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Alphabetical    [«  »]
fair 3
faith 3
faithful 2
fall 39
fallen 15
falling 16
fallow 2
Frequency    [«  »]
39 advanced
39 broad
39 camp
39 fall
39 further
39 kept
39 put
Gustave Flaubert
Salammbo

IntraText - Concordances

fall

   Chapter
1 I | set me free!”~Then he let fall the cup and related his 2 I | Carthage is ours; let us fall upon it!”~“No!” said Matho, “ 3 II | worn, and then he would fall asleep again.~Matho accepted 4 IV | whole of Africa was about to fall upon Carthage. Only the 5 V | before entering the cisternsfall upon his shoulders, and 6 V | The slaves were going to fall upon him, but she stopped 7 VI | every evening these would fall asleep with the placidity 8 VI | made the horses rear and fall back upon their masters 9 VII | from the moon. By their fall they denoted the stars, 10 VII | ruins. Carthage, thou wilt fall!”~The four pontiffs spread 11 VII | he let the wooden sheets fall to the ground and threw 12 VIII| bridge ran pell-mell to fall in a body upon Hamilcar.~ 13 VIII| wings expanded in order to fall upon them, the elephants 14 VIII| and the wicker tower would fall like a tower of stone. Fourteen 15 IX | of the provinces he would fall upon them and exterminate 16 IX | against their lance and fall asleep as they stood; those 17 IX | feast;—then he let his hands fall between his legs, slowly 18 IX | hasten up; an iron hail would fall upon the tents. Galleries 19 X | prodigious speed that its fall was not perceived.~From 20 XI | scent. A little drop would fall every moment through the 21 XI | shoulder. Matho watched it fall.~He was carried away by 22 XI | serpents cause the fruit to fall upon the turf with the diamonds 23 XII | enough to attack her! Her fall even had been asserted several 24 XII | went off.~The man did not fall. He disappeared.~“If he 25 XII | beside the corpse, he let it fall again. The Balearian fastened 26 XIII| Barbarians, and ready to fall upon them. But NarrHavas, 27 XIII| them. Some corpses did not fall, being too much pressed 28 XIII| with uplifted arms, would fall from the sky.~Up to the 29 XIII| it. The choice, too, must fall exclusively upon the families 30 XIII| letting an ample drapery fall to the ground.~Afterwards 31 XIV | seeing the Carthaginians fall back.~The horsemen of Narr’ 32 XIV | of them let their hands fall on feeling the cold flesh 33 XIV | the man, in despair, would fall flat on his face in the 34 XIV | the sword-belt. He let it fall to the ground; Spendius 35 XIV | companion, and they would fall asleep in the starlight 36 XIV | covered with blood would stop, fall into each other’s arms, 37 XIV | matters; he commanded him to fall back upon Tunis; and Hanno, 38 XIV | time to come out, he could fall upon the rear of the Carthaginian 39 XIV | greatly.~Matho made them fall back. His right comprised


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