Day, Novell

 1    2,    7|     your service, and~ ~also a deed of great renowne to your
 2    3,    7|     never committed the sinful deed for which I am condemned
 3    4,    6|    such a blacke and dismall~ ~deed, as you have lost his kind
 4    4,    9|      he had resolved to do the deed; hee rushed forth of the
 5    4,    9|        never to disclose~ ~the deed. So, mounting on horse-backe
 6    4,    9|        all to eate, the wicked deed which he had~ ~done so perplexed
 7    4,   10|       night also favouring the deed.~ ~ The Maids counsell past
 8    7,    9|      words, and beleeving this deed of~ ~hers to be done no
 9    8,    2|         he began to repent his deed of darkenesse, although
10    8,    5|      mine owne eyes beheld the deed, it being now not above~ ~
11    9,    2|     chatting already? Is~ ~the deed you have done, to be answered
12    9,   10| desirous they were to have the deed done; and therefore~ ~when
13    9, Song|   permit,~ ~ Such a faithlesse deed,~ ~ And not in justice punish
14   10,    2|      no more~ ~then a vertuous deed well done, and becomming
15   10,    3| countrey, after such a dismall deed is done.~ ~ When Mithridanes
16   10,    4|     Sister. And yet~ ~the good deed which I have this night
17   10,    5|       performance of so rare a deed, awaiting (in~ ~hopefull
18   10,    8|      to have done~ ~the bloody deed. Which the murderer himself (
19   10,    8|    seeing, truly confessed the deed. By meanes whereof, all~ ~
20   10,    8|       and waxe offended, the~ ~deed is done, over-late to be
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