Book, Chapter

 1    1,  2|     that he were the naturall Serpent, creeping and sliding on
 2    4, 22|     wight of humane seed,~But Serpent dire and fierce as might
 3    4, 22|    you, that there is a great serpent full of deadly poyson, with
 4    4, 22|  married to a dire and fierce Serpent, and many of the Inhabitants
 5    4, 22| whether thou remaine with the Serpent and in the end be swallowed
 6    4, 22| pleasure, and the love of the Serpent doe more delight thee, say
 7    4, 22|     the head of the poysonous serpent, wherein we will aid and
 8    7, 42|    drew into the house a dead Serpent, and out of the mouth of
 9    9, 47|      of the mouth whereof the serpent Aspis lifted up his head,
10    9, 47|     eare, whereupon stood the Serpent Aspis, holding out his scaly
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