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Caius Petronius Satyricon Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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2504 Bib | Lyons~~~~1615.~~~~~~Hadrianides~~~~Amsterdam~~~~1669.~~~~~~ 2505 4, 126| fratricidal~Already he gazed, thou hadst thought! There, silvery 2506 5, 156| double purpose of checking haemorrhage, as would a thermo-cautery, 2507 5, 145| is smooth and the swollen haemorrhoids are incised, the surgeon 2508 Int, 1| sed video te totum in illa haerere, quae Troiae halosin ostendit ( 2509 6 | with livid complexions and haggard eyes, with voices of Stentor, 2510 5, 142| to my heels, with the old hags in full pursuit. Although 2511 6 | delight the while: ~Now shall hair-curling chattel scrape~ Thy cheeks: 2512 2, 71| anklets and even her yellow hair-net, which was twenty-four carats 2513 2, 67| And now I'll tell you a hair-raiser myself, though I'm like 2514 2, 31| playing ball with some long haired boys. It was not so much 2515 1, 25| prick my cheeks with her hairpin, and the little girl would 2516 6 | rough beard, hard breast, hairy body, and the strong disagreeable 2517 5, 153| mind your kissing Cymbalium half-a-dozen times, you only disgraced 2518 5, 141| had disappeared, OEnothea, half-drunk by this time, looked at 2519 3, 91| pleasure in spite of his half-hearted resistance. Nor was he displeased 2520 2, 68| scarf and teasing her with a half-loaf of bread which he had put 2521 1, 15| of his, situated near the halfway point of the journey, and, 2522 2, 33| Trimalchio's beard. I asked the hall-porter what pictures were in the 2523 4, 126| Unwonted, his face in a halo of golden flame shining."~ 2524 4, 128| poison, her features are haloed with serpents,~Her hideous 2525 Int, 1| illa haerere, quae Troiae halosin ostendit (Chapter 89), as 2526 1, 6| past was broken, eloquence halted and was stricken dumb. Since 2527 2, 55| have been! He took a little hammer out of his tunic and beat 2528 3, 83| state, with ten wagons; he hammered on the door for a short 2529 1, 30| furtive kisses. [A thunderous hammering was heard at the door, while 2530 4, 123| gold; and remote~African hammon is covered by beaters, for 2531 4, 126| craven this sword arm shall hamper~And take not a stroke in 2532 5, 156| morals of their maids and hampered the sodomitical hankerings, 2533 2, 70| greedily snatched three handfuls, we had ham, too, but we 2534 5, 160| that what you see is the handiwork of Athena and not that of 2535 3, 100| short time before, when the handle had been broken and jerked 2536 1, 20| did you? I am Quartilla's handmaid: Quartilla, whose rites 2537 5, 143| Encolpius, and this may come in handy for us, so play your part 2538 5, 145| Tomb frequenters and hangers-on at funerals.~Copae -- Bar 2539 2, 35| our feet and removed the hangnails with wonderful dexterity, 2540 4, 105| learning, aid us! Death himself hangs over us, and he will come 2541 5, 135| lips~brought out a twisted hank of different colored yarns 2542 5, 156| hampered the sodomitical hankerings, active or otherwise, of 2543 5, 153| bosom: for, placed by the hapless girl 'neath her soft vestment, 2544 4, 103| cause of so many unpleasant happenings) and with many tears, I 2545 5, 160| whenever the tiniest bit happens to fall upon the floor, 2546 6 | most passionate and the happiest. Hercules took the maidenheads 2547 4, 111| replied, to rebut this damning harangue, "that nothing can look 2548 4, 117| the treaty permitted the harboring of no old grudges and the 2549 4, 112| was furiously angry at my hardihood, nor was he less enraged 2550 6 | learned and paradoxical Hardouin to assert that all the works 2551 4, 106| are young and unused to hardship, could endure the filthy 2552 5, 154| deplore their intolerable hardships, and lament in affected 2553 5, 156| and is a feature of the harem life of the Levant to the 2554 5, 157| thinks he hears her playing:~"Hark! Or is this but frenzy's 2555 5, 145| women who had practiced harlotry and men who had practiced 2556 6 | poverty-stricken troubadours singing harmoniously about their beautiful women 2557 5, 145| manners and cross-stringed harp and harper and exotic timbrels 2558 5, 145| cross-stringed harp and harper and exotic timbrels and 2559 5, 140| by Herakles impelled;~The Harpies, too, whose reeking pinions 2560 5, 145| prostitutes.~Citharistriae -- Harpists. They were almost invariably 2561 4, 113| lose headway, one tried to harpoon the leaping fish, another 2562 4, 106| curling-iron, can we? We can't harrow our foreheads with scars, 2563 6 | which he complains of the harshness of Ligurinus. The tender 2564 5, 154| confidence to the predictions of haruspices, who pretend to read in 2565 Int, 2| have gone before.