Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |     touching their garments, or any foode whereon~ ~the sicke person
 2  Ind      |            inclination) seeking for foode on every dunghill,~ ~tossed
 3  Ind      |        being succoured any way with foode or~ ~physicke, all of them
 4    1,    6|           such,~ ~that no manner of Foode should be served to any
 5    2,    4|       hunger-starved thorow want of foode. The next morning, either~ ~
 6    2,    6|             shee had not tasted any foode: shee made therefore a benefit~ ~
 7    2,    6|            he would go fetch~ ~some foode for her; and because her
 8    2,    8|              and to give him~ ~some foode for Gods sake, which (accordingly)
 9    2,    9|              to be slaine, and made foode for devouring Wolves. Beside
10    3,    8|          while after, he set both~ ~foode and wine before him, which
11    3,    8|       replyed the Monke, and this~ ~foode which here thou seest, thy
12    3,    8|             remember, that ever any foode and wine was halfe~ ~so
13    3,    8|             in me.~ ~ When the next foode was sent to Ferando, so
14    4,    9|            so precious a kinde~ ~of foode, as the heart of so valiant
15    4,    9| Guardastagno; never shall any other foode hereafter,~ ~have entertainment
16    5,    9|           he not having any other~ ~foode for her dinner; made a dainty
17    5,    9|           the Faulcon was all their foode; and Frederigo not a~ ~little
18    6,   10|       Tuscany elsewhere, a kinde of foode greatly affected by those~ ~
19    7,    2|         worke not, yet we must have foode, which I~ ~have provided
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