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  1  Ind      |           rehearsed extremities of life, there were other~ ~of a
  2  Ind      |    infinites also past out of this life,~ ~not having any witnesse,
  3  Ind      |           in censuring commendable life) any way to impaire the~ ~
  4  Ind      |           conserve, and defend her life so long as shee can; and~ ~
  5  Ind      |           Or do we~ ~beleeve, that life is linked to our bodies
  6    1,    1|             And having (during his life~ ~time) bene a very bad
  7    1,    1|            so good and commendable life; that,~ ~being a Notarie,
  8    1,    1|             who very well knew his life and~ ~behaviour) he perfectly
  9    1,    1|         and having lived all~ ~his life time very disorderly, fell
 10    1,    1|            the whole current of my life; that now I intend one action
 11    1,    1|           of good and sanctified~ ~life, all the Citizens held him
 12    1,    1|         had bin shrived in all his life time) thus~ ~replied.~ ~
 13    1,    1|        then, to sustaine mine owne life,~ ~and to helpe the poore
 14    1,    1|         Lord arose~ ~from death to life. But (quoth the Confessor)
 15    1,    1|            rare holinesse of~ ~his life; his fastes, his virginity,
 16    1,    1|         devotion, and integrity of life, maintained~ ~constantly
 17    1,    2|        illumined by their light of life, may beleeve with the stronger~ ~
 18    1,    2|      consider on the course of his life and manners, and likewise
 19    1,    2|    observed the maner of the Popes life, of the~ ~Cardinals, Prelates,
 20    1,    2|           worke, example of honest life, or any good thing else
 21    1,    2|          and led a very~ ~vertuous life.~ ~
 22    1,    6|           and so possesse eternall life; which saying, he kept~ ~
 23    1,    7|          like Fathers)~ ~disordred life, or ill actions in any,
 24    1,    9|     reverence~ ~to him that giveth life to all things, and in hope
 25    1,    9|            forme of our intended~ ~life, nor to be guided by mine
 26    2,    1|          be of good and sanctified life. In which regard (whether~ ~
 27    2,    1|             as meaning to leave no life in him: which Stechio~ ~
 28    2,    1|          and~ ~put in perill of my life.~ ~ While matters proceeded
 29    2,    2|       Theeves, men~ ~of most badde life and conversation; yet he
 30    2,    2|       beene restored from death to life. Then the Lady sent him
 31    2,    2|            with lewd and luxurious life, far unfit for a Lady of
 32    2,    2|           gracious preserver of my life, and I no way able to returne
 33    2,    3|          but poverty and misery of life for ever. As for honest~ ~
 34    2,    3|          he was in danger of his~ ~life; without any further deferring,
 35    2,    3|          of~ ~loyall and unstained life, lewd and dishonest desires
 36    2,    4|          Barke, but endangered his life with their~ ~Darts and Arrowes.
 37    2,    4|             desirous to~ ~save his life, if possibly it might be,
 38    2,    4|           under God) had saved his life. The Chest seemed of~ ~such
 39    2,    4|          of the Sea, and saved his life in a danger so dreadfull.
 40    2,    5|         never so beaten in all thy life, like a~ ~drunken slave
 41    2,    5|              thou art weary of thy life: Be gone therefore, and
 42    2,    5|         that ever I felt in all my life. So, lifting~ ~up the Lanthorn,
 43    2,    5|         money, thou hadst lost thy life likewise. But~ ~teares and
 44    2,    5|         and~ ~doubtlesse there his life had perished. Being come
 45    2,    6|            it was done. What their life now was in captivity and~ ~
 46    2,    6|     particularly of all his passed life, and finding (by most manifest~ ~
 47    2,    6|            deerer then mine owne~ ~life; and rendering it unto me
 48    2,    6|             tydings concerning the life and good estate of Henry
 49    2,    7|   possessions, have bereft them of life, being their kinde and~ ~
 50    2,    7|   lingering~ ~lamentable estate of life, as death were a thousand
 51    2,    7|          all hope of escaping with life. Neverthelesse, as men most
 52    2,    7|           weapons: but~ ~safety of life so far prevayled, that what
 53    2,    7|          be willing to loose his~ ~life: for I intend not to rob
 54    2,    7|           latest comfort in this~ ~life, I shall expire and finish
 55    2,    7|            he departed out of this life, and they gave him~ ~verie
 56    2,    7|      rather then to~ ~leade such a life as I have done; and I thinke
 57    2,    7|            what the course of your life hath bene:~ ~perhaps, I
 58    2,    7|            recovered from death to life, certaine Pezants of the~ ~
 59    2,    7|         abide in that condition of life, or to~ ~returne home againe
 60    2,    7|           honesty and integrity of life, as also the unspotted vertue~ ~
 61    2,    8|         the longing comforts of my life, be abridged by thy base~ ~
 62    2,    8|            you have respect of his life, you know (in this~ ~case)
 63    2,    8|           remedy to preserve~ ~his life: but yet it was no meane
 64    2,    8|            and~ ~hazarded both thy life and ours, it commeth so
 65    2,    8|         that have~ ~indangered thy life by this long lingering sicknesse.
