers, the shambles of popular lusts; also at
1246 4, 5 | Caesars, equally lost to shame; for fear lest a mandate
1247 4, 1 | learn to bid the barber shave their skin close, and to
1248 3, 6 | inasmuch as the more brilliant shells of a mossy wooliness furnish
1249 3, 3 | vineyard, his whole bulk sheltered beneath a vine leaf, you
1250 1, 1 | prodigally long across the shins, nor immodestly scanty between
1251 5, 3 | until the morrow. If any shirt is worn beneath it, the
1252 2, 3 | severed to the centre by the shivering shock of the Adriatic and
1253 5, 2 | tread have the Venetian shoe-factories provided in the shape of
1254 5, 3 | if anything in the way of shoeing is worn, it is a most cleanly
1255 3, 7 | time of his praetorship, showed no less favour to the Greeks
1256 2, 4 | a Judge, impiety earned showers of fire: Sodom's day is
1257 3, 6 | speak of the fact) that shrubs afford you clothing, and
1258 2, 3 | a heap of sand, and the Sibyl (is thus proved) no liar;
1259 2, 3 | Tyrrhenian seas, leaves Sicily as its relics; when that
1260 2, 3 | in vain; when formerly a side of Italy, severed to the
1261 4, 2 | boring, whereof his bust at Sigeum still retains the trace.
1262 6, 1 | as he is seen. My. very sight puts vices to the blush.
1263 5, 1 | there be no (miraculous) signs in proof of your transformation
1264 2, 1 | region of the Meropes, as Silenus prates in the ears of Midas,
1265 3, 6 | it is no secret that the silkworm--a species of wormling it
1266 5, 1 | upon the left, with another similar set of folds reserved for
1267 4, 10| superstition--albeit superstition simple and unaffected? Certainly,
1268 5, 1 | For, to begin with the simplicity of its uptaking: it needs
1269 3, 2 | cave and out of his skin simultaneously; and, clean shorn on the
1270 3, 4 | birthplace because he had sinned, he went, skinclad, to the
1271 3, 6 | the air, she distends more skilfully than the dial-like webs
1272 1, 1 | they were in repute for the skill of the weft, and the harmony
1273 3, 4 | he had sinned, he went, skinclad, to the world as to a mine.~
1274 1, 1 | the empire and from the sky. Still, you too of old time
1275 4, 9 | shameful spectacles of publicly slaughtered chastity, yet do but look
1276 5, 5 | Drusillanus (and he withal a slave of Claudius!) constructs
1277 5, 6 | first to have the heart to slay a peacock for the sake of
1278 2, 2 | thereafter (follows) a slight sprinkling, and then again
1279 4, 7 | purple, why not in glided slippers too? For a Tyrian to be
1280 5, 5 | quarter to no lethargy, no slothful encrustation. I apply the
1281 3, 2 | the threshold leaves his slough behind him then and there,
1282 5, 5 | fear lest that balance be small, when a Drusillanus (and
1283 1, 3 | the redundancy of your now smooth toga~you support by gathering
1284 4, 8 | vigilance is long since smoothed down, so far as reprehension
1285 4, 3 | after long softening and smoothening down and deodorization (
1286 4, 3 | perchance sew a coronet! No sober woman even, or heroine of
1287 2, 4 | earned showers of fire: Sodom's day is over, and Gomorrah
1288 4, 5 | Caesar impurer than Physco, softer than Sardanapalus, and indeed
1289 3, 5 | them, delighted with the softness of a ram which he had chanced
1290 2, 3 | conchs and tritons' horns sojourn as foreigners on the mountains,
