Book, Chapter

 1    1,  15|              and the suffering of the lad only served to increase
 2    2,  67|             had swooped down upon the lad and put the straw changeling
 3    2,  77|            promising, honest, thrifty lad; may he have no bad luck,
 4    3,  89|    philosophers. I was conducting the lad to the gymnasium before
 5    3,  89|          Venus, could I but kiss this lad, and he not know it, I would
 6    3,  89|             turtle-doves to the eager lad, and absolved myself from
 7    3,  90| fighting-cocks, for his silence.' The lad nestled closer to me of
 8    3,  90|               know it.' Never had the lad slept so soundly! First
 9    3,  90|               the house, and gave the lad nothing at all except a
10    3,  90|              good in a few days.' The lad easily understood the true
11    3,  91|               began pleading with the lad to receive me again into
12    3,  91|               was readmitted into the lad's good graces. Then I slipped
13    3,  95|             his voice, and as for the lad, his shapely bosom was heaving
14    3,  96|                 he remarked, when the lad had served him with wine,
15    3, 102|            where he has gone! Get the lad back, Eumolpus, for heaven'
16    4, 104|               I to myself,) "that the lad has so taken our friend'
17    4, 114|             away below and fitted the lad out in her mistress' false
18    4, 114|               overjoyed, now that the lad was restored to his own
19    5, 137|           widow?" Wiping his eyes the lad, in carefully chosen words
20    5, 144|           daughter and her brother, a lad, and pretended that she
21    5, 144|             Nor did this well trained lad reject my advances; but
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