Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |         many being more modestly~ ~curious of, refused such disgracefull
 2  Ind      |        branching Vines, fitter for curious and~ ~quaffing bibbers,
 3    1,    3|            having conferred with a curious~ ~and excellent Goldsmith,
 4    1,    6|    presence) being carried to this curious~ ~Inquisitor, and he well
 5    1,    6|          our Lord a drinker, and a curious quaffer of~ ~wines, as if
 6    2,    5|           both being seated~ ~on a curious Chest at the beds feete,
 7    2,    5|            feeding, with plenty of curious Wines liberally walking
 8    2,    9|          forme of the Chamber, the curious~ ~pictures hanging about
 9    3,    3|           carelesse: and she being curious, nice, yet wisely considerate,~ ~
10    3,    8|           was Abbot, very holy and curious in all things else,~ ~save
11    4,    2|           apprehension of the most curious inquisition. Beside,~ ~a
12    6,    9|          men: provoked him to many curious~ ~speculations: and because
13    6,   10|       cunning Painter, or the most curious~ ~Poeticall wit, had not
14    7,    3| instruments, and yet not~ ~greatly curious of his company, so they
15    7,    3|   therefore could not stand on any curious answer,~ ~especially being
16    7,   10|           notwithstanding the most curious search of my braine) apt~ ~
17    8,    3|           rare pictures, and~ ~the curious carved Tabernacle, which (
18    8,    7|              them artificially, as curious women well know how to doe,
19    8, Song|        Love-sicke passions) made a curious construction~ ~thereof,
20    9,    8|          argument: yet, not as a~ ~curious and spruce Courtier, but
21   10,    3|       goods and treasure; then bee curious in keeping~ ~it, and suffer
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