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  1  Ind      |            to~ ~beleeve it, albeit a man of good credit should report
  2  Ind      |             the kind or~ ~quality of man, they did not onely contaminate
  3  Ind      |             must of necessity have a man to attend her,~ ~were hee
  4  Ind      |      providence or conduct of~ ~some man, we can hardly governe our
  5    1,    1|               THE WICKEDNESSE OF ONE MAN, MAY DECEIVE MANY~ ~ ~ ~
  6    1,    1|         beguyled~ ~an holy Religious man, and after dyed. And having (
  7    1,    1|                time) bene a very bad man, at his death, was reputed
  8    1,    1|     convenient (deare Ladies) that a man ought to~ ~begin whatsoever
  9    1,    1|      Wherefore, seeing that I am the man~ ~appointed, to begin this
 10    1,    1|           bethinke himselfe of~ ~any man (how wicked soever he was)
 11    1,    1|               And~ ~because he was a man of little stature, yet handsome
 12    1,    1|              choller, then any other man could be. Never would he~ ~
 13    1,    1|              never was there a worse man borne; whose wickednesse~ ~
 14    1,    1|            himselfe, that this was a man apt in~ ~all respects, to
 15    1,    1|              my selfe of no meeter a man~ ~then Chappelet, to recover
 16    1,    1|        purpose,~ ~because he (honest man) being now growne aged,
 17    1,    1|              Chamber where the sicke man lay, they~ ~entred into
 18    1,    1|            to~ ~the other) with this man? We are much hindered by
 19    1,    1|            hee hath bin so~ ~badde a man, as he will not now make
 20    1,    1|              most holy and religious man that is to~ ~be found (if
 21    1,    1|          some one~ ~holy and learned man, might come to heare the
 22    1,    1|         sonne (answered the good old man) thou hast done~ ~well,
 23    1,    1|           confession or otherwise, a man can~ ~never sinne. Then
 24    1,    1|      needfull. It happeneth to every man~ ~(how holy soever he be)
 25    1,    1|             parents left me a rich~ ~man, and immediatly after my
 26    1,    1|         often transgressed. And what man is~ ~able to forbeare it;
 27    1,    1|            or to speake evill of any man,~ ~or to doe any other such
 28    1,    1|               you that seeme to be a man of God, how dare you use
 29    1,    1|             false witnes against any man, or hast~ ~spoken falsly,
 30    1,    1|         thinke~ ~not any, except one man, who one day brought me
 31    1,    1|        happening~ ~to meete with the man againe, after I had kept
 32    1,    1|        endureth, were onely in one~ ~man, and he repenting them,
 33    1,    1|            me.~ ~ When the religious man perceived, that nothing
 34    1,    1|       reputing him to be a most holy man, as verily~ ~beleeving all
 35    1,    1|           done the like,~ ~hearing a man to speake in this manner,
 36    1,    1|            pleasing to the good olde man,~ ~and he caused every thing
 37    1,    1|           themselves, What manner of man is this, whom neither~ ~
 38    1,    1|            Chappelet was a very holy man, as appeared by all the~ ~
 39    1,    1|             example by this singular man, this Saint-like man, nay,
 40    1,    1|        singular man, this Saint-like man, nay, a very Saint~ ~indeede.~ ~
 41    1,    2|              Jehannot de Chevigny, a man of faithfull, honest, and
 42    1,    2|           was a Merchant also, and a man of very direct~ ~conversation.
 43    1,    2|          soule, much pittying that a man so good in behaviour, so
 44    1,    2|           the Jew was a very learned man in his owne~ ~Law, yet notwithstanding
 45    1,    2|               as hoping to have this man converted heere. For, if~ ~
 46    1,    2|             Consider, that to a rich man (as thou art)~ ~travaile
 47    1,    2|           the Courtiers. And being a man very~ ~discreet and judicious,
 48    1,    2|              most~ ~sober and modest man; that he had soone seene
 49    1,    2|              else beside. But~ ~if a man desire to see luxury, avarice,
 50    1,    2|     constancy; was the very gladdest man~ ~in the world, and went
 51    1,    3|            TO BEE, ESPECIALLY WHEN A MAN FINDS HIMSELFE~ ~ IN SOME
 52    1,    3|          promise.~ ~ Saladine, was a man so powerfull and valiant,
 53    1,    3|             City of Alexandria. This man he imagined best able~ ~
 54    1,    3|           him, thus began.~ ~ Honest man, I have often heard it reported
 55    1,    3|           The Jew, being a very wise man, plainely perceived, that~ ~
 56    1,    3|             there was a very wealthy man, who (among other~ ~precious
 57    1,    3|              for his heire. The good man,~ ~who loved no one of them
 58    1,    3|       contradiction and square: each man producing then~ ~his Ring,
 59    1,    4|              should gaine-say it. No man~ ~can know it, or any tongue
 60    1,    4|           take such a benefit when a man may enjoy it.~ ~ Upon this
 61    1,    4|           doe.~ ~ The Abbot, being a man of quicke apprehension,
 62    1,    6|             An honest plaine meaning man, (simply and conscionably)~ ~
 63    1,    6|        greatly to seeme a sanctified man, and an earnest~ ~affecter
 64    1,    6|             in~ ~him, he found out a man, more rich in purse, then
 65    1,    6|              any~ ~misbeliefe in the man; for no further reformation
 66    1,    6|           did he seeke after.~ ~ The man comming before him, hee
 67    1,    6|            or no? Whereto the honest man~ ~answered, that he could
 68    1,    6|             countenance, he made the man beleeve himselfe to~ ~be
 69    1,    6|          directed him.~ ~ The simple man, yet not so simple, but
 70    1,    6|             no? Yes Sir, replyed the man very readily. Hast~ ~thou
 71    1,    6|        answered the~ ~plaine-meaning man, I make no doubt of any
 72    1,    6|                O good Sir, saide the man, do you remember the wordes
 73    1,    6|         telling a tale of a skilfull man, named Primasso,~ ~and of
 74    1,    6|         though that~ ~honest meaning man did wisely, in touching
 75    1,    6|          their~ ~pleasure, one onely man remained unrespected, or
 76    1,    6|          whose name was Bergamino, a man very pleasantly disposed,~ ~
 77    1,    6|             have heard of a certaine man, named Primasso, one skilfully~ ~
 78    1,    6|             the Abbot of~ ~Clugni, a man reputed (next to the Pope)
 79    1,    6|              to himselfe; Truly this man is more~ ~magnificent then
 80    1,    6|           was wont to doe; the first man hee saw was Primasso,~ ~
 81    1,    6|          fast, demaunding of~ ~every man neere about him, if they
 82    1,    6|              disdainfull against any man whatsoever? I have~ ~long
 83    1,    6|        Marchant or Minstrill, honest man or knave,~ ~never refraining
 84    1,    6|        basely contemning one~ ~poore man. Beleeve me, covetousnesse
 85    1,    6|       learned, honest, and ingenious man: he grew greatly ashamed
 86    1,    6|           Can de la Scala, who was a man of good understanding,~ ~
 87    1,    7|           greedy and covetous, as no man in the world could be more~ ~
 88    1,    7|          named Guillaume Boursier. A man very farre differing~ ~from
 89    1,    7|          this in the presence of any man, upbraiding him with~ ~injuries,
 90    1,    7|              his time in Geneway: no man more~ ~honouring and friendly
 91    1,    9|     sometimes it happeneth, that~ ~a man or woman, intending (by
 92    1,    9|         dwelt a learned Physitian, a man famous for skill, and farre~ ~
 93    1,    9|         thereat together, to see a~ ~man of such yeares and discretion,
 94    1,    9|         meane merrit, comming from a man so wise and vertuous: And~ ~
 95    1,    9|          Queene, knowing him to be a man full of mirth and matter,~ ~
 96    2,    1|           Arriguo, who being a poore man, served as a Porter, or~ ~
 97    2,    1|    burden-bearer for money, when any man pleased to employ him. And~ ~
 98    2,    1|              knew him then to be the man indeede; whereupon he saide.
