Book, Chapter

 1    4, 21| sleep, she should renew her dolour and miserable weeping. What,
 2    4, 22| unhappy age with continuall dolour? Why trouble you your spirits,
 3    4, 22|    fortune, came with great dolour and sorrow to comfort and
 4    4, 22|   for the great anguish and dolour that shee was in for the
 5    6, 32|    your selfe, pacifie your dolour, refraine your weeping,
 6    6, 32|  finish her life there with dolour and tribulation. But Thrasillus
 7    6, 32|  sleepe, began to renew her dolour, to teare her garments,
 8    7, 42|   farre was he stroken with dolour, but presently taking his
 9    8, 44|   originall cause of all my dolour: Thou art my comfort and
10    8, 44|     of her house, or by the dolour of her husband, but rather
11    8, 44|     was stroken with double dolour of the death of his two
12    8, 46|  should, conceived so great dolour within his mind and was
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