Chapter

 1   III|        Prominent amongst all the youths stood the Whitsun King of
 2   III|          row, came the competing youths. In every face was to be
 3   III|   mortars were again loaded, the youths were once more placed in
 4   III|         sworn umpires placed the youths in line again. Most of them,
 5   III|       himself hastened after the youths in his rustic cart. Possibly
 6   III|          tall reeds, and the two youths, separating, chose each
 7    IV|          A bevy of good-humoured youths were flirting with his daughters
 8    IV|       kingdom wherever dissolute youths and outraged fathers are
 9     V|        purity.~ ~The discomfited youths, more and more angry[Pg
10    VI|          another carriage.~ ~The youths were surprised to observe
11    VI|   erected tent was standing. The youths then told the coachman to
12   VII| peasantry.~ ~After them came the youths of the town, rolling before
13   VII|        choose thee among all the youths present the one that liketh
14   VII|          the spot?"~ ~Ten of the youths leaped forth, Martin among
15   VII|          their own pastimes, the youths and maidens played at blindman'
16  XIII|       midst of a circle of noisy youths, who made their own horses
17   XXI|       over her, and the selfsame youths must do it. All those chants
18  XXII|      They sent for the very same youths who had sung the dirges
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