Day, Novell

 1    2,    6|    referre it to your~ ~more able imagination.~ ~ In the time of this
 2    3,    6|         many things to him, which imagination had often misguided~ ~her
 3    4,    2|         of, no, not so much as in imagination.~ ~ The wise Gentlewoman
 4    4,    2|    Lisetta in no~ ~meane pride of imagination, that God Cupid should be
 5    5,    8|       this conceite of~ ~fearfull imagination in her, not onely happened
 6    7,    5|         fit thee with the foolish imagination which~ ~thou soughtest for,
 7    7,    9|          to entertaine so high an imagination of minde, as to~ ~tracke
 8    7,    9|           dazeled, with a foolish imagination beyond all possibility?
 9    8,    8|       received, I leave to your~ ~imagination, as rather deserving silence,
10    8,   10|     effect, without so much as an imagination of~ ~the least mistrust:
11    9,    7| mysterious~ ~matters, as her idle imagination had tutord her, rather then
12   10,    4|            either he felt, or his imagination so~ ~perswaded him, the
13   10,   10|    conceit may~ ~wrest out an ill imagination; I am of the minde (if yours
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