Book, Chapter

1    1,  4|       possible for the house to stand there, she threw it downe
2    2,  8|       had fashioned the dogs to stand up fiercely with their former
3    4, 19|  beating nor with pricking, nor stand upon his legs, though they
4    4, 19|         another, What should we stand here so long about a dead
5    5, 28| compelled by force of blowes to stand up. The same hangman boy
6    5, 28|       it was not best for me to stand still but fortune was favourable
7    6, 32|         said to Lepolemus: What stand we here amazed? Why show
8    6, 36|    mocke me saying, To what end stand we here with this wilde
9    9, 48|        there I was commanded to stand upon a seate of wood, which
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