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  1  Ind      |           else of the body: in some great and few, in~ ~others small
  2  Ind      |          lived so solitary, in such great necessity of~ ~servants
  3  Ind      |          them~ ~constrainedly, (for great and unreasonable wages)
  4  Ind      |          died night and day, was so great, that it was a~ ~dreadfull
  5  Ind      |            few or none escaping.~ ~ Great store there were, that died
  6  Ind      |            not now suffice, for the great multitude of~ ~dead bodies,
  7  Ind      |        constrained to~ ~make use of great deepe ditches, wherein they
  8  Ind      |          worthy of memory! How many great~ ~inheritances! And what
  9  Ind      |           waiting Chamber-maide; so great are my feares, that the~ ~
 10  Ind      |          have left us alone in this great affliction, even as if we~ ~
 11  Ind      |            hence honestly, then a~ ~great number of other Women to
 12    1,    1|          whatsoever he doth, in the great and glorious name of him,
 13    1,    1|       prayers in the presence of so great a Judge; but onely~ ~to
 14    1,    1|            beeing a most rich~ ~and great Merchant in France, was
 15    1,    1|           because in~ ~those times, great trust and beleefe was given
 16    1,    1|           nature so to do. He was a great glutton and~ ~a drunkarde,
 17    1,    1|      Brethren, although they had no great hope in his speeches,~ ~
 18    1,    1|             aged religious Frier, a great read master in the sacred~ ~
 19    1,    1|            the Citizens held him in great respect and esteeme, and
 20    1,    1|      Chappelet~ ~(breathing forth a great sigh) answered.~ ~ Holy
 21    1,    1|        grace and mercy of God is so great, that upon penitent~ ~confession,
 22    1,    1|            this sinne of mine is so great, that I can hardly beleeve (
 23    1,    1|         Friar: doth that seeme~ ~so great a sinne to thee? Why, men
 24    1,    1|             confessed, as this most great and greevous sinne, and~ ~
 25    1,    1|     clemencie hath alwayes beene so great to us, that~ ~he regards
 26    1,    2|         upright~ ~dealing; who held great affection and friendship
 27    1,    2|              tedious travel, and so great a charge, as thy journey
 28    1,    2|           faith; wherein he grew of great understanding, and led a
 29    1,    3|            of three Rings, to the~ ~great Soldan, named Saladine,
 30    1,    3|         named Saladine, prevented a great danger which was~ ~prepared
 31    1,    3|             of eminencie, into most great and~ ~greevous miseries:
 32    1,    3|             to be the occasion of~ ~great desolation, without happy
 33    1,    3|       standing in neede to use some great summe of~ ~money, yet not
 34    1,    3|          owne) had a goodly Ring of great valew; the~ ~beauty and
 35    1,    3|    inheritance and~ ~honor, grew to great contradiction and square:
 36    1,    3|      answere; the Jew~ ~lent him so great a sum of money as hee demanded,
 37    1,    3|            justly, giving him other great gifts beside:~ ~respecting
 38    1,    4|         Fasts nor~ ~prayers had any great power over him. It chanced
 39    1,    4|            the Chamber, he lost a~ ~great part of his former feare,
 40    1,    5|       answeres; And because it is a great part of sence and~ ~judgement
 41    1,    5|           him, and~ ~as beseemed so great a Prince: the houre of dinner
 42    1,    6|             the mans faculties were great,~ ~and his bagges swolne
 43    1,    6|          UNFITTING FOR A PRINCE, OR GREAT~ ~ PERSON, TO BEE COVETOUS;
 44    1,    6|        sightly~ ~appearance at this great meeting; the importunate
 45    1,    6|         wherefore entering into the great Hall, and so~ ~from place
 46    1,    6|             to place, beholding the great multitude of Tables,~ ~bountifull
 47    1,    7|         house of his, a building of great cost and beauty; where,~ ~
 48    1,    7|            at the entrance into the great Hall of my~ ~House. Master
 49    1,    9|               divers other women of great account) being sitting at
 50    2,    1|    afterward taken prisoner, and in great danger of~ ~being hanged
 51    2,    1|             may first observe, what great mischance happened to one~ ~
 52    2,    1|    departing, all the Belles in the great Church of Trevers,~ ~(not
 53    2,    1|           sanctified body) into the great Church, where people, halt,
 54    2,    1|           came to passe, that in so great a concourse of people, as~ ~
 55    2,    1|            in Trevers,~ ~and was in great credite with the Cities
 56    2,    2|              I~ ~have met with many great dangers upon the way, from
 57    2,    2|              hath beggd of God such great~ ~grace for me; and mee
 58    2,    2|             often told mee) of very great vertue and efficacy.~ ~
 59    2,    2|           it, but~ ~confirmed it by great and honourable giftes; and
 60    2,    3|           in this manner. Ladies of great respect, the~ ~more we conferre
 61    2,    3|         yeares) they had gathered a great summe of mony:~ ~by means