~Haley, "Harvard Studies in Classical Philology," 2566 2, 51| dunghill cock, a pentheus hash, or little things like that, 2567 5, 145| noscetur e naso quanta sit hasta viro," which Joan of Naples 2568 5, 142| discover by none.~One moment I hasten; the next it is torture 2569 3, 93| now the crowd, carefree, hastens to worship~And pours from 2570 2, 42| snatched off an Incubo's hat and found a treasure! For 2571 | hath 2572 6 | that arose the implacable hatred between the two families. 2573 4, 113| persist in our minds. Factious hatreds died out amidst universal 2574 5, 145| she contended. Her natural haughtiness had caused her to lose valuable 2575 2, 76| painting, and when I tried to haul the swimmer out, I was dragged 2576 2, 70| reminded me, there was a haunch of bear-meat as a side dish, 2577 5, 130| servant should possess the hauteur of the mistress and the 2578 5, 145| appeal to Krafft-Ebbing or Havelock Ellis. But there is still 2579 2, 49| trim the claws of a flying hawk, and no snake ever hatched 2580 Int, 1| interpolation of Fulgentius we may hazard the opinion that the beginning 2581 6 | often involved in the most hazardous enterprises, such as abducting 2582 5, 141| incantations, she threw hazel-nuts into the wine and drew her 2583 6 | herself up to the odious he-goat of Capri. Who does not admire 2584 6 | as peasant-girls to jape~ He-whore! Thy Lord's delight the 2585 6 | Again, boars mate with sows, he-wolves with shewolves, neither 2586 4, 113| calm had caused her to lose headway, one tried to harpoon the 2587 4, 128| wrangling in their desire to heap their own riches upon Eumolpus 2588 4, 127| men, horses, arms, fall in heaps, in confusion.~And see! 2589 6 | words with beauty, and his hearers gaze upon him with delight, 2590 3, 92| CHAPTER THE EIGHTY-EIGHTH.~Heartened up by this story, I began 2591 4, 117| breasts and rends our very heartstrings~Is not that bird the charming 2592 6 | countries where heaven shows its heat in the beauty of the sex, 2593 5, 142| down~To soothe me, and eyes heavy-laden with slumber to lull~When 2594 5, 156| Testament proves that the Hebrew authorities of the time 2595 5, 139| like she on Attic soil,~Of Hecate's pure worship worthy she!~ 2596 4, 123| calling of Venus; delayed and hedged round~The hurrying passage 2597 4, 117| No doubt the memory of Hedyle haunted his mind, and the 2598 5, 145| period, but Charidemus and Hedylus still dishonor the cities 2599 5, 138| see in the world must give heed to my mandates;~Blossoming 2600 5, 153| I took my sister, little heeding~The net I for myself was 2601 5, 153| she wore -- ~From head to heel she seemed t'admire~In raptures 2602 2, 42| of his, they're all well heeled. See the fellow reclining 2603 1, 24| not committed a crime so heinous as to merit death by torture." 2604 Int, 1| I~THE SATYRICON.~Heinsius and Scaliger derive the 2605 4, 120| reason that no one who has heirs is invited to dinner or 2606 5, 145| Female Slaves Making Claim to Heirship). Procuration also, had 2607 4, 122| concludes that he has scaled Helicon! Take those who are worn 2608 5, 145| long member." Lampridius (Heliogab. v), "At Rome, his principal 2609 3, 92| Chrysippus purge his brain with hellebore, that his faculties might 2610 3, 102| turned at the commotion. "Hello, Giton," he exclaimed, " 2611 3, 93| each other! The father,~A helper too feeble, now throws himself 2612 4, 106| be well content if chance helps us into the boat." "Not 2613 5, 145| because after the manner of hens, prostitutes take anything 2614 2, 80| advised me to quit. He was hep to all the secrets of the 2615 1, 10| country vegetables.~ ~An Old Herb Woman ~ 2616 3, 96| plaints to still~Green herbs, and berries hanging on 2617 5, 145| recovered from Pompeii and Herculaneum, and in one case an entire 2618 5, 145| are spoken of as keeping herds of oxen, or goats, or sheep, 2619 2, 43| bull-calf and the kickers and herdsmen and those who see to it 2620 5, 156| this sect, Augustine, De Heres. chap. 37, said: "the Valesians 2621 Int, 4| the consequences of his heresy and avoid the too pressing 2622 Int, 4| uncanonical pursuits and heretical doctrines and before he 2623 6 | other virtues, which are the heritage of the full-grown man, possess 2624 5, 151| Marsyae, Satyri, Atlantes, Hermae, Chirones, Silani, Tulii."~ 2625 6 | chambers be disgraced by hermaphrodites. Far better that a woman, 2626 5, 160| lives near the house of Hermodorus, after you have left the 2627 1, 5| hold me up!" Even these heroics could be endured if they 2628 Bib | Berlin~~~~1862.