 66    2,    8|            as dearely as mine owne life. Set~ ~therefore aside this
 67    2,    8|          you onely may~ ~secure my life.~ ~ His Mother, desirous
 68    2,    8|        Mother) that the date of my life is very short. The Lady
 69    2,    8|           more pleasing kinde~ ~of life; because it is farre unfit,
 70    2,    8| preservation of their~ ~onely sons life, to match him farre inferiour
 71    2,    8|    determination, to lead a loving life with his Gianetta.~ ~ Let
 72    2,    8|          of the other limbe of his life, his deerely~ ~affected
 73    2,    8|           but the Queene left this life, and was most~ ~royally
 74    2,    9|         years space~ ~(yea all his life time) out of his house;
 75    2,    9|            sweare to thee, by that life~ ~which I enjoy but by thy
 76    2,    9|          truth, upon perill of his life,~ ~by what meanes he won
 77    2,    9|          praises, he commended the life, constancy,~ ~condition
 78    2,   10|       manner.~ ~Heart of my heart, life of my life, the sweetest
 79    2,   10|            of my heart, life of my life, the sweetest hope that
 80    2,   10|           loves thee~ ~as his owne life? Alas, my fairest hope,
 81    2,   10|           him, who died to give us life,~ ~and endured his bitter
 82    3,    1|         Nuns, vowed to chastity of life; out~ ~of whose number,
 83    3,    2|          fearing~ ~to forfelte his life by delay, when his amorous
 84    3,    2|        time~ ~after, to hazard his life in the like action, under
 85    3,    3|           to leade a sanctimonious life, and was reported to~ ~be
 86    3,    3|       affected as deerely as his~ ~life, for proofe whereof, there
 87    3,    5|        impayre, so long as I enjoy life or motion; yea, and I dare~ ~
 88    3,    5|       onely depends my happinesse, life, and absolute comfort, and
 89    3,    5|       milde mercy, and spill~ ~not life, when you may save it.~ ~
 90    3,    6|        more dearely then mine owne life, finde~ ~now (to my hearts
 91    3,    6|           you~ ~cried out all your life time. If you exclaime, or
 92    3,    6|        after. Wherefore, joy of my life, doe not in one moment,
 93    3,    7|            any time (since then)~ ~life hath allowed me one merry
 94    3,    7|         that hee might destroy his life~ ~by his owne hands. In
 95    3,    7|   Theobaldo, is in perill of~ ~his life, and you a partaker of his
 96    3,    7|              more recalled to this life; and therefore, I know not
 97    3,    7|   dangerous perill of your fathers life, I am to make knowne an~ ~
 98    3,    7|          as you~ ~tender your owne life) from ever being revealed
 99    3,    7|           the Pilgrims sanctity or life,~ ~as thinking him none
100    3,    7|         unfained (if I escape with life) I will truly keepe promise
101    3,    7|        over, that if mercy give me life, and cleere me from~ ~this
102    3,    7|        hatefull against the mans~ ~life, because he would luxuriouslie
103    3,    8|         hee~ ~should be, raised to life againe; he was made to keepe
104    3,    8|         the beatitudes of eternall life, as also the~ ~most holy
105    3,    8|       since departed out of this~ ~life, in mervailous civill and
106    3,    8|          which leadeth to eternall life. But when I~ ~consider with
107    3,    8|          bring him backe againe to life, in as able manner as ever
108    3,    8|        Ferando being~ ~returned to life againe, you must repossesse
109    3,    8|           any action concerning my life~ ~and welfare. In any such
110    3,    8|     concerning the~ ~sanctimonious life of the Abbot, a meere miracle
111    3,    8|          and quite deprived him of life indeede. At~ ~length, when
112    3,    8|           so~ ~villainously in thy life time? Then did he whip him
113    3,    8|          thy departure out of this life, hath lived in continuall~ ~
