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Caius Petronius Satyricon Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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501 5, 139| declaration, which was so awe-inspiring, I shuddered in terror, 502 3, 96| him, clapping its hands in awe-struck admiration, for so heavy 503 2, 56| warning you against being so awkward." Finally, however, we got 504 5, 160| a great tent with blue awnings sprinkled with silver stars. 505 1, 26| player and the crashing brass awoke everybody.~ ~The Drunkards ~ 506 5, 157| Where voices mingle with the babbling stream,~And whispering breezes 507 5, 145| half-eaten bodies of their babes in their bosoms, were found! ( 508 5, 145| the peculiar story of the Bacchanalian cult which was brought to 509 5, 160| figures, five Finns and five Bacchanals, but their movements, though 510 1, 19| many women, who resembled Bacchantes, each of whom brandished 511 2, 45| Bacchus-happy, Bacchus-drunk, and Bacchus-dreaming, reciting, in the meantime, 512 2, 45| impersonated Bacchus-happy, Bacchus-drunk, and Bacchus-dreaming, reciting, 513 2, 45| basket, and impersonated Bacchus-happy, Bacchus-drunk, and Bacchus-dreaming, 514 4, 112| deed. His hired servant backed him up in his protest, as 515 5, 138| descend, and Apollo, atremble~Backs up his horses and turns 516 3, 93| against their fir bows.~Then backward we look: towards the rocks 517 3, 95| might overhear our plans, I bade him hush his complaints 518 4, 127| now, it was treacherous, baffling their steps and their footing~ 519 1, 15| pulling the strap off his bag, he began to lash me very 520 5, 151| fashioned in the likeness of bag-pipers," a fine instance of clarity 521 2, 31| a slave stood by with a bagful from which the players were 522 5, 144| they threw purses or little bags clinking with money into 523 2, 62| iron ring means credit! Bah! A draggled fox is a fine 524 4, 108| I saw in the gallery at Baiae, said to me, in my dream -- 525 2, 57| the house of Nasta, the bailiff." "What's that?" demanded 526 2, 57| codicil, then the names of his bailiffs, and that of a freedwoman 527 2, 57| of a porter banished to Baioe, a steward who was standing 528 6 | m'accabler de ses impurs baisers.~[The soldier ordered the 529 4, 113| the struggling catch on baited hooks. Then some sea-birds 530 1, 7| fisherman, who, unless he baits his hook with what he knows 531 5, 152| Four and Twenty Blackbirds Baked in a Pie."~The diners, startled 532 5, 145| lodging houses, cook shops, bakeries, spelt-mills and like institutions 533 5, 145| the theatres.~Pergulae -- Balconies, where harlots were shown.~ 534 2, 31| sudden we caught sight of a bald-headed old fellow, rigged out in 535 4, 111| arouse more sympathy as bald-pates. What's the use of seeking 536 3, 86| course, and, my revenge balked, I returned to my lodging-house 537 2, 31| chamber-pot, the other counted the balls; not those which bounced 538 5, 155| maintenance, or even "heart balm" and the consequent breach 539 5, 156| and gagged, his eyes were bandaged, he was stretched out on 540 2, 51| Twaddle of this sort was being bandied about when Trimalchio came 541 5, 152| palmiest days. Four negro banjo players and as many jubilee 542 5, 152| Blackbirds" broke forth from the banjoists and singers. Four waiters 543 5, 140| awaiting her return. She banked her fire with broken reeds, 544 5, 156| of many of its members: bankers, civil service officials, 545 2, 42| would guess that he was bankrupt, he advertised an auction 546 4, 127| rivers~That cling to their banks, but unconquered is Caesar! 547 5, 137| intent, a pauper's sin's not banned~As of another! Unto thee 548 2, 75| guest, as you know. Show a banquet-hall, too, if you can, and the 549 5, 156| and this was known as the "baptism by fire."~In the case of 550 6 | substituted social customs for barbarism. He invented the lyre and 551 5, 152| syncopating jazz of the Barbary Coast of our times. The 552 4, 119| help me drag the bellowing bard ashore, I laid hands upon 553 2, 36| would not be displayed, he bared his right arm, adorned with 554 2, 61| among men! I take my stroll bareheaded and owe no man a copper 555 2, 31| water to wash his hands, barely moistened his fingers, and 556 2, 72| it comes to taking off a barker or a mule driver, there' 557 5, 145| 23, De Ritu Nupt.). The Barmaid (Copa), attributed to Virgil, 558 5, 138| naked from his foundered barque,~Some shipwrecked mariner 559 5, 145| public executioner, the barracks for foreign soldiers quartered 560 3, 101| found the doors carefully barred. The public slave loosened 561 6 | sowing seed, as it were, upon barren rocks, they enjoyed a short-lived 562 4, 125| Nile, I can see now thy barriers groaning~And Actium's gulf 563 2, 43| are born under Capricorn. Bartenders and pumpkin-heads are born 564 3, 84| gleeful service gives~But basely flies when ruin o'er you 565 2, 51| business, there's no call to be bashful about it. None of us was 566 5, 145| PROSTITUTION.