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  1  Ind      |          Sister the Brother, and the Wife~ ~her Husband: nay, a matter
  2  Ind      |             was seene also, that the wife with the husband, two or~ ~
  3    1,    1|          nothing else but beat his~ ~wife: and of him once I complained
  4    1,    5|              and Honour; even so his wife, in comparison of~ ~all
  5    1,    5|        Princely Lady, and so loyal a wife as ever lived shee intended
  6    2,    2|          widdow I will~ ~become your wife, except (unmanly) you deny
  7    2,    2|       offences, and Rinaldo with his wife rode to Ferrara.~ ~
  8    2,    3|            wilt not accept me as thy wife, set a locke upon~ ~thy
  9    2,    3|             when hee heard, that his wife was daughter to the~ ~King
 10    2,    3|            the faire Princesse his~ ~wife, proving to be so absolute
 11    2,    5|         shall find Brother, that his wife, can bid you~ ~welcome,
 12    2,    6|           Henriet Capece, who had to Wife a~ ~beautifull Gentlewoman,
 13    2,    6|              his holy~ ~and vertuous wife, who were returned backe
 14    2,    6|              amongst other, with his wife, servants, and wainting~ ~
 15    2,    6|           this time, Conrado and his wife, who had followed closely
 16    2,    6|             the~ ~Gentleman left his wife in her company, saying,
 17    2,    6|            her thence with them. His wife abode there with Beritola,~ ~
 18    2,    6|      admiration of Conrado and his~ ~wife, as also the servants attending
 19    2,    6|          aboord with Conrado and his Wife, being followed by~ ~the
 20    2,    6|            none but Conrado, and his wife onely, shee would be~ ~stiled
 21    2,    6|       Beritola kept company with the wife~ ~of Conrado, but in a mourning
 22    2,    6|          kept company with Conradoes wife; and yet when they came~ ~
 23    2,    6|              shall become thy honest wife, and accepting thee as my
 24    2,    6|           were contracted as man and wife, and the espousals agreed~ ~
 25    2,    6|              this joy; he called his wife, and Madam~ ~Beritola, to
 26    2,    6|          eyes. Then turning~ ~to his wife, he said: And you deere
 27    2,    6|           loving paines of Conradoes wife, as also her~ ~daughter
 28    2,    6|             now with Conrado and his wife, friends,~ ~familiars, and
 29    2,    6|             and exaltation, when his Wife and Sonne were knowne to~ ~
 30    2,    6|       arrived in Sicily, where the~ ~Wife, Sonnes, and Daughters,
 31    2,    7|               was intended to be his wife.~ ~ ~ ~ Peradventure the
 32    2,    7|             not winne her to bee his wife, yet (at the least) shee
 33    2,    7|           shee,~ ~being the purposed wife of a potent King, should
 34    2,    7|             as his espoused Lady and Wife. Which appearing to her
 35    2,    7|            choice of~ ~her to be his wife; causing his nuptials to
 36    2,    7|    Cappadocia, leaving his Ladie and Wife (for her safety) at Lajazzo,~ ~
 37    2,    7|             he~ ~would terme her his Wife, and so hee should be sure
 38    2,    7|         better be reputed as man and wife; for, to passe~ ~otherwise,
 39    2,    7|     otherwise, but that shee was his wife~ ~indeede.~ ~ Now it fortuned,
 40    2,    7|               and afterward make you wife~ ~to the King of Colchos.
 41    2,    7|          namely, that she~ ~might be wife to the King of Colchos;
 42    2,    8|              the aforenamed war, the wife and Lady~ ~of Count Gualtier
 43    2,    8|    interparlance, the~ ~Kings sonnes wife, threw many affectionate
 44    2,    8|            them with his~ ~want of a wife, and likely hope thereby
 45    2,    8|            you to bee destitute of a wife, as I am of an~ ~husband;
 46    2,    8|              duties~ ~belonging to a wife. Wherefore, in regard of
 47    2,    8|              of England~ ~being then wife to the Lord high Marshal,
 48    2,    8|           done. The Nobleman and his Wife hearing this,~ ~became somewhat
 49    2,    8|                words, by holding his wife in such base respect: yet
 50    2,    8|       crowned King, and it~ ~was his wife that wrongfully caused the
 51    2,    8|               his Daughter who is my wife, cannot so~ ~conveniently
 52    2,    8|            soone after~ ~brought his Wife and Mother to Paris, and
 53    2,    8|               and so did Perotto his Wife~ ~where in great joy and
 54    2,    9|            commanding~ ~his innocent Wife to be murthered, she escaped,
 55    2,    9|        cannot well imagine what~ ~my wife is now doing, but I am able
 56    2,    9|        easily forget my~ ~love to my wife, and make use of such an
 57    2,    9|                perswaded, that if my wife be willing to wander, the
 58    2,    9|          favour of Fortune, he had a wife so perfectly compleate in~ ~
 59    2,    9|      appertaining to the office of a wife, either for~ ~domesticke
 60    2,    9|             Bernardo had used of his Wife, and seeming to~ ~make a
 61    2,    9|                confesse it, that thy wife is a Woman, made of flesh
 62    2,    9|      carelesse of, and I justifie my wife to be one of~ ~them. Beleeve
 63    2,    9|           private company with thy~ ~wife, howsoever thou presumest
 64    2,    9|            such kinde consent of thy Wife, as shall be~ ~to mine owne
 65    2,    9|      conditions and qualities of his Wife, which scarcely pleased
 66    2,    9|         greatly in~ ~favour with his wife; upon whose poverty he so
 67    2,    9|              the House of Bernardoes Wife, under~ ~colour of a formall
 68    2,    9|           things did belong to~ ~his Wife: But (quoth he) this may
