Book, Chapter

 1 Life    | transfiguration or transformation, by reason of the argument and matter
 2    1,  1|         passeth the capacitie of mans reason, which if it be more narrowly
 3    1,  4|             woman beside her: and the reason why she transformed him
 4    1,  4|               of an high hill, and by reason thereof destitute of water,
 5    1,  5|            and slept very soundly, by reason of his travell and plenty
 6    1,  6|            mony and substance, but by reason of his great avarice and
 7    1,  6|               which when I refused by reason of courtesie, hee pulled
 8    1,  7|           corner, whome by and by, by reason of his office, hee did greatly
 9    2,  8|               continually, and you by reason of your tender age and comely
10    2, 10|               demanded of her by what reason she knew it? Mary (quoth
11    2, 11|               sooner set upon you, by reason of your comelinesse and
12    2, 11|             could scarce get home, by reason it was so dark, for ear
13    3, 12|              in the great Theatre, by reason of the great multitude that
14    3, 13|             by envy or hatred, but by reason of my office, in that I
15    3, 13|            ran away, and aided by the reason of darknes, slipt into a
16    3, 14|              refused a good space, by reason I would not make my fact
17    3, 14|               that my head did ake by reason of my sobbing and weeping
18    3, 15|              and in your wisedome, by reason that you are come of so
19    3, 15|              Barber espied me, and by reason it was bruited though all
20    3, 15|            fulfil your desire, but by reason shee is so hated, she getteth
21    4, 19|              not keepe our company by reason of faintnesse; and on the
22    4, 20|           than amongst the living, by reason that our preyes were so
23    4, 21|           mooved with indignation, by reason of his pursuit, took up
24    4, 22|               or set out the same.~By reason wherof, after the fame of
25    4, 22|              so well adorned, that by reason of the pretious stones and
26    4, 22|             might happen unto them by reason of their evill counsell,
27    4, 22|            rude heardsman, howbeit by reason of my old age expert in
28    4, 22|               to thy parents? is this reason, that thou hast violated
29    4, 22|             and that I am not able by reason of myne age to have another
30    4, 22|            his love, and blame him by reason that he is amorous? and
31    4, 22|             Vulcanus gave unto her by reason of marriage, so finely wrought
32    4, 22|          Behold she thinketh (that by reason of her great belly, which
33    4, 22|             to be brought to passe by reason it lay so confusedly scattered)
34    4, 22|               in spirit and sense, by reason of the great perill which
35    5, 24|            denie the fact any way, by reason I could not speake; howbeit
36    5, 24|          should seeme to accuse me by reason of silence, and againe being
37    5, 24|              was not much ashamed, by reason that my servant and my horse,
38    5, 24|               about, insomuch that by reason of the feare that every
39    5, 24|          deemed that I was a woman by reason I lacked a beard. Howbeit
40    5, 29|              had it not beene that by reason of her crying out, she was
41    5, 29|           most fierce horses, that by reason of their wantonnesse have
42    5, 31|             the stable, saying, Is it reason that this carelesse beast
43    6, 32|               the maiden, Whereby (by reason that he came of so noble
44    6, 32|            her Mistresse Charites, by reason that she attended on her
45    6, 33|            our journey that night, by reason of the great number of terrible
46    6, 33|              that wee were Theeves by reason of the great multitude)
47    6, 34|          seemed to be a Shepheard, by reason of the Goates and Sheep
48    6, 34|              able to helpe him out by reason of mine old age, but you
49    6, 36|            determined to continue, by reason that it seemed a place where
50    6, 36|              to say, for the barne by reason of my corne, and for the
51    6, 36|          corne, and for the Temple by reason of the goddesse. In this
52    6, 36|            contrary to all nature and reason. When I beheld this horrible
53    6, 36|         Phelibus and his company, (by reason of the bruit which was dispersed
54    7, 39|            the matter, gan say: Is it reason masters that you should
55    7, 39|              not where they strike by reason of dust: And some had their
56    7, 39|            and their skinne rugged by reason of their lancknesse. When
57    7, 40|               see, but I could not by reason mine eyes were covered every
58    7, 41|            could not find the key: by reason it was so darke. In the
59    7, 41|             before his master, but by reason he knew his owne conscience
60    7, 41|          seemed to be but a child, by reason he had no beard, came to
61    7, 41|             not forbeare sneesing, by reason of the smoake of the brymstone.
62    7, 42|          benighted and constrained by reason of the rain to lodge (very
63    7, 42|             the third brother, but by reason the stone ran along his
64    7, 43|            but he could scarce goe by reason of his wounds: howbeit at
65    7, 43|               breach of his faith, by reason of the losse of his speare,
66    7, 43|             within his doores, but by reason of his faithfull promise
67    8, 44|            and inordinate appetite by reason of shame and feare, lest
68    8, 44|            tell what to say first, by reason of shame. The young man
69    8, 45|             thus to his fellow: Is it reason to breake promise and faith
70    8, 45|         throughout all the Country by reason of mee. For every man would
71    8, 46|               to abide such shame, by reason of her dignity, and because
72    8, 46|               suffer to be slaine, by reason of the naturall affection
73    8, 46|             his guilty conscience, by reason of long delay, tooke the
74    9, 47|               horrible Proserpina, by reason of the deadly howlings which
75    9, 47|            not returning hastilie, by reason of sodaine joye, lest I
76    9, 48|       interpretation of my dreame, by reason that beside the promise
77    9, 48|      soveraigne goddesse Isis, who by reason of the place where her temple
78    9, 48|              my desire was stopped by reason of povertie, for I had spent
79    9, 48|             in haunting the court, by reason of my Latin tongue.~Immediately
80    9, 48|             me stomacke and grudge by reason of my doctrine, which I
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