Book, Chapter

 1  Int,   4|         arrived there in time to throw himself into the fight for
 2    1,  26|       detected, were so quick to throw themselves down besides
 3    2,  38|         on the ear, and made him throw it down again; a janitor
 4    3,  85|      whose favors came through a throw of the dice, who hired himself
 5    3,  95|          I leave you, or did you throw me over? For my part, I
 6    4, 106|         hopes of success, but to throw away life without a reason,
 7    4, 106|    garments around our heads and throw ourselves into the deep!"~
 8    4, 119| abstinence. Give the dice a fair throw and you will find shipwreck
 9    4, 121|    swearing that he would either throw his packs away or run away
10    5, 130|        forbid that I should ever throw my arms around a gallows-bird.
11    5, 153|      Thraso, to lean forward and throw it right into her lap, without
12    5, 160|        see if they're all there; throw them some grain, too, for
13    6     |     lordling's love is fled.    ~Throw nuts to boys thou idle all~
14    6     |           throng  ~ He-Concubine throw nuts.    ~Wont thou as peasant-girls
15    6     |         vile: -- ~ He-Concubine, throw nuts."    ~and further on,
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