 99    2,    1|      demanding, how he knew that the man had no such imperfection?
100    2,    1|         counterfet trickes, then any man else~ ~that ever I saw.~ ~
101    2,    1|              out for mercy,~ ~but no man would heare him; for, the
102    2,    1|     Potestates Lieutenant (being~ ~a man of rude quality) tooke him
103    2,    2|            tell you true Sir, I am a man grosse enough in such~ ~
104    2,    2|         lodging. Afterward, the same man thus againe conferd with
105    2,    2|             not knowing, whether his man was gone thither~ ~or no,
106    2,    2|    glimmering in the ayre, she saw a man sitting in his shirt, bare
107    2,    2|              eate it, and if he be a man~ ~likely, we can allow him
108    2,    2|           unto him. Make hast~ ~good man, get thee into this Bath,
109    2,    2|          demaunding how~ ~the honest man fared. Madame, answered
110    2,    2| considerately; for he~ ~was a goodly man, compleate in all perfection
111    2,    3|             named Alessandro, a yong man, and of faire demeanor,
112    2,    3|            was a very~ ~comely young man, so affable, lovely, and
113    2,    3|               he had never seene any man before that better~ ~pleased
114    2,    3|               as thou perceivest) no man, but a woman; and~ ~departing
115    2,    3|            as never did Woman love a man more truely then I doe~ ~
116    2,    3|                impotent, and sickely man. Yet let me tell your sanctity,
117    2,    3|              and goodnesse) with a~ ~man meete to be my husband,
118    2,    3|            never to accept any other man~ ~in marriage, but him onely,
119    2,    3|         appearance, and~ ~not like a man that had lent money to usury,
120    2,    4|              INTO HOW MANY DANGERS A MAN MAY~ ~ FALL, THROUGH A COVETOUS
121    2,    4|            of Fortune, then to see a man so suddainly~ ~exalted,
122    2,    4|           long since) a very wealthy man,~ ~named Landolpho Ruffolo,
123    2,    4|            and wealth together. This man (as other~ ~Merchants are
124    2,    4|        discerning the~ ~shape of any man, shee grew fearefull, and
125    2,    4|           she~ ~espied the face of a man, not being able to judge,
126    2,    5|        NEEDFULL A THING IT IS, FOR A MAN THAT~ ~ TRAVELLETH IN AFFAIRES
127    2,    5|        Perouse or~ ~Perugia, a young man, named Andrea de Piero,
128    2,    5|      questioned~ ~with her, what the man was, whence hee came, and
129    2,    5|                that himselfe was the man. Then taking him aside,
130    2,    5|             he was an hansome proper man, and of such cariage~ ~and
131    2,    5|            Naples not~ ~containing a man of better merit. Whereupon
132    2,    5|              his neck; he stood as a man confounded with admiration,
133    2,    5|              sighes and teares, at a man that hath no knowledge of
134    2,    5|              in you I~ ~know not any man of how great repute or qualitie
135    2,    5|             Get thee gone go ie good man, and~ ~suffer us to sleepe
136    2,    5|            aloude, saide; Surely the man is mad, or walketh the streetes
137    2,    5|           night. For Gods sake (good man) be gone, and let us sleepe;
138    2,    5|          Shift for thy selfe (good~ ~man) in time, and tarrie not
139    2,    5|       Lanthorne and light, as also a man carrying it, and another~ ~
140    2,    5|           carrying it, and another~ ~man with him in company, both
141    2,    5|            thus. In good faith poore man, albeit thou hast lost thy
142    2,    5|          exceede it. What will not a man~ ~(in desperate extremity)
143    2,    5|            raised it so high, that a man might without~ ~perill passe
144    2,    5|            the dead bodie; or if any man came to open the~ ~Grave,
145    2,    6|               being now a brave yong man, and of very goodly forme:
146    2,    6|             authority.~ ~ The honest man of the Guard, without seeking
147    2,    6|         imagined this same to be the man; considering~ ~further withall,
148    2,    6|     admiration, reputing him to be a man of loftie spirit, and his~ ~
149    2,    6|              they were contracted as man and wife, and the espousals
150    2,    6|             her words. And~ ~being a man most ingenious, making further
151    2,    6|           and knowing what manner of man he was, his~ ~Father Henriet
152    2,    7|             power.~ ~ Bajazeth was a man of stearne lookes, rough
153    2,    7|         wanton friend of a much mean man, whose onely glory was her
154    2,    7|        Prince farre happier then any man else whatsoever, by~ ~the
155    2,    7|       because himselfe was a married man,~ ~but rather to a goodly
156    2,    7|         sword drawne, said: Let~ ~no man stirre, or speake a word,
157    2,    7|            brave and~ ~gallant young man, upon a review of the pillage,
158    2,    7|             the better be reputed as man and wife; for, to passe~ ~
159    2,    7|             perceiving him to be the man indeed, weeping incessantly,
160    2,    8|              NEVERTHELESSE RENOWNE A MAN, AND BRING HIM TO FARRE~ ~
161    2,    8|            Friend, being so wise a~ ~man as you are, it is no difficult
162    2,    8|           who will not say, that a~ ~man or woman of poore and meane
163    2,    8|             a woman as I am, but any man of much more potent might, (
164    2,    8|              to bee~ ~commended in a man, the whole Realme of France
165    2,    8|         loyall and most honourable~ ~man, sharpely reprehended her
166    2,    8|         whereupon shee saide. Honest man, thy daughter hath~ ~a pleasing
167    2,    8|       extended over those~ ~parts: a man of very great authority,
168    2,    8|             he attended as a serving man, and lived a long while
169    2,    8|        Virgin might be no mate for a man of~ ~ill conditions, no
170    2,    8|          recovered and married,~ ~no man alive so well contented
171    2,    8|           husband, because hee was a man so worthy and valiant; and
172    2,    8|              and in good~ ~health, a man of goodly feature, and most
173    2,    8|                stil by the good olde man, because he loved them better
174    2,    8|          returned againe to the olde man, and would not leave him,~ ~
175    2,    8|         making much of the good olde man,~ ~Lord Andrew Mandevile,
176    2,    8|              being a~ ~hastie-minded man, and one that ever-despised
177    2,    8|            case, saying to the poore man, that if he would~ ~accept
178    2,    8|              be an holy and vercuous man.~ ~In the repetition of
179    2,    8|            so injuriously wronging a man of so great valour~ ~and
180    2,    9|            and (in the habite~ ~of a man) became servant to the Soldane.
