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Lucius Apuleius
Apology

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(Hapax - words occurring once)


1-cerem | ceres-eleme | eleve-hues | humbl-murmu | mute-relat | relea-talki | tance-zoiot

     Chapter
1002 36 | ome learning even at the eleventh hour. Let him read the words 1003 59 | likely, is the glutton fe eling ill after his debauch? I 1004 88 | she should lie beneath the elm that weds the vine, on the 1005 5 | need fear nothing from my eloq uence. If I have made any 1006 5 | living man could be more eloque nt than myself? I have never 1007 25 | denounce me for my Greek eloquenc e and my barbarian birth? 1008 91 | settlement will speak more eloquently than I can do. From them 1009 | elsewhere 1010 15 | all agree that, when these emanations strike any dense, smooth, 1011 69 | She was now freed from all embarrassment, and being sought in marriage 1012 54 | or that it was a sacred emblem that had been placed in 1013 13 | own coin. Your kindness emboldens me to make this further 1014 9 | with arms entwined in soft embrace; ~the crimson of the rose 1015 22 | horses and their cloa ks embroidered with palmleaves. The staff 1016 8 | these, when the crocodile emerges from the river and opens 1017 8 | snow-white teeth for the emission of dark, d eadly poison? 1018 15 | philosophers that rays are emitted from our body? According 1019 27 | to the `purifications' of Empedocles, the `demon' of Socrates 1020 1 | only, but frequently and emphatically, to proceed with their accusation. ~ 1021 18 | poverty that established the empire of the Roman people in its 1022 2 | person, whose tender age he employs to shield his unworthy self 1023 41 | Aristotle and my desire to emulate him. I owe something also 1024 14 | carve in stone or tint with encaustic pigments or colour with 1025 72 | the Syrtes and the risk of encountering wild beasts. His urgent 1026 57 | one who is ready even to encroach upon the daylight with his 1027 3 | lest I, whose most earnest endeavour it is to avoid incurring 1028 28 | lies with which they have endeavoured to arouse hostility against 1029 84 | the words with which she ended the letter, that poor bewitched, 1030 50 | of man's spirit which is endowed with the power of reason 1031 73 | realized how rich was her endowment of good qualities; but my 1032 12 | other is a celestial power endued with lofty and generous 1033 19 | a creed and has so long endured military service, is more 1034 20 | 20] ~I might even engage with you in controversy 1035 37 | which he happened to be engaged at the time, and to have 1036 74 | energy which he has shown in engineering this accusation against 1037 24 | cabbages are permitted to enhance the value of their wares 1038 4 | allowed to grow long as an enhancement to my personal attractions, 1039 13 | plenty of things of which I enjoy the use without the possession. ~ 1040 96 | some written while he still enjoyed his health, and some when 1041 57 | suppose that while he was enjoying a round of festivities at 1042 19 | because he himself is in enjoyment of great wealth and enormous 1043 19 | enjoyment of great wealth and enormous opulence? You are wrong, 1044 18 | account of their pove rty enriched by the gift of a few farthings 1045 98 | blurt out openly the sil ent suspicions that must have 1046 19 | but must be dragged, will entangle and trip the feet as badly 1047 8 | multitudes of leeches become entangled in his teeth: these, when 1048 66 | antiquity to young men just entering public life as a means of 1049 67 | own rather than a stupid enterprise of my enemies. ~ 1050 24 | the case of man, the soul enters the tenement of the body 1051 73 | said that such universal enthusiasm was nothing less than a 1052 30 | nature of which you are entirely ignorant. To think th at 1053 84 | mother's letter safe in its entirety: it is a good thing that 1054 58 | time left. There in the entrance-hall he came across a large quantity 1055 60 | Calpurnianus acted as middlemen and entreated him to comply to their wishes. 