Book, Chapter

 1  Pre     |            its highest excellence, may well be the despair of our
 2  Int     |           Charles Whibley, and, it may be added, as genial as Rabelais;
 3  Int,   1|            text, as we possess it, may be divided into three divisions:
 4  Int,   1|          follows that this passage may have belonged to Book Sixteen,
 5  Int,   1|     interpolation of Fulgentius we may hazard the opinion that
 6  Int,   2|        vague though it is, to what may have gone before.~Haley, "
 7  Int,   3|          we are concerned with it, may be defined as the literary
 8  Int,   3|      character. The fact that they may be ugly and vulgar the reverse,
 9  Int,   3|            in fiction is made. One may write a successful book
10  Int,   4|         rare to do us any harm, we may admit that the pastiche
11    1,   6|    exercise. A dignified and, if I may say it, a chaste, style,
12    1,   7|     appetizing to the little fish, may wait all day upon some rock,
13    1,   8|            Then, that their wishes may the more quickly be realized,
14    1,   8|          school days. But that you may not imagine that I disapprove
15    1,  14|           know letters, but that I may not stand in the way of
16    1,  15|          which they showed him. As may be readily supposed, I did
17    1,  21|        impulsiveness of youth, you may divulge, to the common herd,
18    1,  29|     proverb, 'Who carried the calf may carry the bull,' as they
19    2,  38|           Let's live then while we may and life is dear."~
20    2,  41|           while ago, what was she! May your genius pardon me, but
21    2,  43|           culture, even at dinner. May the bones of my patron rest
22    2,  48|           nor men take pity on it? May I never have any luck if
23    2,  49|       thing don't happen today, it may tomorrow. That's the way
24    2,  62|            you rat, you toadstool. May I never grow an inch up
25    2,  64|           bowl of wine and cried, "May the gods be propitious!"
26    2,  77|    promising, honest, thrifty lad; may he have no bad luck, so
27    2,  78|          re born, I will! That you may realize how seriously I
28    2,  78|          And furthermore, that she may know I can repay a bad turn,
29    3,  92|      temple to make a vow, that he may achieve eloquence or bathe
30    3,  92|         promises a gift if only he may bury a rich relative; another,
31    3,  92|           capitol, and that no one may question the propriety of
32    3,  97|           went on,) everything one may have lawfully is held cheap
33    3,  98|            bore such a son as you! May your fortune be in keeping
34    3,  98|          found mixed! And that you may not think that all your
35    4, 103|       start for foreign parts, you may come with me. I have taken
36    4, 103|            the cultured. "That you may experience the truth of
37    4, 103|          end my anger with a kiss. May good luck go with us! Get
38    4, 105|           deception, and the pilot may be moved to mercy and grant
39    4, 107|          to do as I direct. As you may gather, from his razor,
40    4, 109|         their heads, that the ship may be freed from the curse!" "
41    4, 113|  laughter-loving lasses.~That thou may'st know that Death is on
42    4, 118|             kiss him while yet you may and snatch this last delight
43    4, 118|          same shore, some passerby may pile some stones over us,
44    4, 122|             This hasty composition may please you, even though
45    4, 123| transported to Rome, that his jaws~May drip with the life blood
46    4, 125|           to forecast~The future I may, without fear, thy petition
47    5, 131|          true votary and, that you may not think I approach this
48    5, 134|         deserve any punishment you may see fit to prescribe. I
49    5, 141|        gold at command anything he may crave~Is his without asking
50    5, 141|         the mysteries, so that you may get back your virility.")~  ~
51    5, 143|           you, Encolpius, and this may come in handy for us, so
52    5, 145|            your heart, so that you may come into the immense legacies
53    5, 145|         Massilian manner. That you may comprehend what this means,
54    5, 145|         appropriate treasures that may well be called royal, --
55    5, 145|        fear that such high fortune may rather master us, than we
56    5, 145|            xiii, 9, "whoever likes may enter here, smeared with
57    5, 145|         brothel, is so called." It may be added, however, that
58    5, 145|            and the eager purchaser may be seduced by shapely hocks,
59    5, 145|           her clothing so that she may be felt all over thoroughly,
60    5, 145|         The destruction of Corinth may well have avenged itself
61    5, 145|       possibility that his mentule may be used as a club by the
62    5, 150|        patron. That goddess, if we may rely upon the authority
63    5, 153|          of one. The truth of this may be established by many passages
64    5, 154|     Pagonius or Tarrasius -- which may impress the ears of the
65    5, 154|           that this vain credulity may often be discovered among
66    5, 155|           are taken in."~"Captare" may be defined as to get the
67    5, 156|       unhappy creatures, that they may the longer serve the purposes
68    5, 156|       disembodied angels, and that may be attained only, through
69    5, 158|           or neophyte, as the case may be, shall be touched with
70    5, 159|        Suetonius, Caligula, 56. It may be added that one of that
71    5, 160|           rub up the polish -- you may thank the lady that I don'
72    5, 160|         late lamented Kylaithis -- may her kinsfolk never forget
73    6     |   courtesan such as I have in mind may have all the public and
74    6     |       unhappy creatures, that they may the longer serve the purposes
75    6     |       should not consider how they may best secure the whole enjoyment
76    6     |          precincts of Venus -- you may make the same use of a woman
77    6     |         semen upon the ground." We may be reproached, perhaps,
78    6     |      vigorous minds that admission may seem ridiculous, but we
79    6     |          loved ones and from it we may judge whether the poetess
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