Book, Chapter

 1    2, 10|    bed) came in and gave me roses and floures which she had
 2    3, 17|  about with faire and fresh roses: then in hope of present
 3    3, 17|     coveting to snatch some roses. But in an evill houre I
 4    3, 17|    hiew, were new and fresh roses: and being very joyful,
 5    3, 17|    that time from eating of Roses, and enduring my present
 6    4, 18|    Apuleius thinking to eat Roses, was cruelly beaten by a
 7    4, 18|     if I could espy any red roses in the gardens by, and my
 8    4, 18|    I saw bright flourishing Roses of bright damaske colour;
 9    4, 18| perceived that they were no roses, neither tender nor pleasant,
10    4, 18|  them by the name of Lawrel roses, which be very poyson to
11    4, 18|   willingly to eat of these roses, though I knew them to be
12    4, 22|    crowned with garlands of roses, who when shee had espied
13    4, 22|    decked up the house with roses and other sweet smells,
14    5, 27|  greene, I should find some roses in some place, whereby I
15    8, 46|   in good hope to find some Roses, to render me my humane
16    9, 47|     CHAPTER~How Apuleius by Roses and prayer returned to his
17    9, 47|   exhortation, a Garland of Roses, next the timbrell of his
18    9, 47|     hand, but snatch at the Roses, whereby I will put away
19    9, 47|   in the other a garland of Roses to give me, to the end I
20    9, 47|   thrust out the garland of roses into my mouth, I (trembling)
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