Book, Chapter

1    4, 22|   meates, but kneeled at the feete of Proserpina, onely contented
2    5, 28|      the way) he to save his feete from water, would leape
3    5, 30|      spurning him with their feete. Then he answered unto them
4    5, 31|      apron, and bound all my feete together, to the end I might
5    6, 36| thousand gestures with their feete and their hands, they would
6    7, 41|  raggedly attired, with bare feete, meigre, ill-favoured, and
7    7, 43|      master fell down at his feete, under colour to move him
8    8, 45|  dance, holding up my former feete: moreover hee taught me
9    9, 47|      throat, her odoriferous feete were covered with shoes
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