Day, Novell

 1    9,    9|    was one shie and skittish Mule~ ~(belike subject to fearefull
 2    9,    9| Intendest thou to~ ~kill the Mule? why dost thou not leade
 3    9,    9|   wonne~ ~the Mastery of his Mule.~ ~ When Melisso and Giosefo
 4    9,    9|      tooke compassion on his Mule. Worthy friend,~ ~replyed
 5    9,   10|    to have his wife become a Mule.~ ~And when it came to the
 6    9,   10|       provided himselfe of a Mule, to~ ~carry commodities
 7    9,   10|  close adjoyning by his owne Mule and the Asse.~ ~ The woman
 8    9,   10|     list: I can convert my~ ~Mule into a faire young woman,
 9    9,   10|     and afterward make her a Mule againe: thus am I never~ ~
10    9,   10|       that thou maist make a Mule of me; then shalt thou have~ ~
11    9,   10|    have~ ~both an Asse and a Mule to travell withall about
12    9,   10|    is the goodly~ ~head of a Mule: then handling her disheveld
13    9,   10|  them the~ ~goodly mane of a Mule. Afterwardes, touching the
14    9,   10|      parts) belonging~ ~to a Mule, nothing else remaining,
15    9,   10|   Forbeare Gossippe John, my Mule shal have no taile at~ ~
16    9,   10|      Pietro) I can like my~ ~Mule better without a taile,
17    9,   10|    Diddest thou ever~ ~see a Mule without a taile? Wouldst
18   10,    1|   Italy. Rogiero rode on the Mule which the king had~ ~given
19   10,    1|   they all staled except the Mule.~ ~ Being mounted againe,
20   10,    1| beasts dranke, and not the~ ~Mule, but staled in the River:
21   10,    1|   which Rogiero spake to his Mule; he was called into~ ~the
22   10,    1|      had compared him to his Mule? Signior~ ~Rogiero nothing
23   10,    1|    requireth:~ ~even so, the Mule would not stale where she
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