Book, Chapter

 1    1,  2|            I scantly knew him: for fortune had brought him into such
 2    1,  2|            slippery inconstancy of Fortune: and therewithall he covered
 3    1,  2|          covered in such sort, Let Fortune (quoth he) triumph yet more,
 4    1,  4|          the like practice, should fortune to heare all our communication.
 5    1,  5|          life. But when I saw that fortune should minister unto mee
 6    1,  5|           Cheese: and behold evill fortune! There was behind the Plane
 7    2, 10|           would tell every man his fortune, to some he would tel the
 8    2, 10|          of unpittifull and cruell fortune: For beeing on a day amongst
 9    2, 10|         tell the simple sort their fortune, a certaine Cobler came
10    2, 10|         pay for the telling of his fortune, and ran away. The Diophanes
11    2, 10|            fare well with his evil fortune, and get againe that which
12    3, 12|    sorrowes, and greatly bewail my fortune, behold I heard a great
13    3, 13|           but that I was mooved by fortune and reasonable cause to
14    3, 14|           and deprived of all good fortune: and execute your justice
15    3, 16|      thought that they bring evill fortune to the house. But I pray
16    4, 18|            of the guide of my good fortune, ranne lustily towards the
17    4, 18|          prevent the cruelty of my fortune, for when I came to the
18    4, 18|          so intangled with unhappy fortune that I little esteemed mine
19    4, 19|         ravening beasts. But evill fortune prevented so good a consideration;
20    4, 19|         with my selfe of the evill fortune of my poore companion, and
21    4, 19|          voide himselfe from evill fortune, for on a day when he had
22    4, 20|             And taking his present fortune in good part, with courage
23    4, 21|            upon me and my wretched fortune, and give me license a while
24    4, 21|        good mother, now my unhappy fortune is renewed and encreased:
25    4, 22|           Venus, bring mee, and as fortune has appointed, place me
26    4, 22|      hearing of her most miserable fortune, came with great dolour
27    4, 22|        sweet Spowse and dear wife, fortune doth menace unto thee imminent
28    4, 22|         Whose lamentations if thou fortune to heare, beware that thou
29    4, 22|         behold cruell and contrary fortune, behold how we, borne all
30    4, 22|            let us declare her good fortune to our father, nor to any
31    4, 22|            perill and danger evill fortune doth threaten unto thee,
32    4, 22|           face, which if thou once fortune to see, as I have often
33    4, 22|          nor answer a word if they fortune to question of me, so will
34    4, 22|           it be a divine babe, and fortune to come to the eares of
35    4, 22|            borne) a bastard; if we fortune to suffer thee to live so
36    4, 22|           perceived the end of all fortune, thinking verely that she
37    4, 23|           dangers: and thou cruell fortune cease thy wrath, let the
38    4, 23|            in memory of my present fortune, and the providence divine.
39    5, 24|          Writers did affirme, that fortune was starke blind without
40    5, 24|    complaine of the crueltie of my fortune, since as I was not much
41    5, 24|       receive the blisse of better Fortune, and not to hold out his
42    5, 24|            of two hundred men, for fortune was cleane against me; harken
43    5, 24|        continue there according as fortune had appointed. But when
44    5, 27|        Being in this calamity, yet fortune worked me other torments,
45    5, 28|            to the Mill, but behold fortune (insatiable of my torments)
46    5, 28|          for me to stand still but fortune was favourable towards me,
47    5, 30|            so every day. But evill fortune would not suffer me to continue
48    6, 32|            learned then I (to whom fortune hath ministred more copious
49    6, 32|            thy vengeance and evill fortune, reckon thy miserie; so
50    6, 36|          exceedingly, but my evill fortune which was ever so cruell
51    7, 37|          traiterous Cooke. Howbeit fortune, or the fatall disposition
52    7, 39| considering with my selfe the good fortune which I was sometime in
53    7, 39|            consolation of my evill fortune, saving that my mind was
54    7, 40|      estate, and bewaile his evill fortune: for she had not one fault
55    8, 44|         avoyd the storme of cruell fortune to come, then to run away.
56    8, 44|         and to the end there might fortune no sedition amongst the
57    8, 44|         the poyson. Behold how the fortune of the old man was changed,
58    8, 44|           was ruled and handled by fortune, according to her pleasure.~
59    8, 46|      sagely, yet in the end cruell fortune sowed great sedition in
60    9, 47|          as weary of all my cruell fortune and calamity, I found good
61    9, 47|      deliver mee from the wretched fortune, which had so long time
62    9, 47|          come to take pitty of thy fortune and tribulation, behold
63    9, 47|            be delivered from cruel fortune, which was alwaies mine
64    9, 47|        Priest understanding all my fortune and miserie, by divine advertisement,
65    9, 47|      escape of so many tempests of fortune, thou art at length come
66    9, 47|          howsoever the blindnes of fortune tormented thee in divers
67    9, 47|        this present felicitie: let fortune go, and fume with fury in
68    9, 47|           execute her cruelty, for fortune hath no puissance against
69    9, 47|          triumph of the victory of fortune; to the end thou maist live
70    9, 48|            the goddesse, and of my fortune worthy to be had in memory.
71    9, 48|    appeasest the great tempests of fortune and keepest backe the course
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