1291 1, 2 | Saturninus pronounced the solemn form of your inauguration,--
1292 4, 2 | boy's case, his mother's solicitude; but he at all events was
1293 4, 10| opposite hankering after sombre raiment, and a gloomy woollen
1294 | something
1295 5, 6 | and talkers; which led his son, after such a titbit, to
1296 5, 6 | consisting of all the songsters and talkers; which led his
1297 4, 2 | For, in sooth, what kind of thing is it
1298 6, 2 | grammarian, the rhetorician, the sophist, the medical man, the poet,
1299 2, 3 | size to Libya or Asia is sought in vain; when formerly a
1300 4, 2 | his sex. The clarion had sounded of battle: nor were arms
1301 6, 2 | first explainer of their sounds, the first trainer in the
1302 2, 1 | material from some other source, lest Punichood either blush
1303 3, 6 | was it enough to plant and sow your tunic, unless it had
1304 6, 2 | gown to Mantle!'" Well, so speaks the Mantle. But I confer
1305 3, 6 | secret that the silkworm--a species of wormling it is--presently
1306 4, 9 | eyes from such shameful spectacles of publicly slaughtered
1307 3, 7 | years) their alphabet and speech--the self-same Cato, by baring
1308 1, 1 | that you have leisure to spend and pleasure to find in
1309 3, 6 | than the dial-like webs of spiders, and then devours. In like
1310 3, 3 | begins straight from his spine, for neck he has none: and
1311 4, 6 | sufficiently swelling of spirit was the Macedonian, unless
1312 2, 7 | restored to their ancient splendour! how many barbarians baffled!
1313 3, 3 | common saying has it--to sport with his own hide.~4.
1314 2, 4 | and moved (particular) spots (in it).~5.
1315 3, 4 | beginning you admit him as springing, naked at all events and
1316 2, 2 | thereafter (follows) a slight sprinkling, and then again brilliance.
1317 2, 3 | novel vice, the vice not of spuing out wrecks, but of devouring
1318 3, 2 | old age throughout him, he squeezes himself into confinement;
1319 3, 2 | feminine. I say nothing of the stag, because himself withal,
1320 4, 3 | unguents! The now veteran (stain of the) Hydra's and of the
1321 4, 10| pink shoe; why do you not stare at such garbs? or, again,
1322 2, 2 | moon by monthly phases. The stars--distinct in their confusion--
1323 2, 1 | habit is, at all events, the stated function of entire nature.
1324 5, 5 | upon public affairs, and states, and empires, than your
1325 1, 2 | and his long delays, when Statilius Taurus reared your ramparts,
1326 2, 2 | The sun varies by annual stations, the moon by monthly phases.
1327 4, 2 | were arms far to seek. "The steel's self," says (Homer), "
1328 3, 3 | demonstrates, than takes, a step: ever fasting, to boot,
1329 5, 2 | expedient, in cold and heat, to stiffen with feet bare rather than
1330 4, 9 | attention of the senate--matrons stoleless in public. In fact, the
1331 1, 3 | Back-twisted-horned, wool-skinned, stones-dragging,"~but a beam-like engine
1332 4, 2 | and monstrous trainer in a stony school. You would bear patiently,
1333 3, 5 | let us hear from your own store--(a store) which the Egyptians
1334 3, 3 | pellicle. His headkin begins straight from his spine, for neck
1335 1, 3 | dumbfounded as at a "novel" and "strange" ingenuity:~"so much doth
1336 4, 2 | name, because he had been a stranger with his lips to the maternal
1337 2, 2 | and the pathways of her streams by alluvial formation?~3.