114    3,    8|     Ferando. Thus his returne to~ ~life againe, and the daily wonders
115    3,    9|          me, without any perill of life, or any the least paine
116    3,    9|        beene the meanes to save my life.~ ~Well did the Count know
117    3,    9|      mayest thou lead a more Noble life, then with the greatest~ ~
118    3,    9|           him deerly as her owne~ ~life. When all was done, the
119    3,    9|         substance,~ ~yet of honest life, vertuous, and never taxed
120    4,    1|            that during~ ~the whole life time of this Prince, he
121    4,    1|            and honest integrity of life; and this beleefe~ ~could
122    4,    1|          will be to me, so long as life~ ~remaineth in this poore,
123    4,    1|     perswasions, she would lay her life downe at the stake. For~ ~
124    4,    1|          also so little benefit of life, that I am yet in the~ ~
125    4,    1|            the utmost period of my life) I have evermore found my
126    4,    1|          so deare unto thee in thy life time.~ ~And because thou
127    4,    1|             what you so cruelly in life denied us.~ ~ Extremity
128    4,    1|            all sense forsooke her, life leaving her~ ~body breathlesse.
129    4,    2|          in the whole course of my life, I had tasted the~ ~least
130    4,    2|            of most lewd and wicked life; named, Bertho de la messa,
131    4,    2|          passages of his dissolute life, and he~ ~pretended to be
132    4,    2|          austere and sanctimonious life, highly commending penance
133    4,    2|         thee, that~ ~all thy whole life time shall be most hatefull
134    4,    2|        Lovers departed out of this life,~ ~walke among the beds
135    4,    2|        intreated, to save both his life and reputation, telling
136    4,    2|          Ladies) when~ ~licentious life must be clouded with a cloake
137    4,    3|           the meanes of saving her life. Afterward, her owne~ ~Friend
138    4,    3|          with the Duke, that~ ~her life might not perish by fire,
139    4,    3|           safetie of her Sisters~ ~life, hee tooke hold on this
140    4,    3|           so desirous of Ninettaes life: it lay in her~ ~power to
141    4,    3|              the losse of her owne life, or her sisters, concluded
142    4,    3|          be assured of her sisters life, without~ ~any blemish to
143    4,    3|         for preserving her Sisters life, and disappointing the Duke~ ~
144    4,    3|          now quench this but the~ ~life of poore Magdalena, suddenly
145    4,    3|         prepared for you, and your life being secured, it is all~ ~
146    4,    4|          what~ ~became of his owne life, having lost her for whom
147    4,    4|            Prince, not sparing the life of any~ ~one, that durst
148    4,    6|          that in matters of good~ ~life, and performing honest actions;
149    4,    6|         him as deerely as her owne life: you that have felt loves~ ~
150    4,    6|            likely meanes to reduce life: she found all~ ~her labour
151    4,    6|           me of my Love, mine owne life must~ ~needs be hatefull
152    4,    6|          kind company here in this life, so shall~ ~you never more
153    4,    6|     challenge the~ ~forfeite of my life, then (good Father) I free
154    4,    8|    departed out of this~ ~wretched life to a better. The Tutors
155    4,    8| instruction~ ~in civill courses of life; rather then by continuing
156    4,    8|            happinesse of peacefull life,~ ~which hitherto we have
157    4,    8|            cold, as not having any life remaining in him, which~ ~
158    4,    8|           she dearly~ ~affected in life. And being come to the Church,
159    4,    8|           of~ ~greefe finished his life, so did it hers in the same
160    4,    8|        poore couple, whom love (in life) could not joyne together,
161    4,    9|          Sir (quoth she) in all my life I was never better~ ~pleased.
