bold = Main text
   Day, Novellgrey = Comment text

 1    1,    7|           infinite meanes, that a civill honest Gentleman~ ~(a Courtier
 2    2,    3|       whose honest, vertuous, and civill~ ~demeanour, deserveth a
 3    2,    7|         her outward behaviour and civill apparancie,~ ~highly to
 4    2,    8|         throwes off all regard of civill and sober~ ~thoughts, and
 5    2,   10|           but heere is honest and civill conversation, better agreeing~ ~
 6    3,    3|        and~ ~to be endured by any civill Gentlewoman; neither would
 7    3,    8|        this~ ~life, in mervailous civill and modest manner. Yet all
 8    3,    9|           mutinies, quarrels, and civill dissentions, having~ ~procured
 9    4,    8|          perfect instruction~ ~in civill courses of life; rather
10    5,    1|        the heart (where never any civill~ ~instruction could before
11    5,    1|        frequenting the company of civill youths,~ ~observing also
12    5,    5|          whole City, for~ ~faire, civill, and honest demeanour, which
13    6,    2|        THAT A REQUEST OUGHT TO BE CIVILL, BEFORE IT~ ~ SHOULD BE
14    6,    5|      reputed him as a Treasury of civill knowledge.~ ~ The other
15    8,    5|         unfitting for a man of so civill profession:~ ~yet he spyed
16    9,    3|       being of verie honest~ ~and civill conversation, hearing her
17    9,    6|          WITH GOOD ADVISE, AND~ ~ CIVILL DISCRETION~ ~ ~ ~ Two yong
18    9,    8|           being a man of no great civill breeding, but furious,~ ~
19    9,    9| SELF-WILLED, MAY~ ~ BE REDUCED TO CIVILL OBEDIENCE~ ~ ~ ~ Two yong
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