Book, Chapter

 1  Ded    |       have all writers in times past employed their travell and
 2 Life    |       at Athens (where in times past the well of all doctrine
 3    1,  4|         men, it is eight yeares past since the poore woman first
 4    1,  7|     Lucius, it is a great while past since we two saw one another,
 5    2,  8| Byrrhena.~As soone as night was past, and the day began to spring,
 6    3, 13|     done last night.~This night past, when as at our accustomed
 7    3, 17|      some garlands this evening past, according to my custome,
 8    4, 22|      thinking that now shee was past all hopes of comfort, in
 9    4, 22|       of so great a Goddesse be past, or until that I be refreshed
10    4, 22|        the heat of the sunne be past, for when the sunne is in
11    4, 22|    soone as their great fury is past, thou maist goe among the
12    5, 24|    charge.~A soone as night was past, and the cleare Chariot
13    7, 37|    considering it was long time past, since I lay and tooke my
14    7, 39|        good part of the day was past, that I was not able to
15    7, 43|         time as all danger were past. Then his friends not forgetting
16    8, 46|       my selfe, for the day was past and the Sunne gone downe,
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