162    4,   10|            beboshed and disordered life, as~ ~neither Kindred or
163    4,   10|           a more settled course of life;~ ~which counsell, that
164    4,   10|       known to be of a most wicked life, a~ ~shame to all his friends
165    4,   10|           man so strangely come to life againe,~ ~knew not well
166    4,   10|            and to make an end of a life so contemptible) he had
167    4,   10|       dissolute~ ~behaviour of his life: yet it could not quaile
168    4,   10|       safety of~ ~poore Ruggieroes life. Mistresse Doctor, affecting
169    4,   10|           did, and willing to save life~ ~rather then suffer it
170    4,   10|            in danger to lose~ ~his life, and all my hopes are utterly
171    4,   10|             purpose to escape with life; went thither before him
172    4, Song|            end be made of Love and Life.~ ~ My teares do, etc.~ ~ ~ ~
173    4, Song|               To finish greefe and life in one blest houre.~ ~ For,
174    5,    1|          be brought to civility of life, understanding of Letters,
175    5,    1|         one.~ ~ This lost kinde of life in him, was no meane burthen
176    5,    1|     alteration, from the course of life, which contented~ ~him so
177    5,    1|            her I will, or loose my life in~ ~the adventure. Being
178    5,    1|           losing both his love and life together. His~ ~friends
179    5,    1|         death,~ ~but also that her life must perish for company.~ ~
180    5,    1|              Jewell of my love and life. For the prevention of two
181    5,    2|         precious estimation of her life, and~ ~without any further
182    5,    3|          feare of loosing his owne life, but also~ ~despayred much
183    5,    3|        that she should escape with life.~ ~ Now, concerning poore
184    5,    3|            deare Pedro, of whose~ ~life and welfare she greatly
185    5,    3|           out of the Forest with~ ~life. But day-light drawing on
186    5,    3|          hath happily escaped. Her life was~ ~endangered by a sharpe
187    5,    4|       Ladder of Ropes, whereby his life is~ ~forfeited to the Law,
188    5,    4|         husband, or~ ~yeelding his life up to the Law, which surely
189    5,    5|       Cremona, out of this mortall life, left a Daughter of~ ~his,
190    5,    5|        then departed~ ~out of this life. It came to passe, that
191    5,    6|          her as dearly as his owne life, and she was as~ ~intimately
192    5,    6|          honour and love beyond my life) and miserably bound~ ~backe
193    5,    6|           the fire shall finish my life, by looking on her, my soule~ ~
194    5,    7|      INSULTING TYRANTS OVER HUMANE LIFE.~ ~ ~ ~ Theodoro falling
195    5,    7|         Pedro fearing to loose his life therefore,~ ~determined
196    5,    7|        lesse respecting~ ~her owne life, then she did the childes;
197    5,    8|            much more~ ~magnificent life, then ever hee had done
198    5,    8|       powers, that she re-assumeth life againe, even as if she had
199    5,    9|          WHEREIN IS FIGURED TO THE LIFE, THE NOTABLE KINDNESSE AND~ ~
200    5,    9|           thereon; he saw the City life could no longer containe
201    5,    9|           as little, or no hope of life remained: he made his last~ ~
202    5,    9|            so departed out of this life. Madam Giana~ ~being thus
203    5,    9|          thereon, but his losse of life. Wherefore I beseech you,
204    5,    9|           your~ ~meanes, my Sonnes life is saved, and we both shall
205    5,    9|          contentment, which all my life time I have desired to doe.~ ~
206    5,   10|           born to such severity of life. My youth~ ~shall be blasted
207    5,   10|         admiring her~ ~sanctity of life, even as if shee were divinely
208    5,   10|        greater an~ ~errour in this life, then the losse of time,
209    5, Song|          The lacke of these, being life and motion giving:~ ~ Are
210    6,    2|            wretched~ ~condition of life. As we may observe by Cistio,
211    6,    4|           thee remember it all thy life time. The~ ~contention ceassing
212    6,    7|       young Gallant, as her owne~ ~life, because hee was most compleate
213    6,    7|        both: but feare of his owne life~ ~caused his forbearance,
214    6,    9|           we have heere~ ~(in this life) other habitations and abidings;
215    6,   10|            a good Pastor of holy~ ~life in outward appearance, and
216    6,   10|            Crownes, then all his~ ~life time would serve him to
217    6,   10|           with the conservation of life? Therefore, if your honesties~ ~
218    7,    1|         the~ ~most sanctimonius in life of them all; perceiving
219    7,    2|        heere at home a miserable~ ~life, not daring once to dreame
220    7,    3|       found to be in that kinde of life, yet he determined to~ ~
221    7,    3|      reputed meerely for Saints in life, are rather much more vile
222    7,    3| appertaining to a modest religious life. For, concerning~ ~the plaine,
223    7,    3|     belonging to a~ ~sanctimonious life; as long watching, praying,
224    7,    3|            course of any Religious life. Agnesia, biting~ ~the lip
225    7,    3|            childe, for he had~ ~no life left in him.~ ~ Credulano,
226    7,    4|           good Cheta, and save thy life: she stood~ ~laughing in
227    7,    4|           time, that thy course of life should bee~ ~publiquely
228    7,    5|      whatsoever. By means whereof, life seemed most~ ~tedious and
229    7,    5|        finish her husbands loathed life before.~ ~ Walking from
230    7,    5|           she lead a very hatefull life.~ ~Neverthelesse (quoth
231    7,    6|           your owne honour, and my life, doe but as I advise you.