181    2,    9|        called in~ ~question. A third man unapt in censure, with his
182    2,    9|             their time.~ ~ Onely one man among them all, named Bernardo
183    2,    9|          lewdly allured by any other man.~ ~ Amongst these Merchants
184    2,    9|           there was a young~ ~proper man, named Ambroginolo of Placentia,
185    2,    9|           evermore understoode, that man was the~ ~most noble creature,
186    2,    9|              next degree to him: but man, as generally is beleeved,
187    2,    9|          make any mention of. If a~ ~man then be possessed of the
188    2,    9|             inticing meanes, which a man (that is affected to her)
189    2,    9|             Be it a bargaine, am the man that will make good~ ~my
190    2,    9|              thee, to please another man, and on a bare command?
191    2,    9|         Bonnet as is~ ~fitting for a man, so returne with my habite
192    2,    9|     Enchararcho~ ~taking her to be a man, as shee appeared no otherwise
193    2,    9|         smilest, because I that am a man, professing Armes,~ ~should
194    2,    9|          world,~ ~in the habite of a man, falsely and most maliciously
195    2,    9|             reputed Sicurano to be a man, having~ ~heard and seene
196    2,   10|      arguments and~ ~reasons, that a man and his wife ought to abstaine
197    2,   10|          neither (as~ ~yet) knew the man, nor what was become of
198    2,   10|             me; because I am a young man, and can as~ ~well maintaine
199    2,   10|          faire a wife as you, or any man else that I know.~ ~Beleeve
200    2,   10|            welcome) he~ ~stoode as a man amazed, saying to himselfe.
201    2,   10|             fishing,~ ~because never man felt the like afflictions
202    2,   10|              the pleasures~ ~of this man, and so sin capitolly, then
203    2,   10|      Consider deare heart, when this man shall waxe weary of~ ~thee,
204    3,    1|          Abbesse, and an honest poor man, who was a Gardiner,~ ~and
205    3,    1|          talke with the honest poore man, whose name was~ ~Lurco,
206    3,    1|            dwels among g them, for a man cannot doe any thing to~ ~
207    3,    1|             need to be more~ ~then a man that is to live with such
208    3,    1|         quoth hee) a poore labouring man, who is~ ~both deafe and
209    3,    1|          services: for the old silly man is gon, and we have need
210    3,    1|            thither, and thinking the man to be dumbe and deafe indeede,~ ~
211    3,    1|              and attended, never any man daring to~ ~adventure among
212    3,    1|            not worthy the title of a man. Ah Sister, it~ ~hath oftentimes
213    3,    1|            incomparable pleasures of man and woman, of which we are
214    3,    1|           she fell in frailty with a man that was both~ ~lame and
215    3,    1|            not~ ~transgressed with a man, because he wanted his rationall
216    3,    1|          parts that do belong to any man,~ ~and therefore no Man,
217    3,    1|              man,~ ~and therefore no Man, wanting them. If folly
218    3,    1|          know what kinde of creature man was.~ ~ After some other
219    3,    1|               whether Massetto was a man~ ~rationall, or no. Ill
220    3,    1|        observed him to be an hansome man, young, lusty,~ ~well-limbde
221    3,    1|          Massetto was no misse-proud man now, to be~ ~thus advanced
222    3,    2|             THE PROVIDENCE OF A WISE MAN, WHEN~ ~ HE SHALL HAVE REASON
223    3,    2|          himselfe to be a much wiser man.~ ~ Agilulffo, King of Lombardie,
224    3,    2|           Stable~ ~of Horse, being a man but of meane and low quality,
225    3,    2|           came to the lodging of the man indeede, that had so~ ~impudently
226    3,    2|               Yea~ ~mary, this is th man that did the deede.~ ~ Nevertheless,
227    3,    2|              which of them was~ ~the man that he had marked. And
228    3,    2|            he saide to himselfe. The man whom I seeke for,~ ~though
229    3,    2|             other turbulent spirited man, no imprisonments, tortures,~ ~
230    3,    2|            short of his meaning; the man~ ~onely excepted whom indeed
231    3,    3|     amourously affected to an honest man,~ ~induced a devoute and
232    3,    3|         minde;~ ~conceiving, that no man of meane condition (how
233    3,    3|           love with a~ ~verie honest man of our City also, and of
234    3,    3|             the night~ ~ensuing. The man himselfe knew nothing hereof,
235    3,    3|              was a fat and corpulent man, yet notwithstanding,~ ~
236    3,    3|       reported to~ ~be a most honest man, she perswaded her selfe,
237    3,    3|              choice of him. The holy man seeing~ ~her to be a Gentlewoman (
238    3,    3|            him, he being a most rich man, and may~ ~very sufficiently
239    3,    3|              Father) that there is a man, whose name I know not,
240    3,    3|              price and value. This~ ~man, imagining (perhaps) no
241    3,    3|        enough.~ ~ The holy Religious man, so soone as he heard her
242    3,    3|             her description of~ ~the man, presently knew whom shee
243    3,    3|             his hand. Which the holy man accepted~ ~thankfully, and
244    3,    3|            discredited with the good man, if so~ ~bee the Gentlewoman
245    3,    3|             angry, sternly said. Bad man as thou art,~ ~how canst
246    3,    3|             became the sorrowfullest man in the~ ~world, not knowing
247    3,    3|             to be a much more~ ~holy man. If I can recall him from
248    3,    3|          said shee) what manner~ ~of man he is, yet would I not have
249    3,    3|           Church, but in commeth the man~ ~that had (supposedly)
250    3,    3|            that could be used to a~ ~man, calling him disloyall,
251    3,    3|            he would say; and, like a man extreamly~ ~perplexed, strove
252    3,    3|      remembrance. But tell me wicked man; where~ ~wast thou this
253    3,    3|         words, pacified the good old man so well as he~ ~could with
254    3,    4|                there dwelt an honest man, and some-what rich, who
255    3,    4|             was but a weake~ ~witted man and a gourmand or grosse
256    3,    4|              reverence.~ ~ The young man continuing his resort to
257    3,    4|             never intended, that any man (by~ ~me) should be acquainted
258    3,    4|            it therefore, that when a man will go diligently about~ ~
259    3,    5|          family of the Vergellisi, a man very rich, wise, and in
260    3,    5|            Pistoya likewise, a young man,~ ~named Ricciardo, derived
261    3,    5|        constant, then ever any other man can expresse to a woman.~ ~
262    3,    5|            it doth in this; I am the man borne to~ ~love you perpetually.
263    3,    5|          held thee deerer~ ~then any man living. But yet it became
264    3,    5|             a lowd laughter. How now man? Have I~ ~not kept my promise
265    3,    5|            youth? The olde miserable man is gone to Millaine, and~ ~
266    3,    6|             a most vile~ ~and wicked man as thou art. With whom doest
267    3,    6|           trayterous and unfaithfull man, as thou art. I am sure
268    3,    6|            thou make, devill, and no man? What, have my words~ ~smitten
269    3,    6|               for with the face of a man, and love of an husband
270    3,    6|     behaviour. Tell mee, treacherous man, am not~ ~I as faire, as
271    3,    7|         hereat, imagining, that some man belike resembling him in~ ~
272    3,    7|              a Corne-loft with~ ~his man. Now by reason of many disturbing
273    3,    7|             of as false witnesses) a man~ ~most innocent, making
274    3,    7|              imagined murtherer of a man yet~ ~living, infinite cares
275    3,    7|            teares spake thus. Good~ ~man, thou seemest to me to be
276    3,    7|           Pilgrime appearing to be a man of great holinesse,~ ~saide.
