Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |   wonted affaires: but, as a waiting for death every houre,~ ~
 2  Ind      | Family, but~ ~onely my poore waiting Chamber-maide; so great
 3  Ind      |     well done, to~ ~take our waiting women, with all such things
 4    2,    2|    beguiling the time, still waiting when their purpose should
 5    2,    6|     a mourning habite; and a waiting Gentlewoman of~ ~theirs,
 6    3,    2| backe as he came, the sleepy waiting~ ~woman not so much as looking
 7    4,    1|   morning, pretending to her waiting woman, that~ ~she was scarsly
 8    4,    4|    to the King of~ ~Granada, waiting for nothing else but best
 9    5,    1|     will have lye in secret, waiting for our comming, and kill
10    5,    3|      scarsely so good as the waiting,~ ~maid: there dwelt sometime
11    6,   10|    Wherefore they sent~ ~the waiting Gentlewoman to have a diligent
12    7,    6|  receiving directions by the waiting woman, to~ ~her Ladies Chamber:
13    7,    6|    in the wall, and then the waiting woman came to him, to~ ~
14    7,    6|   was the owner thereof. The waiting woman, upon~ ~the sight
15    7,    8|     to doe: Roberto,~ ~there waiting his entrance, perceived
16    7,    9|     as before, and Pyrrhus~ ~waiting with dutiful reverence,
17    8,    7|    his next meeting with the waiting woman, shee delivered the~ ~
18    8,    7|     returned to see what the waiting woman ayled, and finding
19   10,    5| servingmen before her, and a waiting Woman following, she~ ~went
20   10,    9| wisest~ ~Baschaes, and three waiting servants.~ ~ When he had
21   10,    9| Angels)~ ~she came with them waiting before her, and graciously
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