Day, Novell

 1    2,    8|          flight, made~ ~himselfe guilty of this foule imputation:
 2    3,    1|          Nunnes likewise cried~ ~guilty too: wherfore being a woman
 3    3,    5|        that my heart was any way guilty of my~ ~outward severity,
 4    3,    7| extremity, as thinking you to be guilty of their~ ~brothers death,
 5    3,    7|        punished, but onely the~ ~guilty and haynous transgressors.
 6    4,    1|         the cave being afterward guilty of~ ~their often meeting
 7    4,    3|        as~ ~supposing them to be guilty of Magdalenaes death. He
 8    5,   10|     cleare us, albeit wee are as guilty; in a sharpe~ ~reprehending
 9    8,    2|       Conscience,~ ~and urgeth a guilty remembrance, with some sence
10    8,    7|         infamies (yet none but~ ~guilty and true taxations) as will
11    9,    1|       injurie at all, as~ ~being guilty of no transgression: yet (
12   10,    1|        to doe it, whereof she is guilty, and not I, as~ ~the truth
13   10,    5|     wherein the will~ ~is no way guilty, are halfe pardonable by
14   10,    8|         that none of them were~ ~guilty of the crime, wherewith
15   10,    8|          neither of these men is guilty of the offence, wherewith
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