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| Alphabetical [« »] solar 1 sold 10 soldier 9 soldiers 131 soldiery 1 sole 5 solemn 4 | Frequency [« »] 136 arms 135 time 134 are 131 soldiers 128 three 127 behind 127 did | Gustave Flaubert Salammbo IntraText - Concordances soldiers |
Chapter
1 I | gardens of Hamilcar. The soldiers whom he had commanded in 2 I | of the palace; the common soldiers were scattered beneath the 3 I | above, it seemed to the soldiers in its haughty opulence 4 I | which afforded mirth to the soldiers.~Oblong flames trembled 5 I | the images of things; the soldiers thronged around, looking 6 I | in the ergastulum. Some soldiers rose at a bound to release 7 I | visible.~When he entered, the soldiers greeted him with loud shouts, 8 I | accordingly, he signed to his soldiers and slowly withdrew. Then, 9 I | palpitating eyeballs. The soldiers lighted themselves with 10 I | With much laughter the soldiers slipped their fingers into 11 I | boiling water.~The surge of soldiers pressed on. They were no 12 I | bent, she gazed upon the soldiers.~Behind her, on each side, 13 I | in pious practices. Some soldiers had seen her in the night 14 I | pity on me, goddess!”~The soldiers thronged about her without 15 I | the captains’ tables among soldiers of his own nation. His girdle 16 I | rushed between them. The soldiers and Numidians pressed together 17 I | the garden, wherein the soldiers’ swords, hanging on the 18 I | midst of the dishes. Drunken soldiers snored open-mouthed by the 19 II | hoplites, captains with soldiers, Lusitanians with Greeks. 20 II | and the long mass of armed soldiers overflowed between the lofty 21 II | bold and mingled with the soldiers. They overwhelmed them with 22 II | lupanaria of Malqua for the soldiers; many of them were suckling 23 II | train of dust; those of the soldiers who looked back towards 24 II | came out to chat with the soldiers.~During the whole night 25 II | confusion to fly with the soldiers.~During the whole of the 26 II | the night. The lines of soldiers also were defiling below, 27 II | screaming when she saw the soldiers’ pikes among the rocks.~ 28 II | straight along the cross. The soldiers made merry around; they 29 II | discoursing in the midst of the soldiers. He mended old cuirasses. 30 II | the man so reclining the soldiers recognised the Suffet Hanno, 31 II | from which to harangue the soldiers, he made a sign; the litter 32 II | guards dispersed the mob of soldiers with strokes of the whip; 33 II | here and there; and the soldiers kept going from one to another 34 II | understood Punic as little as the soldiers, although the Mercenaries 35 II | sprung upon them.~Indeed, the soldiers remembered a great shout; 36 II | The indignation of the soldiers, restrained so long as he 37 II | provisions, and baggage. The soldiers took the coin in the bags 38 IV | barracks for twenty thousand soldiers with armour and all materials 39 IV | Carthage displayed before the soldiers quartered in the plain.~ 40 IV | resumed the command of his soldiers. He drilled them pitilessly. 41 IV | stopped to speak to the soldiers, saying that all was finished 42 IV | with their long robes.~The soldiers requested provisions, undertaking 43 IV | visited the Barbarians.~The soldiers allowed all the Carthaginians 44 IV | dissembled their anxiety.~The soldiers struck them on the shoulder, 45 IV | they should like to become soldiers. They were set to split 46 IV | the captains, read to the soldiers, and definitively approved. 47 IV | Then the delegates from the soldiers and from the Great Council 48 IV | and verbosity. Then the soldiers claimed, as a proof of friendship, 49 IV | armies. They knew that simple soldiers had worn diadems, and the 50 IV | Carthaginian broker was recruiting soldiers. Usually the Republic kept 51 IV | as Gisco disembarked the soldiers ran to him. He had a sort 52 IV | and Gisco began to pay the soldiers, commencing with the Libyans. 53 IV | vagabonds and outlaws assumed soldiers’ arms and declared that 54 IV | he resumed his task.~The soldiers, without suspecting that 55 V | whole plain as far as the soldiers’ tents, and the people on 56 VI | were the thoughts of the soldiers of the African race. The 57 VI | going away from it! The soldiers departed almost alone. Matho 58 VI | Barbarians. Nevertheless soldiers must be had, and not a government 59 VI | tumult would subside, and the soldiers would retire to make a fresh 60 VI | starlight over the sleeping soldiers as they lay wrapped in their 61 VI | transported his elephants and soldiers on rafts across the Gulf 62 VI | manoeuvred so clumsily that the soldiers in derision urged them to 63 VI | been seen tossing among the soldiers like a bark on the waves, 64 VI | bending large bows.