Book, Chapter

  1  Int,   3|      little attention to this; the man, with them, was the important
  2  Int,   4|    renegade. The Greek's father, a man of some learning, had by
  3    1,   7|            the public taste, young man, and you are a lover of
  4    1,   9|            CHAPTER THE FIFTH.~"The man who emerges with fame, from
  5    1,  15|           superlatively avaricious man, afforded him: he complained,
  6    1,  16|            I myself look upon this man without some emotion, for
  7    1,  16|     something rash, approached the man, as a prospective buyer,
  8    1,  21|           one than it is to find a man! But do not think that I
  9    1,  23|         gave orders that no mortal man should be admitted into
 10    1,  23|            had nothing else of the man about us, and this was an
 11    1,  24|            I put one by you, young man; did you drink so much all
 12    1,  29|            I submitted to my first man? Juno, my patroness, curse
 13    1,  30|       going to find out that I'm a man!" At the soldier's orders,
 14    2,  38|            longer than poor little man. Let's fill 'em up! There'
 15    2,  38|        Trimalchio chimed in:~"Poor man is nothing in the scheme
 16    2,  42|          my part, I don't envy any man anything that was given
 17    2,  43|           he wanted me to become a man among men. No one can show
 18    2,  47|         was a trouble maker and no man. Now his brother was a good
 19    2,  47|           I don't know, but when a man runs away from his own kin,
 20    2,  47|           him a lot of harm, for a man won't prosper when he believes,
 21    2,  47|        every tale that he hears; a man in business, especially.
 22    2,  48|            when I was a boy. For a man, he was one hot proposition!
 23    2,  48|         income's more than another man's fortune. I happen to know
 24    2,  52|           if you like me."~"A poor man and a rich man were enemies,"
 25    2,  52|              A poor man and a rich man were enemies," Agamemmon
 26    2,  52|        began, when: "What's a poor man?" Trimalchio broke in. "
 27    2,  61|          one can jeer at me. I'm a man among men! I take my stroll
 28    2,  61|       stroll bareheaded and owe no man a copper cent. I never had
 29    2,  62|            fools; like master like man's a true saying. I can hardly
 30    2,  66|       where the tombstones are. My man stepped aside amongst them,
 31    2,  68|         with an impersonation of a man blowing a trumpet, and when
 32    2,  69|            gatherers, for the dead man was rated at 50,000, but
 33    2,  70|           says I, if a bear eats a man, shouldn't that be all the
 34    2,  70|          all the more reason for a man to eat a bear? The last
 35    2,  73|             No one can show a dead man a good time. Don't be jealous,
 36    2,  75|           for it's all wrong for a man to deck out his house when
 37    2,  79|          the brains that makes the man, all the rest's bunk. I
 38    3,  84|          The father, son, the rich man, all are here,~But soon
 39    3,  85|            womb, never to become a man; in the slave's prison he
 40    3,  85|          guilty blood, I'm no free man!"~
 41    3,  87|          winds, a white-haired old man entered the picture-gallery;
 42    3,  88|           is certainly true that a man is hated when he declares
 43    3,  88|         have good reason," the old man replied, "to deplore the
 44    3,  88|          frankness pleased the old man, who attempted to comfort
 45    3,  94|            changed. "My dear young man," said he, "today is not
 46    3,  96|        would have thought that the man himself was but an appendage
 47    3,  96|          his own member! Oh such a man! He could do his bit all
 48    3, 101|       desired the death of neither man nor suppliant, and least
 49    3, 102|            him not to kill a dying man. "You might have some reason
 50    4, 104|      possessing it. A solitary old man can scarcely become a serious
 51    4, 104|            this voice, which was a man's, and was only too familiar,
 52    4, 105|          not want to lend the sick man a hand? If bare, what would
 53    4, 106|        good of getting an innocent man into troubles with which
 54    4, 106|          you start? Especially the man at the helm, who stands
 55    4, 106|         think of it! Eumolpus is a man of letters. He will have
 56    4, 108|            see that Epicurus was a man inspired," remarked Eumolpus; "
 57    4, 108|            unlawful for any living man aboard ship to shed hair
 58    4, 109|           his identity, since this man, so keenly observant, had,
 59    4, 110|       punishment? I am not a cruel man; what moves me is this:
 60    4, 111|        task. I believe that I am a man, by no means unknown, and
 61    4, 111|          of their own free will? A man meditates deceit, not satisfaction,
 62    4, 116|          modest eye, did the young man seem uncouth or wanting
 63    4, 116|       everyone wondered how a dead man had found his way to the
 64    4, 117|           governor had been a just man," said he, shaking his head
 65    4, 117|      female catamite, if you are a man!" This disturbed my mind
 66    4, 117|           suddenly come in but the man himself; and he was not
