Book, Chapter

 1    1,  4|       of shape.~Semblably she changed one of her neighbours, being
 2    2,  8|      the running waters, were changed from men into such kinde
 3    3, 17|       still when I should bee changed into a Bird as Pamphiles
 4    3, 17|    losing the number of five, changed into hoofes, and out of
 5    4, 18|       presently of an Asse be changed into Lucius out of every
 6    4, 22|        so by her audacity she changed her mind: but when she took
 7    5, 24|    presently susteined, being changed into a miserable Asse, then
 8    5, 24|   away his old. When they had changed his attire, hee imbraced
 9    8, 44|      how the trayterous knave changed his colour, how hee sweat
10    8, 44|    fortune of the old man was changed, who thinking to be deprived
11    8, 46|     fell upon the Goates, and changed their white haire into yellow,
12    9, 47| tender, the hooves of my feet changed into toes, my hands returned
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