Book, Chapter

 1    1,  14|    or the interpretation of dreams. By Hercules, you are much
 2    1,  21|     tertian ague, and in my dreams I prayed for a medicine.
 3    3,  93|   Trojans, prolonging their dreams~To death, which ends all.
 4    4, 108|     in a very witty manner.~Dreams that delude the mind with
 5    4, 108| fields.~The cringing lawyer dreams of courts and trials,~The
 6    4, 108|   write~To lovers: dogs, in dreams their hare still course;~
 7    4, 108|     ache most poignantly in dreams!"~"Still, what's to prevent
 8    4, 110|  alike, by a coincidence of dreams, of what they had done?
 9    4, 119|    man, or a son who little dreams of storms or wrecks; or
10    5, 132|    the sleep-bringing night~Dreams sport with the wandering
11    5, 145|   in that filthy vision the dreams spot my night clothes and
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