MONSTRORUM
PAGE 739

# INDEX

Orion, what constellation it is, 299.e. Mystical interpretations of the mouth, 227.e; and moral teachings concerning it, 242.a–b. Remedies for those suffering from orthopnea, 314.a. Why a small mouth was granted to humans, 157.b. The bone of the twelve leapers, 170.d. The moral significance of the mouth, 257.h. The bones of Behemoth, 235.e. What bones signify in mystical contexts, 234.c. Bones without marrow, 215.e; and bones moistened with marrow, 235.e. The "signature" or resemblance of the shinbone in plants, 308.d. The medicinal virtues of human bones, and oil derived from them, 310.d. Various other uses for human bones, 318.d. Moral doctrine concerning the bones, 249.f. Names of the bones of the arm, 86.c; and the names of the bones of the lower limbs, 86.d. An illustration of a small bone naturally fused together, 125. On the kiss and the ritual swing or mask, 76.b. What constitutes a portent, 325.h. An image of Osiris, 289.f. On what a sheep might bring forth, 118.d. Mention of Ovidio Montalbani, 416.c. Monstrous births among sheep, 335.h. The nature of Egyptian sheep, 549.h. A hen's egg bearing the image of a serpent, 387. Monstrous eggs, 390.a. Edible basil, 75.f.

The image of the river Po, 296.c. An illustration of a Chinese Pagoda, 98. The inventor of the palaestra, 289.h. The image of Pandora, 164.a. How the weight of bread may be increased, 120.a. Various images of Pan, 291.g. Why the poppy is included in depictions of Bacchus, 290.d. Where poppy heads were offered in sacrifice, 316.b; and the various uses of the poppy, 318.a. What a nipple is, 77.e. Moral lessons regarding paralysis, 256.d. The habits of parasites, 232.b. The number, duties, and etymology of the Fates, 294.a. What monstrous parents produce, 345.f. The etymology of the word "parents," 111.g; and their moral duties, 552.a. Who the Peers of France are, 105.g. Various types of parricide, 221.h. The external parts of the human body, 75.e. Male genital organs, 81.h. Which parts are first generated in the womb, 251.f. The principal parts of the human body, 239.h. From where human parts derive their sense and motion, 240.c. The generation of the principal parts, 45.h; and the functions of human parts, 141.e.

The customs of the Parthians, 97.f. A birth in the sixteenth month, 50.d. Delays of birth within the womb, 51.e. Why a birth in the tenth month is considered natural, 51.e; and the nature of the timing of birth, 50.d. The natural form of birth, 53.h. Unnatural forms of birth, 55.e. Illustrations of unnatural births: with hands at the sides, 55; with hands above the head, 55; the third form, 56; and the fourth form, on the same page. Illustrations of the fifth and sixth forms of unnatural birth, 57. What constitutes a dangerous birth, 58.a. Illustrations of the seventh and eighth unnatural births, 58; and the ninth and tenth, 59. The unnatural birth of twins, 60; and birth with a hand emerging first, 60. The various types of twin births, 61. Forms of birth mixed between the natural and unnatural, 60. A birth that is not difficult, 61; and the natural birth of twins, 61. Illustration of the thirteenth form of unnatural birth, 61. The dangerous birth of twins, 62.a. An illustration of a human birth that serves as an omen, 366. Obstructed birth, 200.d. Two births sharing the same fate, 217.e. Births lacking a neck, 461.g. A wondrous twin birth, 634.d. Small children in mystical interpretations, 235.h. Who the Patagonians are, 35.e. The image of Patience, 164.b. The etymology of "paternal uncle," 111.h; and who paternal cousins are, 111.h. A four-footed peacock, 567.f. The enigma of poverty, 174.c; and the nature of poverty, 276.d. Sins likened to thorns, 224.a. The symbol of sin, 233.e. What venial sin is compared to, 260.b. The throat of a sinner, 258.a. Etymology of the chest, 79.h. Moral lessons concerning the chest, 243.h. The number of membranes in the chest, 80.a. Dreams concerning the chest, 151.e. Mystical interpretations of the chest, 228.c. Where lice are given as tribute, 97.g. The nature of feet in representations of God, 233.f; and feet in Angels, on the same page. The feet of the Soul, same page. What shod and unshod feet signify, 233.h. Why the feet of the Apostles were washed, 234.a.

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