Winter, Thomas Nelson. “Apology as Prosecution: The Trial of Apuleius,” (PhD diss., Northwestern University, 1968): 97.
1. That Apuleius had the well-kept hair of a gigolo (4.12)
2. That he arrived with one slave or freed three in one day (17)
3. That he used virile and feminale fish for a philtre (33)
4. That he enchanted a boy (42)
5. That they would provide other boys “likewise enchanted by Apuleius” (42)
6. That he enchanted a woman (47)
7. That the unknown items in the handkerchief were magical (53)
8. That he habitually performed nocturnal rites (i.e., the testimony of Crassus (57))
9. That he worshipped a skeleton, calling it “Basileus” (61)
10. That Pudentilla had never wished to remarry (67)
11. That Pudentilla herself wrote that Apuleius was a magus (67)
12. That Pudentilla was 60 years old when they married (67)
13. That Pudentilla was forced by magic to grant a huge dowry (67)
14. That Apuleius wrote an unsavory letter to Pudentilla (87)
15. That Apuleius used much of Pudentilla’s funds to buy himself a large estate (97-98).