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Alphabetical    [«  »]
placidly 1
placing 4
plague 4
plain 49
plains 6
plaintive 4
plaited 4
Frequency    [«  »]
49 full
49 having
49 horses
49 plain
49 punic
49 times
48 blood
Gustave Flaubert
Salammbo

IntraText - Concordances

plain

   Chapter
1 I | the forest, and came to a plain where women with dragon-croups 2 II | below them stretched the plain lost in the vapours of the 3 II | end. At the extremity of a plain they would always reach 4 II | themselves at their ease on the plain; those who were disciplined 5 II | mantles on the ground.~The plain, which was wholly bounded 6 II | spreading throughout the plain; fires were burning here 7 II | out, Spendius circled the plain, riding on a Punic stallion, 8 IV | soldiers quartered in the plain.~They could recognise the 9 V | it thus across the whole plain as far as the soldiers10 VI | were boiling. Below in the plain the great crowd stirred 11 VI | on Tunis and occupy the plain of Carthage, Autaritus being 12 VI | Utica had on the east a plain which extended to the large 13 VI | but a heap of ruins in the plain. Spendius had recovered 14 VIII| ranged themselves in the plain before him in the form of 15 VIII| of Utica, and in a vast plain, the latter being advantageous 16 VIII| appeared they moved into the plain in three lines— first came 17 VIII| incalculable. The immense plain expanded in every direction 18 VIII| riders and fled across the plain. The Punic slingers scattered 19 VIII| could be discerned in the plain save the undulation of the 20 VIII| Barbarians were fleeing over the plain he had encountered nobody.~ 21 XII | obelisk proceeding across the plain.~They waited until he was 22 XII | from the skies onto the plain. The aqueduct, being cut 23 XIII| Barbarians undulated over the plain with a single movement and 24 XIII| stream curving through the plain fell into the gulf.~Hamilcar 25 XIII| from the back part of the plain he urged forward masses 26 XIII| the slope rising from the plain to the terrace, although 27 XIII| could now be seen on the plain but a sort of perfectly 28 XIV | gorge. It descended into a plain, and was shaped like an 29 XIV | Barbarians were below in the plain.~Then this great human mass, 30 XIV | the other extremity of the plain stretched a long passage, 31 XIV | files, from one end of the plain to the other. They felt 32 XIV | rocks; the rest covered the plain confusedly. The strong shunned 33 XIV | eyes ranged over the whole plain to find others.~But were 34 XIV | them, and soon made the plain one broad tract of rottenness. 35 XIV | dead in the middle of the plain; and wrapped in their cloaks 36 XIV | immediately throughout the plain, before the portcullis and 37 XIV | they projected into the plain like the steps of an immense 38 XIV | from the back part of the plain, and were advancing on both 39 XIV | soon in the centre of the plain. They lacked space; they 40 XIV | The level surface of the plain again became motionless. 41 XIV | his right, occupied the plain of Rhades, and Hanno the 42 XIV | Mercenaries advanced through the plain shaking about flaming firebrands, 43 XIV | walls to the centre of the plain; quite in the background, 44 XIV | following day at sunrise, in the plain of Rhades.~The Mercenaries 45 XIV | Carthaginians arrived first in the plain. They rubbed the edges of 46 XIV | Clinabarians lay stretched upon the plain; some Mercenaries snatched 47 XIV | hillock in the centre of the plain. They had no chance of conquering, 48 XIV | lying over the tract of the plain, and the dead were mingled 49 XIV | irregular fashion embossed the plain, something rose up vaguer


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