Book, Chapter

 1    4, 22|      sufficiently prone to worke mischiefe, yet she egged him forward
 2    4, 22|        so bold to doe so great a mischiefe? Depart from me and take
 3    5, 29|         the boy invented another mischiefe: For when he had sold all
 4    5, 31|       Tush we little esteeme the mischiefe he did yesterday, but now
 5    6, 32|          she knew no part of the mischiefe, devised with her selfe
 6    6, 35|         and I will tell you what mischiefe happened there: you shall
 7    7, 40|           a bawd, a messenger of mischiefe that daily haunted to her
 8    7, 41|        his mind to commit such a mischiefe: wherfore he stopped his
 9    7, 41|      quoth he) to see so great a mischiefe and wicked fact, which my
10    7, 41|         I, considering the great mischiefe of this wicked queane, devised
11    7, 41|         beside her owne naturall mischiefe, (offended at this great
12    8, 44| stepmother, to commit so great a mischiefe. Gentle reader, thou shalt
13    8, 44|        least he would worke some mischiefe withall, gave him a drinke;
14    8, 44|  minister a further cause of his mischiefe, either that he would buy
15    8, 46|       shee invented this kind of mischiefe: She privily stale away
16    8, 46|         woman persevering in her mischiefe, would not suffer him to
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