1056 73 | with how many pressing entreaties he plied me, never ceasing 1057 30 | mentions poison, you produce an entree; he mentions herbs and young 1058 72 | without the slightest risk entrust the whole fortune of the 1059 45 | mad ever since, instead of entrusting the whole business to the 1060 24 | immediately after my first entry into the municipal senate, 1061 9 | garland's grace~with arms entwined in soft embrace; ~the crimson 1062 39 | poem on dainties: he there enumerates countless species of fish, 1063 18 | in Phocion, her force in Epaminondas, her wisdom in Socrates, 1064 51 | false, absurd, and indeed epilepti c. ~ 1065 27 | actually to be performed. So Epimenides, Orpheus, Pythagoras, and 1066 62 | distinguished member of the equestrian order, gave the commission 1067 22 | nd worthily to carry that equipment for which Crates sacrificed 1068 98 | whatever he may be in point of equity. I wish I had not let this 1069 99 | the utmost earnestness to erase that most important clause, 1070 62 | of secret manufacture, wh ereas Pontianus, a distinguished 1071 9 | were frivolous verses of an erotic character.' So that is the 1072 52 | he does in his sickness erring unconsciously; but you, 1073 89 | There is no room for an erroneous gesture; the only possible 1074 70 | any reason for her to p ersist in remaining a widow; she 1075 27 | the reasons for another p erson's private opinions. `But,' 1076 31 | second Greece, he noticed c ertain fishermen draw up their 1077 51 | treatise on convulsions. He ass erts, however, in another book 1078 50 | body causes a white and eruptive ferment. If this ferment 1079 88 | 50,000 sesterces and to escape dining in your company or 1080 50 | this ferment succeeds in escaping from the body, it is dispersed 1081 100| the ills to which this fl esh is heir. Take up your mother' 1082 101| save with the deepest r espect. Ask him, Maximus, what 1083 57 | from his reeking-tavern he espied, with eye keen as any fowler' 1084 6 | reading one of my jeux d'esprit, a brief letter in verse, 1085 87 | how did they secure poss ession of that letter which must, 1086 17 | rather than too small an establishment for a philosoph er. ~ 1087 92 | leave the howe, abandon the estates. Virginity only, once it 1088 86 | clear himself in public estimation by using your letter as 1089 33 | bought of his own sugg estion for me to inspect. For, 1090 64 | father of the soul, the eternal saviour of all that lives, 1091 65 | so much from their anxi ety to see me cleared of guilt 1092 15 | argumentation from t he dialectician Eubulides, last of all he betook himself 1093 36 | Aristotle, Theophrastus, Eudemus, Lycon, and the other successors 1094 37 | the rival and survivor of Euripides -- for he lived to extreme 1095 81 | Palamedes, what Sisyphus, what Eurybates or Phrynondas could ever 1096 33 | describe with decency, and evaded the di fficulty by turning 1097 59 | second bathe and is now evaporating the sweat of intoxication 1098 68 | bidding, but by various evasions managed to avoid the marriage 1099 76 | every penny of it, on the eve of her wedding, and was 1100 | everywhere 1101 51 | the part of a magician and evildoer to heal disease, or, if 1102 3 | report ever since they became evildoers. And even though others 1103 63 | which was made was the lean, eviscerated frame of a gruesome corpse, 1104 63 | to represent a ghost is evoking ghosts. ~ 1105 62 | it. Moreover, it receives exact confirmation from the answers 1106 7 | man's mouth is in position exalted, to the eye conspicuous, 1107 63 | Let them see it, hold it, exam ine it. There you see the 1108 57 | round of festivities at Al exandria -- for Crassus is one who 1109 19 | of daily life, whatever exceeds the mean is superfluous 1110 24 | wares by advertising the excellence of the soil whence they 1111 21 | possession of his peculiar excellences, if he is pleasant to ride 1112 95 | practically all the different excellencies of oratory are united in 1113 30 | But you who take such exception to fish attribute far different 1114 83 | first made disingenuous excerpts from that letter, read but 1115 22 | content with one staff, exchanged his elegant villas for one 1116 101| property such as should excite any prejudice against me, 1117 29 | most effective method of exciting suspicion against m e as 1118 68 | elsewhere he would by his will exclude her sons from the possession 1119 100| respect it is undutiful. She excludes her devoted husband from 1120 103| You clean your teeth.' Excusable cleanliness. `You look into 1121 82 | comes before and after. His excuse was that the rest of the 1122 94 | humbly begged me to make his excuses to the most honourable Lollianus 1123 69 | compelled her to be mine by my exe rcise of the black art; 1124 94 | aware of this. Every one execrated Rufinus and extolled mg 1125 62 | commission for the work and its execution. You were not ashamed falsely 1126 11 | sign that the writer is but exercising his wit. For nature has 1127 95 | and my powers are almost exhausted. I will rather reserve the 1128 25 | spreading fast, but soon exhausting its flimsy fuel, dying fast 1129 43 | for any incantations, and exhausts all his limbs with his convulsions. 