MONSTRORUM
PAGE 821
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# INDEX

Species of goatsbeard (686.b); an illustration of a monstrous goatsbeard (688); which women are known as tribades (84.c); the ambiguous name *trichiasis* (123.h); what a three-headed creature is (347.g); the Trinity as suggested to the heathens (287.g); what the *triorchis* beast is (348.a); the benefits of wheat combined with sage (313.g); who counts as a great-great-great-grandfather (111.f); who the Tritons are (26.c); what the trunk represents in a human (76.d); the optical tube, or telescope (730.b); the trumpeter (139.g); the different types of tumors (126.a) and their moral significance (259.g); the shape of the membranes formed in the womb (45); customs regarding clothing and tunics (102.a); the deafness of the thrush (172.b); a statue of the Tiber River (296.c); what the eardrum is within the ear (79.g); and the character of a tyrant (553.e).

A cow born with eight feet (539.h); a cow that gave birth to a serpent (600.b) or to two human fetuses (600.e); a cow that lives despite being imperforate (220.a); various monstrosities among cows (416.d, 433.g); the Vaccii (137.g); the protection of health (132.a); who the Vari are (137.g); the genital vessels of women (82.a) and the spermatic vessels (81.h); a bony opening in the aorta (86.b); moral lessons concerning the veins (247.h); the hieroglyphic for pardon (156.a); the differences between poisons (260.c) and their moral significance (ibid.); a remedy for the bite of a venomous animal (314.a); images of the winds (295.e) and an illustration of the northern wind (104.c); why the belly is said to have no ears (175.f); what the "belly of the soul" is like (154.d); the three cavities or bellies of the human body (78.d); the parts of the lower belly (80.d) and diseases of the lowest belly (124.a); mystical interpretations of the belly (232.a); dreams involving the belly (151.g); the hieroglyphic for the belly (156.a); moral lessons regarding diseases of the belly (258.c); a deformed constitution of the belly (505.h) and the causes of a monstrous belly (518.b); what the region of the stomach is like (91.h); the origin of Venus (191.f) and her transformation into a fish (193.e); why Venus is called "the Mother" (286.a); whether wicked lust is a cause of monsters (445.g); the hieroglyphic for Venus (154.c) and her various images (294.a), including one atop a tortoise (275.e); what the frenzy of Venus is like (84.c); why humans always feel desire (158.d) and why humans alone pursue male-on-male love (158.d); the power of words (314.d); why the penis is called the *veretrum* (78.a); Truth submerged in a well (273.e); an illustration of a monstrous worm (319); worms born in the head (123.f); moral lessons concerning worm infestations (259.e); what a *verpa* is (78.a); the number of vertebrae (86.c); the god Vertumnus (208.c); a ram with eight horns (424.d); what a natural wart is (129.h); the double bladder in man (81.g); the signature of the bladder in plants (308.a); dreams concerning the bladder (151.h); using a pig’s bladder as a pouch (170.a); the metamorphosis of bats (191.e); Victory depicted on coins (282.d); the figure of a naval victory (284.b) and a statue of victory achieved through wise counsel (285.e); the gods to whom human sacrifices were offered (315.f, g, h); those who suffered annual bouts of sleeplessness (123.g); an exceptionally long period of wakefulness (221.g); moral lessons regarding sleeplessness (255.f); a mention of Vincenzo Tanari (507.g); those who abhor wine (214.d) and the excellence of wine (254.d); a woman who gave birth to a viper (598.d); the derivation of the word "man" (3.f); what "man" represents in mystical terms (235.g); who the "man of God" is (236.a); a man after God’s own heart (ibid.); a man clothed in white (ibid.); the man of sorrows (236.b); a talkative man (ibid.); the man of God’s right hand (ibid.); a man of battle (ibid.); a man riding a blood-red horse (ibid.); a warrior (236.c); a man flying through the air (ibid.); a man fighting his own brother (236.c); one man pursuing a thousand (ibid.); another mention of a talkative man (ibid.); a man whose testicles have been torn away (236.d); a man who was not a man (237.e); the symbolic image of an armed man (261.g); armored men seen in the sky (721.e); the men of Anathoth (237.f); and two men carrying a cluster of grapes (236.d)

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