Day, Novell

 1    1,    6|     which I purpose to relate) pleasantly reprooved~ ~Master Can de
 2    1,    6|      was Bergamino, a man very pleasantly disposed,~ ~and so wittily
 3    1,    7| without injunction or command, pleasantly thus began.~ ~ This last
 4    1,    9|       whereupon their Queene~ ~pleasantly said. For this day (faire
 5    2,    3|    would depart and leave him, pleasantly smiling, and with bashfull~ ~
 6    2,   10|      Crowne to Madam Neiphila, pleasantly speaking to~ ~her in this
 7    3,    2|       Majestie was become more pleasantly disposing, whereat the~ ~
 8    3,    2|        hee would discover, but pleasantly said to the Queene,~ ~Why
 9    3,    4|   forgetting who spake to her, pleasantly replied: Whoop Sir, where~ ~
10    3,    6|  antiquity, and (perhaps)~ ~as pleasantly situated, as any other City
11    3,    6|       perhaps he looked not so pleasantly, neither used her so~ ~kindly,
12    6,    7|        dismay or dread at all, pleasantly thus~ ~replied. My Lord,
13    6,   10|      to whom Madame Pampinea~ ~pleasantly thus spake. Now trust me
14    7,    9|        appease his~ ~distaste) pleasantly thus spake. How now my Lord?
15   10,   10|        to sing a song, which~ ~pleasantly she began in this manner.~ ~ ~ ~
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