Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |        her selfe, and then I~ ~mervaile not, but rather am much
 2    2,    5| brought thither with them; his mervaile so much the~ ~more encreased,
 3    2,    7|       to many, with no~ ~meane mervaile how he should bee murthered
 4    2,    7|   stood as one confounded with mervaile) if he had never seene~ ~
 5    2,    8|         and therefore it is no mervaile, if like will to like, a
 6    3,    2|     manner, to the no little~ ~mervaile of the drowsie wayting woman,
 7    3,    2|   Queene began not a little to mervaile. Now trust mee Sir, quoth~ ~
 8    3,    3|  watcheth my walks, and much I mervaile, that~ ~he is not now heere.~ ~
 9    7,    9|      soever I heare or see.~ ~ Mervaile and amazement, encreased
10    8,    9|       was no great matter of~ ~mervaile, if he lived so merily as
11   10,    3|        had heard a matter of~ ~mervaile, for a Lord Abbot to performe
12   10,    3|  therefore deserving the lesse mervaile, seeing men are~ ~slaine
13   10,    8|      regard it is no matter of mervaile.~ ~ "But let us come now
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