~The soldiers were barely in possession 65 VII | say to him, like mutilated soldiers on seeing their master again, “’ 66 VII | Ancients, the departure of the soldiers, their return, their demands, 67 VII | had the blades of grass soldiers and made battalions with 68 VII | as the enlistment of the soldiers expired with the war, they 69 VII | Carthage through fear of the soldiers. The labourers, who were 70 VII | better reception of the soldiers.~At his daughter’s name 71 VII | that he did not know; some soldiers had come howling in with 72 VII | revenge himself upon the soldiers, or the Ancients, or Salammbo, 73 VII | cut off your arm?”~“The soldiers, Eye of Baal.”~Then to a 74 VII | they? Have you helped the soldiers to murder them?”~His face 75 VII | fled through terror of the soldiers, perhaps through collusion 76 VIII| sent into Liguria to buy soldiers, three thousand mountaineers 77 VIII| Republic.~He had divided his soldiers into even numbers, being 78 VIII| alternately in the midst of the soldiers brandishing the Suffet’s 79 VIII| streets were astir, and the soldiers were everywhere beginning 80 VIII| silent as a great tomb. The soldiers as they leaned on their 81 VIII| arose. Hamilcar had the soldiers roused, but not a trumpet 82 VIII| feat of genius filled the soldiers with enthusiasm. They recovered 83 VIII| without signal or command the soldiers at Utica and those at the 84 VIII| intervals, came the light armed soldiers with shields of lynx skin, 85 VIII| horses, relieved this wall of soldiers at its two extremities.~ 86 VIII| files were pressing upon the soldiers, and the Barbarians had 87 VIII| over their heads to the soldiers in the towers; with their 88 VIII| left Hippo-Zarytus with his soldiers to march upon Carthage. 89 VIII| and heaviness. Among his soldiers on the verge of the tents 90 VIII| canvas. Then the sight of the soldiers reminded him of another 91 IX | his feet and those of the soldiers, and complained of the Barbarians. 92 IX | to be served out to the soldiers individually, without troubling 93 IX | pass beyond them. Then the soldiers resumed their march over 94 IX | Mercenaries. As to a levy of soldiers in the town, how were they 95 XI | such as are made by dogs. Soldiers were carting faggots, resting 96 XI | of three hundred thousand soldiers! I will go and seek them 97 XI | distinguish the captains, soldiers, heralds, and even the serving-men, 98 XI | mountain with its thronging soldiers, and as it was in the centre 99 XII | on their hands: the old soldiers of Antiochus displayed a 100 XII | greyness of the dawn some soldiers appeared on the outskirts 101 XII | chanced that the Suffet’s soldiers had been unable to discover 102 XII | were caught between his soldiers and the provinces belonging 103 XII | despatched by the Greek soldiers in Sardinia. They recommended 104 XII | Hippo-Zarytus to admit three hundred soldiers. Then he departed to the 105 XII | enduring the presence of soldiers, for Magdassin had acted 106 XII | Carthage in order to obtain soldiers and begin the war again.~ 107 XII | Carthaginians had placed soldiers on the aqueduct, they began 108 XII | in the darkness with the soldiers through the cleft in the 109 XII | clarions rang; and the soldiers on vedette, believing that 110 XIII| hands and brought it to the soldiers.~The Carthaginians also 111 XIII| of Khamon.~Seventy-five soldiers were pulling at ropes arranged 112 XIII| They bit the rams. The soldiers clung to the beam and drew 113 XIII| though to follow them.~The soldiers admired his skill and executed 114 XIII| bent like a huge reed. The soldiers, who were crowded together, 115 XIII| embarked the best of his soldiers on lighters and planks, 116 XIII| doors and were filled with soldiers, and on the upper platform 117 XIII| urged forward masses of soldiers who came ceaselessly against 118 XIII| surrounded by a crowd of soldiers. They were dragging it with 119 XIII| fell down, and cuirassed soldiers appeared in the interior 120 XIII| more than three thousand soldiers, began to rock gently like 121 XIII| stories beneath it. The soldiers who were standing on the 122 XIII| of Macedonia was sending soldiers.~But on the second day the 123 XIV | Khamon with his elephants and soldiers. Hamilcar was recalling 124 XIV | tribes—in all twenty thousand soldiers, or half of the army.~Autaritus, 125 XIV | them. The Suffet needed soldiers; he received them unconditionally, 126 XIV | another;—and then moving his soldiers aside (for the Punic standards 127 XIV | he gave the women to his soldiers to be violated before they 128 XIV | sacrificed him and all his soldiers on the slightest hope of 129 XIV | depth, of streets, marching soldiers, and the swinging of swords; 130 XIV | two hundred and nineteen soldiers, but not one complete syntagmata. 131 XIV | there was no need to employ soldiers to put an end to them.~Wild