Citations:lupinarian


 * 1837 — William Harrison Ainsworth, Crichton, London R. Bentley (1837), page 32:
 * "I have myself seen him at the temulentive tavern of the Falcon," returned Caravaja, "and at the lupinarian haunts in the Champ-Gaillard and the Val-d'Amour.—You understand me—ha!"
 * 1946 — Matthew Josephson, Stendhal: or, The Pursuit of Happiness, Doubleday & Company (1946), page 67:
 * A fragment in rather poor verse, one of the few he has written, celebrates one dark lupinarian night in which he and two companions precipitate themselves upon two poor harlots.
 * 1977 — Miriam J. Benkovitz, Frederick Rolfe: Baron Corvo, Putnam (1977), page 130:
 * Doubtless inspired, Douglas turned out imaginary historical accounts of Commodus, Lampridius, Caracalla, and others to a total of eight before he grew sick of writing and convinced that he tortured 'every thought into lupinarian phrases' or they remained 'flat balderdash'.