1130 76 | mother's instigation, was exhibited to all the wealthy young 1131 102| this? That she should at my exhortation present the bulk of her 1132 61 | brought them to his shop, exhorting him to make what I had ordered 1133 89 | falsehood! Twenty years' exile would be a worthy punishment 1134 64 | for him only all things exist.' Maximus knows who that ` 1135 20 | and, thanks to the harmong existing between their desires and 1136 53 | pleasure! ~What credence do you expect us to give you after this? 1137 18 | cultivated at the public expense; if, in a word, all the 1138 57 | the first order, and an expert in all the varied flavours 1139 94 | proconsulate having neariy expired, was awaiti ng your arrival, 1140 14 | earliest childhood to their expiring age: it puts on all the 1141 61 | careful cross-examination, he explained the whole sequence of events 1142 54 | but ask the accused for explanations of everything.' `Why do 1143 13 | of my mirror. He nearly exploded, so violently did he declaim 1144 26 | possessions. But for the man who exposes a magician, credited with 1145 54 | anticipate the truth by expressing opinions on that concerning 1146 82 | commencement, or if phrases be expunged at will from the place they 1147 94 | congratulated Pontianus with the exquisite courtesy which always characterizes 1148 10 | only verses of Plato now extant are love-elegies, the reason, 1149 40 | as far as my knowledge extends, unique in one re spect, 1150 22 | roamed the whole world, exterminated monsters, and conquered 1151 15 | forth from us without any external support; according to the 1152 93 | fresh feuds, but utterly extinguished those already in existence. 1153 94 | one execrated Rufinus and extolled mg conduct. ~Pontianus together 1154 82 | rebuking her son because, after extolling me to her as a model of 1155 22 | lines of Homer in which he extols the island of Crete. I will 1156 93 | All these concessions I extorted from Pude ntilla with difficulty 1157 36 | to permit the reading of extracts from my `magic' works, that 1158 25 | having only one slave, and of extravagance in having three; to denounce 1159 16 | into its depths, now to extrude it forth to view? Why do 1160 89 | good half to the sum, your fa brication is one and a half 1161 42 | verse. He records also that Fabius, having lost five hundred 1162 25 | expectations by your old wives' fables, and the fire kindled by 1163 61 | reconstructing the whole fabric of their slander detail 1164 67 | the rest of my enemies, to fabricate these false charges of sorcery. ~ 1165 34 | My reply to these lyin g fabrications, which are as stupid as 1166 98 | house. The des ign was to facilitate the carrying out of the 1167 43 | consciousness of the body fades from the memory, it returns 1168 60 | evidence smelled after faex and did not dare to read 1169 33 | nature of the obscenity, but fai led, matchless pleader that 1170 46 | falling flat and was doomed to failure by the frowns and murmurs 1171 50 | as in death, their spirit fainting within them. Men of our 1172 44 | selected as one who might fairly be produced at the offering 1173 43 | these things may be, if any faith is to be put in them, the 1174 45 | clearer evidence of the falseness of your accus ations could 1175 101| final proof to show the falsity of that last charge before 1176 25 | accusation with abu se and fanned it with words, but it lacks 1177 25 | You spared no violence in fanning the flame of hatred against 1178 98 | now he has bidden a long farewell to study and betaken himself 1179 56 | to any of the gods of the farmer, who feed him and clothe 1180 93 | at once in the shape of farms, at a low valuation and 1181 29 | nothing. Why do not you go farther and accuse me on many similar 1182 23 | hesitated to expend every farthing of my patrimony, if so I 1183 18 | enriched by the gift of a few farthings per man from the whole Roman 1184 61 | seal, they assert, I had fashioned