Parte,  Chap.

1  II,      XXIX|        out, it would have been Troy town with the pair of them.
2  II,     XXXII| celebrated in ages to come, as Troy was through Helen, and Spain
3  II,        XL|       male line from Hector of Troy himself, our mistresses
4  II,       XLI|     Virgil of the Palladium of Troy, a wooden horse the Greeks
5  II,       XLI|  afterwards the destruction of Troy; so it would he as well
6  II,      LVII|       the ground~ Two thousand Troy Towns,~ If so many were
7  II,      LXVI|     where he had fallen. "Here Troy was," said he; "here my
8  II,      LXXI|       in with those gentlemen, Troy would not have been burned
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