Book, Chapter

 1    1,  27| slobbered a most evil-smelling kiss upon me, and then, climbing
 2    1,  28|      him to her, she pressed a kiss upon his mouth, then putting
 3    3,  83|    tight;~With every wandering kiss our souls would meet!~Farewell
 4    3,  89|        Lady Venus, could I but kiss this lad, and he not know
 5    3,  89| sleeper, I snatched a fleeting kiss or two. Satisfied with this
 6    3,  90|      then I pressed a clinging kiss upon his mouth, but I finally
 7    3,  90|        nothing at all except a kiss. He looked all around, threw
 8    4, 103|     see! I end my anger with a kiss. May good luck go with us!
 9    4, 113|     you do neither embrace nor kiss the said Giton; that you
10    4, 117|    both, with grim eyes. Every kiss was a wound to me, every
11    4, 118|    ever loved Encolpius truly, kiss him while yet you may and
12    5, 130|  married women see to that and kiss the marks of the scourge
13    5, 142|        If I could only steal a kiss, if only I might put my
14    5, 153|         While she the fragment kiss'd and press'd,~And hid it
15    5, 159|   obscene posture, for them to kiss," Suetonius, Caligula, 56.
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