Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |              Ladies were not a jotte inferiour to them; the silence of
 2    1,    9|              may shew our selves not inferiour to~ ~them.~ ~ It is not
 3    2,    8|             life, to match him farre inferiour to his degree, then by~ ~
 4    3,    7|           the very choycest respect) inferiour to any one of best merit
 5    4,    1|             Gentlemen, and others of inferiour quality, as~ ~commonly the
 6    4,    7|             women of poore and farre inferiour~ ~quality, do not alwayes
 7    4,    8|       respect,~ ~and others of farre inferiour quality: a Taylors daughter,
 8    5,    1|              yeeres, but not a jot~ ~inferiour to him in vertue, whose
 9    5,    3| questionlesse, her joy was not a jot inferiour to his, such a simpathy~ ~
10    5,    3|              loyally; they are not~ ~inferiour to one another in birth,
11    5,   10|             grosse faults by farre~ ~inferiour infirmities in others. You
12    7,    2|             are therein not a jote~ ~inferiour to them. Which cannot but
13    7,    9|         delights, which Women (farre inferiour to me) are~ ~continuallie
14    8,    7|            who fixed not her eyes on inferiour subjects (but~ ~esteemed
15   10,    1|          done to divers other, farre inferiour to you in~ ~honour and merit;
16   10,    3|             in vertuous~ ~qualities) inferiour to none, from whom (as now
17   10,   10|              of his Lords, and other inferiour~ ~people, to joyne himselfe
18   10,   10|     Potentates, not in favour of any inferiour or meaner persons. And~ ~
19   10,   10|              knowes her selfe, farre inferiour to~ ~the meanest of your
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