 69    2,    9|               that faire Genevra thy Wife, hath a small round~ ~wart
 70    2,    9|           malitious intention to his Wife: Being come neere to the
 71    2,    9|           two Horses, writing to his Wife, that he was returned, and
 72    2,    9|             unkinde cruelty to~ ~his wife; but his constant avouching
 73    2,    9|           named~ ~Madam Genevra, the wife to one Bernardo Lomellino,
 74    2,    9|             obtaine my will of his~ ~Wife; which I did, and thereby
 75    2,    9|             of concerning Bernardoes wife, he might be compelled thereto~ ~
 76    2,    9|               what didst thou to thy Wife? Being~ ~(quoth Bernardo)
 77    2,    9|            supposed to receive by my Wife; I caused a servant of~ ~
 78    2,    9|              woman,~ ~and matchlesse wife, he gave in costly jewels,
 79    2,   10|             carried away the~ ~fayre Wife of Signior Ricciardo de
 80    2,   10|             Pagamino,~ ~demanded his Wife of him; whereto he yeelde,
 81    2,   10|      Ricciardo dying, she became the wife of Pagamino.~ ~ ~ ~ Every
 82    2,   10|              a faire and youthfull~ ~wife in marriage: both which
 83    2,   10|             would needs instruct his wife in an~ ~Almanacke or Kalender,
 84    2,   10|          reasons, that a man and his wife ought to abstaine from bedding~ ~
 85    2,   10|               documents to his young wife, wherewith (poore soule)
 86    2,   10|              being so jealous of his wife, as scarsely~ ~he would
 87    2,   10|                 in carrying away his wife from him: but all in vaine,
 88    2,   10|           she had bin~ ~his espoused wife.~ ~ Within a short while
 89    2,   10|           Judge, where~ ~and how his wife was kept from him; whereupon
 90    2,   10|             Monaco, where he saw his wife, and she him, as (soone
 91    2,   10|               that he might have his wife home with him. Whereto Pagamino
 92    2,   10|              neither know to be your wife, or any other mans else
 93    2,   10|            well maintaine so faire a wife as you, or any man else
 94    2,   10|            the judge, that she is my wife, and if~ ~you please to
 95    2,   10|              welcome to you~ ~then a wife, you ought not to have maried,
 96    2,   10|            Pisa in the state~ ~of my wife? Consider deare heart, when
 97    2,   10|               when they made me your wife?~ ~If then they could be
 98    2,   10|            here I am regarded as the wife of Pagamino, but at Pisa,
 99    2,   10|            his~ ~folly, in marying a wife so young, and far unfit
100    2,   10|           other~ ~successe, left his wife there, and returned home
101    2,   10|        become of his gallant~ ~young wife, making hornes, with ridiculous
102    2,   10|           rash proceeding~ ~with his wife.~ ~ This tale was so merrily
103    3,    2|        Lombards; a~ ~most beautifull wife and vertuous Lady, but made
104    3,    5|          that he might speake to his wife in~ ~his presence; which
105    3,    5|            or successe) the Lady and wife of Signior Francesco, who
106    3,    5|            the love he bare to~ ~his wife.~ ~ The base-minded Knight,
107    3,    5|              should speake with your wife, and you have made mee talke~ ~
108    3,    5|             undoubted opinion of his wife; yet~ ~this did much more
109    3,    6|       Minutolo fell in love with the wife of Philippello~ ~Fighinolfi,
110    3,    6|             greatly enamoured of his Wife, and had~ ~appointed to
111    3,    6|           kindest affecting~ ~to his wife; yet his gadding eye gazed
112    3,    6|            being named Madam Catulla wife to as gallant a young~ ~
113    3,    6|              have his pleasure of my wife. And as by some carriages
114    3,    6|           close~ ~conference with my Wife, when growing doubtfull
115    3,    6|          true~ ~indeede, I called my Wife, enquiring, what the woman
116    3,    6|            experience, I~ ~caused my wife to send him word, that she
117    3,    6|          meaning in~ ~me, to send my wife thither; I rather did it
118    3,    6|              delusion, wrought by my wife in meere love to you, he
119    3,    6|        nothing else, but Ricciardoes wife, with whom (to morrow)~ ~
120    3,    6|            owne Catulla, and not the wife of~ ~Ricciardo, trayterous
121    3,    6|            love of an husband to his wife, thou~ ~art not able to
122    3,    6|             not~ ~I as faire, as the wife of Ricciardo? Am I not as
123    3,    7|            embraced her, said; Sweet wife, time wit not~ ~now allow
124    3,    8|              who was enamored of his Wife, was taken out of his~ ~
125    3,    8|             the Abbot had got by his Wife.~ ~ ~ ~ When the long discourse
126    3,    8|              beautifull woman to his Wife, with~ ~whom he grew so
127    3,    8|          wise enough in loving his~ ~Wife, keeping her carfully out
128    3,    8|        Ferando, that hee brought his wife with him~ ~divers dayes
129    3,    8|             although I~ ~am a maried wife, because while he liveth,
130    3,    8|          whereupon they sent for his wife and friends, who crediting
131    3,    8|          used instead of Graves; his Wife returning~ ~home againe
132    3,    8|          Ferando, crying out for his Wife and little Sonne,~ ~demanded
133    3,    8|           which here thou seest, thy Wife brought hither to the Church~ ~
134    3,    8|             still~ ~saide; O my good Wife, O my loving Wife, long
135    3,    8|            my good Wife, O my loving Wife, long mayest thou live for~ ~
136    3,    8|           pleasing to me. O my deare Wife; O my hony Wife. Canst thou~ ~(
137    3,    8|             my deare Wife; O my hony Wife. Canst thou~ ~(quoth the