~~~~~~Herxus(Buecheler)~~~~Berlin~~~~ 2629 6 | empire never showed any hesitancy in trying and even in overdoing 2630 5, 153| like this?" Lucian, Dial. Hetairae, 12. These words are spoken 2631 3, 93| felled and dragged down; the hewn timbers were fitted to fashion~ 2632 5, 147| sixth satire of Juvenal; "hic erit in lecto fortissimus," 2633 Pre | Metamorphoses of Ovid, or Francis Hicke's masterly rendering of 2634 4, 106| We can't make our lips so hideously thick, can we? We can't 2635 4, 114| disfigured by no ordinary hideousness since not even Lycas would 2636 5, 130| brought her mistress from her hiding-place and conducted her to my 2637 1, 6| natural purity. This windy and high-sounding bombast, a recent immigrant 2638 2, 79| Ain't that the truth, you high-stepping hussy'? Let me beg you to 2639 2, 78| cried those coming on. Our hilarity was somewhat dampened soon 2640 6 | one who abused it most, Hildebrand, rigorously prohibited the 2641 3, 86| clapping my hand to the hilt of my sword, which I had 2642 4, 127| chains and ice, did not hinder~At first, but lay silent, 2643 2, 44| swore that such fellows as Hipparchus and Aratus were not to be 2644 5, 153| the legend of Atalanta and Hippomenes or Meilanion, to which Suetonius ( 2645 5, 160| was draped only about the hips with an almost airy colorless 2646 4, 126| my battles~A menace? But hirelings, and vile, to whom my Rome 2647 2, 68| his hand to his mouth and hissed out some foul gibberish 2648 3, 93| billows,~The sea with their hissing is sibilant! All stare in 2649 3, 99| one aimed a spitful of hissing-hot guts at his eyes; another 2650 5, 145| down" (Paulus Diaconus, Hist. Miscel. xiii, 2). Rent 2651 5, 147| commentating upon this expression, Histoire de la Prostitution, vol. 2652 5, 155| blind."~Pliny the Elder, Historia Naturalis, lib. XIV, chap. 2653 4, 120| what men inhabited such historic ground, and the nature of 2654 Int, 4| bent toward languages and historical criticism. In his early 2655 5, 154| the verbose and fabulous histories of Marius Maximus. The libraries 2656 5, 145| impost: "he levied new and hitherto unheard of taxes; a proportion 2657 5, 160| the novel. "At this moment hoarse sounds like the roarings 2658 4, 126| heavens a summit eternally hoary,~As though the sky there 2659 4, 110| by an actor's tricks, and hoaxed by a fake inscription!" 2660 2, 50| but he's found another hobby, now he paints all the time. 2661 Int, 1| multis et variis rebus hoc carmen refertum est.'~The 2662 5, 145| may be seduced by shapely hocks, a short head, or an arching 2663 5, 144| hands upon the floor, to hoist his master up and down with 2664 5, 136| gave orders for me to be hoisted upon their shoulders and 2665 2, 52| Sicily to my other little holdings, so in case I want to go 2666 5, 149| reason to beware of needle holes in the walls, through which 2667 2, 50| He comes to the house on holidays and is always satisfied 2668 3, 93| leap back~To form a deep hollow of calm, and resemble the 2669 4, 124| already~The mountains are hollowed and now but re-echoing caverns;~ 2670 6 | in copulation with the Holy-Ghost," unhappily, he decided 2671 5, 156| member of the choir.~Young home-born slaves were bought up by 2672 6 | them. The tranquillity of homes, the civil state of persons 2673 6 | que vous avez affaire a un homme.~You will learn that you 2674 6 | something sacred, and God has so honored it that he willed that his 2675 4, 120| attain to the very highest honors; in other words, they are 2676 5, 141| floated; but she did not hoodwink me, for those with empty 2677 4, 116| last rite. The soldier was hoodwinked while absent from his post 2678 5, 145| is sustained by a tender hoof and the eager purchaser 2679 1, 7| who, unless he baits his hook with what he knows is most 2680 2, 64| panels parted and an enormous hoop, which appeared to have 2681 2, 57| to jump through blazing hoops while grasping a huge wine 2682 6 | where Corydon sighs his hopeless love for the beautiful Alexis? 2683 6 | pudenda garbed in white," Hor. Sat. I, ii, 36. Delia, 2684 6 | it was common among the hordes of American Indians before 2685 5, 130| tale?~At such a time the horns should sprout, the raging 2686 2, 43| are born under the Archer. Horny-handed sons of toil are born under 2687 2, 81| shortly. That's what my horoscope tells me. If I can extend 2688 5, 142| navel. The nettles stung me horribly and I suddenly took to my 2689 4, 112| prevented the perpetration of so horrid a crime by the out and out 2690 5, 154| their deformity excite the horror of the indignant spectators, 2691 4, 105| HUNDRED AND FIRST.