277    3,    7|           danger then before. Good~ ~man (quoth shee) I am burthened
278    3,    7|             It appeareth to me (good man) that divine ordinativation~ ~
279    3,    7|               or ever can love~ ~any man like unto him.~ ~ At these
280    3,    7|       Familiar conversation betweene man and man~ ~and woman, is
281    3,    7|        conversation betweene man and man~ ~and woman, is a concession
282    3,    7|             parts that most adorne a man, and appertaine~ ~to the
283    3,    7|            of nature God hath endued man withall,~ ~farre above all
284    3,    7|              thus is replied. Worthy man, and the~ ~friend to goodnesse,
285    3,    7|           favour, as seeming to be a man come onely to comfort him:~ ~
286    3,    7|              thus answered. Friendly man,~ ~seeing thou art so carefull
287    3,    7|            answered Aldobrandino, no man knoweth how sweet revenge
288    3,    7|            be desired, but onely the man who hath bene~ ~wronged.
289    3,    7|             to whom he saide. Sir, a man ought~ ~to bestow his best
290    3,    7|             think verily he is~ ~the man that hath slaine Theobaldo
291    3,    7|            were the murderers of the man.~ ~ The honest Knight, who
292    3,    7|      suteable. Now,~ ~concerning the man slaine, and supposed to
293    3,    8|           last relation, that a dead man was wept~ ~and mournd for,
294    3,    8|           let you know, how a living man was buried for dead, and~ ~
295    3,    8|           thereof, and who (as a bad man.)~ ~deserved justly to be
296    3,    8|            the said Abby, he being a man materiall,~ ~of simple and
297    3,    8|             my selfe, what manner of man Ferando is, and thinke upon~ ~
298    3,    8|              vertuous and sanctified man, and I a woman~ ~of so meane
299    3,    8|             pleasing to a sanctified man, that it can draw him from~ ~
300    3,    8|          absolutely be confirmed. No man can, or shall be privy to
301    3,    8|               he a divelish deluding man; and the strongest holdes
302    3,    8|            quoth~ ~the Monke) a dead man, as thou art, borne in Sardignia,
303    3,    8|      conversion; and becomming a new man, hating to be~ ~jealous
304    3,    8|              of his grave, and was a man as he~ ~had bin before.
305    3,    8|        perceiving him to be a living man~ ~indeede: whereupon they
306    3,   10|          dwelt aforetime a very rich man, who had among~ ~several
307    3,   10|             it,~ ~found there a holy man. Amazed to see such a one
308    3,   10|             here there dwells a holy man such as~ ~thou seekest:
309    3,   10|               thou seekest: a fitter man than I. Go thou to him."
310    3,   10|             very pious and righteous man,~ ~whose name was Rustico.
311    3,   10|            had carnal knowledge of a man, and was indeed as innocent
312    3,   10|             with cold when~ ~another man would have sweated. He had
313    3,   10|          certain~ ~Neerbale, a young man who had wasted his patrimony
314    4,    1|               and named Cuiscardo, a man not derived from~ ~any great
315    4,    1|          Guiscardo, saying; Let your man make use~ ~of this, insteed
316    4,    1|              he was the most joyfull man of the world, and began
317    4,    1|            long time before) as~ ~no man remembred that there was
318    4,    1|          private conversing with any man, but onely he that was~ ~
319    4,    1|             hadst made~ ~choise of a man, answerable to thy birth
320    4,    1|       converse with that silly young man Guiscardo, one of~ ~very
321    4,    1|         Guiscardo already was a dead man in~ ~Law, and death was
322    4,    1|              in an honest~ ~vertuous man; then you your selfe have
323    4,    1|          have throwne my liking on a man of base condition? In troth~ ~(
324    4,    1|             of more preferment, on a man so honest and well~ ~deserving,
325    4,    1|              selfe, hath seene any~ ~man to mourne for his owne wilfull
326    4,    2|           shape of a wilde or savage man, he was brought~ ~upon the
327    4,    2|          common Proverbe; that a bad man taken and reputed to be
328    4,    2|              in the City of Imola, a man~ ~of most lewd and wicked
329    4,    2|             Catholike then any other man, taking on him the profession
330    4,    2|           not to be affected by this man, or that. How many beauties
331    4,    2|              an holy and~ ~religious man now, he began to reprehend
332    4,    2|          will come in the shape of a man, giving me charge also to
333    4,    2|            in the perfect forme of a man as now you behold me: so
334    4,    2|            in the shape of a mortall man, with~ ~lively expression
335    4,    2|          open, wherein dwelt a poore man, whom he earnestly~ ~intreated,
336    4,    2|            into the water. The poore man, being moved~ ~to compassionate
337    4,    2|           bed, away~ ~goes the poore man to his daily labor. The
338    4,    2|         speeding on, and~ ~the poore man returning homeward by the
339    4,    2|            him. Heereupon, the poore man~ ~began to imagine, that
340    4,    2|           for any one, to disguise a man in~ ~the skin of a Beare,
341    4,    2|             in the shape of a savage man, or any other~ ~forme of
342    4,    2|              is ended; and then each man leades~ ~his monster whether
343    4,    2|       undergo~ ~what shape the poore man pleased, which thus he ordered.