of the rarest wood by some 1185 58 | morning while he was still fasting from food and drink! And 1186 39 | for the acarne and the fat sea-skull the purple-fish, 1187 54 | a good judge, should be fatal to me when, as it is, it 1188 96 | sound! Or since it was not fated that that should be, would 1189 14 | At any rate I know that fathers love those sons most who 1190 72 | occurred. Overcome by the fatigues of the journey, I was laid 1191 30 | hares or boar's flesh or fatted capons. Or is there something 1192 28 | and his mother through no fault of mine: that he abandoned 1193 87 | should I write in such faulty words, such barbarous language, 1194 83 | of much that bore a more favourable meaning, would not the remaining 1195 71 | hastily flew hither from Rome, fearing that, if the man of her 1196 18 | indulge in the pleasures of feasting and of sex. These sins and 1197 17 | perhaps this is one of my feats of magic. Has lying made 1198 60 | large proportion of his fee for perjury. ~I noticed 1199 45 | rotations w eakens his already feeble mind, and the potter is 1200 56 | gods of the farmer, who feed him and clothe him; his 1201 82 | She herself describes her feelings and her sufferings! What 1202 38 | of the year the males and females of each species come together, 1203 93 | property certain exceedingly fertile lands, a large house richly 1204 24 | improved in flavour by the fertility of the district which produces 1205 55 | said, moved by my religious fervour and my desire to know the 1206 57 | was enjoying a round of festivities at Al exandria -- for Crassus 1207 47 | slaves a household, fifteen fettered serfs a chain-gang. Did 1208 12 | fierce intolerable force and fetters their servile bodies in 1209 93 | abstained from sowing fresh feuds, but utterly extinguished 1210 33 | decency, and evaded the di fficulty by turning to my works and 1211 64 | the shade s, with all the fiends, with all the spectrets, 1212 7 | administration of a tooth-powder with fiercer indignation than has ever 1213 47 | have it that there were fif teen slaves present on this 1214 89 | least prove t hat she is fifty. ~To cut the matter short, 1215 89 | him bring out the total at fifty-five, admitting that he lied 1216 98 | names of the gladiators, the fights they have fought, the wounds 1217 18 | wealthy men among the great figures of history. All those at 1218 83 | flown from his hands and filled the whole mar ket-place 1219 24 | citizen of the place, after filling all the municipal offices 1220 78 | such fierce indignation fills my soul. That you, the most 1221 15 | to Plato these rays are filtered forth from the centre of 1222 8 | bitter words, rot in the filth and ordure that it loves! 1223 6 | Catullus says, after the filthy fashion in vogue among the 1224 60 | affair excited your disgust. Fina lly my accusers, in spite 1225 57 | Alexandria at the time!) from finding the feathers of birds and 1226 6 | delicate dust of Arab spices fine,~shall smooth the swollen 1227 10 | were inferior in charm and finish. Learn then the verses written 1228 74 | has been forged, this the firebrand, this the scourge that has 1229 77 | His mother had shown a firmness of purpose not to be expected 1230 56 | reverence. He has never given firstfruits of crops or vines or flocks 1231 67 | Pudentilla were as follows. Firstly, they said that after the 1232 32 | Pharos by their use of curved fish-hooks. Nay, you will class in 1233 29 | net me the fish, and the fisherman take his place and hew his 1234 51 | other reptiles they shed at fixed intervals for the renewal 1235 100| of the ills to which this fl esh is heir. Take up your 1236 25 | noise, while it is weak and flabby in point of facts? ~I will 1237 25 | violence in fanning the flame of hatred against me. But 1238 9 | fire consume me quite,~the flames ye kindle, boys divine,~ 1239 94 | Today it shall do more than flatter, it shall save me! You may 1240 76 | young and how immodestly she flaunted her charms. Who did not 1241 24 | wonderfully improved in flavour by the fertility of the 1242 57 | expert in all the varied flavours of kitchen-smoke, but in 1243 56 | unhol y and unclean. But flax, the purest of all growths 1244 71 | mother's letter hastily flew hither from Rome, fearing 1245 25 | but soon exhausting its flimsy fuel, dying fast away, leaving 1246 56 | firstfruits of crops or vines or flocks to any of the gods of the 1247 