Book, Chapter

 1    1,  2|     eyes) is constrained by her parents to put out of remembrance
 2    1,  3|       dishonoured thy children, parents, and friends, for the love
 3    4, 21|        we warrant you that your parents, although they bee covetous,
 4    4, 21|         a house, forsaken of my parents, friends, and family, made
 5    4, 21| marriage, and by consent of our parents we were contracted together.
 6    4, 21|  espouse was accompanied by his parents, kinsfolke, and friends,
 7    4, 22|        gone home, the miserable Parents well nigh consumed with
 8    4, 22|     comfort and speake with her parents.~The night following, Psyches
 9    4, 22|       any person, no not to our parents, nor tell that ever we saw
10    4, 22|          without visiting their parents, and leapt down rashly from
11    4, 22|          That if he be like his parents, as it is necessary he should,
12    4, 22|       wherfore let us go to our parents, and with forged lies let
13    4, 22| inflamed, and had visited their Parents, they returned againe to
14    4, 22|        word of the death of her parents tooke shipping and came
15    4, 22|       is this honourable to thy parents? is this reason, that thou
16    4, 22|       and not by the consent of parents, wherefore the marriage
17    4, 23|         me safe and sound to my parents, and to him that so greatly
18    4, 23|         you not goe to see your parents? Come on, we will beare
19    5, 26|     above thy husband which thy Parents ordained for thee, now perceive
20    5, 27|       the Citie, especially her Parents, friends, and family, came
21    5, 27|   greatly commend me before her Parents and husband, for the kindnesse
22    5, 31|         meane season, while the Parents of the boy did lament and
23    6, 32|        that he came of so noble parents) he was received and entertained
24    6, 32|       had it not beene that her parents and friends did comfort
25    6, 32|         the intercession of the Parents and friends of Charites,
26    6, 32|         the commandement of her Parents, then for any thing else:
27    9, 48|    FORTY-EIGHTH CHAPTER~How the parents and friends of Apuleius
28    9, 48|       be had in memory. Then my parents friends and servants of
29    9, 48|     comfort and better hope, as parents commonly bridle the desires
30    9, 48|   departed from him to visit my parents and friends; and within
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