Book, Chapter

 1  Ded    |       prudent workes of learned men, wherein in such unripe
 2  Ded    |         but also the vertues of men are covertly thereby commended,
 3  Ded    |        and attempted by mortall men. The fall of Icarus is an
 4 Life    |     spirits, and description of men. Two other books of the
 5    1,  1|         the depraved opinion of men, which either is rarely
 6    1,  2|     done before the face of all men. And that I may first make
 7    1,  3|      and before the face of all men.~
 8    1,  4|       to the computation of all men, it is eight yeares past
 9    1,  5|       not wet with the blood of men, but art embrued with stinking
10    1,  5|         fates have appointed to men, that I beleeve shall happen.
11    1,  7| Thessaly, to be forsaken of all men, and to reduce it into an
12    2,  8|       indurate, and turned from men into that figure, and that
13    2,  8|       waters, were changed from men into such kinde of likenesses.
14    2, 10|        and made by the hands of men, yet hath it a remembrance
15    2, 11|         is here to doe? Do dead men use to run away in this
16    2, 11|         flesh and faces of dead men, and thereby work their
17    2, 11|         deceive the eyes of all men, sometimes they are transformed
18    2, 11|        dore, behold I saw three men of great stature, heaving
19    3, 12|      and murther of these three men. Howbeit the Assyrian Diophanes
20    3, 12|         Crier had commanded all men to keep silence, and people
21    3, 13|       those cruell and terrible men would in no case run away,
22    3, 13|    between us. Thirdly, we were men meere strangers and of no
23    3, 14|     apparent to the eies of all men, the Sergeant charged me
24    3, 14|      bodies of the three slaine men were no bodies, but three
25    3, 14|         selfe from the sight of men, because I had ministred
26    3, 15|       ready the members of dead men, as the nosethrils and fingers,
27    3, 17|      house with weapons. And as men resorted to aid and help
28    4, 18|         whence I came. Then the men of the towne called in their
29    4, 19|         another company of yong men more in number than was
30    4, 19|       when you goe abroad, like men with ganders hearts to creepe
31    4, 19|         ready a great number of men and wilde beasts, and many
32    4, 20|         such paines, for I have men that serve for nothing but
33    4, 21|       she) to deprive our young men of the price of your ransome?
34    4, 21| multitude of theeves armed like men of warre, with naked swords
35    4, 22|        conversant among mortall men, or else that the earth
36    4, 22|         which according as wise men doe terme is called divination)
37    4, 22|      that it is a custome among men to sweare by the puissance
38    5, 24|         or contrary opinions in men, that the wicked doe glory
39    5, 24|         Captaine of two hundred men, for fortune was cleane
40    5, 27|         them with the bodies of men.~
41    5, 29|       which I bare, to certaine men dwelling in a village by,
42    6, 33|      trouble us poore labouring men so cruelly? What meane you
43    6, 36|     stood still forsaken of all men. And when many buiers came
44    6, 36|   desiring so much the bloud of men, should likewise desire
45    6, 36|       valiantly, that the young men of the towne seeking for
46    7, 40|         wherby she deceived all men, but especially her poore
47    7, 42|       the law is common for all men, and a redresse may be had
48    8, 44|        the charge of a thousand men. And when we had remained
49    8, 46|      accompanied with two young men armed, and brandishing their
50    8, 46|   trumpet to provoke and stirre men to battell; this maiden
51    8, 46|       sentence betweene God and men, and that one rusticall
52    8, 46|      Apollo, above all the wise men in the world, by envy and
53    9, 47|      Ghoasts which appeare unto men, and to keepe them downe
54    9, 47|        great number, as well of men as women, with Candels,
55    9, 47|       came the great company of men and women, which had taken
56    9, 47|    covered with linnen: but the men had their crownes shaven,
57    9, 47|     goddesse followed a foot as men do, and specially Mercurie,
58    9, 47|         lesse like the teeth of men, and my tayle which combred
59    9, 48|     benefits, and succoring all men, as well on land as sea;
60    9, 48|      the predestinations of all men, how he had sent a poore
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