55 | opens for Aemilianus, on the floods of perspiration that this 1248 35 | and seaweed, and all the flotsam of the sea that the winds 1249 9 | the flower of life with flowers~. Wherefore for these bright 1250 83 | suppressed by Rufinus have flown from his hands and filled 1251 9 | before the music of thy flute. ~ 1252 83 | could take them wings and fly, would they not, when Rufinus 1253 30 | from the forehead of the foal at birth ere yet its dam 1254 44 | upon you, he would have foamed at the mouth, spat in your 1255 50 | fire as to form a thick and foaming humour. This generates a 1256 19 | pride and showing like poor folk under the dis guise of their 1257 40 | and observe me. In this I foll ow the instruction of my 1258 53 | far surpass all others in folly, that whereas philosophers 1259 86 | common rights of humanity forbade one letter to be read aloud, 1260 65 | over and above these. ~He forbids this with the purpose of 1261 96 | reason to be vexed at my forcing my way into Pudentilla's 1262 89 | that you had placed your fore-finger agai nst the middle joint 1263 1 | bench, I regarded it as a foregone conclusion that Sicinius 1264 30 | talisman, torn from the forehead of the foal at birth ere 1265 30 | to be torn from new-born foreheads, but to be cut from scaly 1266 51 | it, whether from a malign foreknowledge of its value to men or from 1267 66 | accusations as the first step in a forensic career, that by the conduct 1268 84 | have to thank you and your foresight, Maximus. You saw through 1269 42 | reflected in a bowl of water foretold the future in a hundred 1270 74 | now to relate. I freely forgave Pontianus when he begged 1271 94 | implored us to forgive and forget all his past offences; he 1272 2 | indictment, he conveniently forgot Pontianus, his own brother' 1273 79 | prove it with one word? A formal indictment, written and 1274 | formerly 1275 27 | of the gods, as though, forsooth, they knew how to perform 1276 48 | if no criminal motive is forthcoming, a good judge releases the 1277 89 | Pudentilla has barely passed her fortieth year. The insolent audacity 1278 93 | urged my wife -- whose whole fortun e according to my accusers 1279 | forty 1280 74 | than he had shown zeal in forwarding it. He was ready to make 1281 93 | promote, to restore and foster quiet and harmony and family 1282 93 | together with not less than fou r hundred slaves and a large 1283 98 | gladiators, the fights they have fought, the wounds they have received. 1284 6 | of yesterday.~So shall no foulness, no dark smirch be seen,~ 1285 9 | Diogenes the Cynic, of Zeno the founder of Stoicism, and many other 1286 24 | veteran soldiers, our second founders, we have become a colony 1287 68 | trace the whole case to its fount and source. ~Aemilia Pudentilla, 1288 9 | seasons bring~the glory of thy fourteenth spring; ~the garlands, that 1289 67 | used sorcery. Thirdly and fourthly, they object that she made 1290 57 | espied, with eye keen as any fowler's, feathers of birds wafted 1291 86 | already as cunning as any fox and devoid of all filial 1292 75 | fortune unexpectedly through a fraudulent transaction on the part 1293 7 | nothing le ss seemly for a freeborn man with the education of 1294 72 | he said, and should get a freer view of the sea -- a special 1295 98 | such a stranger to him that frequentl y, even when you met him, 1296 4 | body, sucked awa y all the freshness of life, destroyed my complexion 1297 36 | Greek works -- some of my frie nds who are interested in 1298 39 | and whether they were best fried or stewed, and yet he is 1299 8 | mouth, are removed by a friendly waterbird, which is allowed 1300 78 | contemptible timidity, you are so frig htened at the sight of steel, 1301 58 | asked the reason of this fro m the slave whom he had 1302 46 | doomed to failure by the frowns and murmurs of the audience, 1303 18 | handmaid of philosophy; frugal and sober, she is content 1304 88 | the standing crops, on the fruitful ploughland, or she should 1305 16 | and above these questions fu rther matter for discussion. 