138    3,    8|           notoriously jealous of thy Wife, shee~ ~being the very kindest
139    3,    8|              never~ ~wrong so good a Wife, nor ever use one unkind
140    3,    8|            qualified; when next my~ ~Wife doth send me food, I pray
141    3,    8|              earnest entreaty of thy Wife, in~ ~hope of thy conversion;
142    3,    8|         failed to visite~ ~Ferandoes wife, without the least suspition
143    3,    8|              passe, that~ ~Ferandoes wife proved to be conceived with
144    3,    8|         againe. Thou didst leave thy wife newly conceived~ ~with childe,
145    3,    8|             Abbot, thine owne loving Wife, and for sweet Saint~ ~Bennets
146    3,    8|              my most dearely beloved Wife, whom I will faithfully~ ~
147    3,    8|            honest, deare, and loving Wife, I have bin delivered from
148    3,    8|            Father-hood, and my kinde Wife, and will~ ~remember all
149    3,    8|          house, and comfort thy kind wife, who ever~ ~since thy departure
150    3,    8|           any more, either my loving wife, or any other.~ ~ The Abbot
151    3,    8|            or gastly apporition; his wife being as fearfull of him,
152    3,    9|              loyall and honourable~ ~wife.~ ~ ~ ~ Now there remained
153    3,    9|              to make election of his wife,~ ~whereby her affections
154    3,    9|             the readier~ ~to enjoy a Wife, which we intend to bestowe
155    3,    9|          give me a Quacksalver to my Wife, one that deales in drugges~ ~
156    3,    9|             his will)~ ~received his wife at the Kings hand; she loving
157    3,    9|              my daughter, and have a wife of his~ ~owne, he must thinke,
158    3,    9|           Husband, as every vertuous Wife ought to doe.~ ~ The good
159    3,    9|          Count lying with~ ~his owne wife, and disappointed of her
160    3,    9|          despised, and unfortunate~ ~wife; who, that thou mightst
161    3,    9|             be welcommed as thy true wife.~ ~ The Count hearing this,
162    3,    9|              for ever as his lawfull wife, folding her in his armes,
163    3,    9|              loyall, and most loving wife, and so (for ever after)
164    3,    9|              confessed her to be his wife~ ~indeede, and now he would
165    4,    2|          Madam Lisetta de Caquirino, wife to a wealthy Merchant, who
166    4,    3|          Many children he had by his Wife, among whom were~ ~three
167    4,    3|       conspired~ ~against him by his Wife, shee caused him to drinke
168    4,    3|                 Sister (quoth he) my wife hath advised, that I should
169    4,    3|             Duke against him and his wife, as~ ~supposing them to
170    4,    3|         House, where both he and his wife were seized as~ ~prisoners.~ ~
171    4,    3|            for murthering his honest wife, and she for poysoning her
172    4,    8|      Leonardo~ ~Sighiero, who by his wife had one onely Sonne, called
173    4,    8|            and friend, husband and~ ~wife, and divers other such like
174    4,    8|           parents and friends, but~ ~wife and husband: such was the
175    4,    8|       perhaps) he may make her his~ ~wife, and yet without any knowledge
176    4,    8|            know me to be a married~ ~wife, in regard whereof, my thoughts
177    4,    8|              dyed) spake thus to his wife: Disguise thy selfe in some
178    4,    8|              night, according as his wife had truly related~ ~to him,
179    4,    9|             hee imagined to love his wife, gave her his heart~ ~to
180    4,    9|     Guiglielmo de Rossilione, had to wife a very~ ~gallant beautifull
181    4,    9|            received tidings from him wife (saide he) that he cannot
182    4,    9|          himselfe setting before his wife, began to finde fault with
183    4,    9|          there, or my selfe live the Wife to so bloody a~ ~Husband.~ ~
184    4,    9|              a chaste and honourable wife, and all through his~ ~owne
185    4,   10|            LOVE.~ ~ ~ ~ A physitians wife laide a Lover of her Maides (
186    4,   10|      Chamber-maide to the Physitians wife, going before the~ ~bench
187    4,   10|      uprightly of this young married Wife, she declared her~ ~selfe
188    4,   10|          chearing and comforting his Wife, as one that could~ ~hardly
189    4,   10|              company.~ ~The Doctours Wife, had a Chamber-maide attending
190    4,   10|             bene noted in~ ~him. His wife, and her Maide, who had
191    4,   10|            say; but at the last, his Wife thus replyed~ ~somewhat
192    4,   10|              the~ ~world? Alas deere Wife (saide he) you might repute
193    4,   10|              Master Doctor and~ ~his Wife were conferring together,
194    5,    1|               to make her my lawfull wife in marriage. Love is the~ ~
195    5,    1|           not~ ~permit him to have a wife against their will; and
196    5,    1|          question, for his taking to wife a faire young~ ~Gentlewoman
197    5,    3|             very~ ~old man, having a wife rather more aged then he,
198    5,    3|             with the old man and his wife, with such meane cates as
199    5,    3|         there is no body here but my wife and my selfe: as~ ~for this
200    5,    3|         began~ ~thus to question his Wife. What is become of (quoth
201    5,    3|              great good fortune, his wife was then there, she being
202    5,    4|          into age) by~ ~his Lady and wife, called Jaquemina, he had
203    5,    4|          Table, Messer Lizio and his wife making the like account
204    5,    4|          teasty; angerly said to his wife.~ ~Why how now woman? Cannot
205    5,    4|              do it.~ ~ Is it even so Wife? answered Messer Lizio.