~There are two basic instincts in the character 567 5, 156| akin to the one forming a basis of this note, that it is 568 Int, 4| and in 1800 we find him at Basle attached to the staff of 569 3, 96| you better than the whole bathful," he remarked, when the 570 6 | delicate Anacreon, praising his Bathylle, and the valiant Alceus 571 1, 30| dinner (at Trimalchio's,) but battered as we were, flight seemed 572 5, 153| these verses recast from Battiades, lest thou shouldst credit 573 4, 127| emboldened, to follow, the battle-flags, Caesar~Commanded; and boldly 574 4, 128| left arm she guards with a battle-scarred shield scored by weapons,~ 575 2, 59| emerald green, the glass bauble, what mean they to thee?~ 576 2, 79| that you've something to bawl for, but as I started to 577 1, 15| was lying away from the beach, and the master had not, 578 2, 34| it were, upon the bronze beak of a ship, whereon was inscribed:~ 579 2, 71| trail to buy that glass bean for you; if I had a daughter, 580 2, 70| me, there was a haunch of bear-meat as a side dish, Scintilla 581 2, 44| but in his place a great bearded giant, with bands around 582 4, 118| and the helmsman lost his bearings and did not know what course 583 3, 96| t know his name, but he bears a bad reputation, so they 584 5, 145| had an able defender in Beasley) is charged, by Suetonius, 585 2, 82| nauseating, when Trimalchio, beastly drunk by now, bethought 586 4, 123| African hammon is covered by beaters, for fear~Some beast that 587 6 | ancients realized their beau ideal or archetype of go-between 588 6 | And again he says: 'Your beauteous form is destitute of intelligence; 589 4, 103| where the earth has been beautified by the conquest of the plough, 590 4, 106| longer? What if we should be becalmed? What if we were struck 591 Int, 2| susceptible heart."~c -- Beck, in his paper, "The Age 592 3, 84| or lowers;~When good luck beckons, then your friend his gleeful 593 5, 145| Roman patricians to have a bed-fellow of the same sex. Cicero, 594 2, 81| a store-room upstairs, a bed-room where I sleep myself, a 595 2, 81| Four dining-rooms, twenty bed-rooms, two marble colonnades, 596 2, 75| twentieth, and a bed and bedclothes to boot. I'm making Fortunata 597 4, 123| effeminates, flowing of locks,~Bedecked with an infinite number 598 3, 98| fastened my belt to the bedstead which stood alongside of 599 2, 43| well-hung wenchers and those who bedung both sides of the wall. 600 2, 60| tunic. Then there's the bee: in my opinion, they're 601 2, 39| vetches on Aries, a piece of beef on Taurus, kidneys and lamb' 602 5, 149| and a couple of bottles of beer, or wine, if he so desired. 603 2, 60| together, and a bundle of beet -- beta -- the Greek letter 604 2, 70| livers cooked well done, beets, of course, and whole-wheat 605 6 | not what fatality, which befalls the most worthy things. 606 1, 25| buttocks, and the next, he befouled us so with his stinking 607 5, 142| pursuit. Although they were befuddled with wine and lust they 608 5, 133| been affronted, I will not begrudge a prescription to one as 609 3, 84| just as I stood. Had I not begrudged my enemy such a triumph, 610 1, 20| the inn, in person, and begs permission to speak with 611 4, 104| at these conclusions, and beguiled my uneasy spirit, I covered 612 5, 148| sighs or your hand; (you behave) as if you were taking the 613 5, 145| to an increase of her ill behaviour. They used to shut the woman 614 1, 5| which sons are ordered to behead their own fathers; responses 615 5, 141| universe bows at his slightest behest,~For Jove is a prisoner 616 5, 133| disappointment, but as it is I am beholden to your impotence, for by 617 5, 140| and, thus armed, began to belabor the pugnacious brute. Nor 618 3, 93| tenth harvest beheld the beleaguered of Troia~Worn out with anxiety, 619 Int, 4| been present at the sack of Belgrade in 1688. That this Du Pin 620 5, 153| given the queen an apple. As beliefs of this type are an integral 621 Pre | Thurston Peck's rendering of "bell um pomum" by "he's a daisy," 622 5, 150| RESTITVTAE. ANIMAE. DVLCISSIMAE.~BELLATOR. AVG. LIB. CONIVGI. CARISSIMAE.