Book, Chapter

 1    1,  4|       never be delivered of her childe, but according to the computation
 2    2,  8|    prove him to be the naturall childe of Salvia. And moreover
 3    2,  8|         were myne owne naturall childe, beware I say, beware of
 4    3, 14| mourning vesture, and bearing a childe in her armes. And after
 5    4, 22|        thee (quoth she) my dear childe, by motherly bond of love,
 6    4, 22|         Coot, more weake than a childe, and that locketh me up
 7    4, 22|       and this young and tender childe, couched in this young and
 8    4, 22|    shall learn at length by the childe in my belly, grant the fruit
 9    4, 22|    repent Venus to beare such a childe. At the beds feet lay his
10    4, 22|        alwayes unto you to be a childe? You are his mother, and
11    4, 22|         me a grandmother to her childe. Am not I happy, that in
12    4, 22|        is illegitimate, and the childe (that shall be borne) a
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License