Book, Chapter

1    1,  4|   stricken me with no small trouble of minde, yea rather with
2    2, 10| dangerous peregrination and trouble. For the ship where we were
3    3, 15|     the occasion of all thy trouble this day, and therewith
4    3, 15|    the cause and mean of my trouble and sorrow? For I dare sweare
5    3, 15| same, that ever you went to trouble or harm me: perhaps sometimes
6    4, 22| with continuall dolour? Why trouble you your spirits, which
7    4, 22|  Psyches I pray thee not to trouble or pollute my water by the
8    6, 33|   masters, what mean you to trouble us poore labouring men so
9    9, 48|  forward, not without great trouble of mind, I was constrained
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