206    5,    4|              Cocke-Sparrowes. Seeing Wife, she must needes have~ ~
207    5,    4|         saide to~ ~her. Rise quickly wife, and you shall see, what
208    5,    4|             Lizio spake thus to her. Wife, as~ ~you love me, speake
209    5,    4|              to make her thy lawfull wife in marriage, and wipe off
210    5,    5|        forgotten (in the fury) by my Wife her~ ~Mother. But happy
211    5,    5|    Bernardino instantly sent for his wife, her owne Mother, his~ ~
212    5,    6|            Restituta was his elected wife, and~ ~for her he had presumed
213    5,    7| Countrey-House or Farme, whereto his Wife, with her Daughter and~ ~
214    5,    7|            little, he called for his Wife, to know what young~ ~childe
215    5,    7|              rash in beliefe, as his Wife was, made answere, that
216    5,    7|              marriage as his lawfull Wife. Let~ ~me therefore entreat
217    5,    7|            Violenta~ ~should bee his Wife, if he would so accept her:
218    5,    7|        happinesse, if~ ~she might be wife to her beloved Theodoro,
219    5,    8|             Paulo~ ~Traversario, his wife, daughter, with all other
220    5,    8|           offer,~ ~namely, to be his Wife in honourable marriage,
221    5,    8|              was willing to be~ ~the Wife of Anastasio: which newes
222    5,    9|            heire, he substituted his Wife, whom most~ ~dearely he
223    5,    9|      conversation: this poore woman, wife to an honest Husbandman
224    5,    9|             so noble a Lady to his~ ~Wife, and the same whom he had
225    5,   10|             house in the City. His~ ~wife (in the meane while) had
226    5,   10|        Suppers breaking off. Pedroes Wife reproving the error of~ ~
227    5,   10|           the error of~ ~Herculanoes wife, an Asse (by chance) treads
228    5,   10|         findeth the fallacy of his~ ~wife; with whom (nevertbelesse)
229    5,   10|         amourous subtilties of~ ~his Wife, compassionating the misfortune
230    5,   10|         woman whom he had made his~ ~wife, had a yong, lusty, and
231    5,   10|             any way well content one Wife, because his minde ran~ ~
232    5,   10|            which time acquainted his Wife withall, contrary to her~ ~
233    5,   10|            were no Husband, or I his Wife; the marriage bed, which
234    5,   10|               choice of me to be his Wife? If I had not intended to
235    5,   10|             Friend of his, but~ ~his Wife refused to goe, because
236    5,   10|             short a Supper. In troth Wife (quoth hee)~ ~I have not
237    5,   10|          that, said the woman? Marry Wife (quoth hee) I will tell
238    5,   10|          began.~ ~ As Herculano, his Wife, and I were sitting downe
239    5,   10|           not~ ~a little amazed. Now Wife I must tell you, before
240    5,   10|             were to sup, Herculanoes Wife kept the doore fast shut~ ~
241    5,   10|           saide to her. I thanke you Wife now I see the~ ~reason,
242    5,   10|              at your hands. When his Wife heard~ ~these words, and
243    5,   10|            the flight of Herculanoes Wife) wee were~ ~disappointed
244    5,   10|          company? I would I were the Wife of Herculano, seeing you
245    5,   10|             thus find. him, then his Wife was~ ~sorrowfull, tooke
246    5,   10|             hand, thus hee began. Oh Wife! What bitter~ ~speeches
247    5,   10|           use (even now) against the Wife of Herculano,~ ~maintaining
248    5,   10|            thou compare mee with the Wife of~ ~Herculano, who is an
249    5,   10|               betweene a Husband and Wife. Let mee be worser garmented,
250    5,   10|            Pedro perceived, that his Wife had spoken nothing but reason,~ ~
251    5,   10|         ought to be betweene Man and Wife, hee returned~ ~her this
252    5,   10|                her this answer. Well Wife (quoth he) I confesse my
253    5,   10|            will be a true and loyall Wife to thee, so thou wilt be
254    5,   10|            to me. No more words then Wife, replyed Pedro, all is forgotten
255    5,   10|         afterward more loving to his Wife,~ ~then formerly hee had
256    5,   10|            to bee~ ~betweene Man and Wife.~ ~ Dioneus having ended
257    6,    1|            called Madame Oretta, the Wife to Signior Geri Spina. She
258    6,    3|             lye one night with his~ ~wife, not thinking him so base
259    6,    7|         extended to the death of his Wife. Heereupon, having witnesses~ ~
260    6,    7|               that (undoubtedly) his wife at all times,~ ~and oftner
261    6,   10|               that he would~ ~have a Wife in every place where he
262    7,    1|             whereuppon he awaked his Wife Monna Tessa. She made him
263    7,    1|              a very faire and lovely wife, named Monna Tessa, the~ ~
264    7,    1|            the noise, and so did his wife. But to the end, that John~ ~
265    7,    1|        thereat very~ ~much, jogd his wife a litle, and saide to her:
266    7,    1|           broad open day. Arise good wife (quoth~ ~John) and if it
267    7,    1|         haunt our house. Conjure him Wife? Quoth John, By what meanes?