~ 623 4, 128| the serpent-haired Fury, Bellona the Savage,~Megoera with 624 2, 62| curly-headed onion," he bellowed, "are the Saturnalia here, 625 2, 48| they would beat up those belly-robbing grafters till they looked 626 6 | chin was beardless, he was beloved by all; but, when he passed 627 Int, 1| and the glossary of St. Benedict Floriacensis cites the passage ' 628 6 | Nicomedes, and recounting the benefits which Rome owed to that 629 Int, 2| heart noble, upright, and benevolent men, and as in the writings 630 5, 150| fears shall fools alone benumb! By the ear Death pulls 631 5, 145| shall come into what I bequeath them subject to this condition, 632 2, 81| ll also come into another bequest shortly. That's what my 633 5, 140| scattered all over the floor and bereft, I suppose, of their leader, 634 5, 135| and the stately plane~And berry-laden laurel. A brook's wimpling 635 4, 103| with me. I have taken a berth on a vessel which will probably 636 5, 145| Saguntines ate human flesh when besieged by Hannibal, and they had 637 2, 31| spectacle afforded by this beslippered paterfamilias playing with 638 1, 28| changed mounts, and, having bestridden my comrade, nearly drove 639 2, 82| Trimalchio, beastly drunk by now, bethought himself of a new and singular 640 1, 22| for not only would we not betray any secrets to the rabble, 641 4, 124| change, and~Possession's betrayer, dost own thyself crushed 642 1, 15| lay hands upon, for the betterment of the common stock. Lycas 643 2, 62| up and don't annoy your betters, who don't even know that 644 6 | had drunk an aphrodisiacal beverage, is occupied with Quartilla 645 5, 141| and, to my stupefaction, bewailed the death of the goose, 646 Int, 4| the text, is unknown to bibliographers and is supposed to be fictitious.~ 647 2, 63| broke in, "Cut out the bickering and let's have things pleasant 648 5, 145| exotic timbrels and girls bidden stand for hire at the circus." 649 2, 42| roasted whole in their shaggy Bides, bakers' pastries, birds, 650 5, 145| attended at the door with bidets for ablution. Pimps sought 651 6 | woman!"~IV.~Embasicetas fut bientot au comble de ses voeux.~ 652 5, 155| in our courts as Ambrose Bierce's definition of "husband," 653 5, 150| of Venus (Veneris tenere bigas)."~But a still better example 654 6 | wonderfully expended all his bile in depicting, as hideous 655 Int, 2| suffers from the multitude of bill-boards, so to speak, who lashes 656 4, 127| avalanche icy roars down like a billow of ocean;~Earth lay overwhelmed 657 2, 72| fleet held his course on the billowy deep"; never before had 658 2, 61| you gaping at now, like a billy-goat in a vetch-field?"~ 659 6 | those ropes by which it binds its fellow citizens. Also 660 Int, 4| account given by his Spanish biographer. In his preface, dedicated 661 5, 153| too much! And then -- to bite a piece off an apple, and 662 5, 144| be bitten in biting the biters. "Everything that we do," 663 6 | embraces of Nicomedes, King of Bithynia; moreover, after his triumph 664 5, 144| that he might be bitten in biting the biters. "Everything 665 5, 144| Eumolpus that he might be bitten in biting the biters. "Everything 666 6 | were distinguished by their bitterness against the sex. Euripides 667 6 | pure guesswork. It is a bizarre method of judging the morals 668 5, 160| stars. A lantern lighted a black-board on which the order of the 669 Int, 3| pandering, the blear-eyed and black-toothed slave, teasing a little 670 4, 111| that nothing can look blacker against these poor young 671 3, 93| hung wavering deep in the blackest despair.~Apollo commanded! 672 2, 31| playing. After relieving his bladder, he called for water to 673 1, 20| be alarmed! She neither blames your mistake nor does she 674 4, 126| The Lord of the Shades blanched with fear, at this bolt 675 4, 117| wound to me, every artful blandishment which the wanton woman employed, 676 1, 15| What's going on here, a blanket-wedding?" Nor did he confine himself 677 1, 23| change of front, stared blankly at each other and then at 678 5, 154| purposes of nature, and of blasting in the bud the hopes of 679 3, 96| stand and freeze~ In icy blasts, when near a cozy fire?~ 680 2, 57| compelled to jump through blazing hoops while grasping a huge 681 2, 32| his favorite, a withered, blear eyed slave, even more repulsive 682 2, 61| side, I'd have stopped his bleating long ago if I'd been sitting 683 Int, 4| war did not die out until Bleau, in 1670-71, printed his 684 5, 132| sluttish? Have I some natural blemish that disfigures my beauty? 