 62    2,    3|              with~ ~those summes, a great part of their inheritances
 63    2,    3|    Alessandro in England grew verie great, for hee lent~ ~out much
 64    2,    3|         with~ ~divers Monkes, and a great traine before, conducting
 65    2,    3|           whiles~ ~after, as we see great Lords use to do, when they
 66    2,    3|            taking compassion on his great misfortunes, he~ ~comforted
 67    2,    3|          when the Abbot had supt, a great part of the night being
 68    2,    3|       kinsmens overthrow,~ ~and his great losses in England; wherefore,
 69    2,    3|             City, whereof there are great plenty: And also, that sacred~ ~
 70    2,    3|           Cardinals, and many other great persons then in~ ~presence,
 71    2,    3|           his sonne, whereon ensued great comfort~ ~to the Kingdome,
 72    2,    4|          grieving exceedingly at so great a losse,~ ~not knowing what
 73    2,    4|           Merchant, that bought his great Ship of him; with the~ ~
 74    2,    4|          entred (soone after) two~ ~great Carrackes of Genewayes,
 75    2,    4|            to recompence the womans great paines and kindnesse~ ~bestowne
 76    2,    4|           Having knowledge of their great worth~ ~and value (being
 77    2,    4|              found them to be of so great estimation, that selling
 78    2,    4|        vented them all, he sent~ ~a great summe of money to the good
 79    2,    5|         Family, a Gentleman, and of great~ ~revennues, who in his
 80    2,    5|             know not any man of how great repute or qualitie soever,
 81    2,    5|        Albeit, you~ ~might doe me a great kindnesse, to send for your
 82    2,    5|             but punnished them with great severity.~ ~And therefore,
 83    2,    5|               out in length, that a great part of the night might
 84    2,    5|       violence: so that taking up a great stone in his hand, hee layed~ ~
 85    2,    5|            losse~ ~hath not bene so great, but on our words we will
 86    2,    5|             they~ ~went towards the great Church, Andreaes unsavourie
 87    2,    5|        midnight,~ ~they went to the great Church, where finding their
 88    2,    5|           the Tombe, which was very great, being~ ~tall of Marble,
 89    2,    6|     likewise, they both returned to great estate and~ ~credit.~ ~ ~ ~
 90    2,    6|            in Fortune as they are~ ~great, so must they needs be greevous;
 91    2,    6|             And therefore, although great occasions have~ ~beene already
 92    2,    6|        Sicily, about whom, lived in great account and authority, a~ ~
 93    2,    6|          named Geoffrey, and growne great with child~ ~with another,
 94    2,    6|            little at her, and she a great deale more at them. When~ ~(
 95    2,    6|            verie much bemoaning her great disasters: and when both
 96    2,    6|             before Beritola, to the great admiration of Conrado and
 97    2,    6|           Daughter~ ~worthy (for so great an offence) of all cruell
 98    2,    6|         What doth this businesse of great Kings concerne thee?~ ~What
 99    2,    6|          Jehannot, thou knowest how great~ ~the injuries are that
100    2,    6|            and her marriage is both great and good; what her~ ~manners
101    2,    6|            would not be~ ~thoght so great, as you (and many more)
102    2,    6|         feasting, and the concourse great of worthy guests,~ ~both
103    2,    6|             by this meanes, he grew great in the grace of King Pedro,
104    2,    6|           of Henriet) for all the~ ~great graces extended to her and
105    2,    6|          acknowledgement of so many great~ ~mercies received.~ ~
106    2,    7|  Gentlewoman well~ ~derived, as the great reverence done to her by
107    2,    7|             his succour~ ~came many great States: among whom, the
108    2,    7|     redresse the least of all these great extremities, she~ ~became
109    2,    7|           moneths he lived there in great joy with her.~ ~ But before
110    2,    7|          yet to advance his hopes a great~ ~deale higher, Newes came,
111    2,    7|      serving her Father in place of great degree. Heereupon,~ ~a sodaine
112    2,    7|         Alathiella, daughter to the great Soldane, who was supposed (
113    2,    7|          the world.~ ~And if in thy great and grave judgement (after
114    2,    7|       service, and~ ~also a deed of great renowne to your selfe, without
115    2,    7|        under my conduct, it will be great honour to you, and no~ ~
116    2,    7|            for hir from Baffa, with great pompe she was conducted
117    2,    7| Majestically.~ ~And having bestowne great gifts on Antigonus, within
118    2,    8|          found them~ ~advanced unto great dignitie. Then, repayring
119    2,    8|        orderly proceeding, and with great discretion, yet not entering
120    2,    8|            exile, and promises of~ ~great and bountifull rewards,
121    2,    8|          Cathedrall Church doore, a great Lady of England~ ~being
122    2,    8|        those~ ~parts: a man of very great authority, keeping a most
123    2,    8|       towards him, his heart~ ~grew great in amorous desire, and his
