Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |          in this World) had even forsaken all things~ ~that hee had.
 2  Ind      |          but utterly they~ ~were forsaken on all sides: this tribulation
 3  Ind      |   calamity, the sicke being thus forsaken of~ ~neighbors, kinred,
 4  Ind      |         we may tearme our selves forsaken; in regard that our~ ~Husbands,
 5    1,    7|         heaven, and~ ~hath quite forsaken these loathed lower Regions,
 6    1,    9|         desires had not wholly~ ~forsaken him. Having seene (at a
 7    2,    6|  considerations, having left and forsaken~ ~all her goods, going aboord
 8    2,    6|        being left there poore,~ ~forsaken, and miserable, not knowing
 9    3,    6|          and goodnesse having so forsaken me, to let me fall in so
10    3,    9|         in service.~ ~ The poore forsaken new married Countesse, could
11    3,    9|         the Count, how she~ ~had forsaken his house, and purposed
12    4,    6|     blessed soule hath too soone forsaken it) may be honourably~ ~
13    4,    8|        vitall powers had quite~ ~forsaken her. The women labouring
14    4,   10|          if sense and reason had forsaken her;~ ~so violent was her
15    5,    5|          with goods, but utterly forsaken of the dwellers, onely this~ ~
16    6,   10| overruleth us, the judges have~ ~forsaken their venerable benches,
17    7,    9|         Fields. And I, in such~ ~forsaken sort as you see, am left
18   10,    4|      onely~ ~(in such necessity) forsaken him, but also cast him forth
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