232    7,    6|         Gods sake helpe to save my life, or else~ ~I shall be slaine
233    7,    6|          this~ ~time, of saving my life She hath done like a good
234    7,    8|     delighted (as it is the usuall life~ ~of a Merchant) to be often
235    7,    8|            your selfe? In all your life time you did never~ ~strike
236    7,    8|     qualities, and what a wretched life I leade~ ~with him, which
237    7,    8|        over, as long as he had any life left in~ ~him. And were
238    7,    8|          to it (on~ ~perill of thy life) that we have no more such
239    7,    8|        like one that had~ ~neither life or motion, not knowing (
240    7,    9|             And~ ~therefore, if my life and well-fare be respected
241    7,    9|         thou canst not escape with life, beside~ ~open shame and
242    7,    9|            wherein I dare gadge my life to~ ~the contrary. Concerning
243    7,   10|        were~ ~departed out of this life, and found their equall
244    7,   10|          when you remained in this life) I knew you to be very~ ~
245    7,   10|      offences of frailty in this~ ~life, and chiefly with Gossips:
246    7, Song|     COMPANY~ ~ ~ ~ Wearisome is my life to me,~ ~ Because I cannot
247    7, Song|         painde.~ ~ Wearisome is my life to me, etc,~ ~ ~ ~ I cannot
248    7, Song|          shall.~ ~ Wearisome is my life to me, etc.~ ~ ~ ~ Tell
249    7, Song|          place?~ ~ Wearisome is my life to me, etc.~ ~ ~ ~ Me thinkes
250    7, Song|            day.~ ~ Wearisome is my life to me,~ ~ Because I cannot
251    8,    4|         Which was such a wearisome life~ ~to him, that he became (
252    8,    6|       wonderfull, that once in thy life time thou canst bee~ ~wise.
253    8,    6|         for which I am weary of my life, because I dare not go home
254    8,    7|         and to the perill of~ ~her life. Let Me then assure you,
255    8,    7|       sought the utter ruine of my life, in recompence~ ~of the
256    8,    7|         what peril she brought his life, by such an unnatural nightwalke:~ ~
257    8,    7|           value equal with my owne Life.~ ~ Reniero, who perfectly
258    8,    7|         carriage, and~ ~honesty of life, heeretofore free from a
259    8,    7|       monstrous cruelty to me: thy life, if I tooke it from~ ~thee,
260    8,    7|         thou didst terme me: whose life may~ ~hereafter be more
261    8,    7|         fortune be so~ ~faire) thy life and lothsome qualities ending
262    8,    7|      causing her to curse her owne life, hir amorous~ ~friend, but (
263    8,    7|           my loathed and wearisome life, for I desire it beyond~ ~
264    8,    7|     despairing~ ~of escaping (with life)~ ~ from the heates violence;
265    8,    7|           in daily dispayre of her life; beside other~ ~accidents
266    8,    9|          filth, where thy fouler~ ~life did justly cast thee. Behold
267    8,   10|         the whole employment of my life, to be onely yours~ ~in
268    8,   10|      flying reports concerning her life, yet hee would not credite~ ~
269    8,   10|          him almost weary of~ ~his life, and much to bemoane his
270    8,   10|         love dearer then mine owne life, and am most joyfull of
271    8,   10|            he saide. Comfort of my life, Full~ ~well I know that
272    9,    1|          it should so happen) my~ ~life is lost, and yet the occasion
273    9,    1|            against mee, to draw my life in danger, and further his
274    9,    1|             as on him that (in his life time) had offended them?
