Book, Chapter

 1    1,  3|      environed with a company of theeves, who robbed and spoiled
 2    1,  3|          her such apparel as the theeves left to cover me withall.~
 3    1,  5|    verily have thought that some Theeves had been presently come
 4    1,  5|           and moreover, what can theeves take from him that hath
 5    2, 10|        was taken away from us by theeves, whose violence when my
 6    2, 11|     thinke that they were strong theeves. Whereupon I by and by drew
 7    2, 11|      with the slaughter of those Theeves, like Hercules when he fought
 8    3, 13|     fortuned to espy three great theeves attempting to break down
 9    3, 13|       was mooved to set upon the theeves by just occasion. Secondly,
10    3, 14|          remembred I wounded the theeves the night before. Whereat
11    3, 17|        And by and by a troupe of theeves entred in, and kept every
12    3, 17|      were within the doores, the theeves resisted and kept them back,
13    3, 17|        in no wise pronounce. The Theeves little regarding my crying,
14    3, 17|       fall into the hands of the theeves, and either by suspition
15    4, 18|       village to certaine of the theeves acquaintance and friends,
16    4, 19|         his purpose, and how the Theeves came to their den.~Not long
17    4, 19|         den.~Not long after, the theeves laded us againe, but especially
18    4, 19|         this, I thought that the theeves when they did see me so
19    4, 19|        his eares: which when the theeves beheld, as without all hope
20    4, 19|  especially of the den where the theeves did inhabit, I will prove
21    4, 19|          it to be a very den for theeves, and there was nothing else
22    4, 19|         with thatch, wherein the theeves did nightly accustome to
23    4, 19|       who seemed likewise to bee Theeves, for they brought in their
24    4, 19|          when there be but a few theeves, then will they not only
25    4, 21|     TWENTY-FIRST CHAPTER~How the Theeves stole away a Gentlewoman,
26    4, 21|          When night was come the Theeves awaked and rose up, and
27    4, 21|          And suddenly after, the Theeves returned home carefull and
28    4, 21|       sorrow she was in; but the theeves brought her within the cave,
29    4, 21|      pieces among so many sturdy theeves and dreadful robbers, can
30    4, 21|       cease your crying, for the Theeves doe little esteeme your
31    4, 21|          in a great multitude of theeves armed like men of warre,
32    4, 21|          up and down, one of the theeves mooved with indignation,
33    4, 23|         were taken againe by the theeves, and what a kind of death
34    4, 23|          for them.~By and by the theeves came home laden with treasure,
35    4, 23|         Knowst thou not that the theeves have ordained to slay thee?
36    4, 23|        the cruell purpose of the theeves, was mooved with small pity,
37    4, 23|         that was captive amongst Theeves: Thou shalt be numbred amongst
38    4, 23|          but I (knowing that the theeves were gone that way to fetch
39    4, 23|   whether way we might take, the theeves returned, laiden with their
40    4, 23|       them foure. But one of the theeves after every man had declared
41    4, 23|         This being said, all the Theeves consented, and when I (poore
42    5, 24|        one of the company of the theeves, (for so his and their greeting
43    5, 24|          the apprehension of the theeves, to the intent I might learne
44    5, 24|    touching the death, which the theeves provised for me and the
45    5, 25|  enterprise. I doubt not but all theeves, and such as have a good
46    5, 26| TWENTY-SIXTH CHAPTER~How all the Theeves were brought asleepe by
47    5, 26|   knowest thou not how the other theeves if they knew thy demeanour
48    5, 26|      Then hee filled wine to the theeves more and more, and never
49    5, 27|         by her husband while the theeves were asleepe, and how much
50    5, 27|   Apuleius was made of.~When the theeves were all asleepe by their
51    5, 27|        horses to the cave of the theeves, where wee found them all
52    5, 27|           they threw many of the theeves downe into the bottome of
53    5, 31|         confesse the offence, as theeves and malefactors accustome
54    5, 31|          either to keepe off the theeves with thy heeles, or else
55    5, 31|          the cruell hands of the theeves: where contrary thou runnest
56    6, 32|    calamity with mee amongst the theeves, who after that hee had
57    6, 32|          he fell in company with Theeves, and had his hand ready
58    6, 32|        from the puissance of the Theeves, he mingled himselfe among
59    6, 33|        such which passed by like theeves, and devoure both them and
60    6, 33|          supposing that wee were Theeves by reason of the great multitude)
61    7, 39|          prevaile in pursuite of theeves, they said that this enemy
62    7, 39|           and his pursuits after theeves should be prosperous. Thus
63    7, 39|       them cruelly, calling them theeves and robbers, and after they
64    9, 47|   goddesse. For what availed the theeves: the beasts savage: thy
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