Book, Chapter

 1 Life    |        vertue and riches as any woman might be. Hee himselfe was
 2    1,  3|     come to the house of an old woman that sold wine, called Meroe,
 3    1,  3|      say against so venerable a woman as shee is, lest by your
 4    1,  4|        tell you the truth, this woman had a certaine Lover, whom
 5    1,  4|        because he loved another woman beside her: and the reason
 6    1,  4|         that he fancied another woman) she turned him into that
 7    1,  4|     yeares past since the poore woman first began to swell, and
 8    1,  4|        feare, lest the same old woman using the like practice,
 9    1,  6|     City: where I espied an old woman, of whom I enquired whether
10    2,  8|     whereas I espied a certaine woman, accompanied with a great
11    2,  8|      acquaintance of an unknown woman. Howbeit as halfe ashamed
12    2,  9|         the corporal parts of a woman, the same doth the naturall
13    2,  9|        and cut the haire of any woman or deprive her of the colour
14    2,  9|         on the shoulders of the woman, or hang down scattering
15    2, 11|       on this wicked and cursed woman his wife which hath committed
16    3, 14|       this was done, out came a woman in the middle of the Theatre
17    3, 14|       And after her came an old woman in ragged robes, crying
18    3, 14|  members. And by and by the old woman, who troubled all the Court
19    4, 19|      began to chide with an old woman there, crooked with age,
20    4, 19|        till night? Then the old woman trembled, and scantly able
21    4, 19|      out of the window, the old woman marked him wel, and came
22    4, 20|    downe to sleep. Then the old woman gave us fresh barley without
23    4, 21|        Then they called the old woman, and commaunded her to sit
24    4, 21|         any entreaty of the old woman, but howled and sobbed in
25    4, 21|    again like a furious and mad woman, and beat her breast and
26    4, 21|        did before.~Then the old woman enquired the causes of her
27    4, 21|       hang me. Whereat the old [woman] was more angry, and severely
28    4, 21|          I awaked.~Then the old woman rendring out like sighes,
29    4, 22|     Verily I live not, nor am a woman, but I will deprive her
30    4, 22|        of every poore rusticall woman? No, no, yet had I rather
31    4, 22|      are his mother, and a kind woman, will you continually search
32    4, 22|     said unto Psyches, O simple woman without all experience,
33    4, 22|      river, denyed to helpe the woman spinning, and filled the
34    4, 22| Pleasure. This the trifling old woman declared unto the captive
35    4, 23|      Art thou afraid of the old woman more then halfe dead, whom
36    4, 23|      the kitish eyes of the old woman, for shee ran after me,
37    4, 23|    hearing the voice of the old woman, came out to see what the
38    4, 23|     almost home, we saw the old woman hanging upon a bow of a
39    4, 23|         which the miserable old woman had prepared for them. At
40    5, 24|      court: his wife Platina, a woman of rare faith and singular
41    5, 24|        away, but this most holy woman, faithfull and true to her
42    5, 24|         one deemed that I was a woman by reason I lacked a beard.
43    5, 24|  skirmish, and disguised like a woman, I invaded townes and castles
44    5, 27|        next day this new wedded woman (my Mistresse) did greatly
45    5, 29|        more. For he espyeth any woman passing by the way, whether
46    6, 32|       of the family of the good woman Charites, who sometimes
47    6, 32|    tydings, as a mad and raging woman, ran up and down the streets,
48    6, 32|         to win the heart of the woman, and to nourish his odious
49    6, 32|       you grant to me miserable woman, necessarie time to bewaile
50    6, 32|       the false promises of the woman, and preferring his inordinate
51    6, 32|  pleaseth thine eies to a chast woman, that thou shall have blindnesse
52    6, 32|        all the Citie like a mad woman towards the Sepulchre of
53    6, 33|     hurled a great flint upon a woman, which sate upon my backe,
54    6, 35|      THIRTY-FIFTH CHAPTER~How a woman killed her selfe and her
55    7, 38|     CHAPTER~Of the deceipt of a Woman which made her husband Cuckold.~
56    7, 38|      his wife was a faire young woman, but very lascivious, and
57    7, 38|        pence, for which I poore woman that sit all day alone in
58    7, 38|       agree to the words of the woman, he sayd: Dame will you
59    7, 39|        tyed and yoked to a good woman and have increase of children.
60    7, 40|     wife was the most pestilent woman in all the world, insomuch
61    7, 40|    abhomination. She had an old woman, a bawd, a messenger of
62    7, 40|         you know (quoth the old woman) the whole tale of Philesiterus?
63    7, 40|        story. By and by the old woman which knew well to babble,
64    7, 41|    according to the nature of a woman, when she heard him speake
65    7, 41|        the right owner.~The old woman had scant finished her tale
66    7, 41|      scabbed Asse. Then the old woman answered, I promise you
67    7, 41|   seemed to me a wise and chast woman, regarding her own honesty
68    7, 41|        About noone there came a woman into the Milhouse, very
69    7, 41|  scattering upon her face: This woman tooke the Baker by the hand,
70    7, 41|         they could not find the woman, but onely their master
71    8, 44|      but rather a tragedy: This woman when her love began first
72    8, 44|        meane season this wicked woman impatient of her love, and
73    8, 44|      For the young sonne of the woman that came from schoole at
74    8, 44|       the child: but the cruell woman the onely example of stepmothers
75    8, 44|       lie came home, the wicked woman declared that his sonne
76    8, 44|    matter revealed, whereby the woman was perpetually exiled,
77    8, 46|   thought, if I should hurt the woman by any kind of meane, I
78    8, 46|      obtained for money a poore woman, which was condemned to
79    8, 46|         I heard concerning this woman. This woman had a husband,
80    8, 46|     concerning this woman. This woman had a husband, whose father
81    8, 46|         was the husband of this woman, condemned to be eaten of
82    8, 46|      began to suspect the young woman as a harlot and common queane,
83    8, 46|        for her, the mischievous woman, like one that were mad,
84    8, 46|    remedy to save his life. The woman that slew the Maiden having
85    8, 46|          But the bold and hardy woman, to the end she might accomplish
86    8, 46| wickednesse of this mischievous woman, as voyd of all counsell
87    8, 46|    first poyson: But the wicked woman persevering in her mischiefe,
88    8, 46|        whereat the ill disposed woman, with resemblance of honesty,
89    8, 46|     further favour of this rich woman, and partly to gaine the
90    8, 46|         of her father: but this woman knowing that the mothers
91    8, 46|        the abhomination of this woman: but shee had scarce ended
92    8, 46|       matter, caused the cursed woman, and her servants to be
93    8, 46|        knowne, this mischievous woman farre lesse then she deserved,
94    8, 46|        beasts. Behold with this woman was I appointed to have
95    8, 46|      consent of the people, the woman who was condemned to the
96    8, 46|        appointed to devoure the woman, was not so instructed and
97    9, 47|       and dressed in forme of a woman! There was another ware
98    9, 47| triumphantly march forward: The woman attired in white vestiments,
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