Day, Novell

 1    1,    5|    Lady Marques,~ ~then any meate that stood on the Table.
 2    1,    6|  long; expecting still when meate would be~ ~served in, and
 3    1,    6| have~ ~long time allowed my meate to be eaten by all commers
 4    1,    6|   covetousnesse of one mans meate, doth ill agree~ ~with mine
 5    2,    8|   old Count sate eating his meate in the Hall, the children~ ~
 6    3,    1|     his belly daily full of meate, flatter, and make much
 7    3,    8|    here in Purgatory~ ~with meate and drinke, and (twice every
 8    4,    9|    this delicate kinde of~ ~meate? In good faith Sir (quoth
 9    4,    9|     you tell me~ ~Sir; what meate was this which you have
10    5,   10|  you are a shaver at your~ ~meate, that you have made so short
11    5,   10|    her to let him have some meate, else hee must goe to~ ~
12    6,    4|   should you say so?~ ~ The meate of my Master,~ ~ Allowes
13    8,    2|     guests, because hee had meate~ ~required such sawce. Belcolore
14    8,    9|       Hall where we sate at meate, the Tables covered in such
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