Gargantua and Pantagruel | Page 5

François Rabelais
reigned

Chapter 4.
XXX.--How Shrovetide is anatomized and described by Xenomanes

Chapter 4.

XXXI.--Shrovetide's outward parts anatomized

Chapter 4.
XXXII.--A continuation of Shrovetide's countenance

Chapter 4.
XXXIII.--How Pantagruel discovered a monstrous physeter, or
whirlpool, near the Wild Island

Chapter 4.
XXXIV.--How the monstrous physeter was slain by Pantagruel

Chapter 4.
XXXV.--How Pantagruel went on shore in the Wild Island, the ancient
abode of the Chitterlings

Chapter 4.
XXXVI.--How the wild Chitterlings laid an ambuscado for Pantagruel

Chapter 4.

XXXVII.--How Pantagruel sent for Colonel Maul-chitterling and
Colonel Cut-pudding; with a discourse well worth your hearing about
the names of places and persons

Chapter 4.
XXXVIII.--How Chitterlings are not to be slighted by men

Chapter 4.
XXXIX.--How Friar John joined with the cooks to fight the
Chitterlings

Chapter 4.
XL.--How Friar John fitted up the sow; and of the valiant cooks that
went into it

Chapter 4.
XLI.--How Pantagruel broke the Chitterlings at the knees

Chapter 4.
XLII.--How Pantagruel held a treaty with Niphleseth, Queen of the
Chitterlings

Chapter 4.
XLIII.--How Pantagruel went into the island of Ruach

Chapter 4.
XLIV.--How small rain lays a high wind

Chapter 4.
XLV.--How Pantagruel went ashore in the island of Pope-Figland

Chapter 4.
XLVI.--How a junior devil was fooled by a husbandman of Pope-
Figland

Chapter 4.
XLVII.--How the devil was deceived by an old woman of Pope-
Figland

Chapter 4.
XLVIII.--How Pantagruel went ashore at the island of Papimany

Chapter 4.
XLIX.--How Homenas, Bishop of Papimany, showed us the Uranopet
decretals

Chapter 4.
L.--How Homenas showed us the archetype, or representation of a pope

Chapter 4.
LI.--Table-talk in praise of the decretals

Chapter 4.
LII.--A continuation of the miracles caused by the decretals

Chapter 4.
LIII.--How, by the virtue of the decretals, gold is subtilely drawn out of
France to Rome

Chapter 4.
LIV.--How Homenas gave Pantagruel some bon-Christian pears

Chapter 4.
LV.--How Pantagruel, being at sea, heard various unfrozen words

Chapter 4.
LVI.--How among the frozen words Pantagruel found some odd ones

Chapter 4.
LVII.--How Pantagruel went ashore at the dwelling of Gaster, the first
master of arts in the world

Chapter 4.
LVIII.--How, at the court of the master of ingenuity, Pantagruel
detested the Engastrimythes and the Gastrolaters

Chapter 4.
LIX.--Of the ridiculous statue Manduce; and how and what the
Gastrolaters sacrifice to their ventripotent god

Chapter 4.
LX.--What the Gastrolaters sacrificed to their god on interlarded
fish-days

Chapter 4.
LXI.--How Gaster invented means to get and preserve corn

Chapter 4.
LXII.--How Gaster invented an art to avoid being hurt or touched by
cannon-balls

Chapter 4.
LXIII.--How Pantagruel fell asleep near the island of Chaneph, and of
the problems proposed to be solved when he waked

Chapter 4.
LXIV.--How Pantagruel gave no answer to the problems

Chapter 4.
LXV.--How Pantagruel passed the time with his servants

Chapter 4.
LXVI.--How, by Pantagruel's order, the Muses were saluted near the
isle of Ganabim

Chapter 4.
LXVII.--How Panurge berayed himself for fear; and of the huge cat
Rodilardus, which he took for a puny devil

THE FIFTH BOOK.
The Author's Prologue

Chapter 5.
I.--How Pantagruel arrived at the Ringing Island, and of the noise that
we heard

Chapter 5.
II.--How the Ringing Island had been inhabited by the Siticines, who
were become birds

Chapter 5.
III.--How there is but one pope-hawk in the Ringing Island

Chapter 5.
IV.--How the birds of the Ringing Island were all passengers

Chapter 5.
V.--Of the dumb Knight-hawks of the Ringing Island

Chapter 5.
VI.--How the birds are crammed in the Ringing Island

Chapter 5.
VII.--How Panurge related to Master Aedituus the fable of the horse
and the ass

Chapter 5.
VIII.--How with much ado we got a sight of the pope-hawk

Chapter 5.
IX.--How we arrived at the island of Tools

Chapter 5.
X.--How Pantagruel arrived at the island of Sharping

Chapter 5.
XI.--How we passed through the wicket inhabited by Gripe-men-all,
Archduke of the Furred Law-cats

Chapter 5.
XII.--How Gripe-men-all propounded a riddle to us

Chapter 5.
XIII.--How Panurge solved Gripe-men-all's riddle

Chapter 5.
XIV.--How the Furred Law-cats live on corruption

Chapter 5.
XV.--How Friar John talks of rooting out the Furred Law-cats

Chapter 5.
XVI.--How Pantagruel came to the island of the Apedefers, or
Ignoramuses, with long claws and crooked paws, and of terrible
adventures and monsters there

Chapter 5.
XVII.--How we went forwards, and how Panurge had like to have been
killed

Chapter 5.
XVIII.--How our ships were stranded, and we were relieved by some
people that were subject to Queen Whims (qui tenoient de la Quinte)

Chapter 5.
XIX.--How we arrived at the queendom of
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