268    7,    2|         meane man, who~ ~did take to Wife, a fayre and lustie young
269    7,    2|               honest, and loving~ ~a Wife. Behold, though I went early
270    7,    2|           worse, when I was made thy Wife. I could have had~ ~a proper,
271    7,    2|             thus answered. Alas good Wife! I pray you bee not so angry,
272    7,    2|           therefore patiently (sweet Wife) that I went forth to my
273    7,    2|          that it had~ ~bene Holyday. Wife, this is the Feast day of
274    7,    2|     returning.~ ~Neverthelesse (dear Wife) I was not carelesse of
275    7,    2|              for more then a moneth. Wife, I remembred the brewing~ ~
276    7,    2|             for the~ ~Fat, my loving wife hath sold it for twelve,
277    7,    2|             thou? I ask for the good wife, with whom I made~ ~my match
278    7,    2|            maintaine~ ~whatsoever my Wife hath done.~ ~ I crie you
279    7,    2|              I bargained with your~ ~Wife for this brewing Fat, which
280    7,    2|              Husband. I warrant thee Wife, answered Lazaro, hurt not
281    7,    3|             love with a Gentlewoman, Wife to a man~ ~of good account;
282    7,    3|        beautifull Gentlewoman,~ ~and wife to a man of good esteeme:
283    7,    3|           knockt, and called for his Wife.~ ~ She hearing his voice:
284    7,    3|           sodaine conceit: Alas good wife (quoth he) how hapned~ ~
285    7,    3|          verily~ ~beleeved, what his Wife had saide, never misdoubting
286    7,    3|          with a vehement sigh, said. Wife,~ ~may not I goe in and
287    7,    4|          night season, did locke his wife out of his house, and~ ~
288    7,    4|          perswaded~ ~that it was his Wife indeed; came forth of his
289    7,    4|              In the meane while, his wife gotte into the house, made~ ~
290    7,    4|         exceeding-jealous. Which his wife~ ~perceyving, she grew much
291    7,    4|              being fast asleepe, his wife then tooke~ ~advantage of
292    7,    4|          drunke indeede.~ ~Which his Wife constantly beleeving, saide
293    7,    4|           Tofano perceiving that his Wife came not to bed, and imagining
294    7,    4|           his bed, and~ ~calling his Wife Cheta divers times, without
295    7,    4|            the returning home of his wife, from whence shee came,
296    7,    4|             wilfull murtherer of thy wife; for all will Judge it~ ~
297    7,    4|        already.~ ~Tofano hearing his Wife thus to flout him out of
298    7,    4|         committed, and avouching his wife to be vertuous and honest.
299    7,    4|              more be jelous of~ ~his wife. This being faithfully promised,
300    7,    5|               Confessour to his owne Wife; who made him beleeve, that
301    7,    5|      beautifull Gentlewoman~ ~to his wife, he became extreamly jelous
302    7,    5|        questioned further with~ ~his wife, saying: Why good Woman,
303    7,    5|              head,~ ~and wishing his wife halfe hangd, said: Mistresse,
304    7,    5|                for the taking of his wife and the Friar together,
305    7,    5|          both severely punished. His wife being come home from the~ ~
306    7,    5|              comming, saide~ ~to his Wife. I have occasion both to
307    7,    5|            watch his owne doore. His Wife had made~ ~fast all the
308    7,    5|             going to dinner with his Wife. Within a~ ~while after,
309    7,    5|              his~ ~entrance, and his wife kept still her contented
310    7,    5|          pleasing countenance in his wife: one day demaunded of her (
311    7,    5|            Make an end then quickely Wife (quoth Geloso) and~ ~tell
312    7,    5|              of thine honest meaning Wife. Wherefore, to~ ~feede thee
313    7,    5|              answer, confirmed~ ~his wife to be both wise and honest,
314    7,    6|         admirable perfections, being wife to Signior~ ~Beltramo, a
315    7,    6|                  Now trust mee deare wife (said Beltramo) you behaved
316    7,    6|            his Sanctuary.~ ~But alas wife, what is become of the poore
317    7,    6|           deceitfull~ ~policy of his Wife.~ ~
318    7,    7|        having one onely sonne by his wife, named Lodovico. This~ ~
319    7,    7|            not any comparable to the Wife~ ~of Egano de Galluzzi,
320    7,    7|               Egano answered~ ~thus: Wife, why should you move such
321    7,    7|             owne bosome? Gramercie~ ~Wife for this politicke promise
322    7,    7|          title of a Lady, or~ ~to be Wife unto so good a natured man,
323    7,    7|            Come?~ ~ quoth Egano, Yes Wife, he came, but deerely to
324    7,    7|         chastest Woman living to his wife, and so just a Servant,
325    7,    8|       DISCOVER ANY WRONG OFFERED HIS WIFE; EXCEPT~ ~ HEE HIM-SELFE
326    7,    8|           immeasurably jelous of his Wife~ ~Simonida, who fastened
327    7,    8|             all this violence to his wife Simonida:) and afterward~ ~
328    7,    8|             assuredly do, he took to wife a~ ~Gentlewoman, one much
329    7,    8|        intelligence~ ~concerning his Wife Simonida, as he grew into
330    7,    8|         onely to be watchfull of his Wife; so that he~ ~never durst
331    7,    8|           softly out of bed from his wife, and taking his~ ~Sword
332    7,    8|              any noyse, onely as his wife was wont to doe: Roberto,~ ~
333    7,    8|             had taken~ ~holde on his wife, he grasped the Chamber-maide,
334    7,    8|               Wicked woman, and no~ ~wife of mine, be sure I have
335    7,    8|              might be angry with his Wife upon some other~ ~occasion,
336    7,    8|             so good a woman to his~ ~wife, as thou art. What could
337    7,    8|             faire Gentlewoman to his Wife,~ ~of honest fame, riches
338    7,    8|                any word) he left his Wife, and went quietly to bed.
