Book, Chapter

 1    1,  14|          temper and his unbridled passion. On this account, I followed
 2    1,  15|        eye acquainted Doris of my passion, a coquettish glance informed
 3    1,  30|        she, burning with the same passion, reciprocated in the game.
 4    2,  57|          THE FIFTY-THIRD.~But his passion for dancing was interrupted
 5    2,  65|           wench. It was no carnal passion, so hear me, Hercules, it
 6    3,  83|        brother" and, burning with passion as I was, after such a magnificent
 7    3,  87|         would have controlled her passion had she thought Hercules
 8    4, 110|          AND SIXTH.~In a towering passion, Lycas leaped forward, "
 9    4, 110|        face convulsed with savage passion, "you are aware, I believe,
10    4, 112|          of her father's son!~But passion scorned, becomes a power:
11    4, 114|     roused to madness by a chance passion! Nor had he need to quote
12    4, 116|         Why will you fight with a passion that to you is pleasure,~
13    4, 117|           a decisive repulse, his passion turned to fury and he tried
14    4, 117|   disappointment of her lecherous passion, Tryphaena upbraided me
15    4, 119|           Where is your unbridled passion? You be there, a prey to
16    5, 130|          by that you only fan the passion of the lady who burns for
17    5, 142|         me of the violence of her passion: but Circe owns me, heart
18    5, 143|         not likely that his angry passion would be placated until
19    5, 145|           give to every caress of passion or avarice. They wooed fortune
20    5, 154|      yields to the more imperious passion of avarice. The prospect
21    5, 160| safeguarded served to inflame the passion for the dance and indulgence
22    5, 160|      crowd was beside itself with passion. Agamemnon, nearly mad,
23    6     |          they considered the only passion worthy of men, and they
24    6     |     he-lions, but, in due season, passion excites them towards the
25    6     |         excites the most vehement passion! What! should one love Phoedrus,
26    6     |     thinking -- the object of his passion at first feels pain, even
27    6     |         reached the height of his passion.~The theologians class this
28    6     |         are some reasons for this passion of mankind for maidenheads.
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License