 67    4, 119|          of the earth, awaits this man, or a son who little dreams
 68    4, 119|           great ambitions! See how man rides the waves!" Until
 69    4, 119|         fraud! Only yesterday this man audited the accounts of
 70    4, 119|            an epitaph for the dead man:~HIS FATE WAS UNAVOIDABLE~
 71    4, 120|           you must know that every man whom you will meet in that
 72    4, 121|            had lost a son, a young man of great eloquence and promise,
 73    4, 121|           this reason the poor old man had left his native land
 74    4, 121|            out to do the work of a man, not that of a pack-horse,
 75    4, 122|         poetry; for, the instant a man has composed a verse in
 76    4, 123|            his puberty's bloom~The man child is kidnapped; surrenders
 77    4, 123|           Twas not the defeat of a man! No! The power and the glory~
 78    4, 124|          re-echoing caverns;~While man quarries marble to serve
 79    5, 131|          this year known her first man, I offer you a sister,"
 80    5, 133|            not know whether I am a man or not," (I vainly protested;) "
 81    5, 133|         walk without nerves! Young man, I advise you to beware
 82    5, 134|           offense, for I am only a man, and a young one, too, but
 83    5, 134|     betrayed a trust, I murdered a man, I violated a temple: demand
 84    5, 138|           hag replied, "this young man here was born under an unlucky
 85    5, 138|        tell me what you think of a man who could get up from Circe'
 86    5, 141|            though I had murdered a man? Look here! I'm laying down
 87    5, 141|          them!" "Forgive me, young man," said OEnothea, when she
 88    5, 141|          your sacrilege!"~The rich man can sail in a favoring gale~
 89    5, 145|              She is chaste whom no man has solicited," said Ovid (
 90    5, 145|            as each earned with one man. A clause was also added
 91    5, 145|         that which pertaineth to a man, neither shall a man put
 92    5, 145|          to a man, neither shall a man put on a woman's garment:
 93    5, 145|           among sailors: "Englisha man he catcha da boy, Johnnie
 94    5, 145|         lib. i, 24)~"You invite no man but your bathing companion,
 95    5, 148|          them than it is to find a man."~Quartilla is here smarting
 96    5, 148|          difficult to marry a real man." Martial, vii, 57.~"No
 97    5, 150|            have finished supper, a man carries round in a coffin
 98    5, 153|       conduct of the healthy young man says:~"You shall rise up
 99    5, 153|           the household -- a young man from Elis, one of the Olympian
100    5, 154|           just resentment of every man who recollects that their
101    5, 156|        means, and among them, this man.~"Hermotimus, however, was
102    5, 156|            any of thine, that of a man thou hast made me nothing?~"'
103    5, 156|         Most High,' said the elder man. 'He who looks on a woman
104    5, 156|       sinners doe' asked the young man. 'Knowest thou not,' replied
105    5, 156|         further inquired the young man. 'Come and see,' said the
106    5, 156|        Come and see,' said the old man. 'He took his companion
107    5, 156|           the Flagellants, the old man announced to his companion: '
108    5, 156|            as snow.' And the young man, before he had time to ask
109    5, 160|          Domitian. "One could do a man no graver injury than to
110    5, 160|           Pro Murena, and adds: "a man cannot dance unless he is
111    6     |            you have to deal with a man.~Fighting men have in all
112    6     |            already married another man.~The best proof that, during
113    6     |            the eternal sagacity of man has failed to take notice
114    6     |           kings of the people, the man who adopts the word father
115    6     |          the universe. The soul of man was part and parcel of divinity
116    6     |           It is not given to every man to go to Corinth"; there
117    6     |          the conduct of that young man who had recourse to a public
118    6     | accouchement, or the entrance of a man who had touched an impure
119    6     |        occupied with modelling his man and woman, he was invited
120    6     |        never-ending succession: no man can boast of having been
121    6     |          of having been created by man alone; two venerable names
122    6     |            in such slight regard a man who, during a long life,
123    6     |       interpreter of truth -- 'One man is meaner than another in
124    6     |         heritage of the full-grown man, possess no attraction for
125    6     |           of such, like those of a man, are hard and coarse; their
126    6     |          was twice as great as the man's. I think that those who
127    6     |       should usurp the nature of a man, than that man's noble nature
128    6     |         nature of a man, than that man's noble nature should be
129    6     |          to the rude embraces of a man. What comparisons can be
130    6     |       strong disagreeable voice of man? Juvenal has wonderfully
131    6     |           or Hermes gave the first man knowledge; but it was enveloped
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License