339    7,    9|              birth, and honor, being Wife to~ ~Nicostratus, Governour
340    7,    9|              if thou~ ~hadst a faire Wife, Mother, Daughter, or Sister,
341    7,    9|          more precious to a~ ~loving wife, and a hell it is to live
342    7,    9|            the Table? Yes~ ~but I do wife (quoth he) how squemishly
343    7,    9|        annoyance. You say verie true wife~ ~(answered Nicostratus)
344    7,   10|              Camporegglo, who by his wife, called Monna Mita, had
345    8,    1|             match or wager, with the Wife of Gasparuolo, for the~ ~
346    8,    1|             in the~ ~presence of his wife, how he had payde the whole
347    8,    1|          named~ ~Mistresse Ambrosia, Wife unto a rich Merchant, who
348    8,    1|             or rather most disloyall wife, uppon~ ~this answer sent
349    8,    1|        sitting at the doore with his Wife; tooke~ ~his Friend with
350    8,    1|          repayment of them to~ ~your Wife, and therefore I pray you
351    8,    1|            Gasparuolo turning to his Wife, demanded; Whether it was
352    8,    2|             a tale of a Country mans wife, more~ ~to make you laugh
353    8,    2|           named Monna Belcolore, and wife to a~ ~plaine mecanicke
354    8,    2|              to bee at home with his wife, by a spye which was set
355    8,    2|         roughly replyed. Why how now wife? Is not~ ~Sir Simon our
356    8,    3|            loaden with~ ~stones. His Wife rebuking him for his absence,
357    8,    3|             by great ill luck) his~ ~wife, being a comely and very
358    8,    3|           was~ ~not invisible to his Wife: full of rage and wroth,
359    8,    3|            the floore: he ran to his wife, catching frer~ ~by the
360    8,    3|       bickering betweene him and his Wife,~ ~and seeming as if they
361    8,    3|            and raving still at his~ ~Wife: looking forth of the window,
362    8,    3|              over with stones,~ ~his Wife sitting in a corner, all
363    8,    3|        stones? How sitteth thy poore wife? How hast thou misused~ ~
364    8,    3|             toylesome beating of his Wife, (but much more impatient~ ~
365    8,    3|              reconciled him to~ ~his wife, and she to him: but not
366    8,    6|           report this theft to his~ ~Wife; they made him to goe buy
367    8,    6|           him by the marriage of his Wife. Amon other~ ~Cattle and
368    8,    6|            of December, he and his~ ~wife resorted to their village
369    8,    6|              the money: then let thy wife know no otherwise, but that~ ~
370    8,    6|              followed, neither is my wife so easie to be perswaded:
371    8,    6|             owne house, in regard my wife will never beleeve it; and
372    8,    6|            onely to cousen thy poore wife and us. Canst~ ~thou not
373    8,    6|              knavery of thine to thy Wife.~ ~ Calandrino perceiving,
374    8,    7|            of his two brethren~ ~and wife, setting the waiting-woman
375    8,    7|               lamentations. The good wife, led the Lady into hir own
376    8,    8|         prevailed so well with~ ~the Wife of Spinelloccio, that he
377    8,    8|             amorous looks on Zeppaes wife, and pursued his unneighbourly~ ~
378    8,    8|              to the knowledge of his wife, Spinelloccio came to enquire
379    8,    8|          Spinelloccio goe with his~ ~wife into the Chamber, and make
380    8,    8|            Spinelloccio was with his Wife; but hee being~ ~gone, he
381    8,    8|          Chamber, where he found his wife, amending~ ~the forme of
382    8,    8|          into a~ ~disordred fashion. Wife (quoth be) what art thou
383    8,    8|          answered she. Yes that I do wife, replied Zeppa,~ ~and something
384    8,    8|              Zeppa thus answered.~ ~ Wife, if inward contrition be
385    8,    8|            not justly~ ~mislike. The wife, to make some satisfaction
386    8,    8|              kindly welcommed by the wife: they were~ ~no sooner gone
387    8,    8|           the Chamber. Where are you Wife? said he, (speaking so loud,
388    8,    8|       formerly he did: Come~ ~hither Wife (quoth he) how shall we
389    8,    8|               by which~ ~meanes, his wife is left at home alone: give
390    8,    8|          make up the consort.~ ~ His Wife being very timorous, yet
391    8,    8|     commanded, so prevailed with the Wife of Spinelloccio: that she
392    8,    8|             hand, and winking on his Wife,~ ~that she should betake
393    8,    8|             in the~ ~Chamber.~ ~ His wife being gone, he shut the
394    8,    8|            even to~ ~be bold with my wife, in the selfesame manner
395    8,    8|              then~ ~familiar with my wife. I must borrow the selfe-same
396    8,    8|           you~ ~have sustained by my wife. Our injuries are alike,
397    8,    8|           Husband~ ~to me, and in my wife to you: let then their punishment
398    8,    8|         abuse of his true and loyall wife: I am the more~ ~willing
399    8,    8|              of~ ~love betweene your wife and mee, albeit I have good
400    8,    8|         answered~ ~Zeppa) between my wife and you, take my honest
401    8,    8|           uttered, the answer of his wife, as also~ ~what Musicke
402    8,    8|          railde and exclaimed on his wife,~ ~as thus hee lay shut
403    8,    8|           bargaine;~ ~Spinelloccioes wife challengeth the jewel, then
404    8,    8|         Zeppa~ ~calling for his owne wife, commanded her to open the
405    8,    8|         merrily smiling, saide. Well wife, you have given mee a~ ~
406    8,    8|            thy former speeches to my Wife, that~ ~thou wast my friend,
407    8,    9|             Queene of Baschia;~ ~the Wife to the great Soldane, the
408    8,    9|          that they would give him to Wife, the faire Countesse di~ ~
409    8,    9|              many apt excuses to his wife, stealing forth his~ ~Scarlet
410    8,    9|            welcomd home by his angry wife: who scolding and railing
411    9,    3|            faintly, hee saide to his Wife: Woman, make my Bed presently
412    9,    3|             a small while after, his Wife being come into~ ~the Chamber,
413    9,    3|             out aloud, saying to his wife Ah thou~ ~wicked woman,
414    9,    3|        through the wickednesse of my Wife:~ ~heaven plague her with
415    9,    3|            Calandrino: but how~ ~the Wife liked the folly of her Husband,
416    9,    4|           given by Calandrino to his Wife, all the~ ~whole company
417    9,    4|              tongue, and accused his Wife of overmastering him. Which~ ~
