Book, Chapter

 1    1,  4|       promises, and stirred by pitty, released all the towne.
 2    1,  5|   spare my throat, mooved with pitty, but rather cruelly pardoned
 3    2,  9| presently dye unlesse you take pitty upon me. Which when I had
 4    2, 10|      our losses, either by the pitty of strangers, or by the
 5    2, 10|    sayd, O my sweet heart take pitty upon me and helpe me, for
 6    2, 11|       the weale publique, take pitty and mercy upon this dead
 7    3, 13|      children, to shew me some pitty and favour. And when my
 8    3, 17|       brute beasts) would take pitty on me, and profer me lodging
 9    4, 21|        and said, O mother take pitty upon me and my wretched
10    4, 22|    Psyches I pray thee to take pitty on thy selfe, of me, and
11    4, 22|       the land of Athens, take pitty on me thy servant Psyches,
12    4, 22|       the whore) to move me to pitty, and to make me a grandmother
13    4, 22|      pismire the emote, taking pitty of her great difficulty
14    7, 40|        I my selfe did secretly pitty his estate, and bewaile
15    7, 43|       and civilly to take some pitty upon him, and to let him
16    7, 43|     colour to move him to some pitty, but when he saw his time,
17    8, 44|      shall certainly die: Have pitty therefore upon me, be not
18    8, 44|      Magistrates and people to pitty, insomuch that without any
19    8, 44|       motions of the people to pitty, which were too long a processe.
20    9, 47|       Behold I am come to take pitty of thy fortune and tribulation,
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