~I shivered, horror-struck, at this thunderbolt and, 2692 2, 49| like the real thing as the horsemen on the lamps; you would 2693 5, 145| cited, in which the aedile Hostilius had attempted to force his 2694 2, 63| young fellow, Hermeros, he's hot-blooded, so you ought to be more 2695 2, 62| hold myself in and I'm not hot-headed by nature, but once let 2696 3, 98| you spouting poetry! I am hot-tempered and you are lecherous; see 2697 2, 62| by my death, if I don't hound you everywhere with my toga 2698 6 | with the most beautiful houris, more seductive than those 2699 6 | concubines of which, alas! our housekeepers of today are but feeble 2700 6 | and left her with all the housework to do. "Mary has chosen 2701 5, 147| lecto fortissimus," which Housman has rendered "he is a valiant 2702 2, 81| the job, anyhow; it was a hovel, as you know, it's a palace 2703 5, 135| undertook~To bear true witness; hovering, the gleaming grass above~ 2704 4, 109| blow, Giton set up such a howling that his all too familiar 2705 5, 138| me, gales silence their howlings,~Hearing my step! And the 2706 1, 19| upon us, they raised such a hubbub that the vault of the temple 2707 5, 160| singing a popular song:~Hue, huc, convenite nunc~Spatalocinaedi!~ 2708 5, 138| head with my right arm and huddled down upon the pillow. Nor 2709 2, 75| SEVENTY-FIRST.~Trimalchio was hugely tickled at this challenge. " 2710 3, 84| by our unreasoning fury, hugged each of us tightly by the 2711 4, 108| shipwrecked sailor from his hulk is swept.~Or, washed aboard, 2712 3, 84| the knee, and in tears he humbly begged that this wretched 2713 4, 112| he would permit no one to humiliate well-born young men contrary 2714 1, 15| nymphomaniac harlot. So humiliated were our enemies by the 2715 5, 154| great to the use of the most humiliating expedients. When they desire 2716 5, 132| cried, "do not mock me in my humiliation. I am bewitched!" (Circe' 2717 2, 73| or more, while Habinnas hummed with him, holding his finger 2718 1, 19| we could hear a curious humming, which resembled the sound 2719 1, 11| you?" Delighted with such humorous affability, "What's the 2720 2, 49| it's to his interest to hump himself to get the best 2721 4, 104| CHAPTER THE ONE HUNDREDTH.~(We picked out a retired 2722 1, 15| unpleasantness, persuaded Lycas to hunt for his fugitives in the 2723 1, 15| and I retreated in such a hurry that the precious tunic 2724 1, 30| her own weight. He was not hurt, but the girl gave her head 2725 4, 112| that unless she stopped hurting Giton, I would use every 2726 6 | keen, while he no longer hurts him, he will feel no pleasure 2727 3, 95| overhear our plans, I bade him hush his complaints and, leaving 2728 5, 142| vigilant watch-dogs are hushed! Alone, I of all~Society 2729 2, 79| truth, you high-stepping hussy'? Let me beg you to make 2730 6 | flowing locks, dark as hyacinths, stream down her back and 2731 4, 127| terror of Pontus, of savage Hydaspes~Explorer, the reef that 2732 5, 137| Whose temple in his own Hypaepa placed,~Thou Dryad's joy 2733 1, 6| who rivalled the fame of Hyperides? Not a single poem has glowed 2734 5, 148| very lecherous on women, Hypnus is slow to admit he is my 2735 1, 5| priests, animated by an hypocritical mania for prophecy, boldly 2736 5, 145| beauties; though blinder than Hypoesea herself thou canst see what 2737 6 | with them. Jason abandoned Hypsipyle for Medea, and her, for 2738 5, 138| their channels;~Dragons, Hyrcanian tigers stand fast at my 2739 4, 125| Thessaly's funeral pyres and Iberia mourning.~Already the clangor 2740 5, 145| accounts, the fee will suit" (Ibid.)~When an applicant registered 2741 1, 9| Whose mind gropes for lofty ideals, to bring them to light,~ 2742 6 | question of AEneas; these ideas, I say, and these sentiments, 2743 1, 16| for he seemed to be the identical person who had picked up 2744 3, 96| found some one who could identify me, which only goes to show 2745 2, 69| said, "Keep your seat, you idiot, it's only Habinnas the 2746 6 | But you men, who boast idly of your wisdom, but are 2747 6 | giving one's seed to the idol Moloch meant giving the 2748 4, 123| Extravagance. Sterile and ignobly prized is the wood~But round 2749 6 | only too well justify the ignominy which is levelled against 2750 2, 33| in the middle hall. "The Iliad and the Odyssey," he replied, " 2751 5, 159| fundament; it was called "Iliga," by the Spaniards. From 2752 5, 145| return to Rome they were but ill-pleased with the standard of entertainment 2753 5, 151| statue of Marsyas, Apollo's ill-starred rival. It probably bore 2754 Int, 1| passage 'sed video te totum in illa haerere, quae Troiae halosin 2755 5, 145| No penalty attached to illicit intercourse or to prostitution 2756 5, 132| arrived there, I feigned illness and threw myself upon my 2757 Pre | peach." Again, Peck renders "illud erat vivere" by "that was 2758 5, 157| version.