418    9,    5|             was found~ ~there by his wife, and dealt withall according
419    9,    5|            is, and if she be not the wife or friend to our young master~ ~
420    9,    5|            is a neer Kinsman~ ~to my wife, and he is able to undo
421    9,    5|              to conceale it from his wife.~ ~ Having worne out three
422    9,    5|            company with Calandrinoes Wife, thus hee began.~ ~ Cousine,
423    9,    5|            thou abuse thine~ ~honest wife so basely? I sweare by blessed
424    9,    5|             intent to kisse her: his wife and Nello entred into the
425    9,    5|              on his knees before his Wife, holding up his hands for
426    9,    5|        Gentlewoman was his~ ~Masters Wife, who came with no such intent
427    9,    5|              shee fondly~ ~imagined. Wife, or wife not (quoth she)
428    9,    5|          fondly~ ~imagined. Wife, or wife not (quoth she) I would
429    9,    5|      Calandrino, to walke~ ~with his Wife to Florence, and returne
430    9,    5|            home to Florence with his Wife, scoulded and raild at all~ ~
431    9,    6|           the darke)~ ~to the Hostes Wife. He which lay with the daughter,
432    9,    6|           sufficiently faire) to his wife, by whom hee had also two~ ~
433    9,    6|              noise wherof awaked the wife, and~ ~fearing greater harme,
434    9,    6|            first he found it.~ ~ The Wife having found the thing throwne
435    9,    6|             to be a~ ~very good mans wife: this night shee hath given
436    9,    6|           Didst~ ~thou not heare him wife, brag and boast, how he
437    9,    6|             Host heard, what his own Wife and Adriano~ ~had confirmed:
438    9,    7|            much honour, who tooke to wife a yong Gentlewoman, named
439    9,    7|           that Talano being with his wife, at a summer-house of his
440    9,    7|           one night, that he saw his Wife walking in a~ ~faire wood,
441    9,    7|             sate conversing with his wife, he spake thus unto hir.~ ~
442    9,    7|             first we becam man~ ~and wife, but rather my life hath
443    9,    7|              speeches.~ ~ True it is Wife (quoth he) that little credit
444    9,    7|             wishest unto me.~ ~ Well Wife, answered Talano, I knew
445    9,    9|                headstrong and unruly wife. And what answeres the wise
446    9,    9|            the froward~ ~and wilfull wife of Talano, who had a heavier
447    9,    9|             the spurre.~ ~ So a good wife and bad wife, a wand will
448    9,    9|               So a good wife and bad wife, a wand will make stirre.~ ~ ~ ~
449    9,    9|              reclaiming of a wilfull wife, the most froward and~ ~
450    9,    9|             handle my selfe-will'd~ ~wife, untill the Muletter did
451    9,    9|              day Giosefo said to his Wife: Woman, this Gentleman is
452    9,    9|            thus to her. I perceive~ ~wife, you are the same woman
453    9,    9|             the Chamber,~ ~where his wife sate railing, and despitefully
454    9,    9|            againe.~ ~Thus our unruly Wife became mildely reclaimed,
455    9,   10|             enchantment, to have his wife become a Mule.~ ~And when
456    9,   10|            woman which he had to his wife, as also~ ~his Asse: evermore
457    9,   10|             wherein himselfe and his wife lay;~ ~so that John de Barolo
458    9,   10|              thou maist make mee thy wife againe, in the same condition~ ~
459    9,   10|                Gossip Pietro and his wife, could hardly take any rest
460   10,    4|        called Madam~ ~Catharina, the Wife of Signior Nicoluccio Caccianimico.
461   10,    4|              she had been his owne~ ~Wife. Secretly he repaired to
462   10,    4|            he~ ~did respect; were it Wife, Friend, Sonne, Daughter,
463   10,    4|     questioned, if she were Gentiles Wife, or no, or~ ~else his Kinsewoman;
464   10,    4|         regard she was a worthy mans wife) and consequently, how all
465   10,    4|             will not~ ~give thee thy wife, whom both her kindred and
466   10,    4|      contentment received both his~ ~wife and childe, being before
467   10,    5|                  Madame Dianora, the Wife of Signior Gilberto, being
468   10,    5|               gave consent, that his Wife should fulfill her promise
469   10,    5|              named~ ~Madame Dianora, WiFe to a rich and woorthie Knight,
470   10,    5|           wrong a~ ~Gentleman in his wife.~ ~ When Signior Ansaldo
471   10,    5|              honest intention of his Wife;~ ~wisely he pacified his
472   10,    7|           reputation, who had by his Wife one onely Daughter, of~ ~
473   10,    7|     contentment thereby, as ever any wife could have of her owne Husband.~ ~
474   10,    8|           her selfe to be the maried wife of Gisippus, was~ ~(indeed)
475   10,    8|         Gisippus, was~ ~(indeed) the wife of Titus Quintus Fulvius,
476   10,    8|              see one friend love the wife of another, a case happening~ ~
477   10,    8|             ordaining her to be my~ ~wife, although thou doest not
478   10,    8|            come to my bed, not as my wife but onely thine. And~ ~therefore
479   10,    8|             they~ ~had thought her a wife fit for me, doe not thou
480   10,    8|         convert my liking to another wife, but never~ ~to have the
481   10,    8|            able to~ ~recover another wife) though never such a worthy
482   10,    8|            should be accepted as his wife, and used many obstinate~ ~
483   10,    8|           will not accept thee as my wife: great~ ~scandall would
484   10,    8|            as if she were thine owne wife. Afterward, in apt time
485   10,    8|            intention to make her his wife, according as was the~ ~
486   10,    8|           him to goe~ ~to bed to his wife. Which Titus hearing, overcome
487   10,    8|             were willing to be~ ~his wife.~ ~ She beleeving verily
488   10,    8|         should be willing to be your wife. At which words, a costly
489   10,    8|              for ever) my Spouse and Wife; no other kind of marriage
490   10,    8|        avouching her selfe to be the wife of Titus, and not of~ ~Gisippus,
491   10,    8|            shee to be~ ~mine, and no Wife for Gisippus, as at this
492   10,    8|   disposition) hee gave her to be my Wife, whom (by your election)~ ~
493   10,    8|      complain, that Sophronia is the wife to Titus; but of the manner~ ~
494   10,    8|              done, as being made his wife secretly, and by theft,~ ~
495   10,    8|              in secret I made her my wife, yet I came not~ ~as an
496   10,    8|     Sophronia is secretly become the wife of Titus Quintus Fulvius.