124    2,    8|         amendment, to the Mothers~ ~great joy and comfort, disposing
125    2,    8|          dye for her love.~ ~ After great consultation with Kindred
126    2,    8|             and not as Father to so great a Lady, arose,~ ~and did
127    2,    8|         offences; she revealed what great wrong~ ~she had done to
128    2,    8|        other worthy persons, and of great honour, entreating~ ~them
129    2,    8|    injuriously wronging a man of so great valour~ ~and honour: Proclamation
130    2,    8|         Perotto his Wife~ ~where in great joy and triumph, they continued
131    2,    8|            the rest of his dayes in great~ ~honour and felicity.~ ~
132    2,    9|           named Ambroginolo, lost a great part of his goods. And commanding~ ~
133    2,    9|           much frequented by~ ~many great Italian Merchants, according
134    2,    9|           breake the wager, knowing great harme must needs~ ~ensue
135    2,    9|             The servant, who had no great good will to kill her, very
136    2,    9|      services, that he grew in as~ ~great grace with the Soldan, as
137    2,    9|     subjection, there yeerely met a great assembly of~ ~Merchants,
138    2,    9|          likewise come thither, and great store~ ~of Merchandizes
139    2,    9|      convenient shop, where he made great benefite of his Merchandizes,~ ~
140    2,    9|            of her. But because your great wisedom~ ~knoweth perfectly
141    2,    9|          therefore~ ~thus spake.~ ~ Great Soldane, I am the miserable
142    2,    9|          being welcomed home~ ~with great honour, especially Madam
143    2,   10|         affirmed, you shal offer me great wrong, in~ ~seeking to get
144    2,   10|     Bertolomea, he maried her, with great solemnity;~ ~banishing all
145    2,   10|            have~ ~shewne himselfe a great deale wiser, and sparing
146    2, Song|        found the torment sharp, and great;~ ~ Yet still me thought
147    2, Song|              etc.~ ~ ~ ~ Grant then great God of Love, that I may
148    2, Song|          other beside, and having~ ~great variety of instruments'
149    3,  Ind|          Chambers; the Seneshall or great Master~ ~of the Houshold,
150    3,    1|             Alexandria, there was a great and goodly~ ~Monasterie,
151    3,    1|             which is very faire and great; then I went to the Forest~ ~
152    3,    1|         there arrived, he found the great gate open, and~ ~entering
153    3,    1|            more the~ ~misery of his great defectes. Then one of them,
154    3,    1|   undertaken a taske belonging to~ ~great Hercules, in giving content
155    3,    2|       discovering the guilt of~ ~so great an offender. Many Chambers
156    3,    3|          MISGUIDE GOOD PEOPLE, INTO GREAT AND GREEVOUS ERRORS.~ ~ ~ ~
157    3,    3|             his crafty cunning, and great wisedom in the King had
158    3,    3|           to be descended of very~ ~great parentage, and (by chance)
159    3,    3|        knowing her to be a woman of great wealth (after all~ ~their
160    3,    3|          purse, as also a Girdle of great worth, she threw them into
161    3,    3|             me thought were in very great pains, and desired nothing~ ~
162    3,    3|           in at the window. But, by great good fortune, I~ ~awaked,
163    3,    4|          but onely~ ~concerning the great vertue in Alchimy, extolling
164    3,    4|       having onely practise, but no great learning) he used many questions~ ~
165    3,    4|      prosecuted~ ~by none but onely great Lords, that are able to
166    3,    4|           trust me Sir, there is no great~ ~difficultie in this labour,
167    3,    5|              and leaving him in the great Hall of the house, went
168    3,    5|      affection toward me to be very great and most~ ~perfect, but
169    3,    6|        Citie of Naples, it being of great antiquity, and (perhaps)~ ~
170    3,    7|         somewhat of the coursest; a great~ ~part of the night was
171    3,    7|              himselfe, how many and great the dangers are, wherewith
172    3,    7|            appearing to be a man of great holinesse,~ ~saide. Rise
173    3,    7|            abilities.~ ~ This is so great a sinne, as the divine justice (
174    3,    7|            perceive the fault to be great and~ ~greevous, wherein
175    3,    7|   themselves,~ ~because she reposed great confidence in the Pilgrims
176    3,    7|            her father freed from so great a~ ~danger; kissed and embraced
177    3,    7|              crave pardon for their great error committed. On the
178    3,    7|           which~ ~slander was to my great discredit. Go on boldly,
179    3,    8|     understanding, yet he fell into great familiarity~ ~with the Abbot;
180    3,    8|           gift, hoping to~ ~enjoy a great many more of them, and returning
181    3,    8|         drugge, was sent~ ~him by a great Prince of the East, and
182    3,    8|                The Abbot pretending great admiration at this accident,
183    3,    8|                which was not of any great strength, neither well closed
184    3,    8|           the Abbot, for working so great a wonder heere in our Monastery.
