Book, Chapter

 1    1,  1|          strengthen my self (being weary with riding) I lighted off
 2    1,  2|           towards night being very weary, I went to the Baines to
 3    1,  2|           done, though I were very weary my selfe, yet I led the
 4    1,  5|          of some heynous crime, be weary of your life, yet thinke
 5    1,  6|         for I know that he is very weary of travell.~These things
 6    2, 11|           let me in. And then full weary with the slaughter of those
 7    4, 19|          my worne hooves, I was so weary that I could scantly go.
 8    4, 22|           into our laps, and being weary of our company, commanded
 9    4, 22|            me, and save me that am weary with so long labours and
10    4, 22|        Venus. After that Venus was weary with searching by Sea and
11    5, 27|           was she not contented to weary me and make me a drudge
12    5, 31|         beating me till she was so weary that the bar fell out of
13    6, 34|            staffe in his hand very weary with travell, who approaching
14    6, 36|            know mine age, I was so weary with opening my jawes that
15    7, 39|          money, but when they were weary with giving of answers,
16    7, 39|         but although my bones were weary, and that I needed to refresh
17    7, 41|            young man. And so being weary of their supper, I forthwith
18    7, 42|          to lodge (very lagged and weary).in our Garden, where although
19    9, 47| diminishing motions diminished: as weary of all my cruell fortune
20    9, 47|           then live, for I am full weary of my life. When I had ended
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