Day, Novell

 1    1,    7|        a full and~ ~over-cloyed stomacke, to avoyde base humours
 2    3,    5|    pulses strongly beating, her stomacke~ ~rising, and sighes swelling,
 3    3,    8|      some fume or vapour in the stomacke, had thus over-awed his~ ~
 4    3,    8|        three nights, felt his~ ~stomacke well prepared to eate, and
 5    3,    9|       strange swelling~ ~on his stomacke, which failing of apt and
 6    4,    9|        with his owne~ ~lacke of stomacke, yet provoked her with many
 7    6,    2|    before him, and emptying his stomacke~ ~twice or thrice, of some
 8    7,    2|       selfe~ ~with leaning your stomacke on the Fat, and leave the
 9    8,    9|    crossed his~ ~armes over his stomacke, according to the Lesson
10   10,    2|    disease, which he had in his stomacke, and~ ~afterwards set him
11   10,    2|      feeding, or otherwise, his stomacke~ ~being grievously offended
12   10,    2|      against any disease in the stomacke,~ ~was this which he had
13   10,    2|         Abbot, who had a better stomacke to eate, then any will or
14   10,    2|      what temper he found his~ ~stomacke now? I should finde my stomacke
15   10,    2| stomacke now? I should finde my stomacke well enough (answered the~ ~
16   10,    2|       seeing you doe feele your stomacke so well, it is time you~ ~
17   10,    2|         of him, how he felt his stomacke now,~ ~and whether it would
18   10,    2|     answered, that he found his stomacke perfectly~ ~recovered, his
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License