185    3,    9|          faire Juliet thus replyed: Great~ ~King, let not my skill
186    3,    9|        follow~ ~thereon? Whatsoever great King (quoth she) shall please
187    3,    9|            you are~ ~a Gentleman of great honour, and it is our Royall
188    3,    9|            a noble heart shee said: Great Countesse say,~ ~wherein
189    3,    9|             married, to her Mothers great comfort.~ ~ Not long after,
190    3,    9|           thither, entring into the great~ ~Hall where the Tables
191    3,   10|            put his resolution to so great a test, he forebore to send
192    4      |            say to them, who take so great compassion on my~ ~povertie,
193    4,    1|        future hopes; like a Lady of great and~ ~glorious magnificence,
194    4,    1|          man not derived from~ ~any great descent by blood, yet much
195    4,    1|         whose heart was swolne so~ ~great with griefe, as hardly was
196    4,    1|          confusions. Many Kings and great~ ~Princes have heeretofore
197    4,    2|           to be surprized with very great devotion, becomming much~ ~
198    4,    2|             formerly he had-beene a great Preacher; yet not~ ~abandoning
199    4,    2|             perceived, he was~ ~the great commanding God Cupid, and
200    4,    2|    contentment. But you may do me a great grace, and without any~ ~
201    4,    2|           my body againe after that great God had made use thereof~ ~
202    4,    2|          tell you, priviledges, how great and~ ~singular soever they
203    4,    2|             of whose perfections,~ ~great Cupid the awefull commanding
204    4,    2|             at a wedding,~ ~among a great number of other women, whom
205    4,    2|          standing directly over the great gulfe or River, and~ ~presently
206    4,    2|             his face, he gave him a great staffe in the one hand,
207    4,    2|          chaine, he was followed by great crowds of~ ~people, every
208    4,    2|           hither) to shew you~ ~the great God of Love called Cupid,
209    4,    3|          Rhodes, where they dyed in great poverty.~ ~ ~ ~ When the
210    4,    3|           know, redoundeth to~ ~the great disgrace and prejudice of
211    4,    3|          Fathers, whence they tooke great store of Gold~ ~and costly
212    4,    3|         shee caused him to drinke a great draught~ ~thereof, under
213    4,    3|         their publike execution, by great summes of money, which~ ~
214    4,    3|             they lived afterward in great distresse and~ ~misery.
215    4,    4|      wonderously~ ~esteemed for his great valour and humanity. His
216    4,    4|         understood and saw all this great preparation; secretly~ ~
217    4,    4|             a long while, to~ ~very great harme on either side. At
218    4,    5|         betrayed. He being a man of great discretion, although this
219    4,    6|            for some men, to give as great~ ~credit to such things
220    4,    6|          very noble Gentlemen, with great~ ~honor and reverence.~ ~
221    4,    7|          you, either in~ ~all, or a great part of my Novell, whereto
222    4,    8|             IS AGAINE DECLARED, THE GREAT INDISCRETION AND FOLLY OF~ ~
223    4,    8|            good,~ ~that to avoid so great an inconvenience, we should
224    4,    8|      Gentlemen, whereof we have too great a~ ~number. When you are
225    4,    8|           so~ ~much patience, as so great a wrong, and his hearts
226    4,    8|  understanding, whose greefe was so great, as it exceeded~ ~all capacity
227    4,    8|         deaths, which moved them to great~ ~compassion. Then taking
228    4,    9|          Table, and stepping unto a great gazing~ ~Window, the Casement
229    4,    9|             much lamentation for so great a~ ~misfortune to befall
230    4,   10|             were condemned to pay a great~ ~summe of money.~ ~ ~ ~
231    4,   10|           Patient in cure, who~ ~by great misfortune, had one of his
232    4,   10|            from Malfy, concerning a great~ ~conflict happening there
233    4,   10|             by his trade) I~ ~saw a great Chest stand; and, as it
234    4,   10|            desiring him to pardon a great error,~ ~whereby she had
235    4,   10|             which was~ ~graced with great and honourable pompe, he
236    4, Song|            Yet in my death, let thy great power approve,~ ~ That I
237    5,    1|            riding and managing of~ ~great horses, and finding himselfe
238    5,    1|           duty was to do, in such a great unexpected distresse, nor
239    5,    1|             us. This direction gave great contentment~ ~to Chynon,
240    5,    1|            Upon day, performed with great and magnificent Triumph,
241    5,    2|             to him, and he being in great authority, as a~ ~privy
242    5,    2|           there was a young Lord of great birth, and very powerfull,~ ~
243    5,    2|            be done, it would~ ~give great hope of successefull prevalling.
