Book, Chapter

 1    4, 22|    doores gave light as it had beene the Sunne. Neither otherwise
 2    5, 24|     ragged clothes, for I have beene a Captaine of a great company,
 3    5, 24|     Prince, which sometime had beene Captaine of two hundred
 4    5, 26|     and lay as though they had beene dead.~
 5    5, 29|      all the world, had it not beene that by reason of her crying
 6    5, 29|        this fearefull maid had beene slaine by him, what danger
 7    5, 29|        him, what danger had we beene in? By these and like lies,
 8    5, 29|      of their wantonnesse have beene most mad and terrible, but (
 9    6, 32|     entirely loved, had it not beene that her parents and friends
10    6, 32|     his demand, and as she had beene stroken with some clap of
11    6, 36|        heart, as though he had beene ravished in spirite, or
12    6, 36| whereby they judged that I had beene theirs, entred into the
13    7, 37|        and thinking that I had beene bitten in like sort, came
14    7, 37|      me, and I had undoubtedly beene slaine, had I not by and
15    7, 37|   bason, drank as though I had beene greatly athirst; then they
16    7, 38|     day alone in my house have beene proffered so often seaven:
17    7, 40|       day. And verily if I had beene free and at liberty, I would
18    7, 41|       good man thinking it had beene his wife that sneesed, cryed,
19    7, 42|   vessels, as though there had beene some great fire under. By
20    8, 44|      whole. After that she had beene long time tormented in her
21    8, 46|      lighted, as though it had beene a day of marriage. Then
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