... came to a man, for they understood that it would not be a common spectacle ; they knew that Caesar had determined to make for himself a tragedy out of the suffering of Vinicius. Tigellinus had kept secret the kind of punishment intended for the betrothed... Quo Vadis: A Tale of the Time of Nero - Page 472by Henryk Sienkiewicz - 1905 - 515 pagesFull view - About this book
| Henryk Sienkiewicz - Christian fiction - 1896 - 564 pages
...secret the kind of punishment intended for the betrothed of the young tribune ; but that merely roused general curiosity. Those who had seen Lygia at the house of Plautius told wonders of her beauty. Others were occupied above all with the question, would they see her really... | |
| Andrew Lang, Donald Grant Mitchell - Literature - 1898 - 564 pages
...secret the kind of punishment intended for the betrothed of the young tribune ; but that merely roused general curiosity. Those who had seen Lygia at the house of Plautius told wonders of her beauty. Others were occupied above all with the question, would they see her really... | |
| Richard Garnett, Léon Vallée, Alois Brandl - Anthologies - 1899 - 436 pages
...secret the kind of punishment intended for the betrothed of the young tribune ; but that merely roused general curiosity. Those who had seen Lygia at the house of Plautius told wonders of her beauty. Others were occupied above all with the question, would they see her really... | |
| English literature - 1906 - 662 pages
...secret the kind of punishment intended for the betrothed of the young tribune ; but that merely roused general curiosity. Those who had seen Lygia at the house of Plautius told wonders of her beauty. Uncertainty, waiting, and curiosity had mastered all spectators. Cfcsar... | |
| Daniel Harvey Hill, Frank Lincoln Stevens, Charles William Burkett - Readers - 1906 - 424 pages
...secret the kind of punishment 5 intended for the betrothed of the young tribune; but that merely roused general curiosity. Those who had seen Lygia at the house of Plautius told wonders of her beauty. Uncertainty, waiting, and curiosity had mastered 10 all spectators. Cassar... | |
| Richard Garnett - 1899 - 436 pages
...secret the kind of punishment intended for the betrothed of the young tribune ; but that merely roused general curiosity. Those who had seen Lygia at the house of Plautius told wonders of her beauty. Others were occupied above all with the question, would they see her really... | |
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