Book, Chapter

 1  Ded    |      slain of his own Dogs; may bee meant, That when a man casteth
 2  Ded    |       his minde, hee seemeth to bee turned into a brute beast,
 3    1,  5|    would not greatly lament and bee sorry? But when that Socrates
 4    1,  6|         whose house I shall not bee afeared either of smoke
 5    2, 10|        the field, see then thou bee valiant, see thou be couragious,
 6    2, 11|         shee gave me license to bee absent for a while, saying,
 7    2, 11|     feast when as I pray you to bee present, to set out the
 8    3, 13|      alive should accuse mee to bee remisse in the same I wil
 9    3, 14|     would wish that they should bee reserved for myne Auntients,
10    3, 15|     revoked, but that is not to bee deemed as a crime.~When
11    3, 17|     looking still when I should bee changed into a Bird as Pamphiles
12    4, 19|     rather a stony asse? let us bee gone: and so they tooke
13    4, 19|          who seemed likewise to bee Theeves, for they brought
14    4, 19|         the memory of him shall bee renowned for ever amongst
15    4, 21|     your parents, although they bee covetous, will be contented
16    4, 21|        good heart unto you, and bee not afeared at feigned and
17    4, 22|       most vile, that there may bee none found in all the world
18    4, 22|      wee whose voyces you heare bee your servants, and ready
19    4, 22|    thinking that thou art dead, bee greatly troubled, and are
20    4, 22|        I had rather die than to bee separated from you, for
21    4, 22|     from you, for whosoever you bee, I love and retaine you
22    4, 22|       we that are the elder two bee married to strange husbands,
23    4, 22|    blisse. And if you my sister bee so far bent as I, let us
24    4, 22|      avoid the perill of death, bee contented to live with thy
25    4, 22|        of love, how darest thou bee so bold as to burne the
26    4, 22|   promise and faith was broken, bee fled away without utterance
27    4, 22|   willed mee that thou shouldst bee married to a man of base
28    4, 22|   mortall Foe, to whome I shall bee made a mother, and she a
29    4, 22|       of death, by your meanes: bee you assured, I will handle
30    4, 22|    sonne of a vile harlot shall bee accounted the nephew of
31    4, 22|         will prove if that thou bee of so stout, so good a courage,
32    4, 22|     prudency as thou seemest to bee. Then Venus spake unto Psyches
33    4, 22| wherefore all occasion ought to bee taken away by meane of marriage:
34    5, 24|      servile estate, and rather bee contented to live like tyrants
35    5, 24|       none of the residue might bee compared, for hee was higher
36    9, 47|        as hard and difficill to bee brought to passe, for in
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