Book, Chapter

 1    2, 10|            but that thou mayst the better please me, undresse thy
 2    2, 11|         all the world which I like better than this, but I greatly
 3    3, 17|           her with my heels. But a better thought reduced me from
 4    3, 17|          upon them, I thought of a better advice more profitable for
 5    4, 19|           by his consent devised a better way, for we cut off his
 6    4, 22|            houses, and when we are better instructed, let us return
 7    4, 22|        over-passe no place whither better hope did direct her, and
 8    5, 24|           might cleane escape, and better prevent such as made hew
 9    5, 24|           to receive the blisse of better Fortune, and not to hold
10    5, 24|     Captaine, and so they gave him better garments, and threw away
11    5, 27|         perswaded them that it was better for me to runne in the fields
12    5, 29|            be thereby more fat and better in flesh. For I know my
13    7, 40|       pleasure with him: how farre better is the young man Philesiterus
14    8, 44| deliberation, thought there was no better way to avoyd the storme
15    8, 45|          and I thought I was never better placed, then with them:
16    9, 48|           to day, with comfort and better hope, as parents commonly
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