Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |      men, being~ ~beaten and banished from their houses, went
 2  Ind      |     of publike~ ~Lawes) were banished hence, onely for their bad
 3    2,    8|    being falsly accused, was banished out of~ ~France, and left
 4    2,    8|     thought of Lovers, being banished from my friends and~ ~kinsfolke,
 5    2,    8|   and Sonne to the wrongfull banished Count D'Angiers: avouch~ ~
 6    4,    1|     yet was it not therefore banished from Nature or good~ ~manners.
 7    4,   10| Garden, the beauty~ ~whereof banished the least thought of wearinesse.
 8    9,    1|      the~ ~apprehension of a banished man, stolne into the City
 9   10,    2|  very farre famed, who being banished from Sienna, and an enemy~ ~
10   10,    8|     the common people, was~ ~banished from Athens, and hee, as
11   10,    8|   particular benefit; have~ ~banished true Amity, to the utmost
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