Book, Chapter

 1    2, 11|     elbow thereon, and held out three forefingers of his right
 2    2, 11|       certaine herb and layd it three times against the mouth
 3    2, 11|     unto the dore, behold I saw three men of great stature, heaving
 4    3, 12|  slaughter and murther of these three men. Howbeit the Assyrian
 5    3, 13|   drawing out his sword against three Citisens, and after a long
 6    3, 13|       is accused to have slaine three persons, to perswade you
 7    3, 13|        city, I fortuned to espy three great theeves attempting
 8    3, 13|       without danger. Verily ye three Judges, I confess that I
 9    3, 13|      out my sword against those three Citizens, but I thought
10    3, 14|      Olive boughs wherewith the three slaine bodies were covered
11    3, 14|        one man alone could kill three such great and valiant persons,
12    3, 14|      for why, the bodies of the three slaine men were no bodies,
13    3, 14|         men were no bodies, but three blown bladders mangled in
14    3, 15|     whole heard of beastes, but three blowne skinnes, to the intent
15    3, 15|  notable Labors, as Gerion with three bodies, and as Cerberus
16    3, 15|    bodies, and as Cerberus with three heads, for I have slaine
17    3, 15|        heads, for I have slaine three blown goat skinnes. But
18    4, 20|       long travell, having lost three of our soldiers, we are
19    4, 21|        huts were so greedy that three panniers full would scantly
20    4, 21|        cousine Germane, and but three years older than I; we two
21    4, 22|      noble Dame, by whom he had three daughters exceeding fair:
22    4, 22| greeting which was between them three, all sorrows and tears were
23    4, 22|      and marvailous dogge, with three heads, barking continually
24    4, 23|        to come to a place where three wayes did meet, and shee
25    6, 36|       had remained the space of three dayes, and that I poore
26    7, 41|       betweene us, by lying all three in one bed, to the end there
27    7, 42|      man of the house, that his three sonnes who had been brought
28    7, 42|     manners were dead, for they three had great acquaintance and
29    7, 42|    Amongst whom, he found these three brethren, as friends to
30    7, 42|    running, the youngest of the three brethren stombled at a stone,
31    7, 42|       cruelty with the bloud of three brethren, now maist thou
32    8, 45|          to endure the space of three dayes, and to bring his
33    8, 46|    judge her the fairest of the three, and to give her the apple
34    9, 48|   pleased the gods to call thee three times, when as there was
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