Lexicographical Neighbors of Succubae
Literary usage of Succubae
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Faiths of Man: A Cyclopædia of Religions by James George Roche Forlong (1906)
"The Cyprians said that the Greeks were the offspring of succubae. Our St
Augustine (600 AC) said that he was constantly visited by such beautiful fiends ..."
2. Horns of Honour: And Other Studies in the By-ways of Archæology by Frederick Thomas Elworthy (1900)
"He says that one told him : " I am one of the deluded dwellers in this desert,
who have imprudently offered a refuge to the incubi and succubae. ..."
3. Horns of Honour: And Other Studies in the By-ways of Archæology by Frederick Thomas Elworthy (1900)
"He says that one told him : " I am one of the deluded dwellers in this desert,
who have imprudently offered a refuge to the incubi and succubae. ..."
4. The Harvard Classics by Charles William Eliot (1910)
"Then, my glasses Cut in more subtle angles, to disperse And multiply the figures,
as I walk Naked between my succubae. My mists I'll have of perfume, ..."
5. The Chief Elizabethan Dramatists, Excluding Shakespeare by William Allan Neilson (1911)
"Then, my glasses « stuft ; Cut in more subtle angles, to disperse And multiply
the figures, as I walk Naked between my succubae.1 My mixta I 41 have of ..."