685 6 | intoxicated; you see on their blemished and emaciated bodies, the 686 4, 127| The Quirites from battle blench! Cowed by the breath of 687 5, 145| fool came to him with a blennorrhoeal infection! The ancient jest 688 2, 68| recitation or a song. The gods bless us, how the green figs have 689 4, 113| such lustrous charm~And blighted are the locks of Spring 690 5, 145| discover its beauties; though blinder than Hypoesea herself thou 691 3, 93| As even their eyes: now a blinding beam kindles the billows,~ 692 5, 145| Noctiluae -- Night walkers.~Blitidae -- A very low class deriving 693 5, 129| although I daily crammed my bloated carcass to overflowing with 694 2, 78| took her off the auction block and made her a woman among 695 4, 128| wounds 'neath her helmet blood-clotted.~Her left arm she guards 696 4, 124| my Tisiphone bathed her blood-lusting body~Since Sulla's sword 697 5, 156| men, one of them young and blooming, the other old, with sallow 698 5, 138| give heed to my mandates;~Blossoming earth, when I will it, must 699 4, 110| If only they had really blotched up their foreheads with 700 4, 112| over my whole countenance, blotting out every feature in a sooty 701 2, 57| pleasure, rope-dancers and horn blowers; all other entertainments 702 2, 68| an impersonation of a man blowing a trumpet, and when he had 703 6 | slay her, and Calypso, full blown goddess as she was, was 704 2, 46| Gawd's truth, we're only blown-up bladders strutting around, 705 2, 79| no longer. "Habinnas," he blubbered, "as you hope to enjoy your 706 5, 160| two Kerdons, one is that blue-eyed fellow, the neighbor of 707 5, 130| maid smiled broadly at this blunt speech. "Don't have such 708 2, 71| the more beautiful for its blushes.~ ~Fortunata and Habinnas ~ 709 1, 30| him with savage eyes and blustering mien, and, catching sight 710 2, 44| stalking their game with boar-spears, and all the paraphernalia 711 1, 15| the following morning, and boarded the wreck, a thing easy 712 4, 118| put off in their little boats to salvage their booty, 713 6 | pleasantries of Erasmus, of Boccaccio, and all the others, against 714 5, 135| instead?" and throwing myself bodily into her arms, I revelled 715 5, 145| had its origin among the Boeotians, and John Addington Symonds 716 Int, 4| for English readers is in Bohn's translation, in which, 717 6 | Catullus put it into Latin and Boileau into French. Here follows 718 5, 160| listening to your grumbling and boiling over with temper, as you 719 2, 77| the place ring with their boisterous peals of laughter; others 720 5, 160| preserved in the Spanish "bolero" and the Neapolitan "tarantella." 721 2, 67| that it was only a straw bolster, no heart, no guts, nothing! 722 2, 36| himself was carried in and bolstered up in a nest of small cushions, 723 4, 126| blanched with fear, at this bolt of his brother's,~Sank back, 724 1, 6| windy and high-sounding bombast, a recent immigrant to Athens, 725 6 | these mysteries of the Bona Dea, where the young and 726 4, 121| sesterces in estates and bonds; such a horde of his slaves 727 2, 69| the chickens had all been boned. Just at that instant, however, 728 2, 67| And as for the long-haired booby, he never got back his own 729 2, 50| because you, who can talk book-foolishness, won't. You don't belong 730 4, 110| Ignorance and Awe, the toiling boor,~To Ceres, from his harvest, 731 2, 75| a bed and bedclothes to boot. I'm making Fortunata my 732 2, 78| palace I'll see that this booted Cassandra's tamed, so help 733 5, 145| under ground, they set up booths on either side of these 734 2, 45| me, I'm a bit groggy; the booze has gone to my head."~ 735 6 | partiality for gallantry, has borne witness to the constancy 736 Bib | Bourdelot~~~~Paris~~~~1677.~~~~~~Boschius~~~~Amsterdam~~~~1677.~~~~~~ 737 4, 127| And pacified billows of Bosphorus worshipped! Disgraceful 738 5, 145| seek their sponsors in the Botanical Gardens and on the Luneta. 739 1, 15| vexation, but the thing which bothered me most of all, was the 740 5, 152| nothing if not reminiscent of Boulevard Clichy and Montmartre in 741 2, 31| the balls; not those which bounced back and forth from hand 742 2, 81| tells me. If I can extend my boundaries so as to join Apulia, I' 743 5, 130| cheeks, almost met at the boundary line between a pair of eyes 744 4, 115| her hand to receive the bounty of their host. Refreshed 745 5, 153| wife, together with faded bouquets and half-eaten apples." 746 Bib | Amsterdam~~~~1669.~~~~~~Bourdelot~~~~Paris~~~~1677.