244    5,    2|            as apt for their enemies great nockt~ ~Arrowes, as their
245    5,    2|          and he being a Prince of~ ~great understanding, gave order
246    5,    2|              Martuccio came to~ ~be great in his grace, as also consequently
247    5,    2|          that he was living, and in great~ ~authority about the King,
248    5,    2|           did many honors, and gave great gifts to the aged Sarazine~ ~
249    5,    3|            might best be done in so great a~ ~necessity. From his
250    5,    3|          him by the bridle~ ~unto a great tree, uppe he climbed into
251    5,    3|             which she lighted on by great good~ ~fortune) even when
252    5,    3|             almost day, she heard a great noise of people travailing~ ~
253    5,    3|           in one of the~ ~corners a great stacke of Hay, wherein she
254    5,    3|             she fully hidden, but a great company of~ ~Theeves and
255    5,    3|            Campo di~ ~Fiore, and by great good fortune, his wife was
256    5,    3|          any~ ~comfort; he espied a great fire, which seemed to be
257    5,    4|          Garden Gallery, which is a great deale more coole lodged.~ ~
258    5,    4|          putting on her garments in great haste, followed her Husband,~ ~
259    5,    5|          with whom Giovanni grew in great~ ~familiarity, and when
260    5,    5|             injured by me, then any great wrong that I have~ ~sustained.
261    5,    6|             and then there~ ~grew a great contention betweene them,
262    5,    6|            grew the noyse and rumor great in Ischia, about this rape
263    5,    6|           and~ ~lived long after in great felicity.~ ~
264    5,    7|  Ambassadours, a~ ~man aged, and of great authority, named Phinio:
265    5,    7|          named Phinio: hee espied a great red~ ~spot upon his breast,
266    5,    7|              it was celebrated with great pompe and solemnity, a~ ~
267    5,    8|      Traversario, lavishly wasted a great part of~ ~his substance,
268    5,    8|            there dwelt sometime a~ ~great number of worthy Gentlemen,
269    5,    8|           and Pavillions, such as~ ~great persons make use of in the
270    5,    8|            still flying from him in great contempt and scorne: for~ ~
271    5,    9|          yet) his name remaineth in great~ ~and reverend authority,
272    5,    9|         Gentleman her Sonne, taking great delight in~ ~Hounds and
273    5,    9|              it proceeded from your great deservings, and by the service~ ~
274    5,    9|          extreame, and his greefe~ ~great, remembring his former inordinate
275    5,   10|             knowing your offence as great as hers? Questionlesse,~ ~
276    5,   10|            have checkt and reproved great~ ~folly in others, and to
277    6,  Ind|        before: to wit, they heard a great noyse and tumult, among
278    6,  Ind|         feare of their parents, and great prejudice of their friends.~ ~
279    6,    2|             done. Even so these two great commanders of the world,
280    6,    2|            Messer Geri Spina was in great regard) having sent divers
281    6,    2|          Serving-man, who had heard great report of the~ ~Wine, and
282    6,    2|            taste thereof:~ ~tooke a great Flaggon Bottle, containing
283    6,    3|           comely~ ~personage, and a great observer of the choysest
284    6,    3|   understanding, whereof there were great plenty about her, whose~ ~
285    6,    5|         contemptible Arts, the most great and~ ~unvalewable treasures
286    6,    5|          Giotto, had a spirit of so great~ ~excellency, as there was
287    6,    6|            youth of Florence took a great deal of~ ~pleasure in and
288    6,    6|            will allow, must~ ~be no great master when he made these
289    6,    8|           thoughts having wandred a great distance hence,~ ~and further
290    6,    9|             NOTABLY DISCOVERING THE GREAT DIFFERENCE THAT IS BETWEENE~ ~
291    6,    9|            society. And not without great reason: for, over and beside
292    6,    9|         Tombes (which was some-what great) he~ ~tooke his rising,
293    6,   10|          any one, and in never~ ~so great secrecy, but he will be
294    6,   10|             Cabinet,~ ~wrapped in a great many foldings of rich Taffata;
295    6,   10|         since then they have bin in great abundance, to the utter
296    6,   10|            Phoenix (having first in great devotion finisht the confession)~ ~
297    6,   10|            from whence, not without great extremity of thirst, I arrived
298    6,   10|          much inhabited, and with~ ~great people. From thence I went
299    6,   10|           Maso de Saggio, who was a great Merchant there, and whom~ ~
300    6,   10|             multitude, having (with great admiration and reverence)~ ~
301    6,   10|          wasted with making those~ ~great crosses, the more they still
302    6,   10|             the Certaldanes (to his great~ ~benefit) and their abuse:
303    6,   10|        consideration beside, of som great injury offered to mine honor,
304    6,   10|         with sixe small hils, of no great height, and on each of~ ~
305    6,   10|           the heat of the~ ~dry was great, the place tempting, and
306    6, Song|        danced divers daunces: And a great part of the night being
307    7,    2|           friend and Lover, under a great brewing~ ~Fat, upon the
308    7,    2|   especially Husbands, have bene so great and many, as when it hath~ ~
309    7,    2|          cannot but redound to your great benefite,~ ~because, when
310    7,    3|          his hope, and shee~ ~being great with childe, he resolved
311    7,    3|           childe of mee, who was in great~ ~danger, of your ever seeing
312    7,    4|           into a Well, by casting a great stone into the same Well.
