Day, Novell

 1    2,    1|        I purpose to go in~ ~the disguise of an impotent lame person,
 2    2,    9|      mercy, I will so strangely disguise my selfe,~ ~and wander so
 3    3,    1|      whether hee~ ~went, in the disguise of a poore labouring Countryman,
 4    4,    2|   oftentimes unto her,~ ~in the disguise of the same God. Afterward,
 5    4,    2|         lawfull for any one, to disguise a man in~ ~the skin of a
 6    4,    3|        thither in some queint~ ~disguise, and enjoy his long expected
 7    4,    3|         The amorous Duke in his disguise, having long daunced attendance~ ~
 8    4,    8|         spake thus to his wife: Disguise thy selfe in some decent~ ~
 9    7,    5| notwithstanding all his formall disguise) made answer: That~ ~the
10   10,    9|        clouding himselfe in the disguise of a Faulkner, the Soldan
11   10,    9|         Thorello in his strange disguise went with the Abbot to the~ ~
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