1338 4, 9 | are not hers. Look at the street-walkers, the shambles of popular
1339 5, 1 | the guardianship of the stretchers the whole figment of the
1340 4, 10| with a tunic more broadly striped with purple, and casting
1341 3, 5 | which he had joined with strips of linen. But you have preferred
1342 3, 5 | which he had chanced to stroke, flayed a little ewe; and,
1343 4, 1 | for surmounting by hard struggling the difficulties of the
1344 6, 2 | All that is liberal in studies is covered by my four angles. '
1345 3, 6 | wooliness furnish a hairy stuff. Further: it is no secret
1346 4, 3 | toughness. The yawning mouth stuffed with hair, the jaw-teeth
1347 5, 6 | first to vitiate meat with stuffing, and by the aid of forcemeats
1348 3, 3 | with a lion. But when you stumble upon him, generally in a
1349 1, 2 | from the shoulders of the sublimer people it should descend
1350 4, 3 | I suppose the mane, too, submitted to the comb) for fear of
1351 2, 1 | will consist of diverse substances and offices, answerable
1352 2, 2 | temper; and then all of a sudden it heaves restlessly with
1353 4, 6 | the ventilating silk! Not sufficiently swelling of spirit was the
1354 5, 5 | dapplings!), or, again, Sulla to frame dishes of an hundred
1355 5, 6 | after somewhat yet more sumptuous: for he swallowed down pearls--
1356 2, 2 | night revolve in turn. The sun varies by annual stations,
1357 3, 7 | therefore, of the tailoring art, superadded to, and following up, so
1358 4, 4 | athlete's cloak with some superfinely wrought tissue.~5.
1359 5, 3 | the torment of a girdle is superfluous: if anything in the way
1360 4, 10| of superstition--albeit superstition simple and unaffected? Certainly,
1361 4, 10| eyes, as being guilty of superstition--albeit superstition simple
1362 4, 10| this wisdom which renounces superstitions with all their vanities,
1363 5, 6 | for fear he should have supped more beggarly than his father.~
1364 4, 4 | the cestus, but likewise supplanted the coarse ruggedness of
1365 4, 10| falsely plead religion as the supporter of their novelty? while
1366 5, 4 | Quietude with the name of 'supreme' and 'unique' pleasure.~
1367 4, 1 | nature adapted rather for surmounting by hard struggling the difficulties
1368 3, 4 | modesty (to forecover), he surrounds himself meantime with fig-leaves:
1369 2, 2 | mountain-waves. Thus, too, if you survey the earth, loving to clothe
1370 1, 3 | your tunic too long, you suspend it on a dividing cincture;
1371 5, 6 | yet more sumptuous: for he swallowed down pearls--costly even
1372 2, 6 | Transmigrations were made by the swarms of redundant races. The
1373 2, 2 | time, the breezes equably swaying it, tranquillity gives it
1374 3, 1 | than any edging, and in the sweep of his tail more flowing
1375 2, 3 | relics; when that total swoop of discission, whirling
1376 2, 6 | the earth undermined, the sword shorn down, reappears at
1377 1, 1 | men's backs with quadrate symmetry. The garment of the mantle
1378 2, 6 | Corinthians with Archias, fortify Syracuse. But antiquity is by this
1379 5, 5 | perchance, to the aforesaid tables, for which, if a workshop
1380 3, 1 | and in the sweep of his tail more flowing than any train;
1381 3, 7 | ingenuities, therefore, of the tailoring art, superadded to, and
1382 1, 2 | Well! what a circuit has it taken! from Pelasgians to Lydians
1383 3, 3 | rather demonstrates, than takes, a step: ever fasting, to
1384 5, 6 | of all the songsters and talkers; which led his son, after
1385 3, 3 | There is, withal,~ "A tardigrade field-haunting quadruped,~
1386 3, 6 | Altinum, or of those for which Tarentum or Baetica is famous, with
1387 5, 6 | he himself withal might taste some savour of the bodies
1388 1, 2 | long delays, when Statilius Taurus reared your ramparts, and
1389 6, 2 | store are clothed the first teacher of the forms of letters,
1390 5, 4 | of 'sages' to the whole teacherhood of Quietude, who have consecrated
1391 5, 1 | its uptaking: it needs no tedious arrangement. Accordingly,
1392 2, 6 | Peloponnesus for the behoof of Temenus. So, again, the Ionian comrades
1393 2, 2 | it the semblance of even temper; and then all of a sudden
1394 4, 10| others run mad in Bellona's temple; while the attraction of
1395 2, 1 | Things which, in diversity, tend to unity, are diverse by
1396 4, 3 | for fear of getting her tender neck imbued with lionly
1397 4, 7 | as the Platonic couches testify--but would have carried Empedocles
1398 4, 6 | covering it with a transparent texture he bared; punting still
1399 | thee
1400 3, 6 | Thenceforth material (was abundant).