~~~~~~Boschius~~~~ 747 2, 47| Hercules, I don't; and what a boy-lover he was! Saw a virgin in 748 5, 145| a word which signified "bracelet." These copulators could 749 2, 71| Fortunata then removed the bracelets from her pudgy arms and 750 6 | Ipsa Venus magico religatum brachia nodo~Perdocuit, multis non 751 5, 144| himself was lying and after bracing himself by putting his hands 752 Int, 2| Melos. Friedlaender, in bracketing Cumis, has not taken this 753 2, 79| for I'm not one of your braggarts!"~ 754 3, 96| hanging on their rough and brambly sprays~ Suffice our hunger' 755 5, 145| which, decked out with olive branches and sacred vestments, he 756 4, 111| the faces of free men the brand-marks of a punishment which was 757 4, 110| made by the letters on the branding-iron! If only they had really 758 4, 128| right hand~A flaming torch brandishes, kindling a flame that will 759 4, 128| Of Ares, his mighty spear brandishing! Phoebus espouses~The cause 760 2, 61| for him, but you're only a brat with the milk still in your 761 1, 13| even when you swived it bravely, never entered the lists 762 2, 56| household chanting:~Oh bravo~Oh bravissimo~in chorus, and he would 763 3, 100| carried into the midst of the brawl by two chair-men, for he 764 5, 141| You villain, are you so brazen that you can speak?" she 765 1, 13| had prepared anything for breakfast, the boy sat down upon the 766 2, 61| have you? Then eat two breakfasts and two dinners a day. I' 767 3, 93| portents: Where Tenedos steep breaks the ocean~Where great surging 768 3, 93| re-echoed~The wooden mass breathed out a fear that was not 769 6 | with voices of Stentor, breathing out at the same time the 770 2, 61| Hercules, I ain't, but worms breed in tender flesh. Look at 771 5, 157| babbling stream,~And whispering breezes play."~Sir Theodore 772 5, 150| Philosophic dogmas concerning the brevity and uncertainty of life 773 6 | domination is strewn with so many briars that one would never be 774 4, 123| of Mars,~Our quirites are bribed; and for plunder and promise 775 1, 30| previously decked out the bridal-bed with a suggestive drapery. 776 1, 30| the child's head in the bridal-veil, the catamite, holding a 777 6 | smooth-faced ingle train~(Anointed bridegroom!) hardly fain~Hast e'er 778 2, 35| honey were served on little bridges soldered fast to the platter, 779 5, 134| But my apology amounts briefly to this; if you will grant 780 6 | Megeres is often to encounter brigands and assassins: what a spectacle! 781 3, 97| goose, and the duck in his bright-colored plumes~Must nourish the 782 4, 126| of Saturn whose glory~Was brightened by feats of my armies and 783 4, 115| burial, saw a light shining brightly among the tombs, and heard 784 4, 122| they should gleam with the brilliancy woven into the fabric. Homer 785 6 | hair upon it, shines more brilliantly than amber or Sidonian crystal. 786 1, 13| Ascyltos pretended to bristle up and, shaking his fists 787 6 | so smooth, are rough and bristly, and their well-grown thighs 788 1, 15| old flame of his, so he broached the subject of a mutual 789 5, 150| taken a meaning very much broader and less special, than that 790 5, 130| The waiting maid smiled broadly at this blunt speech. "Don' 791 Int, 4| after the publication of his brochure. The fragment will remain 792 2, 44| signifying that this was a brood-sow with her pigs at suck. It 793 2, 38| janitor followed with his broom and swept the silver dish 794 5, 145| girl earned: "give me the brothel-keeper's accounts, the fee will 795 2, 43| a hard head, a shameless brow, and a sharp horn. A great 796 5, 136| Catos with their frowning brows~Condemn a work of fresh 797 5, 145| describing his excursion to Brundisium, narrates his experience, 798 5, 143| Knowing not he must bear the brunt; Ulysses feared the storms~ 799 1, 25| intimidate Ascyltos with a brush dipped in satyrion. Then 800 5, 130| the roots of her hair were brushed back from it; her eyebrows, 801 Int, 4| the reprint at Soleure (Brussels), 1865, consisted of only 802 Int, 3| this aristocracy in all its brutality and greed, it remained for 803 5, 148| Julia to Pompey, Porcia to Brutus. Juno was Jupiter's Ganymede 804 2, 46| in them, but we're only bubbles. And supposing he had not 805 1, 15| to pour down rain by the bucketful, compelling us to run for 806 2, 48| And it would pour down in bucketfuls then or never, and they' 807 6 | with thee.~Virgil Bucol. Ecl. X, 41.~In the minds 808 5, 154| and of blasting in the bud the hopes of future generations. 809 1, 6| private tutor to stifle budding genius. I need not cite 810 3, 88| means in their power to so buffet the lovers of literature 811 4, 127| convulsions, with swollen hail buffets them sorely.