Book, Chapter

 1  Ded    |    of Lucius Apuleius; being mooved thereunto by the right pleasant
 2    1,  4|  defend her. Whereupon shee, mooved by their promises, and stirred
 3    1,  5|     did not spare my throat, mooved with pitty, but rather cruelly
 4    2,  8|      of this City, and being mooved by great desire, I viewed
 5    2, 11|     Whereat this Prophet was mooved, and took a certaine herb
 6    3, 13|  owne desert, but that I was mooved by fortune and reasonable
 7    3, 13|    to die, since first I was mooved to set upon the theeves
 8    3, 13|   were somewhat relented and mooved by my lamentable teares,
 9    3, 16| willing to proove her force, mooved her selfe from the ground
10    4, 21|     down, one of the theeves mooved with indignation, by reason
11    4, 22|     that ye covet not (being mooved by the pernicious counsell
12    4, 22|     simple miser Psyches was mooved with the feare of so dreadful
13    4, 22|  mistrusteth, somtime she is mooved, somtime she hateth the
14    4, 22| feeble in body and mind, yet mooved by cruelty of fate) received
15    4, 23|  purpose of the theeves, was mooved with small pity, for I kicked
16    8, 46|      gorgiously, dancing and mooved in comely order, according
17    8, 46|   shee bare in her hand, and mooved her selfe towards the shepheard
18    8, 46|      the more pleasing Venus mooved forward more and more, and
19    9, 47|     with a joyfull face, and mooved by a great affection to
20    9, 47|     weeping and prayers hath mooved mee to succour thee. I am
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