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| Alphabetical [« »] towered 1 towering 1 towers 30 town 54 towns 20 townspeople 1 trace 3 | Frequency [« »] 54 gold 54 light 54 temple 54 town 53 crowd 53 take 53 too | Gustave Flaubert Salammbo IntraText - Concordances town |
Chapter
1 I | bands to accumulate in the town. Gisco, their general, had 2 I | their crowd, and the great town sleeping beneath them in 3 I | you now? In a conquered town, or in the palace of a master? 4 II | wearied by residence in a town; there was difficulty in 5 II | number) had remained in the town, and were amusing themselves 6 II | Although Sicca was a sacred town it could not hold such a 7 III | above the waves, and on the town which was still wrapped 8 III | lowered upon the sleeping town, while the sigh that she 9 IV | on foot, arrived in the town, pale, breathless, and mad 10 IV | Megara, which was the new town, reached as far as the edge 11 IV | triple wall? Then behind the town, at the back of Megara, 12 IV | palace.~The camp was like a town, so full of people and of 13 IV | disembarked at Carthage the town would be abandoned to them, 14 IV | springs in the interior of the town.~“Not one!” replied Matho.~ 15 IV | where they sank beneath the town to incline what was nearly 16 IV | lines of walls. The whole town was asleep. The fires of 17 V | slave, “in Syria, in the town of Maphug”; and they ascended 18 VI | besieging Hippo-Zarytus. But the town was protected by a lake, 19 VI | was unable even to take a town.~At night when alone in 20 VI | The three Judges of the town appeared in the opening 21 VI | as the Suffet was in the town the principal men came to 22 VI | was going on around the town.~The Carthaginians had not 23 VI | come he stole away from the town with his escort, and made 24 VII | completely separated from the town; when ambassadors arrived, 25 VII | overlooked Carthage.~The town sank downwards in a long 26 VII | And when they are in your town, poor and numerous amid 27 VIII| communications with some in the town and would not leave, being 28 VIII| for some minutes the whole town was silent as a great tomb. 29 VIII| the river and towards the town.~The phalanx exterminated 30 VIII| mountain he perceived the town with the carcases of the 31 IX | levy of soldiers in the town, how were they to be equipped? 32 X | which rolled through the town. They descended the Acropolis. 33 XI | thorns. They passed through a town in which houses were burnt 34 XI | and I will overthrow your town and burn all its temples; 35 XII | for they had need of a town.~Hamilcar, as he perceived 36 XII | prayers, was surrounding the town. As for these, they were 37 XII | nomads who had never seen a town were frightened by the shadows 38 XIII| needed for the capture of the town. They were utilised in a 39 XIII| all recognised that the town was impregnable, unless 40 XIII| impossible to resist.~The town was beginning to suffer 41 XIII| genius of the gods within the town their images had been covered 42 XIII| walls at the end of the town cut uneven zigzags upon 43 XIII| imagined themselves before a town in their own country. Their 44 XIII| three fronts which faced the town fell down, and cuirassed 45 XIII| proposed to abandon the town, and found a colony far 46 XIII| might be scattered over the town and even to the region of 47 XIV | clamours of the distant town were lost in the murmuring 48 XIV | was under the walls of the town on the appointed day.~For 49 XIV | hillock in front of the town.~At the sight of this the 50 XIV | On the other side of the town, whence there now escaped 51 XIV | known anything about it; the town in front of him masked everything 52 XIV | lights in the houses that the town appeared to be all in flames.~ 53 XV | death in which the whole town might take part, in which 54 XV | passed before his eyes; the town whirled round in his head,