313    7,    4|            thereat, and tooke it in great~ ~scorne, that she should
314    7,    4|          husband Tofano; he tooke a great delight in drinking, which
315    7,    4|               where finding a verie great stone, which lay loose upon
316    7,    4|            silent, the fal of~ ~the great stone made such a dreadfull
317    7,    4|              condemning him for his great fault that night~ ~committed,
318    7,    6|        valiant Knight, and a man of great possessions. As~ ~oftentimes
319    7,    6|            being~ ~very rich and of great power) hee sought to compasse
320    7,    7|            trading, that he grew to great~ ~wealth, having one onely
321    7,    7|         praises answerable to thy~ ~great and glorious deservings,
322    7,    8|          fastened a thred about her great toe, for to serve as~ ~a
323    7,    8|             also, that Anichino had great cause of fear, when she
324    7,    8|           fastned it about her left great Toe, wherewith Roberto was~ ~
325    7,    8|             was tyed~ ~to his wives great toe; it prooved apt tinder
326    7,    8|         with his knife he cut off a great deal of her~ ~haire, giving
327    7,    8|          found tyed about his wives great toe, the fight and houshold~ ~
328    7,    8|             cut this thred from thy great toe, tyed it to~ ~mine,
329    7,    9|           WHEREIN IS DECLARED, THAT GREAT LORDS MAY SOMETIME BE DECEIVED
330    7,    9|                    Lydia, a Lady of great beauty, birth, and honor,
331    7,    9|           then wealth, or any other great matter of~ ~worth: there
332    7,    9|      Fortune bestowed in marriage a great Lady, no lesse bold of spirit,~ ~
333    7,    9|             be the occasion of so~ ~great a losse.~ ~ Lesca, comforted
334    7,    9|            opinion concerning the~ ~great Wisedome of his Lord and
335    7,    9|   withdrawne: Lydia came~ ~into the great Hall, where the Feast was
336    7,    9|              meanes to be rid of so great an annoyance. You say verie
337    7,   10|     committed I am to~ ~suffer very great and grievous paines. Then
338    8,    1|        Loving this Gentlewoman with great~ ~discretion, without the
339    8,    3|     Territories, both being of very great vertue. One~ ~kind, are
340    8,    3|          afterward they send to the great Soldane, and have whatsoever~ ~
341    8,    3|           his owne house, where (by great ill luck) his~ ~wife, being
342    8,    4|           IT~ ~ REDOUNDETH TO THEIR GREAT DISGRACE AND PUNISHMENT~ ~ ~ ~
343    8,    4|             in~ ~times past) a very great and most ancient City: although
344    8,    4|              My house~ ~also is not great, wherefore it is impossible
345    8,    4|            had a wrie mouth,~ ~huge great lippes, foule teeth, great
346    8,    4|          great lippes, foule teeth, great and blacke, a monstrous
347    8,    4|             house, because he tooke great~ ~delight in their company,
348    8,    4|             awaked, and~ ~seeing so great a light, as also so many
349    8,    6|              this other~ ~made it a great deale worse, for teares
350    8,    7|          the season of the yeare, a great snow had falne the day before,
351    8,    7|    affecting his safty,~ ~out of so great and dangerous a cold.~ ~
352    8,    7|         obliged to thee for this so great favour? Now~ ~thou hast
353    8,    7|             spleene was swolne very great, in~ ~remembring such a
354    8,    7|            mine offence appeared so great, as neither my~ ~youth,
355    8,    7|              perhappes) you esteeme great~ ~and dishonourable, is
356    8,    7|             whereat there needed no great~ ~the Lead of the Turret
357    8,    7|           shee was~ ~brought now to great extremity: which sight,
358    8,    7|             her owne: as also the~ ~great mishap of her woman: forged
359    8,    7|           Maide, could now make any great boast,~ ~of his nights hard
360    8,    8|              consideration, that so great al injury was first begun
361    8,    9|        Minever, beside divers other great apparances,~ ~succeeding
362    8,    9|             yet redounding to their great commoditie and profite.~ ~
363    8,    9|        entreating~ ~Bruno with very great instances, to tell him what
364    8,    9|            make to mee? It~ ~is too great a secret, which you desire
365    8,    9|        there named.~ ~ There is the great Lady of Barbanicchia; the
366    8,    9|          Baschia;~ ~the Wife to the great Soldane, the Empresse of
367    8,    9|      consider with your selfe, what great reason we have to live~ ~
368    8,    9|      answered Bruno, that it was no great matter of~ ~mervaile, if
369    8,    9|             desire of mine but upon great occasion, as thou thy~ ~
370    8,    9|            I know to be exceeding~ ~great, and farre beyond the compasse
371    8,    9|           he sayde. I sweare by the great God of~ ~Pasignano, that
372    8,    9|             where there was neyther great nor small, Doctor nor~ ~
373    8,    9|       answered Buffalmaco, she is a great~ ~Lady, one worthy to have
374    8,    9|           hindrance, but also do us great harme beside: and now you~ ~
375    8,    9|        blacke and horned, but of no great stature, will come to fetch
376    8,    9|            because you may doe us a great deale of injurie, without~ ~
377    8,    9|            they should publish this great disgrace of~ ~him. And whereas (
378    8,   10|         made the meanes to borrow a great summe of~ ~Money of her,
379    8,   10|           the woman deceived, was a great and cunning~ ~Mistris in
380    8,   10|           they unlade any~ ~Ship of great fraught, there are prepared
381    8,   10|             thinking her to be some great Lady: began also to grow
382    8,   10|             head, and~ ~the other a great Basket filled with many
383    8,   10|          Clothes,~ ~whereby hee had great gaines, and the moneyes
384    8,   10|            flames, had consumed a~ ~great part of his necessary understanding,
385    8,   10|            Constantinople, a man of great wisedome and understanding,
386    8,   10|            against you: such and so great is the affection I beare~ ~
387    8,   10|             good Salabetto, in what great~ ~trouble and affliction
388    9,    1|       devised (in regard of their~ ~great and liberall offers) to
389    9,    1|            not a litle, as also the great~ ~boldnesse of them both.