1306 96 | reading of these letters ful l of expressions of respect 1307 46 | Pudens, that you should fulfil your promise. Bring forward 1308 74 | he tried to prevent the fulfilment of this project with no 1309 85 | is born. But your son is fullgrown and the wounds he deals 1310 66 | accuse Cnaeus Norbanus, Caius Furius to accuse Marcus Aquilius, 1311 74 | bought witnesses. This is the furnace in which all this calumny 1312 22 | to dispense with all this furniture a nd worthily to carry that 1313 88 | known in comedy ~that in the furrow children true be sown ~bears 1314 16 | marvel at the numberless furrows with which wrinkles have 1315 70 | evidence of your intentions. ~Furthermore, she wrote a letter of her 1316 42 | argument about the fish was futile an d bound to fail. They 1317 24 | myself as half Numidian, half Gaetulian in a discourse delivered 1318 45 | burning of the stone named gagates is an equally sure and easy 1319 75 | seeming in any way to be the gainer by his father's dishonesty. 1320 75 | with the kicks of wanton gallants, his windows loud with the 1321 97 | their client. ~But Rufinus gaped for his prey in vain like 1322 9 | outweigh. ~Surpass the twinèd garland's grace~with arms entwined 1323 3 | impudence. For honour is like a garment; the older it gets, the 1324 17 | procession through the same gate of Rome, had but two servants 1325 84 | case that they might not gather streng th as the days went 1326 10 | Alexis fair', ~and all men gazed on him with wondering eyes, ~ 1327 88 | dinner-parties which custom generally imposes on newly-married 1328 38 | which are spontaneously generated from the mud, discussing 1329 50 | and foaming humour. This generates a vapo ur, and the heat 1330 11 | recorded for subsequent generations. ~But, apart from that, 1331 66 | glory for their youthful genius. The custom has long since 1332 10 | the public gaze the boys Gentius and Macedo, whose real names 1333 85 | amours? Who is there of such gentle tem per, but that this would 1334 7 | with the education of a gentleman than an unwashen mouth. 1335 79 | But even supposing she had genuinely regarded me as a magician, 1336 61 | after loo king at many geometrical patterns all carved out 1337 16 | subtlety in all branches of geometry, but was perhaps particularly 1338 93 | valuation and at the price sug gested by themselves, and further 1339 89 | the simplest of all such gestures, for you have merely to 1340 3 | a garment; the older it gets, the more carelessly it 1341 45 | this disease with its own giddiness. For the sight of its rotations 1342 31 | Circe her cup, nor Venus her girdle, with any charm drawn from 1343 31 | used to call on Mercury the giver of oracles, Venus that lures 1344 92 | beauty, the unblemished gl ory of her prime. The very 1345 14 | merit that the original may gladden his heart by looking on 1346 98 | is frequently seen in the gladiatorial school and there -- as a 1347 98 | school the names of the gladiators, the fights they have fought, 1348 85 | matters, do you watch her glances, count her sighs, sound 1349 32 | that it may not be given a gloomy meaning. And yet we do not 1350 17 | of the Roman people have gloried in the small number of their 1351 39 | the sea-urchin sweet. ~He glorified many fish in other verses, 1352 57 | upon the daylight with his gluttonies -- I suppose, I say, that 1353 18 | case were Caius Fabricius, Gnaeus Scipio, Manius Curius, whose 1354 85 | the light of day only by gnawing through its mother's womb; 1355 29 | en trust such a task to gold-embroiderers or carpenters, and, to avoid 1356 57 | deposition, the evidence of a gorging brute, a hopeless glutton, 1357 75 | infinite variety of his gormandizing; so that yo u might really 1358 32 | dolphins, and the lobster; gourmands also, who sink whole fortunes 1359 95 | Laelius with its smoothness, Gr acchus with its energy, 1360 73 | between us. Meanwhile I gradually recovered my health. At 1361 31 | passage he says: ~Earth the grain-giver yields up to her its store 1362 47 | Were they to count the grains of incense? Or to knock 1363 7 | with like command of the grand style, he might say after 1364 3 | well, philosophy, whose grandeur is such that she resents 1365 1 | brought by the brothers Granius against my wife Pudentilla. 1366 94 | all that had happened. I granted him this request also and 1367 12 | give themselves over to the grat ification of their desires: 1368 1 | in a serious spirit as to gratify my opponents' tas te for 1369 61 | he said, would be most gratifying to me. Our artist did as 1370 34 | trifles of the shore, either gratis or for money. ~ 1371 40 | necessary. I am, therefore, greatly surprised that you are only 1372 55 | public discourse on the greatness of Aesculapius delivered 1373 88 | to barren ground, on the greensward of the meadow rather than 1374 85 | ckedness such as might match grey hairs? Nay, the most offensive 1375 100| when you were plunged in grief and mourning, and fled from 1376 96 | 96] ~Now, I grieve to say, it is my duty to 1377 59 | lids swollen, his <...