Book, Chapter

 1    1,  5|       that am most willing to dye. And therewithal I pulled
 2    1,  5|      strangle my selfe and so dye, behold the rope beeing
 3    2,  9|    yours, and shall presently dye unlesse you take pitty upon
 4    4, 22|      No, no, yet had I rather dye, howbeit I will not cease
 5    4, 23|    nor throwne to beasts, nor dye any sodaine death, but by
 6    4, 23|     beast: thirdly shee shall dye for hunger: last of all,
 7    7, 41| otherwise he should certainly dye) with assurance that he
 8    7, 41|     him, that his enemy would dye with the force of his brimstone,
 9    8, 44|    see the elder condemned to dye for his offence: Againe,
10    8, 44|    which would cause a man to dye suddenly, saying, that he
11    9, 47| divine Majesty, let me rather dye then live, for I am full
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