Day, Novell

 1    2,    7|       and his soule much more ugly; he laide~ ~him downe on
 2    2,    9|   that shame succeedeth after ugly sinne, and the deceiver~ ~
 3    3,    7|       it, as it would appeare ugly in another. In~ ~which respect,
 4    4,    2|      his necke, and a strange ugly~ ~vizard on his face, he
 5    4,    6|      hunger-starved, and very ugly to looke upon. At me she
 6    4,    6|       hold on any such blacke ugly sight, whereof he had formerly~ ~
 7    4,   10|       notwithstanding all the ugly deformities in Ruggiero,
 8    6,    1|      could appeare to be more ugly.~ ~ Madame Oretta, being
 9    6,    5|   almost) could bee made more ugly.~ ~But notwithstanding all
10    6,    5| mishape them, then their owne ugly deformity, and made them~ ~
11    6,    8|  unsightly, ill shaped, and~ ~ugly faced, as a worse was very
12    6,    8|     are the most mishapen and ugly creatures, that, if God
13    6,   10|       Tartaria or India, more ugly or~ ~unsightly to bee lookt
14    8,    4|     in bed with her Mayde, an ugly, foule, deformed Slut.~ ~ ~ ~
15    8,    9|     man of person, had got an ugly masking suite,~ ~such as
16    9,    1|       body, and his~ ~face so ugly deformed, that such as knew
17    9,    1|     Scannadio (for so was the ugly~ ~fellow named) was buried;
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