~Already the 812 6 | a moral inclination, as Buffon says, than a physical matter, 813 2, 56| I suppose, that such low buffoonery was not in keeping with 814 1, 30| keeps a clock and a liveried bugler in his dining-room, so that 815 3, 102| his mouth against the very bugs themselves. (The pair had 816 4, 124| their destruction.~They build out of gold and their palaces 817 5, 145| the upkeep of the public buildings, that it might not contaminate 818 2, 43| whole heaven turns into a bull-calf and the kickers and herdsmen 819 2, 43| weighing down my own destiny. Bulldozers and gluttons are born under 820 5, 138| Quenched is the raging of bulls; and the sun's daughter 821 4, 125| All favors~I gave to the bulwarks of Rome, now, I hate them. 822 1, 30| girl gave her head a slight bump, and raised such a clamor 823 2, 64| apples of all varieties and bunches of grapes against his breast, 824 4, 106| up too long, and paper in bundles will lose its shape. Do 825 2, 59| Our whole lives Fortune bungles up.~Falernian, boy, hand 826 5, 145| enemies; and Juvenal in bursts of satiric indignation, 827 5, 145| district was one of the busiest and most densely populated 828 4, 108| together," she cried, "for a bust of Neptune, which I saw 829 2, 79| as for myself, I'm fairly busting with prosperity. What, grunting-sow, 830 5, 145| street walkers. Secuteleia |~Busturiae -- Tomb frequenters and 831 2, 39| depressed at the prospect of busying ourselves with such vile 832 2, 66| sheep, bleeding them like a butcher. But he didn't get the laugh 833 2, 51| directed that the oldest be butchered, and demanded in a loud 834 2, 43| are born under the Virgin. Butchers and perfumers are born under 835 5, 160| flutterings of a captured butterfly. Her eyes grew dim but in 836 2, 43| school-teachers and rambunctious butters-in are born under that sign." 837 5, 145| custom among kings that, when buying horses, they inspect them 838 2, 42| you get the idea that he buys anything; everything is 839 2, 40| he had often experienced byplay of this sort he explained, " 840 2, 33| in one corner was a large cabinet, in which was a very small 841 5, 140| with their abominable rabid cackling. One tore at my tunic, another 842 Int, 4| no means eradicate this "cacoethes emendandi."~When, circa 843 2, 33| his hair long, holding a caduceus in his hand, entering Rome, 844 5, 145| paederasty shows itself "Caelius loves Aufilenus and Quintus 845 5, 154| parent, to devolve on the Caesars, her favorite sons, the 846 6 | than the maceration and caging of innocent animals.~The 847 5, 154| seacoast of Puteoli and the Caieta, they compare their own 848 4, 123| fields.~Behold other woes and calamities outraging peace!~Wild beasts, 849 1, 15| abuse, so I smiled at my calamity, and very prudently, too, 850 6 | Those disciples of Joseph Calasanz who took their places in 851 3, 93| anxiety, fearing: the honor of Calchas~The prophet, hung wavering 852 5, 152| masterpiece to be given in California. The studio, one of the 853 5, 145| to the rate" (Suetonius, Calig. xi). Alexander Severus 854 6 | Charicles. He is addressing Callicratidas, a passionate lover of young 855 5, 157| found in Horace's ode to Calliope. After the invocation to 856 2, 76| barking brute, which then calmed its fury and became engrossed 857 2, 51| well used to serving up calves boiled whole, in their cauldrons!" 858 6 | desired to slay her, and Calypso, full blown goddess as she 859 6 | deserves the fair."~II.~Ses camarades se saisissent de moi et 860 Bib | corrections)~~~~1670~~~~~~Gaselee (Cambridge)~~~~1915.~~~ ~ 861 5, 145| ancient as the times of Furius Camillus. "There was an ancient law 862 5, 145| beauties of figure are not camouflaged; that which is for sale, 863 4, 123| less vile is seen in the campus of Mars,~Our quirites are 864 6 | Thus it is that the land of Canaan is promised to the seed 865 2, 60| suggestive of business -- ; "canale" -- chased by a dog -- " 866 5, 152| cloud of frightened yellow canaries flew out and perched on 867 2, 56| s no one can do a better cancan, believe me," and he himself 868 2, 68| uproar end in a dog fight, a candelabrum was upset upon the table, 869 2, 68| shops! Who could hold a candle to me except, of course, 870 6 | who keep them."~Si gaudet cantu, nullius fibula durat~Vocem 871 6 | that, like men, women were capable of the greatest crimes and 872 3, 93| this cavern,~Roofed over, capacious enough for a camp. Here 873 2, 44| wearing a short hunting cape in which a design was woven. 874 2, 48| luck, but the jaws of the capitalists are always keeping the Saturnalia. 875 2, 33| him this inscription, in capitals:~BEWARE THE DOG.