Book, Chapter

 1    1,  2|         and weeping for thee at home: Thy children are in ward
 2    1,  2|      losse and lacke of thee at home, and against her will to
 3    2,  8|     named among your friends at home: wherfore I pray you to
 4    2,  8|    neither Milo nor his wife at home.~
 5    2,  9|    selfe therewith privately at home, and thereby judge the residue
 6    2, 11|        So I disfigured returned home againe, and covered the
 7    2, 11|         pain I could scarce get home, by reason it was so dark,
 8    3, 14|    wiped my selfe, and returned home againe, I never remembred
 9    3, 15|         ground, and to bring it home. Which when I thought to
10    3, 15|       have neither minde to goe home, nor to depart hence, but
11    3, 16|       remedy when she returneth home.~Consider I pray you with
12    4, 19|         talke that we were come home well nigh at our journeys
13    4, 19|        sittest idley all day at home, and having no regard to
14    4, 19|   brought away, we are all come home safe, and are increased
15    4, 20|       our soldiers, we are come home with these present cheats.~
16    4, 21|     after, the Theeves returned home carefull and heavy, bringing
17    4, 22|       Psyches, sitting alone at home, lamented her solitary life,
18    4, 22|   prophesie of Apollo, returned home sad and sorrowful, and declared
19    4, 22|      people, and every man gone home, the miserable Parents well
20    4, 22|         she.~But now let us goe home to our husbands and poore
21    4, 22|       and happy, and sittest at home nothing regarding thy peril,
22    4, 22|      desire and wicked envy ran home, and feigning to her husband
23    4, 22|      night came, Venus returned home from the banket wel tippled
24    4, 22|         go thither and bring me home some of the wooll of their
25    4, 22|         apron, and carried them home to Venus. Howbeit the danger
26    4, 23|         and by the theeves came home laden with treasure, and
27    4, 23|        soone as he hath brought home his burthen, I will surely
28    4, 23|      death, we fortuned to come home, for the feare that I was
29    4, 23|   halter and thought to pull me home: but I not forgetting the
30    4, 23|        when we were come almost home, we saw the old woman hanging
31    5, 24|   robbery of Miloes house, came home and declared to his Company,
32    5, 27|         Gentlewoman was carried home by her husband while the
33    5, 27|     homeward. When we were come home, all the people of the Citie,
34    5, 27|         after this wee returned home glad and merry of so great
35    5, 28|     made a common Asse to fetch home wood, and how he was handled
36    5, 28|        by horses, I was brought home againe to the Mill, but
37    5, 28|        I was appointed to bring home wood every day from a high
38    5, 28|     should drive me thither and home again, but a boy that was
39    5, 29|        his skinne, and carry it home to our master, and say that
40    5, 30|      the way, and (bringing him home fast bound to their houses)
41    6, 32|       new marriage, and comming home againe of the maiden, Whereby (
42    6, 36|        this faire beast to ride home on, and about in the countrey:
43    6, 36|       he caried his new servant home, and before he came to his
44    6, 36|      verely that he had brought home a fit and conveniable servant
45    6, 36|     life, because I might carry home the goddesse. So they laded
46    7, 38|        no such matter, returned home praising the chast continency
47    7, 38|         this sort: Commest thou home every day with empty hands,
48    7, 38|       pray you have you brought home hither, to fetch away my
49    7, 39|         me likewise to carry it home, and when he had well laded
50    7, 41|       of his mind, but being at home he seemed to see the money
51    7, 41|       compelled him to tarry at home, the pestilent avarice of
52    7, 41|     this returned incontinently home, and called his servant
53    7, 41|     wives expectation) returned home, for she thought he would
54    7, 41|   husband demanding why he came home so soone. I could not abide (
55    7, 41|    supper, I forthwith returned home. When the Baker had told
56    8, 44|    departure. And when lie came home, the wicked woman declared
57    8, 46| necessary, he would not returne home into his Countrey in Chariots,
58    8, 46|       his wife which he left at home great with child, that if
59    8, 46|       when her husband returned home, shee declared unto him
60    8, 46|     would have gone immediately home to receive a counterpoyson,
61    8, 46|         she licensed him to goe home: By the way the poyson invaded
62    8, 46|      money, ranne incontinently home, and brought her a whole
63    9, 47|         and garlands of flowers home to their houses, kissing
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License