Book, Chapter

 1    1,  5|    crying out, I thinke under a colour to steale away something,
 2    1,  5|       pale, and that his lively colour faded away, insomuch that
 3    2,  8|     slendernesse, his Vermilion colour, his haire yellow by nature,
 4    2,  9|     woman or deprive her of the colour of her face, though shee
 5    2,  9|         O how well doth a faire colour and a shining face agree
 6    2,  9|        the haire resembleth the colour of gold and honey, sometimes
 7    4, 18|         Roses of bright damaske colour; and said within my bestaill
 8    4, 22|         with forged lies let us colour the matter.~After they were
 9    4, 22|      kill the beast which under colour of my husband did lie with
10    4, 22|     waters of blacke and deadly colour, which nourisheth the floods
11    4, 23| neighing, and oftentimes (under colour to rub my backe) I would
12    6, 36|     certaine Castle where under colour of divination, they brought
13    7, 39|       of gold, which (under the colour of your solemne religion)
14    7, 41|         with us at the table to colour the matter: in the meant
15    7, 43|        down at his feete, under colour to move him to some pitty,
16    8, 44|       flame of Cupid, and under colour of the disease and infirmity
17    8, 44|    trayterous knave changed his colour, how hee sweat for feare,
18    8, 46|        the age of the dame. Her colour was of two sorts, for her
19    8, 46|       spout, ran a floud of the colour of Saffron, which fell upon
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