1401 | thereafter
1402 1, 3 | own part, I wonder not (thereat), in the face of a more
1403 4, 1 | tweezers to weed their chin so thievishly? A prodigy it is, that all
1404 3, 3 | tortoise of Pacuvius, you think? No. There is another beastling
1405 3, 5 | the material invited him) thins out the thread by assiduous
1406 | though
1407 3, 5 | invited him) thins out the thread by assiduous traction, wove
1408 | through
1409 1, 1 | itself too quadrangular--thrown back on either shoulder,
1410 5, 3 | support; it has no surrounding tie; it has no anxiety as to
1411 1, 1 | niggardly to the arms, nor tight to the hands, but, without
1412 6, 2 | man, the poet, the musical timebeater, the astrologer, and the
1413 4, 7 | raiment he might make some tinkling sound, did he walk in cymbals!
1414 4, 4 | had formerly rivalled the Tirynthian --the pugilist Cleomachus--
1415 4, 4 | some superfinely wrought tissue.~5.
1416 5, 6 | led his son, after such a titbit, to have the hardihood to
1417 1, 3 | redundancy of your now smooth toga~you support by gathering
1418 5, 7 | named), were men of the toga-such as among the men of the
1419 6, 2 | conducted into the arena in togas. This, no doubt, will be
1420 | together
1421 6, 1 | is content with an even tongueless philosophy--my very cut
1422 5, 6 | he kept land-monsters, toothless, clawless, hornless: it
1423 5, 3 | is worn beneath it, the torment of a girdle is superfluous:
1424 3, 3 | Humble and rough."~The tortoise of Pacuvius, you think?
1425 5, 2 | implements as they are of torture proper to the gown, most
1426 3, 5 | Alexanderdigests, and his mother reads--touching the time of Osiris, when
1427 4, 3 | neck imbued with lionly toughness. The yawning mouth stuffed
1428 4, 2 | Sigeum still retains the trace. Plainly afterwards he turned
1429 4, 4 | cover with bracelets the traces left by (the bands of) the
1430 3, 5 | the thread by assiduous traction, wove it into the shape
1431 4, 8 | were to wear a dainty robe trailing on the ground with Menander-like
1432 3, 1 | tail more flowing than any train; many-coloured, diverse-coloured,
1433 6, 2 | Well; but your gladiatorial trainers, and all their ignominious
1434 4, 1 | which have had a better training, provinces which nature
1435 2, 2 | breezes equably swaying it, tranquillity gives it the semblance of
1436 4, 2 | than Greekish attire? The transfer of dress approximates to
1437 4, 3 | disgraceful was the case when lust transfigured a man in his dress, than
1438 4, 3 | over the fact that, after transfixing monsters, they should perchance
1439 5, 1 | signs in proof of your transformation for the better: there is
1440 2, 6 | every region of her orb. Transmigrations were made by the swarms
1441 4, 6 | bosses, by covering it with a transparent texture he bared; punting
1442 2, 5 | the pen is not wont (to travel), in general, among you (
1443 2, 4 | devouring chasm, expiated by the treacherous absorption of one single
1444 5, 2 | mighty munition for the tread have the Venetian shoe-factories
1445 6, 1 | my antagonist), 'you have tried to persuade me,--a most
1446 3, 5 | and, while he persistently tries and (as the pliancy of the
1447 4, 3 | funereal altars? where Geryon, triply one? The club preferred
1448 2, 3 | this day marine conchs and tritons' horns sojourn as foreigners
1449 4, 6 | Median garb. Doffing the triumphal mail, he degraded himself
1450 4, 7 | tub, he would not (have trodden on him with muddy feet--
1451 4, 6 | himself into the captive trousers! The breast dissculptured
1452 4, 7 | had been barking from his tub, he would not (have trodden
1453 4, 10| above all the caps and tufts of your Salii and Flamines,
1454 5, 5 | the ambition which led M. Tullius to buy a circular table
1455 1, 1 | wore your garments--your tunics--of another shape; and indeed
1456 4, 2 | Larissaean hero gave a shock by turning into a virgin; he who had
1457 4, 1 | with such rapacity, the tweezers to weed their chin so thievishly?
