Book, Chapter

 1    1,  5|       But when that Socrates had eaten sufficiently hee waxed very
 2    2,  8|        might have bin pulled and eaten; and while I beheld the
 3    6, 33|          passe, many dead bodies eaten and torne with wolves. Wherefore
 4    6, 36|      from the ground, was cleane eaten up by a gray hound, that
 5    7, 41|         table: but he had scarce eaten the first morsell, when
 6    7, 41|        goe to bed, but he having eaten nothing, said that he would
 7    8, 45|     table, which (although I had eaten sufficiently before, yet
 8    8, 46|        which was condemned to be eaten of wilde beasts, with whom
 9    8, 46|      this woman, condemned to be eaten of wild beasts: For shee
10    8, 46|     offence, was condemned to be eaten with wild beasts. Behold
11    9, 47| affection: And as soone as I had eaten them, I was not deceived
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