~My companions 876 3, 92| thousand pounds of gold to the capitol, and that no one may question 877 5, 145| sexes"; Marcus Aurelius (Capitolinus, Life of Marcus Antoninus, 878 2, 70| helping of tripe, liver pate, capped eggs, turnips and mustard. 879 6 | to the odious he-goat of Capri. Who does not admire the 880 2, 43| sons of toil are born under Capricorn. Bartenders and pumpkin-heads 881 2, 39| Sagittarius, a sea lobster on Capricornus, a goose on Aquarius and 882 2, 69| and goose eggs with pastry caps on them, which same Trimalchio 883 4, 118| an instant the waves will capsize the ship! Think! In an instant 884 6 | magistrates, the greatest captains: and who keeps men of all 885 5, 155| else they are taken in."~"Captare" may be defined as to get 886 5, 155| upper hand of someone; and "captari" means to be the dupe of 887 5, 155| of interested flattery; "captator" means a succession of successful 888 5, 149| recourse to the "right of capture," before executing the purpose 889 5, 145| prostitutes (vectigal ex capturis), as a state impost: "he 890 2, 66| that our master had gone to Capua to attend to some odds and 891 2, 80| wine again, bacon, beans, Capuan perfumes, and slaves: Fortunata 892 2, 71| hair-net, which was twenty-four carats fine, she would have us 893 4, 120| which there is nothing but carcasses to be torn at and carrion 894 4, 121| fellow was joking in the care-free way of poets, until he complained, " 895 3, 87| picture-gallery; his face was care-worn, and he seemed, I know not 896 4, 114| on the contrary, if we cared to hear it, he would relate 897 Int, 4| destined for an ecclesiastical career. He received an excellent 898 3, 93| from war, now the crowd, carefree, hastens to worship~And 899 2, 34| he said, "as it is the carelessness of this worthless rascal. 900 4, 120| until we learned from a caretaker that it was Crotona, a very 901 4, 105| of slaves. He carries a cargo consigned to market. He 902 5, 154| In tracing this savage caricature, Petronius had in mind not 903 5, 145| town walls, lying in the Carinae, -- the valley between the 904 5, 153| right into her lap, without caring whether I saw it or not; 905 5, 150| BELLATOR. AVG. LIB. CONIVGI. CARISSIMAE.~AMICI. DVM. VIVIMVS. VIVAMUS.~ 906 5, 138| down a farmer's crop, his cark~Seeks consolation from another, 907 Int, 1| multis et variis rebus hoc carmen refertum est.'~The text, 908 2, 65| little wench. It was no carnal passion, so hear me, Hercules, 909 1, 30| asleep or intent upon some carouse, as they were nowhere to 910 3, 96| And met our wants, our carping plaints to still~Green 911 5, 145| different colors, nor ride in a carriage in the city or in any town, 912 5, 154| and ladies, whose covered carriages are continually driving 913 5, 145| Sat. vi, 331) "some water carrier will come, hired for the 914 4, 120| carcasses to be torn at and carrion crows tearing at them."~ ~ 915 5, 138| you are worn out like a cart-horse at a hill, you have lost 916 6 | of Hector. The ferocious Carthaginians were softened through the 917 Int, 1| English word satyr, but Casaubon, Dacier and Spanheim derive 918 2, 47| Hercules, I do! All in cold cash, too; but I've eaten dog' 919 5, 145| duty of the villicus, or cashier, to keep an account of what 920 2, 64| been knocked off a huge cask, was lowered from the dome 921 2, 33| marble Venus, and a golden casket by no means small, which 922 5, 145| among the Romans," says Dion Cassius, lib. xliii, "which forbade 923 5, 138| another, too.~Death levels caste and sufferers unites,~And 924 5, 151| there were cisterns (or castella, as they were called). From 925 5, 145| frequently in male part.~Casuaria -- Road houses; almost invariably 926 6 | the general opinions and catered to them in order to obtain 927 2, 39| and upon each sign the caterer had placed the food best 928 2, 43| under the Water-Carrier. Caterers and rhetoricians are born 929 4, 123| spoils of the world. Art caters to appetite. Wrasse~From 930 5, 156| between secrecy and death."~Catherine II signed the first edict 931 5, 158| child with spittle. The Catholic priest's ritual, which prescribes 932 5, 145| scrutiny unless she is a Catia who has dispensed with her 933 5, 136| their pain?~"Why will our Catos with their frowning brows~ 934 2, 59| his last nest in the -- cauldron of gluttony base.~India 935 2, 51| calves boiled whole, in their cauldrons!" Then he ordered a cook 936 2, 48| here, who's not worth three Caunian figs and who thinks more 937 5, 145| whom Martial (ix, 69) makes caustic mention:~"I passed the whole 938 5, 160| Eubole of Bitas, and she cautioned her not to let a soul hear 939 4, 105| trapped in the Cyclops' cave: some way out must be found, 940 4, 124| hollowed and now but re-echoing caverns;~While man quarries marble 941 3, 93| war-horse. Unfilled is a cavity left, and this cavern,~Roofed 942 6 | method when she wished to cease being a virgin; she simply 943 5, 154| deny the existence of a celestial power."