390    9,    2|         long while, but not without great affliction unto~ ~them both.
391    9,    3|             that~ ~he was conceived great with childe. And having
392    9,    3|             it proceedeth from some great cause, and so he~ ~departed
393    9,    3|        disease, but only~ ~thou art great with child.~ ~ So soone
394    9,    3|               then doe you drinke a great Glasse full every morning,
395    9,    4|            bad qualitie, namely too great~ ~neglect of their Fathers,
396    9,    4|       service: but because he was a great Gamester, and divers times~ ~
397    9,    4|         also: but had not you~ ~(by great good lucke) thus holpe mee
398    9,    5|       Citizen of ours, and a man of great~ ~wealth; who, among other
399    9,    5|        woman,~ ~wearing garments of great value, and (according to
400    9,    5|              esteemed as matters of great moment. Moreover, at divers
401    9,    6|     Florence, as if they had some~ ~great journey to ride. Having
402    9,    6|          night season: it were no~ ~great sinne if you brake your
403    9,    7|        corner of the~ ~said Wood, a great and furious Wolfe, which
404    9,    8|       knight, who being a man of no great civill breeding, but furious,~ ~
405    9,    9|         Salomon, the famous King of Great Britaine. The one desiring
406    9,    9|            powers wherof are very~ ~great, and worthy to be reverenced,
407    9,    9|             wise and famous King of Great~ ~Britaine, as a most wholesome
408    9,    9|        wisedome of Salomon, King of Great~ ~Brittain, was most famous
409    9,    9|              you are vexed with one great mis-fortune, even so am
410    9,    9|            untill they arrived in~ ~Great Britaine, where, by meanes
411    9,    9|        goodly Bridge, and because a great company of~ ~Horses and
412    9,   10|           which shall not be of any great length,~ ~whereby you may
413    9,   10|            Countreyes, he grew into great and familiar acquaintance,
414    9, Song|           their Chambers, because a great part of the night was~ ~
415   10,    1|          SERVANTS TO PRINCES AND~ ~ GREAT LORDS, ARE MANY TIMES RECOMPENCED,
416   10,    1|             and (perhappes) of as~ ~great merit as any, was one, named
417   10,    1|     Figiovanni. He~ ~being rich, of great courage, and perceiving,
418   10,    1|            former reputation, and a great empayring of his~ ~fame,
419   10,    1|         conducted him then into the great Hall, where (as hee had~ ~
420   10,    1|       before given order) stood two great Chests, fast lockt; in the~ ~
421   10,    2|            set onward thither, with great and pompous Cariages, of
422   10,    2|             in this order: into the great Hall of the~ ~Castle, Ghinotto
423   10,    2|          thither immediatly, to the great joy of the Lord Abbot: and
424   10,    3|      Alphonso King of~ ~Spaine, was great and that done by the Lord
425   10,    3|           and that done by the Lord great in Abbot of~ ~Clugny, a
426   10,    3|             man, in~ ~expression of great liberality to another man,
427   10,    3|               living adjoyning to a great common rode-way, whereby
428   10,    3|            and over each of them in great golden~ ~carracters was
429   10,    3|         wearie~ ~(therefore) of his great charge and liberality: it
430   10,    3|          therein he should do him a great kindnesse:~ ~albeit (if
431   10,    4|            IS, THE OCCASION OF MANY GREAT AND WORTHY COURTESIES~ ~ ~ ~
432   10,    4|           the City) because she was great with child,; and~ ~somewhat
433   10,    4|           to his Mother, a woman of great wisdome~ ~and vertue, who
434   10,    4|        there made preparation for a great and solemne feast, appointing
435   10,    4|           the~ ~Knight; that he had great reason to affect her: And
436   10,    4|           to be~ ~dumbe, which were great pitty, if it should be so.