344    4,    2|       Butchery. Afterward, he sent a man to the Rialto,~ ~who there
345    4,    2|              he~ ~chained his savage man, making shew, as if be meant
346    4,    2|              anguish. When the poore man~ ~saw, that there needed
347    4,    2|             to let loose his Salvage man; he tooke the maske or~ ~
348    4,    3|             named Narnaldo Civida, a man but of meane condition,
349    4,    3|          enamoured of Ninetta, as no man~ ~possibly could be more,
350    4,    3|         soever we please. There each man freely enjoying his~ ~owne
351    4,    4|           trust, being a jeweller, a man~ ~of singular discretion,
352    4,    4|            know, whether he were a~ ~man of that magnanimous spirit,
353    4,    4|        Princesse: to shew himselfe a man endued with~ ~courage, he
354    4,    4|           there is not any mortall~ ~man, that can have any goodnesse -
355    4,    5|            thus betrayed. He being a man of great discretion, although
356    4,    6|          accident. But let not any~ ~man among you, be so bold as
357    4,    6|             liking, I accepted the~ ~man as my troth-plighted husband,
358    4,    6|              Negro da Ponte, being a man well in yeeres,~ ~and of
359    4,    6|              and friends to the dead man (uppon noise~ ~of his death
360    4,    8|              the way to~ ~make you a man of more solid apprehension,
361    4,    8|         resolution, not to minde any man but my husband; and~ ~therefore,
362    4,    8|       mutually embraced.~ ~ The yong man, hearing these wordes, and
363    4,    8|              best to~ ~be done, if a man should steale into a neighbours
364    4,    8|      universall mourning, the honest man (in whose house he~ ~dyed)
365    4,    8|           the same Biere by the yong man,~ ~and when they had sufficiently
366    4,   10|          REASONABLE COMPREHENSION, A MAN MAY ESCAPE OUT OF~ ~ MANIFOLD
367    4,   10|           house, where afterward the man awaking, was apprehended
368    4,   10|           deerely. Yet being an aged man, and never remembring, how~ ~
369    4,   10|     gracefull in her eye, then~ ~any man else could be.~ ~ In the
370    4,   10|              meanes, he could be the man in this~ ~perillous extreamitie.~ ~
371    4,   10|           their braine, about a dead man so strangely come to life
372    4,   10|         truly, whither the condemned man was Ruggiero, and~ ~what
373    4,   10|            of Ruggiero, who is the~ ~man condemned to dye; and, for
374    4,   10|           betweene him and~ ~another man, to whom (it seemeth) the
375    4,   10|               doore. Which the other man contrarying, maintaineth
376    4,   10|            he never sold it to any~ ~man; but if it were there, they
377    4,   10|               Master Doctors Maid, a man especially respected of
378    4,   10|            never bene any disordered man.~ ~ If the former Novels
379    5,    1|           LOVE (OFTENTIMES) MAKETH A MAN BOTH WISE AND~ ~ VALIANT~ ~ ~ ~
380    5,    1|       fairest, which ever any living man beheld.~ ~ Then he began
381    5,    1|             that love had made him a man, whereas~ ~(before) he was
382    5,    1|       because (by her) I am become a man. But if I could be~ ~possessed
383    5,    1|               condition of a mortall man, and have her I will, or
384    5,    1|           arose impetuously, that no man could see what~ ~his duty
385    5,    1|         being a very wise and worthy man, he~ ~dissembled his distaste,
386    5,    1|           that made thee to become a man~ ~endued with reason. Afterward,
387    5,    1|            Pasimondo, the onely glad man~ ~of thy misfortune, and
388    5,    2|              There dwelt also a yong man called~ ~Martuccio Gomito,
389    5,    2|        drowned in the Sea, and not a man escaped. When~ ~Constance,
390    5,    2|             other women (but not one man) all exercising themselves
391    5,    2|              abroad, in honor of the man by whom they hapned: even~ ~
392    5,    3|          thus among themselves. This man~ ~is a friend to our deadly
393    5,    3|              kill, and spare~ ~not a man.~ ~ They which before had
394    5,    3|               he was the most wofull man in~ ~the world, wandering
395    5,    3|            found therin a very~ ~old man, having a wife rather more
396    5,    3|             without company, the old man spake thus unto her.~ ~
397    5,    3|           Daughter (answered the old man) this~ ~is not the way to
398    5,    3|             so neere, said the~ ~old man, that day light will give
399    5,    3|       Daughter answered the good old man, we can gladly give you~ ~
400    5,    3|          supt poorely~ ~with the old man and his wife, with such
401    5,    3|               belonged. The good old man, not seeing the Maiden present
402    5,    3|           distance off, the good old man began~ ~thus to question
403    5,    3|       Hay-stack; wherof the good old man was not a little joyfull,
404    5,    3|              full of griefe, as no~ ~man could be more; about the
405    5,    3|           joy, for never could any~ ~man be more comforted, then
406    5,    4|        engirting Tarras, onely for a man to~ ~stand upon, for making
407    5,    5|        things in his time, and was a man of sound understanding,
408    5,    5|           observing him also to be a man of yeeres and~ ~gravity:
409    5,    6|    MANIFESTED, THAT LOVE CAN LEADE A MAN INTO NUMBERLESSE~ ~ PERILS:
410    5,    6|           small~ ~advantage) makes a man the more adventurous: so
411    5,    6|            wrathfull displeasure) no man durst presume to contradict.~ ~
412    5,    6|            goodly and compleat young man: but the poore infortunate
413    5,    6|             Don Rogiero de Oria, a~ ~man of much admired valour,
414    5,    6|            Then looking on the young man, thus he~ ~saide within
415    5,    6|             yeeld a~ ~more compleate man. Now, as good natures are
416    5,    6|         heretofore~ ~I have bene the man which you speake of; but
417    5,    6|            now, both that name and~ ~man must die with me. What misfortune (
418    5,    7|              that he made him a free man, and imagining him to be
419    5,    7|            alwayes being diligent to man them~ ~thither. One time
420    5,    7|            her Husband, he~ ~being a man of very implacable nature:
421    5,    7|          signe of love in her to any man whatsoever,~ ~and therefore
422    5,    7|       childes also; as a~ ~franticke man, violently carried from
423    5,    7|             of the Ambassadours, a~ ~man aged, and of great authority,
424    5,    7|              dead, was the wofullest man in the World, for his so
425    5,    8|          THAT LOVE NOT ONELY MAKES A MAN PRODIGALL, BUT ALSO AN~ ~
426    5,    8|         PASSE, AS WIT AND CUNNING IN MAN~ ~ CAN EVER COMPREHEND~ ~ ~ ~
427    5,    8|             to be~ ~commended in any man. But, howsoever Fortune
428    5,    8|           pitty, like a simple silly man,~ ~hoodwinkt with his owne
429    5,    9|             marriage, and made him a man of wealthy possessions.~ ~ ~ ~
430    5,    9|          from his predecessors. This man,~ ~being well entred into
431    5,    9|              disastrous Fate, like a man enraged, or bereft of senses:
432    5,    9|            dinner:~ ~he stood like a man meerely dulled in his sences,
433    5,    9|              for it. But give me a~ ~man that hath neede of wealth,
434    5,    9|        wealth that hath neede of a~ ~man. The Brethren hearing how
435    5,   10|             meane while) had a young man whom shee loved, at supper~ ~
436    5,   10|              on a sodaine, the young man was hidden under~ ~a Coope
437    5,   10|           imperfections of a foolish man, and at the amourous subtilties
438    5,   10|          since in Perugia, a wealthy man named Pedro~ ~di Vinciolo,
439    5,   10|          matter~ ~no way beseeming a man, then any beauty or good
440    5,   10|          Dowry, thinking him to be~ ~man, and affected a woman as
441    5,   10|            and affected a woman as a man ought to doe, else he had
442    5,   10|         coveting to hide the young~ ~man, that her Husband should
443    5,   10|           deede. And after the young man was indifferently~ ~recovered;
444    5,   10|              needes bee to him, good man?~ ~Neither I, nor any honest
445    5,   10|            Neither I, nor any honest man else, ought to have any
446    5,   10|           the entry, where the young man lay hidden under the Hen
447    5,   10|           sacke, he espyed the young man, who, beside the~ ~painefull
448    5,   10|              holding still the young man~ ~before her face, meerely
449    5,   10|              as ought to be betweene Man and Wife, hee returned~ ~
450    5,   10|           for doubtlesse, this young man and thy selfe fell~ ~short
451    5,   10|              ought to bee~ ~betweene Man and Wife.~ ~ Dioneus having
452    6,    2|           longing (almost) in a dead man.~ ~ Messer Geri well noting
453    6,    3|              visite him. Hee being a man of very comely~ ~personage,
454    6,    3|              a verie harsh~ ~natured man. Which the Lord Marshall
455    6,    3|         beeing a discreete and sober man) would seeme to take no
456    6,    4|       FURIOUS CHOLLER OF AN~ ~ ANGRY MAN~ ~ ~ ~ Chichibio, the Cooke
457    6,    4|            Noble Citizen,~ ~beeing a man bountifull, magnificent,
458    6,    4|              Cranes, he sayde to his man; We shall see anon~ ~Sirra,
459    6,    4|   understanding the~ ~knavery of his man, replyed: Stay but a little
460    6,    5|          Messer Forese de Rabatta, a man of little and low~ ~person,
461    6,    5|              knowledge.~ ~ The other man, being named Giotto, had
462    6,    5|        thereby) a jot the handsommer man (either in person or~ ~countenance)
463    6,    5|          unsightly jade, such~ ~as a man can sildome meet with worse.
