For truth and falsehood, in such things, are like the iron and clay, in the toes of
Nebuchadnezzar's image; they may cleave, but they will not incorporate.
"Behold Nebuchadnezzar!" exclaimed an old Puritan soldier, whose eyes flashed at the sight of the man they called the tyrant.
"Do you call him Nebuchadnezzar?" said Mordaunt, with a terrible smile; "no, it is Charles the First, the king, the good King Charles, who despoils his subjects to enrich himself."
I'm in what I call THE stage, and all I desire is a listener, although he were deaf, to be as happy as
Nebuchadnezzar.'
Now, D'Artagnan, when he left Calais with his ten scamps, would have hesitated as little in attacking a Goliath, a
Nebuchadnezzar, or a Holofernes as he would in crossing swords with a recruit or caviling with a landlady.
But we did not take much further interest in the green growth, for one cannot live on grass like
Nebuchadnezzar. That requires a special dispensation of Providence and peculiar digestive organs.
As my bricks had been in a chimney before, though I did not read the name of
Nebuchadnezzar on them, I picked out its many fireplace bricks as I could find, to save work and waste, and I filled the spaces between the bricks about the fireplace with stones from the pond shore, and also made my mortar with the white sand from the same place.
This is what makes my blood tingle." And he turned over the pages of his Bible and read, "Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed- nego answered and said to the king, O
Nebuchadnezzar, we are not careful to answer thee in this matter.
'faux air' of
Nebuchadnezzar in the fields about you, that is certain: your hair reminds me of eagles' feathers; whether your nails are grown like birds' claws or not, I have not yet noticed."
Drawing on the methodology established for earlier studies of court litigation procedure in Mesopotamian history--i.e., classification of cuneiform litigation records and attention to legal terminology as the basis for description of the adjudicatory process--Holtz (Yeshiva U.) surveys the adjudicatory procedures found in the records of the Neo-Babylonian period (employing a broad use of the term that includes texts that date to the reign of the Babylonian Kings from
Nebuchadnezzar II onwards to Darius II and the earlier Achaemenid emperors).
THE BRITISH MUSEUM'S exhibition Babylon: Myth And Reality provides a penetrating flash of insight to the ancient city during the reign of King
Nebuchadnezzar II (605-562 BC), its contribution to science and mathematics and the art, films and music it inspired.