Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |      perhaps) might a little coole it, in regard of the queazie
 2  Ind      |  here againe, to dine in the coole shade.~ ~ This jocund company
 3  Ind      |     a temperate~ ~calmnesse, coole and gentle winds fanning
 4  Ind      |    refuge, the ayre being so coole, delicate, and acceptable,
 5    2,  Ind|   after they had dined, in a coole and pleasing aire they fell
 6    2,    6|     not any body neere, with coole water or any other remedy~ ~
 7    2,    7|    in his shirt, to take the coole ayre, because~ ~the season
 8    4,    1|       the heat of another to coole the fiery rage of her distemper,~ ~
 9    5,    1|       whose current was both coole and cleare. Hard by it,
10    5,    4|    make the weather warme or coole, as thou perhaps wouldst~ ~
11    5,    4|  which is a great deale more coole lodged.~ ~There shall I
12    6,   10|    into the Holy Land, where coole fresh bread is sold for
13    7,    4|   and so he shall~ ~stand to coole his feet.~ ~ Tofano (but
14    7,    8|    rage, began to demaund in coole~ ~blood, (as it were) from
15    7,   10|   feete, to wash them in the coole current. Others, not~ ~so
16    7,   10|       quite set. Then in the coole evening, according to the
17    8,    7|    times with them, for to~ ~coole the extreamity of her thirst,
18    8,    7|     her, goodly Woods, fayre coole~ ~shades, and Country houses
19    8,    7|      as to give mee a little coole water, which murtherers
20   10,  Ind| rinsing their Glasses in the coole cleare running~ ~current,
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