Book, Chapter

 1    4, 22|    delight, but alas by evill ill chance the oyle of the lampe
 2    4, 23|    shall we do with this lame Ill favoured Asse, that is not
 3    6, 32|       be the eies whom I have ill pleased, behold now they
 4    7, 41|     agree thereto, to send an ill spirit into him, to dispossesse
 5    8, 44|       young man suspecting no ill, with humble courtesie demanded
 6    8, 44|     in mind at so suddaine an ill, although hee abhorred to
 7    8, 44| otherwise they should give an ill example to their successours.
 8    8, 46|       and possessed with some ill spirit, when the poore maiden
 9    8, 46|     man her brother taking in ill part the miserable death
10    8, 46|       the drinke, whereat the ill disposed woman, with resemblance
11    9, 47|      thy great servitude: the ill and dangerous waits: the
12    9, 48|   former Priests had given me ill counsell, and fearing that
13    9, 48|      the slander and envie of ill persons, which beare me
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