~Another exquisite and illuminating passage occurs in Catullus, 2759 5, 145| from the stigma, as is well illustrated by the proverb current among 2760 5, 153| furnishes yet another excellent illustration. The prostitute Philanis, 2761 2, 69| makes the finest tombstones imaginable." Reassured by this information, 2762 6 | Tarquins. Men with vivid imaginations create for themselves a 2763 3, 84| in choosing a 'brother'." Imagining that a relationship of such 2764 2, 37| discovered a fine fat fig-pecker, imbedded in a yolk seasoned with 2765 5, 145| Scions of patrician families imbibed their lessons from the skilled 2766 Int, 3| bringing out character and imbuing his episodes and the actions 2767 4, 113| sexual embrace, except under immediate forfeiture of one hundred 2768 1, 6| high-sounding bombast, a recent immigrant to Athens, from Asia, touched 2769 6 | giving modest names to immodest sentiments, do men call 2770 6 | of Jephtha before being immolated for the sake of the Lord, 2771 1, 5| pestilence, ordering the immolation of three or more virgins; 2772 5, 141| I, "could I not purchase immunity for a price, even though 2773 4, 123| of the evils impending, impels them to madness.~Despair 2774 Pre | for revision is even more imperative; the change in the cultured 2775 5, 154| through some unguarded and imperceptible chink, they deplore their 2776 6 | boyhood to manhood, when his imperfect intelligence had reached 2777 6 | principle of evil and of all imperfection, while they regarded the 2778 6 | cause of all the inevitable imperfections of the universe. The soul 2779 5, 156| less constant until the Imperial government began vigorous 2780 5, 154| occasionally yields to the more imperious passion of avarice. The 2781 1, 30| began to gore Quartilla impetuously, and she, burning with the 2782 5, 145| powerful influence in giving impetus to the spread of prostitution. 2783 5, 154| the profane sceptics who impiously doubt or deny the existence 2784 4, 105| us!" Overwhelmed by this implication, Eumolpus swore by all the 2785 2, 68| we believed none the less implicitly and, kissing the table, 2786 5, 145| A strumpet. Secrecy is implied, but the word has a broad 2787 2, 58| was crawling at our feet, imploring pardon. I was uneasy for 2788 4, 118| stretched out his hands to me imploringly. "Save us from destruction, 2789 Int, 3| author's recognition of the importance of environment, of the vital 2790 5, 160| these days; I yielded to her importunity and gave it to her before 2791 4, 106| altered complexions, we can impose upon our enemies!" "Yes, 2792 4, 110| but as it is, we are being imposed upon by an actor's tricks, 2793 4, 128| we went in search of more imposing lodgings and fell in with 2794 5, 152| something that resembled an impossibly large pie. They, placed 2795 6 | horrors of intolerance, the impostures of priests, the despotism 2796 6 | the bath that Tiberius, impotent through old age and debauchery, 2797 5, 145| entire city, loaded with imprecations so that he might take to 2798 5, 154| or Tarrasius -- which may impress the ears of the vulgar with 2799 5, 145| that he could enjoy their impressive proportions." The quotations 2800 3, 93| that was not of its own.~Imprisoned, the warriors advance to 2801 2, 42| side issue, so he could improve the native bees by crossing 2802 Pre | of fresh manuscripts had improved the text. In the case of 2803 2, 62| everything and don't be impudent to your elders. Don't loiter 2804 Int, 3| of reality and with those impulses and actions which are common 2805 1, 21| that, with the careless impulsiveness of youth, you may divulge, 2806 6 | embasicetas de m'accabler de ses impurs baisers.~[The soldier ordered 2807 Int, 3| bread and when, from sheer inability, she refuses to eat, cramming 2808 4, 104| us quartered in the most inaccessible spot on deck, was it? So 2809 5, 143| displeasure too~Driven from the Inachian coast: Laomedon of old~Sated 2810 1, 18| this and, for fear that inactivity on our part should seem 2811 5, 150| we live, let us live," is inadequate, to say the least. So far 2812 6 | spoke eloquently of the incalculable advantages which would accrue 2813 5, 135| had made an end of this incantation she ordered me to spit three 2814 5, 141| parsley. Then, muttering incantations, she threw hazel-nuts into 2815 5, 145| The size ranged from a few inches in length to about two feet. 2816 4, 114| hear it, he would relate an incident which had occurred within 2817 5, 145| swollen haemorrhoids are incised, the surgeon grinning the 2818 5, 145| ready at hand to satisfy the inclinations which the spectacles aroused. 