Day, Novell

 1    4,    9|         with sauce beseeming so dainty a morsell. The Cooke tooke
 2    4,    9|        the Cooke brought in the dainty dish, which he~ ~himselfe
 3    4,   10|        Faulcon messenger, and a dainty mouth; her lippes looking~ ~
 4    5,    9|    foode for her dinner; made a dainty dish of his Faulcone for
 5    5,    9| supposed, that she would make a dainty dish for your dyet, and~ ~
 6    7,    1|         Capons, drest in~ ~most dainty and delicate manner: it
 7    8,    2|        as sometime a bunch of~ ~dainty greene Garlicke, whereof
 8    8,    2|         demaunded? Beleeve me~ ~dainty Ducke, answered Sir Simon,
 9    8,    9|    viands~ ~being very rare and dainty, abounding in plenty and
10    9,    5|    daily haunt the~ ~company of dainty Damosels, yet are so shallow
11    9,    6|      Gentleman, Nicholetta is a dainty delicate wench, and worthy
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