> grin, his slobbering lips, his 1378 87 | accounts of the bailiffs, gro oms, and shepherds, that 1379 98 | think their suspicions well grounded. You took him from us a 1380 68 | facts, that his envy was groundless and that he has strayed 1381 56 | shrine, no holy place, nor grove. But why do I speak of groves 1382 56 | grove. But why do I speak of groves or shrines? Those who have 1383 56 | flax, the purest of all growths and among the best of all 1384 84 | the conclusion, I will not grudge it you. Tell me, what were 1385 21 | poor, because fortune has grudged me riches, because my guardian, 1386 63 | eviscerated frame of a gruesome corpse, utterly horrible 1387 72 | leave them and to become his guest in his mother's house. I 1388 71 | myself. ~She was indeed guided in making her choice less 1389 81 | could ever have devised such guile? All those whom I have mentioned, 1390 19 | poor folk under the dis guise of their moderation. Now, 1391 84 | and magic there is a great gulf, indeed they have absolutely 1392 40 | stayed by a chant as it gushed forth from a wound. Now 1393 74 | of every wickedness, the habitation of lust and gluttony, a 1394 14 | shares all the varying habits of the body, and imitates 1395 85 | such as might match grey hairs? Nay, the most offensive 1396 25 | the age of fourteen he is handed over to the care of men 1397 55 | what I had wrapped up in a handker chief and entrusted to the 1398 55 | there is no one who has ever handled it, and only one freedman, 1399 18 | poverty has long been the handmaid of philosophy; frugal and 1400 4 | of `philosopher', was the handsomest man of his day. Zeno also, 1401 100| that drunken gang, that hang about you and prey upon 1402 19 | as badly as a cloak that hangs down in front. In everything 1403 21 | have to distract me the happier I shall be. For the soul, 1404 20 | were deservedly rich and happy. For poverty consists in 1405 15 | of mankind? The man who harangues for a brief space before 1406 5 | myself? I have never even harboured in my thoughts anything 1407 30 | brittle laurel, clay to be hardened, and wax to be melted in 1408 30 | should seek to purchase hares or boar's flesh or fatted 1409 13 | the patchwork suit of the harlequinade? I think not. On the contrary 1410 98 | most abandoned youths among harlots and wine-cups. He rules 1411 32 | nothing in the world, however harmless, that may not be put to 1412 20 | disposal, and, thanks to the harmong existing between their desires 1413 49 | their two opposites, fail to harmonize. That comes to pass when 1414 59 | his slobbering lips, his harsh voice, his trembling hands, 1415 | hast 1416 100| co-heir with himself, who hastened to desert you when you were 1417 71 | receiving his mother's letter hastily flew hither from Rome, fearing 1418 85 | is a well-known line ~I hate the boy that's wise before 1419 101| have utterly swept away the hateful charge on which the whole 1420 66 | blockhead, I will not say, hates sin, but recognizes it when 1421 75 | revel, his bedchambers the haunt of adulterers. For no one 1422 14 | now, let me admit that I háve looked into it. Is it a 1423 50 | During sleep it makes less havoc, but when men are full of 1424 18 | the Kings, or Agrippa, the healer of the people's strife, 1425 31 | of drugs, whereo many be healing, mingled in the cup, and 1426 72 | should find the situation healthier, he said, and should get 1427 43 | so, tell me who was that healthy, unblemished, intelligent, 1428 78 | presence of her own son he heaped insults, such as he might 1429 35 | be found on any shore in heaps and multitudes, and are 1430 65 | earth and the household hearths of all men are holy to all 1431 98 | actually gave them with my hearty support. ~ 1432 50 | generates a vapo ur, and the heat of the air thus compressed 1433 73 | nothing less than a sign from heave n. He then revealed to me 1434 64 | and joyous, majestic and heavenly and of the world above us. 1435 4 | Homer makes Paris reply to Hector:~[GREEK]~[GREEK]~which I 1436 64 | in its zeal to reach the heights of wisdom, the Platonic 1437 98 | intestate