Book, Chapter

 1 Life    |           stature, gray eyed, his haire yellow, and a beautiful
 2    2,  8|         his Vermilion colour, his haire yellow by nature, his gray
 3    2,  9|      abroad to marke the face and haire of every dame, and afterwards
 4    2,  9|         if you spoyle and cut the haire of any woman or deprive
 5    2,  9|       Sometimes the beauty of the haire resembleth the colour of
 6    2,  9|          is such a dignity in the haire, that whatsoever shee be,
 7    2,  9|         increased her beauty, her haire hanged about her shoulders,
 8    2,  9|       where she had thus laid her haire. Whereat she turned her
 9    2, 10|           please me, undresse thy haire and come and embrace me
10    2, 10|          selfe, and unattyred her haire, presenting her amiable
11    2, 11|       blubbered face covered with haire unto me saying, I pray you
12    3, 13|      strongly, and drew me by the haire with both his hands, and
13    3, 15|    towards me, and tooke away the haire which I had gathered, out
14    3, 15|            and much resembled the haire of the Boetian, and I tooke
15    3, 15|         certaine charmes over the haire, and dipped it in divers
16    3, 15|   confections, those bodies whose haire was burning in the fire,
17    3, 15|   smelling the sent of their owne haire, came and rapped at our
18    3, 15|         ruddy cheekes, glittering haire, sweet cosses, and lilly
19    3, 17|         burgen out, but verily my haire did turne in ruggednesse,
20    3, 17|        and myne eares rugged with haire: neither could I see any
21    4, 20|         covered the seam with the haire, that it might not be seen.
22    4, 22|         gave them, and tare their haire, renewing their false and
23    4, 22|          away her teares with his haire, did yeeld unto his wife.
24    4, 22|            his purple cheeks, his haire hanging comely behinde and
25    4, 22|        rased and cut off this thy haire, which I have dressed with
26    4, 22|        wiping the ground with her haire, and with great weeping
27    4, 22| therewithall she tooke her by the haire, and brought her in, before
28    4, 22|        apparell) tooke her by the haire, and dashed her head upon
29    5, 24|        wherefore shee cut off her haire, disguised her selfe like
30    5, 28|       staffe, till he had left no haire on all my body, no not so
31    5, 31|        mourning vesture, tare her haire and beat her breast, and
32    6, 32|       griefes, while she tare her haire and rent her garments, demanded
33    6, 36|          bald, with long and gray haire, one of the number of those
34    6, 36|          be compelled (tearing my haire) to looke for some Physition
35    7, 39|         hot yrons, some had their haire halfe clipped, some had
36    8, 45|            my skin waxed soft, my haire began to shine, and was
37    8, 46|           and changed their white haire into yellow, with a sweet
38    9, 47|          had a great abundance of haire, dispersed and scattered
39    9, 47|         socks of gold, having his haire laid out, and dressed in
40    9, 47|         over. The women had their haire annointed and their heads
41    9, 47|      abated, and first the rugged haire of my body fell off, my
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