Book, Chapter

1    2,  8| dismayed and vexed with desire, knowing no certaine place whither
2    4, 22|          Am not I a foole, that knowing that I carrie here the divine
3    4, 23|       her fathers house: but I (knowing that the theeves were gone
4    6, 32|     hearing all the matter, and knowing not by what meanes he might
5    7, 41|         to be burned alive. But knowing her owne guilty conscience
6    8, 44|      sight of his stepdame. And knowing that this matter touching
7    8, 46|      her father: but this woman knowing that the mothers succoured
8    8, 46|       the matter, and thereupon knowing of certainty that she had
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