464    6,    5|           old cloakes of the poore~ ~man, of over-worn and ragged
465    6,    5|       Complexion, (because the poore man had no better) which did~ ~
466    6,    5|              greatly deformed, as no man could be worse, in~ ~his
467    6,    7|             of adultery with another man: and therefore he requireth,~ ~
468    6,    8|          understood it.~ ~ An honest man, named Fresco da Celatico,
469    6,    8|             could not see one proper man: and as for the women,~ ~
470    6,    9|             was~ ~commendable in any man, was no way wanting in him,
471    6,    9|              be duly deserved, as no man therin could go beyond him.
472    6,    9|         themselves: That Guido was a man without any~ ~understanding,
473    6,   10|                 then remained in the man indeed; beside, that part
474    6,   10|             This Friar Onyon~ ~was a man of litle stature red haire,
475    6,   10|      Consider then,~ ~what manner of man he is like to be, having
476    6,   10|            to be made by the hand of man:~ ~containing in circuite
477    6,   10|             to reach the breast of a man, and~ ~having no mud or
478    7,    1|            named John of Lorrayne; a man more~ ~happy in his Art,
479    7,    1|             oftentimes (as being~ ~a man of an easie inclination)
480    7,    1|              of his~ ~soule.~ ~ This man, had a very faire and lovely
481    7,    1|          Frederigo, who was no meane man in his Mistresses favor,
482    7,    1|                how? Bee patient good man (quoth Tessa) and I will
483    7,    2|                 Peronella hid a yong man her friend and Lover, under
484    7,    2|              Naples, an honest meane man, who~ ~did take to Wife,
485    7,    2|              that a~ ~certayne young man, well observing the beauty
486    7,    2|              was the amorous young~ ~man named) visiting Peronella
487    7,    2|              a proper, handsome yong man; one, that would have maintained
488    7,    2|              before. Thou that art a man, walkest every where, and
489    7,    2|         Gigliatoes, to a very honest man, who (even a~ ~little before
490    7,    2|              the doore, saying. Good man, you may~ ~goe your way,
491    7,    2|               shee hath done: so the man departed, and the variance
492    7,    2|            lift up the Fat, that the man may come foorth,~ ~and then
493    7,    2|         stepping forth boldly like a man,~ ~replyed: Heere am I,
494    7,    3|             a Gentlewoman, Wife to a man~ ~of good account; found
495    7,    3|            in Siena, a proper yong~ ~man, of good birth and well
496    7,    3|         Gentlewoman,~ ~and wife to a man of good esteeme: of whom
497    7,    3|         respects made like another~ ~man, quite from the course of
498    7,    4|     SURPASSETH ALL THE ART OR WIT IN MAN~ ~ ~ ~ Tofano in the night
499    7,    4|         Village of Tuscany)~ ~a rich man, named Tofano, who enjoyed
500    7,    4|            shame thee, as never base man was. As how I pray thee?~ ~
501    7,    4|             put into Wine~ ~before a man drinkes it, and not when
502    7,    4|           thy house. Tofano, being a man of very impatient Nature,
503    7,    4|         unfitting houres, this~ ~bad man comes home to his house,
504    7,    4|             you see what~ ~manner of man he is. What would you thinke
505    7,    5|              INJURY~ ~ ~ ~ A jealous man, clouded with the habite
506    7,    5|            speake of another jealous man; as being halfe~ ~perswaded,
507    7,    5|         argument of every bad minded man, being~ ~weake and shallow
508    7,    5|             metamorphose an ordinary man into a Priest? But,~ ~let
509    7,    5|         singularly well, when a wise man will suffer~ ~himselfe to
510    7,    5|          knew thee Husband to be the man, and therefore I prepared~ ~
511    7,    5|       beleeve all this.~ ~ Alas good man, like an armed Watchman,
512    7,    5|        become a~ ~true understanding man, as thou shouldst bee, and
513    7,    6|           very valiant Knight, and a man of great possessions. As~ ~
514    7,    6|             commeth to passe, that a man cannot alwayes feede on
515    7,    6|           She knowing what manner of man he was, and how able to~ ~
516    7,    6|     notorious~ ~scandall to us, if a man should bee slaine in your
517    7,    6|         dishonestly, to pursue~ ~any man so outragiously, having
518    7,    6|              Traitor thou art a dead man. Upon these rough words,
519    7,    7|       especiall trust~ ~in him, as a man altogether governed by him.~ ~
520    7,    7|          Wife unto so good a natured man, as my Mayster is, to whom
521    7,    8|            this looked on her like a man that had lost his Senses:
522    7,    8|          your selfe a cruell~ ~curst man, when (on either side) there
523    7,    8|           that this~ ~seeming honest man, to whom (in a lucklesse
524    7,    8|          left in~ ~him. And were I a man, as I am a woman, none other
525    7,    9|             may seeme to be; but the man or woman that~ ~affecteth
526    7,    9|          every way~ ~as active as no man could be more: his name
527    7,    9|              wise and fortunate yong man, I shall confesse~ ~thee
528    7,    9|           wonders to be seene when a man is up in it, as thou~ ~wouldst
529    7,   10|           either of the woman to the man, the man to the woman,~ ~
530    7,   10|            the woman to the man, the man to the woman,~ ~or of one
531    7,   10|            to the woman,~ ~or of one man to another: and I am of
532    8,    1|            you a subtile tricke of a man to a Woman. Not that I blame~ ~
533    8,    1|            nature, as commending the man, and~ ~condemning the woman
534    8,    1|              presence of this Gentle man my friend, I made repayment
535    8,    2|          Simon. Now, albeit he was a man of slender~ ~reading, yet
536    8,    2|      comfortable visitant, and would man them from their houses,
537    8,    2|              to a~ ~plaine mecanicke man, called Bentivegna del Mazzo.