497   10,    8|           Sophronia should bee~ ~his Wife, hee their deare and loving
498   10,    8|          esteemed, should become the wife of his Companion,~ ~but
499   10,    9|             a~ ~certaine time to his Wife, for his returne back to
500   10,    9|           night to~ ~Pavia, when his Wife was to be married on the
501   10,    9|           kept no doore shut) to his Wife, named Madam Adialetta;
502   10,    9|                sent for his Lady and wife, because (as yet) they had
503   10,    9|              and intreaties of his~ ~Wife, determined to be one in
504   10,    9|         should take shipping; to his Wife (whom~ ~he most intirely
505   10,    9|              I will live and dye the Wife of Signiour Thorello, and
506   10,    9|           purposed to write to his~ ~Wife, that he was living, and
507   10,    9|        especiall Garments, which his Wife had given one of the~ ~strange
508   10,    9|         three Merchants to whom your Wife gave these Roabes: and now
509   10,    9|           comming to the eare of his Wife,~ ~and likewise to his kinred
510   10,    9|       continuall lamentations of his Wife, who~ ~(within some few
511   10,    9|           the time limitted to his~ ~Wife, drew neere expiring within
512   10,    9|             thither of his life, his Wife would~ ~questionlesse be
513   10,    9|              he had appointed to his Wife, and revealed to him also
514   10,    9|              affection you love your Wife, and~ ~misdoubt her marriage
515   10,    9|             to Madame Adalietta, the wife of Thorello. On his~ ~finger
516   10,    9|              assure thee, that thy~ ~Wife Adalietta, being conquered
517   10,    9|            in making election of his wife.~ ~ The Bridegroome, albeit
518   10,    9|           Adalietto was~ ~Thorello's wife in equitie, and bee could
519   10,    9|              yeeres (after) with his wife Adalietta,~ ~and using greater
520   10,   10|         taking in marriage another~ ~wife, more worthy of his high
521   10,   10|              daughter, expulsing his wife Grizelda~ ~poorely from
522   10,   10|        Gualtiero, who having neyther wife nor~ ~childe, spent his
523   10,   10|              match~ ~himselfe with a wife, to the end, that hee might
524   10,   10|              is bound to live with a wife~ ~not fit for him. And in
525   10,   10|           and so to provide mee of a wife, it is a meere argument
526   10,   10|             displeased me, to take a wife at~ ~your request, and against
527   10,   10|           provided that~ ~he tooke a wife.~ ~ Some indifferent space
528   10,   10|           his daughter should be his wife.~ ~Whereupon, the Marquesse
529   10,   10|         dispose my selfe to~ ~take a wife: and I thereto condescended,
530   10,   10|             I shall elect to make my wife: and now the time is~ ~come,
531   10,   10|             whom I intend to make my wife, and (within few dales)~ ~
532   10,   10|           Grizelda, if I make you my wife, will you doe your best~ ~
533   10,   10|          poore a~ ~maiden to be your wife. Yes Grizelda, quoth hee,
534   10,   10|               I confirme thee for my wife; and so espoused her before
535   10,   10|             in the~ ~election of his Wife, which few else (but he)
536   10,   10|            that I may take~ ~another wife, more pleasing to them.~ ~
537   10,   10|             to keepe Grizelda as his wife,~ ~confessing, he had done
538   10,   10|           Grizelda, and take another Wife. Wherein although they~ ~
539   10,   10|               and marry with another Wife,~ ~wherefore sending for
540   10,   10|            to make choyce of another Wife, and to free my~ ~selfe
541   10,   10|            to have thee no longer my Wife, but~ ~will returne thee
542   10,   10|              then I wil take another Wife, with whom I am~ ~already
543   10,   10|            that she who had been his Wife thirteene yeares and more,~ ~
544   10,   10|            keepe his daughter as his Wife, but rather expected dally,
545   10,   10|          thus he spake to her. The~ ~Wife that I have made the new
546   10,   10|            and them) should be~ ~the Wife to the Marquesse, and that
547   10,   10|     concerning the patience of his~ ~Wife, who in so many hart-grieving
548   10,   10|              you did to your other~ ~wife: for I cannot thinke her
549   10,   10|       daughter of hers should be his wife, and answered him in so~ ~
550   10,   10|              it is to be~ ~a married wife, and to let them know (whosoever
551   10,   10|            how to take~ ~and keepe a wife. Which hath begotten (to
552   10,   10|             man living hath the like Wife, as I~ ~have.~ ~ So, sweetly
553   10,   10|              experiences made of his wife: but (above al) they reputed~ ~
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