1458 5, 5 | and Asinius Gallus to pay twice as much for an ordinary
1459 1, 2 | wherever else in Africa Tyre (has settled).But when the
1460 4, 7 | glided slippers too? For a Tyrian to be shod in anything but
1461 2, 3 | of the Adriatic and the Tyrrhenian seas, leaves Sicily as its
1462 4, 10| superstition simple and unaffected? Certainly, when first it
1463 5, 2 | proper to the gown, most uncleanly protection to the feet,
1464 3, 2 | him then and there, and uncoils himself in a new youth:
1465 4, 1 | labour in vain--and the unction with mud, and the rolling
1466 2, 1 | necessarily have similarly to undergo mutation; inasmuch as, if
1467 2, 3 | same. Even now her shape undergoes local mutations, when (some
1468 2, 6 | heaven burned down, the earth undermined, the sword shorn down, reappears
1469 2, 6 | for itself alone. And so, understanding at last that all things
1470 2, 3 | that even the heights have undulated. But withal, by ebbing out,
1471 3, 4 | naked at all events and ungarmented he came from his fashioner'
1472 4, 3 | was being pestered with unguents! The now veteran (stain
1473 2, 6 | of her circuit, empty and uninhabited; but if any particular race
1474 5, 4 | the name of 'supreme' and 'unique' pleasure.~5.
1475 3, 3 | something yet more huge united with a lion. But when you
1476 2, 7 | favours so many Augusti unitedly, how many populations have
1477 2, 1 | which, in diversity, tend to unity, are diverse by demutation.
1478 2 | LAW OF CHANGE, OR MUTATION UNIVERSAL.~1.
1479 3, 7 | part, on the other hand, universally, as being useful to all:
1480 2, 5 | from the nativity of the universe~6.
1481 1, 3 | among you, you not only are unmindful of, but even deride. For
1482 | until
1483 5, 1 | with the simplicity of its uptaking: it needs no tedious arrangement.
1484 2, 7 | crafty familiarity wholly uptorn; and (the orb itself) delightsome
1485 1, 2 | has settled).But when the urn of worldly lots varied,
1486 4, 8 | is concerned, promiscuous usage offers to our gaze freedmen
1487 3, 7 | hand, universally, as being useful to all: as, for instance,
1488 6, 2 | scientific arts of public utility I boast. From my store are
1489 6, 1 | medicament.' But, albeit utterance be mute--impeded by infancy
1490 2, 2 | eyes that are closed, or utterly Homeric. Day and night revolve
1491 5 | V. VIRTUES OF THE MANTLE.
1492 4, 1 | sad old age and labour in vain--and the unction with mud,
1493 4, 6 | warmly does the force of vainglory also work for the mutation
1494 4, 10| superstitions with all their vanities, then most assuredly is
1495 1, 2 | the urn of worldly lots varied, and God favoured the Romans,
1496 2, 2 | revolve in turn. The sun varies by annual stations, the
1497 3, 7 | wake--have promulgated the various forms of garments. Of which
1498 2, 4 | of boundaries, (behold) a vast waste, and a bereaved region,
1499 5, 6 | the inhumanity which led Vedius Pollio to expose slaves
1500 2, 2 | mountains by recursion, the veins of her fountains by disappearance,