2819 5, 153| whose whole thoughts to love incline,~And heated with th' enliv' 2820 Int | the many discrepancies and incoherences with which the text, as 2821 4, 121| silver and estates, the incomes from which were not what 2822 5, 156| emasculation: complete and incomplete, and, in the case of the 2823 6 | For the rest, one of the incontestable facts of ancient history 2824 5, 156| consequences of his wife's incontinence was by no means well served 2825 2, 37| absence should cause you any inconvenience, I gave over my own pleasure: 2826 1, 15| in our favor, naming the increasing wantonness of Lycas as the 2827 5, 158| force to this day. Let the incredulous critic spit in some one' 2828 2, 42| that he snatched off an Incubo's hat and found a treasure! 2829 5, 150| practical philosophy of the indefatigable roues sums itself up in 2830 5, 160| marked by any particular indelicacy. Many ancient authors and 2831 5, 139| very shrine of poverty.)~No Indian ivory set in gold gleamed 2832 6 | among the hordes of American Indians before the discovery of 2833 5, 159| infamies in words when he could indicate shamelessness with his fingers," 2834 5, 145| people come!" Another sure indication of the prevalence of the 2835 2, 63| starting in to answer this indictment when Trimalchio, who was 2836 5, 154| injury, and a contemptuous indifference for the rest of the human 2837 5, 154| excite the horror of the indignant spectators, who are ready 2838 6 | atoned for the rebuffs and indignities these women had been compelled 2839 Int, 3| originals from whom directly, or indirectly, later authors drew that 2840 5, 136| Why have I committed an indiscretion in relieving my resentment 2841 Bib | bibliography compiled by Gaselee is indispensable, and those of my readers 2842 5, 132| Giton, who had heard of my indisposition, entered the room in some 2843 5, 133| read through the entire inditement, "and especially in this 2844 Int, 3| upon the other, and which individualize, in some measure, every 2845 5, 145| conditions in European society, induced by the late war. Their problem 2846 5, 154| knees. As soon as they have indulged themselves in the refreshment 2847 5, 132| whole body seemed to be inert. "My queen," I cried, "do 2848 6 | was the cause of all the inevitable imperfections of the universe. 2849 5, 136| Lashed to fury by these inexcusable affronts, the lady at last 2850 Int, 2| condition and on every occasion inexhaustibly, out of their own nature; 2851 4, 127| they dread to lose most. Inexperience drags all~Its chattels to 2852 5, 159| as the "infamous finger."~Infami digito et lustralibus ante 2853 5, 159| was he given to demand infamies in words when he could indicate 2854 5, 158| ears and nostrils of the infant or neophyte, as the case 2855 5, 154| order as the cavalry and infantry, the heavy and the light 2856 5, 145| makes no difference in this inference. Scions of patrician families 2857 5, 145| the priest's crown is an inferential substantiation of the fact 2858 5, 154| a multitude of cooks and inferior ministers employed in the 2859 3, 87| is, if anything is to be inferred from the crowns which gratitude 2860 5, 145| as though the slave were infibulated in place of having his generous 2861 2, 71| and the other about the infidelities and neglect of her husband. 2862 4, 112| so wholehearted a manner. Inflamed as she was by this affront, 2863 5, 156| of the punishment I shall inflict upon thee.'~"When he had 2864 5, 155| You know you're being influenced,~You know the miser's mind;~ 2865 5, 155| children, for the purpose of so influencing their wishes and them by 2866 5, 145| their taste in luxuries. The influx of slaves and voluptuaries 2867 2, 69| earnestly entreated us to eat, informing us that the chickens had 2868 5, 156| diffusion of the doctrine. Not infrequently it is the women who, with 2869 6 | Tis said from smooth-faced ingle train~(Anointed bridegroom!) 2870 6 | the air, nor the fish that inhabit the deep, or any living 2871 4, 120| learning this, what men inhabited such historic ground, and 2872 5, 159| salivis~Expiat, urentes oculos inhibere perita.~Persius, Sat. 2873 3, 83| never-failing well-spring of iniquity, stole the boy away from 2874 1, 21| scarcely a thousand persons are initiated."~ ~Quartilla ~ 2875 5, 145| thing of the past, her Roman initiative, unadorned by sophistication, 2876 5, 155| or refined cruelty, or "injunctions" restraining husbands from 2877 2, 77| the cups were porcelain inlaid with gold; before our eyes 2878 5, 145| occupata" and when the inmate was engaged the tablet was 2879 3, 98| farcical death scene.