| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] legion 13 legionaries 1 legions 2 legs 27 leisure 4 lemnos 1 lemnos-earth 1 | Frequency [« »] 27 high 27 joy 27 lake 27 legs 27 lines 27 longer 27 pieces | Gustave Flaubert Salammbo IntraText - Concordances legs |
Chapter
1 II | his former melancholy; his legs hung down to the ground, 2 II | distended skin; his hind legs, which were nailed against 3 II | hands over the scars on his legs at the place where the fetters 4 II | strewn with silver moons. His legs were swathed in bands like 5 IV | between their arms and their legs close together, they passed 6 V | representing another woman. Her legs reached to the top of the 7 V | was gliding between their legs. Through some fissures cut 8 VI | the basin and rubbed his legs. But attention to his body 9 VII | He stopped between the legs of the brass colossus. He 10 VII | strips of cloth enfolding his legs were joined together with 11 VII | cippi for fastening the legs, numellae for confining 12 VIII| their helmets; their right legs were all covered with bronze 13 VIII| bloodstained bandages from their legs. Those who were doomed to 14 IX | his hands fall between his legs, slowly bent his head, and 15 X | musk, ebony, and crushed legs of flies.~Salammbo seated 16 XI | Mercenaries had broken the legs of the captive Ancients 17 XII | like a series of hillocks; legs, sandals, arms, and coats 18 XII | known by the speed of their legs and the force of their blows.”~ 19 XII | them they took them by the legs, and suddenly threw them 20 XIII| pools of blood; and arms and legs projecting half way out 21 XIII| deliberation, reached the legs of the colossus; then, spreading 22 XIII| was burning between the legs of the colossus. The tips 23 XIV | with uplifted arms.~Their legs and hands were tied; then 24 XIV | nameless mass; the fat on his legs hid the nails on his feet; 25 XIV | parallel lines, like the legs of a compass that is being 26 XIV | syntagmata. Some, whose legs were broken, went hopping 27 XIV | their pikes between the legs of their companions, and