538    8,    2|     dexteriously, as~ ~happy was the man that could dance in her
539    8,    2|      behaviour fitting for an holy~ ~man? Holy-men Belcolore, (quoth
540    8,    3|         named Calandrino, a~ ~simple man; yet as much adicted to
541    8,    3|           matters of novelty, as any man~ ~whatsoever could be. The
542    8,    3|              have beene there? Yes~ ~man, above a thousand times,
543    8,    3|            in our beddes, and~ ~if a man dreame right; he may be
544    8,    3|        indeede: but where else may a man finde that Helitropium?~ ~
545    8,    3|      strugling and wallowing, like a man quite out of breath: after
546    8,    3|       behaviours of a wise or honest man? Calandrino,~ ~over-spent
547    8,    3|             sate fretting like a mad man. Whereupon,~ ~Buffalmaco
548    8,    3|          immagine. Poore unfortunate man that I am, I found the rare~ ~
549    8,    3|             my selfe the onely happy man in~ ~Florence, am now made
550    8,    4|            you could be like a dumbe man, without speaking one word,
551    8,    4|              bed this night with a~ ~man, and give him courteous
552    8,    5|              there came an especiall man, as pickt out of purpose,
553    8,    5|            authority. This~ ~hansome man (among the rest) was deputed
554    8,    5|           him, farre unfitting for a man of so civill profession:~ ~
555    8,    5|             and~ ~pull it downe as a man pleased, and let him fall
556    8,    6|           EASILY A PLAINE AND SIMPLE MAN MAY BE~ ~ MADE A FOOLE,
557    8,    6|             but became the wofullest man in the~ ~world, telling
558    8,    6|             saying: As I am a true~ ~man to God, my Prince, and Countrey,
559    8,    6|             they be, would have each man to receive~ ~one of these
560    8,    6|             exorcisme,~ ~giving each man a Pill, and Buffalmaco a
561    8,    6|           Friends) in judging of any man, some other matter (then
562    8,    6|        honest earnest, there~ ~was a man in the company, who did
563    8,    7|          therefore, he accounted the man~ ~more then fortunate, that
564    8,    7|            Scholler the onely jocond man of the world, and failed~ ~
565    8,    7|              her friend, as hee is a man, and a~ ~learned Scholler,
566    8,    7|         heart (saide cannot I make a man~ ~daunce without the sound
567    8,    7|         still so~ ~exceedingly, as a man might easily be more then
568    8,    7|           Scholler, As for him poore man, hee was become~ ~like the
569    8,    7|              Woman~ ~would repeale a man to love her, or a man a
570    8,    7|              a man to love her, or a man a woman: because, it is~ ~
571    8,    7|       careful, that you name not one man insted of~ ~another. When
572    8,    7|         answered. Unkinde and cruell man, if that wretched night
573    8,    7|           was no sooner given to his man, but hee went to the house
574    8,    7|            Kindred, and lefte no one man living of thy~ ~race? I
575    8,    7|              then any other ordinary man. Never remembring, that
576    8,    8|            WORSE MANNER) BY THE SAME MAN~ ~ ~ ~ Two neere dwelling
577    8,    8|        report a Novell of a certaine man, who too an injury done
578    8,    8|                is sufficient for any man, and so he ought to esteeme
579    8,    9|             Bruno~ ~proved to be the man.~ ~ Now Bruno plainly perceiving (
580    8,    9|         Lucifer da San Gallo, if any man~ ~whatsoever should know
581    8,    9|             in this Citie of ours, a man very~ ~excellent in the
582    8,    9|            being so assembled, every man~ ~uttered his minde to those
583    8,    9|          have: No Sir,~ ~not any one man among us, but appeared by
584    8,    9|         Venice:~ ~yet (in such) each man is appointed to take his
585    8,    9|            relation of Bruno, as any man could doe, to the most certaine
586    8,    9|                 I know thee to bee a man of judgement, deepely informed
587    8,    9|        propper, portly, and~ ~comely man I am, how fitly my legges
588    8,    9|             else did beside) to be a man of more words~ ~then wit,
589    8,    9|            mee, and there is not any man now living in the~ ~world,
590    8,    9|             me, as I~ ~was the onely man, that knew his mariage with
591    8,    9|       respective courtesie. Hee is a man, who when he~ ~perceyveth
592    8,    9|     exceeding well. For, if hee be a man, that taketh~ ~delight to
593    8,    9|           farre better doe, then any man else living to my~ ~knowledge,
594    8,    9|              honest and apprehensive man hath done. Thou didst not
595    8,    9|          best (quoth Bruno) that any man~ ~living in the World could
596    8,    9|             most expert and singular man: and I dare~ ~boldly maintaine
597    8,    9|             as it becommeth me, to a man so excellent in wit and~ ~
598    8,    9|           the entertaining of such a man as I am,~ ~enough to create
599    8,    9|     Buffalmaco,~ ~being a lusty tall man of person, had got an ugly
600    8,    9|               terming him the vilest man living.~ ~ Where have you
601    8,    9|                with us, as never any man shall doe the like againe,
602    8,   10|          very faire and affable yong man, easie to kindle~ ~affection
603    8,   10|       Message, was the onely joyfull man~ ~that could be: and having
604    8,   10|            spake.~ ~ I know not what man else in the worlde, beside
605    8,   10|      Empresse of~ ~Constantinople, a man of great wisedome and understanding,
606    8,   10|            be recovered. And being a man of woonderfull~ ~apprehension,
607    8,   10|              himselfe a well-meaning man, and the next morning shee
608    9,    1|             this peece of service, a man was~ ~buried in Pistoya,
609    9,    1|             reputed to be the vilest man living,~ ~not onely there
610    9,    1|              even as if you were the man himselfe, so to remaine
611    9,    1|         bethinke him, what manner of man~ ~Scannadio was, and what
612    9,    1|              he had beene the~ ~dead man indeede; he remained to
613    9,    1|           apprehension of a banished man, stolne into the City contrarie
614    9,    2|           may, for we have~ ~seene a man enter our Sister Isabellaes
615    9,    3|         cured him, without any other man of deliverance.~ ~ ~ ~ After
616    9,    3|         already heard what manner of man Calandrino was, and~ ~likewise
617    9,    3|            consultation, and a third man in their companie, named~ ~
618    9,    3|             lookst (almost) like a~ ~man more then halfe dead.~ ~
619    9,    3|        Calandrino? Art thou the same man, or no? How wonderfuly~ ~
620    9,    3|           all: and therefore, like a man much perplexed in minde,~ ~
621    9,    3|           who (as thou knowest) is a man of most singular skill and~ ~
622    9,    3|           his breast, said: Wretched man that I am, What~ ~shall
623    9,    3|             none~ ~other then a dead man, and all through the wickednesse
624    9,    3|              sound in health, as any man in all Florence can be:
625    9,    3|      Calandrino arose like a joyfull man, and walked daily through
626    9,    4|           related,~ ~namely, how one man may strive to surmount another
627    9,    4|              on him as~ ~his serving man, promising both dutiful
628    9,    4|          little while, for an honest man is comming hither, who~ ~
629    9,    4|              that he had robde the~ ~man which pursued him in his
630    9,    5|             a Citizen of ours, and a man of great~ ~wealth; who,
631    9,    5|             because he looked like a man newly come thither, then
632    9,    5|    Calandrino? Sigh, puffe, and blow man? What may~ ~be the reason
633    9,    5|              no better then a dead~ ~man. Be patient said Bruno,
634    9,    5|              large,~ ~what manner of man Calandrino was, and how
635    9,    5|       observe me with judgement, why man, I am not so old as I seeme
636    9,    5|    comnendations, thought himselfe a man of~ ~action already, going,
637    9,    5|            stood on tiptoe, like a~ ~man newly molded by Fortune,
638    9,    5|            stand like a~ ~Statue, or man alla morte? The rare tunes
639    9,    6|               since) an honest meane man, who kept a poore Inne or
640    9,    6|         money. As he was but a poore man, so his house affoorded
641    9,    6|             this manner to him. Good man, we must~ ~request one nights
642    9,    6|   compassionating his case, as~ ~one man should do anothers: he tooke
643    9,    6|           are alike to thee.~ ~Arise man for shame, and come to thine