~ ~The Inn-Keeper ~ 2880 6 | which cannot corrupt by innate viciousness, how they observe 2881 2, 31| supplied. We noted other innovations as well, for two eunuchs 2882 4, 128| features~Deep scarred by innumerous wounds 'neath her helmet 2883 5, 145| the Roman power served to inoculate the legionaries with the 2884 5, 145| crowd: nor need they be inordinately shocked for among some peoples, 2885 6 | vague desires and expectant inquietude; whoever has never had that 2886 5, 131| heaven, but I made bold to inquire the name of my divinity. " 2887 Int, 4| and avoid the too pressing Inquisition by a timely flight into 2888 3, 96| not take kindly to such an inquisitive beginning, fearing that 2889 2, 59| what can excel these lines?~Insatiable luxury crumbles the walls 2890 5, 145| AEserman inscription (Mommsen, Inscr. Regn. Neap. 5078, which 2891 2, 60| opinion, they're divine insects because they puke honey, 2892 5, 154| motives, have the address to insert in the list of invitations 2893 3, 101| slave loosened the bolts by inserting the edge of his ax in the 2894 5, 155| undue influence became very insidious in its quest of wealth, 2895 5, 136| embers.~"Nothing can be more insincere than the silly prejudices 2896 5, 145| and Empire react to the insinuating precepts of older and more 2897 6 | allegories are! And how true! How insipid life would be without these 2898 1, 15| entrusted to me, demanding it insistently, but I was so weak that 2899 5, 153| The unsuspecting youth insnared,~And rivall'd me in his 2900 2, 74| a club. Perturbed at the insolence of these drunken ruffians, 2901 5, 145| when buying horses, they inspect them in the open, lest, 2902 6 | is pleasing to them, she inspires in them a desire for reciprocal 2903 2, 59| in a discussion upon the instability of human affairs, which 2904 Pre | need of revision, except in instances where the discovery and 2905 5, 145| they call the Floralia" (Instit. Divin. xx, 6). In chapter 2906 5, 156| upon the attitude of an institution placed, as it were, "between 2907 5, 144| the world who could daily instruct young children in healthy 2908 5, 154| procure some trusty sycophant, instructed to maintain a charge of 2909 6 | this story to us, for the instruction of virgins from century 2910 2, 33| exercise under the eye of an instructor, and in one corner was a 2911 1, 25| with us. Several wrestling instructors appeared and refreshed us, 2912 5, 154| the harmony of vocal and instrumental music is incessantly repeated 2913 5, 159| officers assassinated him for insulting him in that manner. When 2914 1, 15| my chagrin became almost insupportable as I vented many a groaning 2915 6 | endowed Cassandra, did not insure her against the brutal caresses 2916 5, 145| Empire as well, might be insured an abundant population." 2917 5, 145| must remain for all time an insurmountable bar to repentance and respectability. 2918 5, 153| beliefs of this type are an integral part of the character of 2919 6 | are deceived, for a ripe intellect could not be misled. These 2920 5, 145| century, and those of any intelligent observer in the Orient, 2921 Int, 2| the Roman in a language intelligible to every susceptible heart."~ 2922 2, 35| same slave for whom we had interceded, rushed up to us as we entered 2923 5, 145| that young men should be interdicted from intrigues with the 2924 4, 109| hidden in the least, by the interference of the hair; as they ought 2925 1, 18| should escape us in the interim, we resolved to appraise 2926 1, 21| time. Not even then did we interject a single word, but waited, 2927 1, 15| lash me very thoroughly, interjecting sarcasms the while, "This 2928 4, 119| a night that was almost interminable. As we were holding a council, 2929 Int, 4| perfect imitation. There is no internal evidence of forgery. If 2930 5, 145| would seem to have been "internuculos nudasque meretrices furtim 2931 5, 145| species. It is from the interplay of these instincts that 2932 2, 72| lowering of his voice, he interpolated Atellane verses, and, for 2933 6 | according to Homer, the great interpreter of truth -- 'One man is 2934 4, 124| of battles~Destroyed; and interred, each one under a mountain 2935 5, 145| the correct reading of "intertitulos, nudasque meretrices furtim 2936 Int | times, few have attained, at intervals, to such popularity; few 2937 2, 34| back our right feet and intervened with the steward, who was 2938 Int, 1| suppose that the chapters intervening between the end of the Cena ( 2939 4, 122| circumlocutions and the intervention of the immortals, the free 2940 Int, 3| course, exceptions; the interview between