| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] stomachs 7 stone 35 stoned 1 stones 57 stood 60 stool 7 stools 4 | Frequency [« »] 57 both 57 red 57 sea 57 stones 56 master 56 slave 56 together | Gustave Flaubert Salammbo IntraText - Concordances stones |
Chapter
1 I | mitre starred with precious stones, and which hung all about 2 I | basins by walls of blue stones. So limpid was the wave 3 I | a collection of luminous stones, their variegation imitating 4 II | heavy cothurni on the paving stones. Their armour was dented 5 II | were browsing among the stones; a woman with a blue fleece 6 II | the Libyans cabins of dry stones, while the Negroes with 7 II | palace, does she not? Ah! the stones must quiver beneath her 8 II | his great necklace of blue stones, his golden clasps, and 9 II | broad necklace of precious stones rebounded up to his ears. 10 III | thee; thine eyes devour the stones of buildings, and the apes 11 III | more insensible than the stones of the terrace. He looked 12 IV | metal chains, cones of dry stones with bands of azure, copper 13 IV | off his necklace of blue stones he threw it into the crowd 14 IV | time to time to feel the stones with his hand.~“Here it 15 IV | immediately beneath the stones above, and their faces were 16 V | bounded by a low wall of dry stones. Spendius and Matho leaped 17 V | the rays from the precious stones making a play of light through 18 V | as it brushed against the stones recalled his new power to 19 V | past, then another, and stones began to buzz about him; 20 VI | the sky disappear, while stones would be heard rebounding 21 VI | He would snatch up the stones with his hands, overturn, 22 VI | borders covered with precious stones, they might have been taken 23 VI | slaves who were to hurl stones had picked such as were 24 VII | mystic place. The round stones lying in the niches were 25 VII | its flattened summit; the stones of it could not be seen; 26 VII | the ground; three black stones bordered by yellow circles 27 VII | distraught to loosen the paving stones. A wooden disc sprang up 28 VII | dreams.~The fires from the stones and the flames from the 29 VIII| demolished in order to furnish stones. But difference of fortune, 30 IX | fields, Matho would cast stones into them to render them 31 IX | suddenly hear the rolling of stones, and raising their eyes 32 IX | repulsed by a volley of stones; for the Suffet had taken 33 IX | was stumbling among the stones. Zarxas ran up to him, knocked 34 IX | deserter, an enemy. Some threw stones at her to insult her. But 35 XI | perceived an enclosure of dry stones shutting in a rambling edifice. 36 XI | continued the delicacy of the stones which loaded her fingers; 37 XII | motionless on the tops of the big stones.~When night had fallen yellow-haired 38 XII | the Celts, the three rude stones beneath a rainy sky at the 39 XII | aqueduct, they began to hurl stones, balls, and beams. Spendius 40 XII | passed through between the stones; others with greater intrepidity 41 XIII| wild asses which fling up stones with their feet, and the 42 XIII| children went to procure stones on the strand, and gathered 43 XIII| oil, and built furnaces. Stones were heaped up on the platforms 44 XIII| lowered, and showers of stones and showers of arrows poured 45 XIII| of the spring, when the stones were shooting in rays, and 46 XIII| drive a pin between the stones, and then making use of 47 XIII| grass and flowers among the stones to boil them in wine, wine 48 XIII| through fear of the rest.~The stones from the catapults, and 49 XIII| against one another, the stones would strike together and 50 XIII| second wall composed of stones and long beams lying quite 51 XIII| and many were throwing stones with the hand like shepherds; 52 XIII| forth from the disjointed stones. Then the lofty brazen mass, 53 XIII| broke off from it, like stones from a crumbling pyramid. 54 XIII| Crocodile. The Abbadirs, stones which had fallen from the 55 XIII| was covered with fatidical stones, and the flame mirrored 56 XIV | down the flying crows with stones. Sometimes when a gypaetus 57 XIV | the holes in them with the stones of the houses. It was the