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Chapter 106 chapter Ten

巨人传 弗朗索瓦·拉伯雷 2186Words 2018-03-21
How Paguguet explained to Panurge the difficulty of instructing others to marry; how Homer and Virgil were divined Banurge said: "Your instructions, if I am not mistaken, are like Ricochet's ballads, full of sarcasm, sarcasm, and self-contradictions. I don't know which one to believe." Paiguguay replied: "Your words are full of 'if, if' and 'however, but', which make me uncertain and unable to understand them. Have you made up your mind? The main question is Here; the rest is unpredictable and left to fate. "There are many who are happily married, whose marriages seem to shine with ideals and images of heavenly bliss.

But there are also many unhappy people who are more miserable than the hermits whom the devil tempts in the wilderness of Thebaid and Montserra.Once you make up your mind, cover your eyes, bow your head, and kiss the ground to express your complete trust in God, and wherever you go, it counts.For the rest, I can't say anything. "If you like, we can do it this way. You bring me Virgil's work, open it three times with your fingernails, count the number of lines we agreed, and see what will happen to you after marriage. This is how many people see their future in Homer. "For example, Socrates, because he heard someone recite a line of Homer's poem describing Achilles in prison, see Book Nine:

There was not much delay along the way, and on the third day we established ourselves on the fertile soil of Phthia. Foreseeing that he would die in three days, he informed Aeschines first.Plato in the "Crito", Cicero in the first volume of "On Divination", and Diogenes? Laerius have all described ③. "There is also Eupilius Macrinus ④, which also proves that he once wondered whether he could be the emperor of Rome, and finally saw his fate from this proverb in the eighth book: O old man, these soldiers are young and strong, and they will make you irresistible later on, your prime is past, and the sad old age is beside you.

"It turned out that he was already old, and the emperor had only been in power for a year and two months before he was laid down by the young and strong Erakabarus and killed. ① In ancient times, some people used reading Homer or Virgil's works as a method of divination, and later some people used the "Bible" as a tool for divination. ② "The Ballad of Ricoche": Unclear words that are both questions and answers. ③ Debayd: The northern part of ancient Egypt, also known as Upper Egypt, where the first hermits lived in seclusion. ④ Monsera: Spanish place name, near Babylon, where there are caves where monks lived.

① The thirty-sixth and third lines of the ninth volume. ② Aeschines: Ancient Greek philosopher in the fourth century BC. ③ Diogenes talked about Aeschines in his "Biography of the Philosophers", and the other two talked about Crito. ④ Opilius Macrinus: Emperor of Rome from 217 to 218 AD. ⑤ Line 302 of Volume Eight. ① Erakabarus: Roman emperor from 218 to 222 AD, born in 204, and was only 14 years old when he became emperor. "Brutus is also an example. He wanted to know the fate of the battle of Pharsalus - in which he was killed - and in the sixteenth book he encountered Bartroclus. line poem:

By fate, I was killed by Leto's son. "'Apollo' is the watchword for the day of war. "From the works of Virgil, the past has also made people foresee many important events, like Alexander Severus ⑤, he knew in this poem of the sixth book of "Init" that he wanted to be in Rome. emperor. Romans, you want to rule the world, don't let it sink and deteriorate⑥. "A few years later, it really came true, and he really became the emperor of Rome. "There is also the Roman Emperor Adrian, he is not at ease, he really wants to get Telazan's opinion on him and his feelings for him, he once asked Virgil's works for divination, and found in the sixth volume of "Init". Through these two poems:

Who is the man holding the olive branch in the distance? From his gray beard and hair, and his stately quilt, I recognized him as the late Roman monarch. "Sure enough, he was adopted by Telang as his adoptive son and inherited his empire. "There is also the admired Roman Emperor Clotius II, who found these two lines in the first volume of the Ineter: His reign at Raqiom was coming to an end in less than the third summer. "Sure enough, his life has only been in existence for two years. "The same Clodeus, who also read for his brother Cantilius, who he wanted to call his brother in his empire, found this verse in the sixth book of the Inet:

Fate destined him to go underground⑤. "This sentence was indeed fulfilled, because he was killed on the seventeenth day after he came to power. The same fate should also befall the younger Gorthian.⑥ ② Phasalus: The place name in ancient Greece, where Caesar defeated Pompeii in AD 48. ③ Line 849 of Volume 16. ④ See Chapter 28 of Plutarch's "Biography of Brutus". ⑤ Alexander Servilus: Roman emperor after Escabarus in 222 AD. ⑥ The eighth and fifth lines of the sixth volume of "Init". ① Lines 808 to 810 of the sixth volume of "Init". ② Clotius II: Emperor of Rome from 268 to 270 AD.

③ The second sixty-five lines of the first volume of "Init". ④ Gantilius: Emperor of Rome in 270 AD, killed in the same year. ⑤ Line 869 of the sixth volume of "Init". ⑥ Gortian the Younger: Emperor of Rome in 238 AD, who was killed shortly after taking over the throne. "And Clotius Albinus, who also wanted to know his fate, found in the sixth book of Inet: This knight defended the city of Rome in chaos, defeated Carthage, and wiped out the rebellious Gauls. "And Aurelian's predecessor, Clodeus, who feared he would have no successor, found out his future in this line from the first book of Inet:

I want their descendants to be prosperous and happy without end. "Later, he really prospered. "And Pierre Ami, who wanted to know if he could get away with being framed by those villains, found this line in the third volume of "Init": what!Flee from this cruel place, from this greedy sea⑥. "Later, he escaped their poisonous hands as expected. "There are countless other examples, too many to mention one by one, who have counted their fate from the proverbs of poetry. "However, I don't want to say that this divination method is absolutely reliable, because I don't want you to be deceived."

⑦ Clotius Albinus: A Roman general in the second century, who was later crowned emperor and killed by Septimius Severus. ① The eighth fifty-seventh and eighth fifty-eighth lines of the fifth volume of "Init". ② Clotius II. ③ Lines 278 and 278 of the first volume of "Init". ④ Pierre Ami: The author's good friend when he was practicing in the Franciscan Order, and he once studied Greek together. ⑤ Refers to the priest who framed Ami and others and prevented them from reading Greek. ⑥ The fourth and fourth lines of the third volume of "Init".
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