Book, Chapter

 1    2, 11|    living. For I know one not farre hence that was cruelly handled
 2    4, 18|     about, and behold I saw a farre off a shadowed valley adjoyning
 3    4, 22|      youngest daughter did so farre surmount and excell then
 4    4, 22|       strangers resorted from farre Countries, adventuring themselves
 5    4, 22| expert in many things, for as farre as I can learnt by conjecture (
 6    4, 22|      a Citie in Greece is not farre hence: go thou thither and
 7    4, 22|      poore Asse, not standing farre of, was not a little sorry
 8    4, 23|      pray, and perceived us a farre off by the light of the
 9    5, 24|      colored honesty, fell so farre in favour with this Milo,
10    5, 26|      other companions. But as farre as I see, here is no other
11    7, 40|    nor pleasure with him: how farre better is the young man
12    7, 42|       thinke not but that how farre thou dost remove and extend
13    7, 42|    could in no wise weepe, so farre was he stroken with dolour,
14    8, 44|   husband to ride abroad into farre countreyes. And then she
15    8, 46|        this mischievous woman farre lesse then she deserved,
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