~ 944 2, 60| passa -- and Attic honey; "cenatoria" -- a dinner toga -- "and 945 1, 14| are much more deserving of censure than I, you who will flatter 946 5, 145| Florentius by name, who strongly censured this practice, to the Emperor, 947 5, 145| as declared by you to the Census Commissioners, of all the 948 5, 152| placed it carefully in the center of the table. The negro 949 2, 43| Mother Earth is in the centre, round as an egg, and all 950 2, 64| propitious!" One was called Cerdo -- business -- , Trimalchio 951 5, 145| respect to thy opinion, Cerinthus), the togaed plebeian's 952 6 | the most worthy things. Cervantes the only philosophic author 953 2, 60| vinegar cruets on top of it; "cervical" -- something soft for the 954 2, 60| the neck -- a piece of the cervix -- neck -- of a sheep was 955 4, 128| check valiant Ares!~Thou, Cesar divine, why delayest thou 956 5, 156| Panionius." Herodotus, viii, ch. 105-6.~Mention of the Galli, 957 4, 117| head the next. Uneasy and chagrined at this new league, I took 958 2, 43| women and fugitives and chain-gangs are born under the Virgin. 959 6 | Prometheus deserved to be chained to Mount Caucasus with the 960 3, 100| midst of the brawl by two chair-men, for he had the gout. He 961 6 | quite so attractive as the Chaldean beauties. For the rest, 962 5, 160| probably not unlike the French "chalhut," danced in the wayside 963 5, 160| order of the program was chalked up in Syriac and Greek. 964 5, 144| promised, but left in his bed chamber a very beautiful daughter 965 5, 152| and one half bottles of champagne allotted to each Silenus 966 5, 145| the mistress is taking no chances, her rights are as carefully 967 2, 56| But nothing could be so changeable as his humor, for one minute 968 2, 67| the lad and put the straw changeling in his place! Believe me 969 1, 9| theme, sung in soul-stirring chant,~In eloquent words such 970 2, 56| actor; the whole household chanting:~Oh bravo~Oh bravissimo~ 971 1, 14| be rid of a troublesome chaperon, so that I could resume 972 2, 64| perimeter was hung with golden chaplets and jars of alabaster filled 973 6 | Lucian puts into the mouth of Charicles. He is addressing Callicratidas, 974 5, 145| society of that period, but Charidemus and Hedylus still dishonor 975 5, 154| to the loftiness of their chariots and the weighty magnificence 976 6 | everywhere a sister for charity. The deaconesses date from 977 Int | Flaubert, in the opinion of Charles Whibley, and, it may be 978 6 | Aspasia who, after having charmed the cultured people of Athens 979 3, 94| surprised that the rabble chases you with rocks. I'm going 980 6 | warrior, to have all the women chasing after him; therefore, his 981 4, 124| Naples and Great Puteoli, a chasm~Deep cloven, and Cocytus 982 5, 154| obedience, he is instantly chastised with three hundred lashes; 983 5, 154| distress which follows and chastises extravagant luxury often 984 6 | Now shall hair-curling chattel scrape~ Thy cheeks: poor 985 4, 127| Inexperience drags all~Its chattels to camp and to battle: as, 986 5, 130| up with this delightful chatter. "Come now, confess, won' 987 4, 123| Resemble the gold that is cheaper than they and ensnare~Extravagance. 988 1, 30| with lying promises, and cheating me out of the night you 989 4, 128| Lentulus, strive not to check valiant Ares!~Thou, Cesar 990 4, 112| right and law, Eumolpus checked the threats of the savage 991 5, 156| served the double purpose of checking haemorrhage, as would a 992 1, 22| begged her to be of good cheer and to make herself perfectly 993 1, 22| tertian ague. The woman cheered up at this promise, and 994 5, 136| of fresh simplicity'?~A cheerful kindness my pure speech 995 1, 24| as she said this, and so cheerfully did she gossip about its 996 5, 152| pleasure of interviewing the chef-caterer who got it up, and he was, 997 5, 141| prisoner in his treasure chest.~In the meantime, she scurried 998 5, 156| Mysian territory which the Chians possess, and is called Atarneus, 999 2, 70| myself. Then there were chick-peas and lupines, all the smooth-shelled 1000 2, 35| after a new custom, the chief place was reserved.~On the 1001 1, 6| you -- teachers -- are chiefly responsible for the decay 1002 4, 124| HUNDRED AND TWENTIETH.~"Three chieftains did fortune bring forth,