437   10,    5|             Gilberto, a man of very great fame and merite.~ ~ This
438   10,    5|             Gradense; a man of very great spirit, bountifull,~ ~active
439   10,    5|           binding himselfe to pay a great~ ~summe of mony, upon performance
440   10,    5|           thinke convenient for his great bounty~ ~towards me, accounting
441   10,    5|          Lady, hee presently saide. Great~ ~jupiter strike me dead
442   10,    6|             with all his family and great store of wealth, woulde
443   10,    6|           whereof,~ ~because he had great plenty of water: according
444   10,    6|            as they quickly caught~ ~great store of Fish, to the Kings
445   10,    6|             occasions, he fell into great familiarity with~ ~Signior
446   10,    6|             Signior Neri, for the~ ~great kindnesse he had shewne
447   10,    6|          but I maintaine it~ ~to be great, and more then great, if
448   10,    6|             be great, and more then great, if we say, that a King,
449   10,    7|          end of her Novell, and the great~ ~magnificence of King Charles
450   10,    7|         little wonder at the Maides great spirit, and~ ~her desperate
451   10,    7|                   With heaved hands Great Love, I call to thee,~ ~
452   10,    7|          life a while:~ ~ Grant it (great love) mine anguish to beguile.~ ~
453   10,    7|          life a while:~ ~ Grant it (great love) mine anguish to beguile.~ ~
454   10,    7|          life a while,~ ~ Grant it (great love) mine anguish to beguffe.~ ~ ~ ~
455   10,    7|            world would sustaine~ ~a great maine and imperfection,
456   10,    7|            could, thus she replyed. Great King, by opposing my feeble~ ~
457   10,    7|             the King, was reputed a great honour to the Apothecary
458   10,    7|             to us, calleth~ ~for as great honour from us to you; in
459   10,    7|             else from you,~ ~for so great favour, but only one kisse,
460   10,    7|            and Calatabelotta, two~ ~great territories abounding in
461   10,    8|       seeing thy liberality~ ~is so great, as it surmounteth all reason
462   10,    8|             accept thee as my wife: great~ ~scandall would arise thereby,
463   10,    8|           those of Gisippus,~ ~made great complaints to the Senate,
464   10,    8|            was.~ ~ This then is the great evill, the great offence,
465   10,    8|             is the great evill, the great offence, and the great~ ~
466   10,    8|          the great offence, and the great~ ~injurie committed by my
467   10,    8|           and~ ~welcommed with very great honour.~ ~ Gisippus remaining
468   10,    8|             the Romanes, as being a great~ ~Commander and a Senator:
469   10,    8|          then, to covet and procure great multitudes of~ ~kinred,
470   10,    9|           THEM~ ~ ~ ~ Saladine, the great Soldan of Babylon, in the
471   10,    9|            of him, and did him many great honours. Afterward, Thorello~ ~
472   10,    9|          her Novell, is not without great reason, to see it so~ ~slenderly
473   10,    9|     concerning a magnificent act of great Saladine: to the~ ~end,
474   10,    9|         that his guests were men of great merit, and worthy of~ ~much
475   10,    9|           Citizen, and no Prince or great Lord. Dinner~ ~being ended,
476   10,    9|            having received hir with great~ ~reverence, they seated
477   10,    9|          Horsse) accompanied them a great distance from~ ~the Citie,
478   10,    9|             passage, and wonderfull great preparations, in all places
479   10,    9|             woman,~ ~beautifull, of great parentage, and no way thereto
480   10,    9|              but divers and sundrie great Lords and~ ~Gentlemen (if
481   10,    9|          man of very honourable and great esteeme, in which respect~ ~(
482   10,    9|         kinred and hers: procured a great and grievous~ ~mourning
483   10,    9|            be best accomplished.~ ~ Great Saladine (answered Thorella)
484   10,    9|             the same evening in the great Hall of his Pallace,~ ~commanded
485   10,    9|            strengthen him after his great~ ~weaknes: he drank it off,
486   10,    9|           side of them, hee set two great Basons of pure Gold, full
487   10,    9|            in honor sent her~ ~from great Saladine. In which triumphant
488   10,   10|            but Kings, Soldanes, and great~ ~Potentates, not in favour
489   10,   10|        Marquesse, not any matter of great~ ~magnificence, but rather
490   10,   10|            then I begin.~ ~ It it a great while since, when among
491   10,   10|           his~ ~conditions, and how great the number is of them, who
492   10,   10|        short, of~ ~discerning those great and precious vertues, veiled
493   10,   10|          have beene Noblemen,~ ~and great Lords in this Country, thou
494   10,   10|           women, and thus answered. Great Marquesse, I never was so
495   10,   10|             about her necke, to the great~ ~griefe and mourning of
496   10,   10|             done; sustayning with a great and~ ~unconquerable spirit,
497   10,   10|     Countrey, to be present at so~ ~great a Feast: when the marriage
498   10,   10|              and comming~ ~into the great Hall, where the tables were
499   10, Song|        Truly Madam, you may do us a great courtesie, to~ ~expresse
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