he will be his heir-at-law, whatever he may be in point 1438 73 | simply because it was no fair heiress that was offered me, but 1439 92 | the hand of the richest heiresses, is also content with this 1440 31 | Aeolus his windbags, nor Helen her mixing bowl, nor Circe 1441 64 | heaven and the lords of hell grant you the hatred of 1442 32 | as though I had bought hellebore or hemlock or opium o r 1443 32 | had bought hellebore or hemlock or opium o r any other of 1444 17 | Oea with one slave,' and t hen only a very few words later 1445 | Hence 1446 47 | victims you mentioned were hens! Were they to count the 1447 50 | a choking sensation, the herald of epilepsy. But if it reaches 1448 88 | earth, among t he springing herbage, the trailing vine-shoots 1449 68 | of any of their father's heritage. When she saw that nothing 1450 | hers 1451 | herself 1452 46 | are you silent? Why do you hesitate? Why look round? If he does 1453 23 | Nay, I should not have hesitated to expend every farthing 1454 10 | having died, thou art as Hesperus giving~new light unto the 1455 29 | fisherman take his place and hew his timber? Or did you infer 1456 4 | other philosophers that t hey were comely of countenance 1457 70 | young man of the elegance w hich you attribute to him, you 1458 74 | boyhood, ere he became so hideously bald, the ready servant 1459 50 | the Greeks, who call it hiera nosos, the holy sickness. 1460 41 | every animal, that he is the high-priest of every god? Do you bring 1461 26 | Oromazes established it, high-priestess of the powers of heaven. 1462 64 | school has explored regions higher than heaven itself and has 1463 31 | small pebbles from their hilltops into the sea, and there 1464 54 | it were proved up to the hilt, would not prejudice me 1465 101| may approach his mother himsel f for the future; he has 1466 102| the accused! Give him some hint to follow! Give him even 1467 103| have smitten my adversary hip and thigh and vanquished 1468 3 | shamelessness worthy of its hire. ~It is a recognized practice 1469 74 | this accusation, who has hired advocates and bought witnesses. 1470 30 | tragic poets and from the historians, had I not noticed ere now 1471 71 | mother's letter hastily flew hither from Rome, fearing that, 1472 101| name of Pudentilla. The ho nourable Coninus Celer, 1473 43 | are certain divine powers holding a position and possessing 1474 96 | some as he drew near on his homeward journey, some written while 1475 87 | him without having read it honestly as it was written! Let him 1476 62 | character and recognized honesty. The work was assisted by 1477 11 | divine Hadrian, when he honoured the tomb of his friend the 1478 85 | fourteen years of widow hood! The viper, I am told, reaches 1479 77 | obstacles in his attempt to hoodwink the weak Pontianus and the 1480 30 | sickles, but to be caught on hooks. Finally, when he is speaking 1481 57 | evidence of a gorging brute, a hopeless glutton, named Junius Crassus, 1482 13 | did he declaim against the horrid nature of my offence. `The 1483 64 | dwellers in the tomb, all the horrors of the sepulchre, although 1484 21 | bull, to the lion? lf the horse is strong in the possession 1485 22 | chariots drawn by four white horses and their cloa ks embroidered 1486 95 | Caesar with its warmth, Hortensius with its arrangement, Calvus 1487 10 | for concealing the name Hostia beneath the pseudonym of 1488 28 | have endeavoured to arouse hostility against me, with their misquotation 1489 57 | sense of smell. For what hound, what vulture hovering in 1490 57 | the smoke, he surpasses hounds and vultures in the keenn 1491 36 | learning even at the eleventh hour. Let him read the words 1492 9 | thou in boyhood's golden hours~mayst deck the flower of 1493 46 | the appearance of such a housefull? ~ 1494 18 | them the honour of their houses and the wealth of the state; 1495 57 | what hound, what vulture hovering in the Alexandrian sky, 1496 92 | restore the slaves, leave the howe, abandon the estates. Virginity 1497 43 | predict the future. ~But howsoever these things may be, if 1498 97 | would die in a few mont hs. The rest of the prophecy 1499 31 | widespread that you mig ht have been believed. But 1500 78 | timidity, you are so frig htened at the sight of steel, that 1501 30 | incense and threads of diverse hues, and, in addition to these,


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