Book, Chapter

 1    1,  4|        his house, him, and his daughter: so she, by her conjurations
 2    4, 21|     gentlewoman borne, and the daughter of some worthy matron of
 3    4, 21|        speake in this sort: My daughter take a good heart unto you,
 4    4, 22|        majesty of the youngest daughter did so farre surmount and
 5    4, 22|     father of this unfortunate daughter, suspecting that the gods
 6    4, 22|      desired a husband for his daughter: but Apollo though he were
 7    4, 22|        and unhappy fate of his daughter. Then they began to lament
 8    4, 22|       made a mother, and she a Daughter.~Thou presumest and thinkest,
 9    4, 22|    diligent inquisition of thy daughter, and by the other secrets
10    4, 22|     contrary to the will of my daughter in law Venus, whom alwaies
11    4, 22|    tydings of a Kings fugitive Daughter, the servant of Venus, named
12    4, 22|       I will handle you like a daughter: where be my maidens, Sorrow
13    4, 22| cursing the cruellnesse of the daughter of Jupiter, and of so evill
14    4, 22|    Venus, and said, And you my daughter, take you no care, neither
15    7, 41|       The next day morrow, the daughter of the Baker, which was
16    8, 46|        she were delivered of a daughter, it should incontinently
17    8, 46|        fortuned that she had a daughter, whom she would not suffer
18    8, 46|        shee was delivered of a daughter, whom (as hee commanded),
19    8, 46|   meanes shee should endow her daughter, but that her husband should
20    8, 46|    hands to murther. She had a daughter by her husband (that was
21    8, 46|     the Physitian and her owne daughter: The child being young and
22    9, 47|       after the finding of thy daughter Proserpina, through the
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