Ulysses and Nausiskaa 2941 5, 152| questionable pleasure of interviewing the chef-caterer who got 2942 5, 145| problem will, however, be more intimately concerned with homosexuality 2943 1, 25| and the little girl would intimidate Ascyltos with a brush dipped 2944 5, 154| chink, they deplore their intolerable hardships, and lament in 2945 6 | religious wars, the horrors of intolerance, the impostures of priests, 2946 2, 63| himself up on his cushion and intoned in Latin, from a book, while 2947 5, 155| the avarice of one of the intriguers:~"You know you're being 2948 5, 135| straight to the latter, introducing me into a lovely nook that 2949 4, 111| of the captain to whom he intrusts his safety! Be reasonable, 2950 4, 127| And slaughters the distant invader -- with curses! Their spouses~ 2951 Int, 4| again from Mr. Gaselee's invaluable bibliography, "but the reprint 2952 5, 136| had made an end of this invective, so out of keeping with 2953 6 | imitated the Greeks in their invectives against women; the comedies 2954 6 | ministers and moralists to inveigh against love of women for 2955 4, 121| dignity! Furthermore, he had, invested in Africa, thirty millions 2956 2, 57| to the vaults as no sound investment could be found: on said 2957 5, 141| day my dwelling has been inviolate and you have polluted it 2958 5, 145| Martial (lib. i, 24)~"You invite no man but your bathing 2959 5, 157| ode to Calliope. After the invocation to the muse he thinks he 2960 3, 87| in tatters Genius stands~ Invoking a neglected art, for succor 2961 1, 30| the stalest of catamites, involuntarily and almost unconsciously 2962 4, 117| tightly that I uttered an involuntary cry of pain. One of her 2963 2, 63| victorious, and gave his daughter Iphigenia, to Achilles, for a wife: 2964 6 | the beginning of the work.~Ipsa Venus magico religatum brachia 2965 6 | ii, 36. Delia, Lesbia, Ipsythillia, Corinna, Nemesis, Neeria, 2966 5, 145| be used as a club by the irate landowner. Again, in Catullus, 2967 5, 142| it is torture to move,~It irks me again to turn back, shame 2968 Int, 4| known, and it is one of the ironies of fate that caused this 2969 6 | Saintly Sisters, that the irrefutable proof of his chastity was 2970 Int, 4| exception of one which is irrelevant, are here included.~The 2971 5, 145| avoided being spied upon by irreverent witnesses, the poet sarcastically 2972 4, 103| gentleman, ought to remove all irritation from his mind, and leave 2973 6 | found among the south sea islanders, and the evidence of the 2974 5, 145| times. That the fathers of Israel were quick to perceive the 2975 6 | about the morals of the Israelites which are to be found in 2976 1, 22| easy as to both of those issues, for not only would we not 2977 1, 19| resembled the sound of voices issuing from the depths of a cavern. 2978 6 | long known in Europe; the Italians are accused with this terrible 2979 Int, 4| additions of De Salas in italics.~The work is also accompanied 2980 2, 45| crowned with vine leaves and ivy, passed grapes around, in 2981 6 | submission to the pursuit of Ixion, and Thetis succumbed despite 2982 2, 72| cook, or a baker a regular jack of all trades. But he has 2983 6 | son of Judas, grandson of Jacob, and husband of Thamar, 2984 5, 145| till midnight for a lying jade till sleep overcame me, 2985 5, 152| jubilee singers titillated the jaded senses of the guests in 2986 1, 15| to escape the storm. The jam prevented our being watched, 2987 2, 38| him throw it down again; a janitor followed with his broom 2988 6 | thou as peasant-girls to jape~ He-whore! Thy Lord's delight 2989 6 | beauties, and slept with them. Jason abandoned Hypsipyle for 2990 4, 108| Maneuvering armies sees, and javelins,~And funerals of kings and 2991 2, 61| be such that no one can jeer at me. I'm a man among men! 2992 1, 15| sanctimonious 'brother'?" he jeered. "What's going on here, 2993 6 | recommend it. The daughter of Jephtha before being immolated for 2994 3, 100| handle had been broken and jerked out, and I wished him joy 2995 5, 158| first century. Any Jew in Jerusalem hearing the name of Titus 2996 6 | writings: this savant was a Jesuit. But this taste is not peculiar 2997 5, 158| in the first century. Any Jew in Jerusalem hearing the 2998 2, 67| s minion died. He was a jewel, so hear me Hercules, he 2999 2, 81| other things, too, in a jiffy; believe me, if you have 3000 1, 8| imagine that I disapprove of a jingle in the Lucilian manner, 3001 5, 145| quanta sit hasta viro," which Joan of Naples had always in 3002 1, 19| and he sometimes did odd jobs for the lawyers, seized 3003 5, 145| intimate friend, these are jocularly alluded to as the venial