Book, Chapter

 1    7, 43|        way wee met with a tall souldier (for so his habite and countenance
 2    7, 43|        spake never a word: The souldier unable to refraine his insolence,
 3    7, 43|      what he said, whereat the souldier angerly demanded againe,
 4    7, 43|    next City: But I (quoth the souldier) have need of his helpe,
 5    7, 43|       which he received of the souldier, desired him gently and
 6    7, 43|   trusses: but when he saw the souldier would in no wise be intreated,
 7    7, 43|     saw his time, he tooke the souldier by the legs and cast him
 8    7, 43|      before, insomuch that the souldier could not tell by what meanes
 9    7, 43|     the cover closed fast: The souldier (as I afterwards learned)
10    8, 44|   FORTY-FOURTH CHAPTER~How the souldier drave Apuleius away, and
11    8, 44|       knew not, but the gentle souldier, who was well beaten for
12    8, 44| Captaines house. And there the souldier tooke me to one of the servants,
13    8, 45|     and daintily he fared.~THE Souldier that payed never a peny
14    9, 47|        a speare like a martial souldier: after him marched one attired
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