Day, Novell

 1    1,    9|  discourses,~ ~are the best habit of the minde, and an outward
 2    2,    8| presence, and in the homely habit which he did weare, to touch
 3    3,    2| manner, and what the usuall habit was of the King, when he
 4    3,    7|    putting on his Pilgrimes habit againe, kissing her once
 5    3,    7|   selfe. So in his Pilgrims habit, he departed from her house,
 6    3,    9|      attired in a Pilgrimes habit, yet well furnished with
 7    3,    9|      when (in her Pilgrimes habit) secretly she went to the
 8    4,    2|     covered with his Friars habit, which~ ~must be the sole
 9    4,    2|    he put on his dissembled habit of God Cupid, with his~ ~
10    6,   10|    swear to you by the holy habit which I~ ~weare on my body,
11    7,    1|    and to~ ~another a whole habit. In reward whereof, they
12    7,    3|    Friar laide by his holie habit, Cowle, Hood, Booke, and~ ~
13   10,    9|    be grown long, and his~ ~habit after the Arabian fashion,
14   10,    9|   his beard, strangeness of habit, (but most of all) firm
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