Book, Chapter

 1    1,  5|         hath waked me out of a sound sleepe. Then I rose up joyfull
 2    1,  5|       Behold I see Socrates is sound, safe and in health. Where
 3    2, 11| following, the corps whole and sound as he received the same,
 4    2, 11|        untouched, and his chin sound: all which was written and
 5    2, 11|      cast him into so dead and sound a sleepe, that by their
 6    4, 22|   pleasure, but especially the sound of the instruments was a
 7    4, 23|        once render me safe and sound to my parents, and to him
 8    5, 27|       againe with my shrilling sound: when wee were come to her
 9    6, 32|      of the wine, he fell in a sound sleepe: Now when he lay
10    7, 38|      under, to see where it be sound or no: then her lover which
11    8, 46|    Pipes yeelded out the sweet sound of Lydians, whereby they
12    8, 46|     motion and gesture, to the sound of the instruments. For
13    8, 46|      the ground, did fall in a sound sleepe.~
14    9, 47|  brasse, which gave a pleasant sound, in her left hand shee bare
15    9, 47|      which rendered a pleasant sound.~The principall Priests
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