644    9,    7|           Talano de Molese, or no, a man of~ ~much honour, who tooke
645    9,    7|           thee, since first we becam man~ ~and wife, but rather my
646    9,    8|               the name of Guiotto, a man being the greatest Gourmand,
647    9,    8|            also, there was~ ~another man, named Blondello, very low
648    9,    8|        Signior Phillipo~ ~Argenti, a man of huge stature, stout,
649    9,    8|              to anger then any other man. To him (quoth~ ~Guiotto)
650    9,    8|            the~ ~knight, who being a man of no great civill breeding,
651    9,    8|             about them, to succour a man so much misused, the~ ~matter
652    9,    8|    considering he knew what kinde of man Philippo was, not any way
653    9,    9|             I cannot meet with any~ ~man that loveth me. In which
654    9,    9|            him to demaund of an aged man (who sate~ ~craving almes
655    9,    9|        called: Sir, answered the old man, this is called, The Goose
656    9,    9|     acquainted a wise and reverend~ ~man, with the answere which
657    9,    9|          know, that you love not any man; but the bountiful~ ~banquets
658    9,   10|             at Barletta, an honest~ ~man, called John de Barolo,
659    9,   10|              he said. I know not any man in the world, to whom I
660   10,    1|              very valiant and famous man. And~ ~having remained an
661   10,    1|       enclined himselfe first to one man, then~ ~another, bestowing
662   10,    2|            liberall bounty to such a man,~ ~as had done him good
663   10,    2|       liberality? And although every man (naturally) desireth revenge~ ~
664   10,    2|          stout robberies, became a~ ~man very farre famed, who being
665   10,    2|              Abbot being a very wise man, and his angry distemper
666   10,    2|            to win the love of such a man, as I plainely~ ~perceive
667   10,    2|   maintenance, to live like a worthy man, as he is no~ ~lesse: I
668   10,    2|             Pope finding him to be a man of valor and worth, upon~ ~
669   10,    3|           knowing him to be the same man, that taught him how to
670   10,    3|              when you heare, how one man, in~ ~expression of great
671   10,    3|          great liberality to another man, that earnestly~ ~desired
672   10,    3|           said to himselfe. Wretched man as I am, when shall I attaine
673   10,    3|          distinguished from a meaner man: and,~ ~because he knew
674   10,    3|             Faire Syr, there~ ~is no man in these parts, that knoweth
675   10,    3|            from him,~ ~he sayde. Old man, thou must dye. Whereunto
676   10,    3|           immediately to be the same man, that had entertained him~ ~
677   10,    3|             be reputed the Woorthier man. Take then~ ~this assurance
678   10,    3|       constantly, that there is no~ ~man living, whom I love and
679   10,    3|          then~ ~killing; yet not one man onely, as thou wouldst have
680   10,    3|          follow~ ~me: never came any man to mee, whom I did not content (
681   10,    3|            shouldst not be the onely man, that ever departed hence,
682   10,    3|             for I never met with any man before (but~ ~thy selfe)
683   10,    3|            yet) I never did unto any man, namely,~ ~robbe thee, to
684   10,    4|         reputed~ ~wonderfull, that a man should be so bountifull,
685   10,    4|            and with the helpe of his man, he~ ~tooke her forth of
686   10,    4|           Caccianimico the especiall man.~ ~ After he was dismounted
687   10,    4|        declare unto~ ~you.~ ~ If any man having in his house a good
688   10,    4|          good right) is mine, and no man els by any~ ~just title,
689   10,    4|             and an old~ ~idle-headed man, yeelding to the mercy of
690   10,    5|         called Signior~ ~Gilberto, a man of very great fame and merite.~ ~
691   10,    5|          Signior Ansaldo Gradense; a man of very great spirit, bountifull,~ ~
692   10,    5|          promise) as perhaps no wise man else would do:~ ~mooved
693   10,    6|              will speake of one, a~ ~man of no meane ranke or quality,
694   10,    6|            my admiration, because no man els can be subject to the~ ~
695   10,    6|           more famous victory, for a man to conquer~ ~himselfe. You
696   10,    6|              in~ ~the warre, where a man may learne to conquere his
697   10,    7|          this manner.~ ~ There is no man of good understanding (honourable
698   10,    7|            named Bernardo Puccino, a man of~ ~good wealth and reputation,
699   10,    8|      confessed that he had murdred a man, with ful~ ~intent to die
700   10,    8|           commendations, as when one man doth good to another, when
701   10,    8|           Publius Quintus Fulvius, a man of~ ~singular understanding,
702   10,    8|            to bee a most~ ~miserable man. Give way to reason, bridle
703   10,    8|            wilt be reputed to be a~ ~man of sensible judgement.~ ~
704   10,    8|          yongman do~ ~love her, what man living can justly reprove
705   10,    8|          thee to my selfe, as of the man~ ~who hath violated our
706   10,    8|         appointed for me, as being a man unworthy of such~ ~happinesse;
707   10,    8|          this grace of thine, as a~ ~man not sufficiently understanding,
708   10,    8|     thankfull part, having married a man of farre greater worth and~ ~
709   10,    8|              to a Noble and~ ~honest man; that of Gisippus, to one
710   10,    8|       bestowed her on a rich~ ~young man: Gisippus hath given her
711   10,    8|           point. That I~ ~am a young man and a Philosophe, as Gisippus
712   10,    8|             hee~ ~had given her to a man of the very vilest condition?
713   10,    8|              face of the condemned~ ~man (as hee sate upon the bench)
714   10,    8|      sentence given on the condemned man~ ~sent away, because hee
715   10,    8|             by killing that wretched man,~ ~whom the Serjeants found
716   10,    8|            Marcus Varro stood like a man confounded with admiration,
717   10,    8|              last night murdered the man in the~ ~Cave, and there
718   10,    8|            but I that~ ~murdered the man, wherefore, I commiserate
719   10,    8|            said. Noble Praetor, this man (as thou seest)~ ~is a stranger
720   10,    8|             to acquaint them: a yong man, who had stood there all
721   10,    8|          this morning murdered~ ~the man in the Cave, one of no greater
722   10,    8|              and~ ~seeing this poore man lie there sleeping, while
723   10,    8|          himselfe, because [he] is a man of no such base quality:
724   10,    9|                  Saladine, who was a man of accute understanding,
725   10,    9|             Sir, if courtesie in one man to another,~ ~do deserve
726   10,    9|           Gods, I never met with any man, more compleat in all~ ~
727   10,    9|        himselfe that he was the same man. And therefore falling~ ~
728   10,    9|                called Pavia, a poore man, and of as poore condition.~ ~
729   10,    9|              may make knowne to this man, how~ ~thankefully I accepted
730   10,    9|               no more then a private man.~ ~ I am not able to expresse
731   10,    9|              Thorello de~ ~Dignes, a man of very honourable and great
732   10,    9|              Thorello had~ ~espied a man in Alexandria whom he saw
733   10,    9|              Barbarie, where not any man escaped with life, onely
734   10,    9|           her marriage to some other man: I protest unto you, by
735   10,    9|            assuring your selfe,~ ~no man living can command me as
736   10,    9|       returned, yet there is not any man in our~ ~Citie, but doth
737   10,   10|             The plaine honest simple man, that stood holding the
738   10,   10|          very greatest and worthiest man of them al,~ ~was a young
739   10,   10|          woman, who can agree with a man in all his~ ~conditions,
740   10,   10|        miserable prooves the life of man, who is bound to live with
741   10,   10|       contented, and the onely happy man~ ~of the world.~ ~ In like
742   10,   10|            him selfe a singular wise man, in the~ ~election of his
743   10,   10|              him to be a most cruell man, and~ ~did highly compassionate
744   10,   10|       fathers house.~ ~ And he (good man) never beleeving, that the
745   10,   10|              her, as the onely happy man of the world. But I humbly
746   10,   10|            and commendation, That no man living hath the like Wife,
747   10,   10|         determine otherwise I am the man ready~ ~to make my resignation.~ ~
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