Day, Novell

 1    2,    3|     gathered a great summe of mony:~ ~by means whereof it came
 2    2,    9| expresse charge, that all his mony and goods should be given
 3    5,    9|      he had~ ~not one peny of mony neither pawne or pledge,
 4    5,   10|       minde ran~ ~more on his mony, then those offices and
 5    6,    3|      as then went for currant mony in Florence, and~ ~called
 6    6,   10|     himselfe of good store of mony. Hereupon, he~ ~sent to
 7    7,    2|   cleane~ ~before you pay the mony.~ ~ So, stripping himselfe
 8    8,   10|    distressed:~ ~for if I had mony lying by mee (as many times
 9    8,   10|       selfe~ ~was to lend the mony, wherof he was not a litle
10    9,    4|     played away his~ ~Masters mony at the Dice, but rather
11   10,    5|     to pay a great~ ~summe of mony, upon performance of so
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