Book, Chapter

 1  Ded    |          which he touched might be gold, is carped the foul sin
 2 Life    |       acceptable than this Asse of Gold indeed. Howbeit there be
 3    2,  8|            her garments beset with gold and pretious stone, in such
 4    2,  9|           to deck themselves up in gold and pretious stones. But
 5    2,  9|           resembleth the colour of gold and honey, sometimes the
 6    2,  9|            to bravely attyred with gold, silks, pretious stones,
 7    2, 11|          and spread with cloath of gold, the Cups were garnished
 8    2, 11|           stood another of shining gold, and here was another of
 9    4, 19|         brought in their preyes of gold and silver, Plate, jewels,
10    4, 19|          down the bags of mony and gold out at a window, to us that
11    4, 20|            my fellows take as much gold and silver as they could
12    4, 20|     companions, they tooke cups of gold, and sung hymns unto the
13    4, 22|         undermined with pillars of gold, the walls covered and seeled
14    4, 22|           should give them as much gold and jewels as she would.
15    4, 22|         she filled their laps with gold, silver, and Jewels, and
16    4, 22|           robes, what Gemmes, what gold we trod on? That if shee
17    4, 22|       minde, how she cast a little gold into our laps, and being
18    4, 22|         she filled their laps with Gold and Silver, and bid Zephyrus
19    4, 22|        mind, she saw his haires of gold, that yeelded out a sweet
20    4, 22|           and made to glitter like gold, and when I have clipped
21    4, 22|           ingraven with letters of gold, hanging upon branches of
22    4, 22|        finely wrought that neither gold nor silver could be compared
23    4, 22|          great sheepe shining like gold, and kept by no manner of
24    5, 24|         but rather to take as much gold and silver as hee would.
25    5, 24|            my backe, then money or gold in my hands. And as for
26    5, 24|          stony house of yours into gold. Then by and by every one
27    5, 25|         one will give us summes of gold for her. This is my opinion
28    5, 27|          first brought out all the gold, and silver, and other treasure
29    6, 36|   inhabitants came in, and offered gold, silver, vessels of wine,
30    7, 39|             quoth they) the cup of gold, which (under the colour
31    7, 39| Inhabitants, who taking the cup of gold, and the goddesse which
32    7, 40|        worthy to weare a crowne of gold, for one part that he played
33    7, 41|            with money, since as by gold the adamant gates may be
34    7, 41|           he shewed him glittering gold in his hand, saying that
35    7, 41|         pleasure of the crownes of gold; in the end the desire of
36    7, 41|           the pestilent avarice of gold egged him out a doores,
37    7, 41|            for great desire of the gold, he ran hastily to Philesiterus,
38    7, 41|          wherefore he demanded the gold which he promised. Then
39    8, 46|         with trappers and barbs of Gold, with brave harnesse, with
40    8, 46|           Coverlet was of cloth of Gold, and the pillowes soft and
41    8, 46|       promised him fifty peeces of Gold, if he would give her a
42    8, 46|            her the fifty peeces of gold which she promised her husband
43    8, 46|            her the fifty peeces of gold, if she would fetch her
44    8, 46|         Barbary, having a mitre of gold upon his head, and seeming
45    8, 46|         his right hand an Apple of gold, and with a seemely gate
46    8, 46|           for she had a Diademe of gold upon her head, and in her
47    8, 46|           to give her the apple of gold: the other maiden which
48    9, 47|            hand shee bare a cup of gold, out of the mouth whereof
49    9, 47|        robe of silke, and socks of gold, having his haire laid out,
50    9, 47|    shepheard, and bearing a cup of gold in his hand: an Asse which
51    9, 47|  instruments of brasse, silver and gold, which rendered a pleasant
52    9, 47|            of palme with leaves of gold, and the verge of Mercurie.
53    9, 47|         carried a round vessell of gold, in forme of a cap. The
54    9, 47|            wrought with springs of gold, and another carried a vessell
55    9, 47|     covered over with coverings of gold, and all the shippe was
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