275    9,    2|        contaminated by her~ ~lewde life and actions, the sanctity
276    9,    4|        reason have I to spoyle thy life (thou traiterous Villaine)~ ~
277    9,    5|           as~ ~also her quality of life, which Phillippo had acquainted
278    9,    5|         though he (rather then his life) would gladly have had~ ~
279    9,    7|            and wife, but rather my life hath bene most tedious to
280    9,    7|         hast away to save his owne life. Notwithstanding the harme
281    9,   10|        following the same Trade of life as~ ~he did, carrying his
282   10,    1|           the quality belonging to life, and the customes~ ~observed
283   10,    2|       recounted, the course of his life since hee saw them; and
284   10,    2|         but onely to save his owne life and honour knowing~ ~himselfe
285   10,    2|          thee to so base a kind of life, and did not~ ~blesse thee
286   10,    3|            Mithridanes envying the life and liberality of Nathan,
287   10,    3|         him how to take away~ ~his life: Confounded with shame,
288   10,    3|         disposed to give him his~ ~life, which had bin lost, if
289   10,    3|          prodigally to bestow your life~ ~on me, which I have no
290   10,    3|            not to bereave me of my life, for any hatred thou barest
291   10,    3|           fortune to come for my~ ~life, which when I saw thee so
292   10,    3|        thing so~ ~precious as your life is, or once to have so vile
293   10,    4|            to give away his~ ~owne life, and to his hatefull enemy.
294   10,    4|            injuries, and lay downe life it selfe, honour and renowne~ ~(
295   10,    4|        operation, as~ ~no signe of life appeared remained in her,
296   10,    4|          had~ ~some small sense of life remaining in her, whereof
297   10,    4|         back againe wrongwandering life. Then fetching a~ ~vehement
298   10,    4|         reducing you from death to life: you shal find no other~ ~
299   10,    4|           meanes of preserving her life: and more~ ~honestly she
300   10,    6|          passions, the rest of his life time, and dyed as an~ ~honourable
301   10,    7|            his sight would lend me life a while:~ ~ Grant it (great
302   10,    7|            his sight would lend me life a while:~ ~ Grant it (great
303   10,    7|        mercies sight would lend me life a while,~ ~ Grant it (great
304   10,    7|           the seisible~ ~motion of life in it, where the King being (
305   10,    8|         Titus, grew~ ~weary of his life, and confessed that he had
306   10,    8|         and~ ~desiring to save the life of Gisippus, charged himself
307   10,    8|            longer in this wretched life, considering, that~ ~Fortune
308   10,    8|            to me, then a~ ~loathed life, with remembrance of my
309   10,    8|            with himselfe; that the life of his friend ought to be~ ~
310   10,    8|       valued equall with mine owne life.~ ~ Titus hearing this answer
311   10,    8|            thee, yet because thy~ ~life is deare to me, in regard
312   10,    8|          but also doe hold my very life of~ ~thee. Grant then you
313   10,    8|     departed out of this~ ~mortall life, and letters came to Athens,
314   10,    8|          Gisippus affected more my life,~ ~then your benevolence,
315   10,    8|            yea, more than his owne life, both entirely~ ~loved and
316   10,    8|      violent hand on himselfe; for life being very loathsome~ ~to
317   10,    8|            the questioning for his life, and before the Tribunall
318   10,    8|         taken for safetie of~ ~his life, but by accusing himselfe,
319   10,    8|             Art thou wearie of thy life? Thou chargest thy selfe~ ~
320   10,    8|          late for the safety of my life.~ ~Titus on the other side,
321   10,    8|         Ambustus, a fellow of lewd life,~ ~and utterly out of hopes,
322   10,    9|           he should be spared with life, and the warre (which he
323   10,    9|          you~ ~leave me; but if my life surmount the fortitude of
324   10,    9|          you for certainty, either life or death:~ ~I will live
325   10,    9|           not any man escaped with life, onely my selfe~ ~excepted,
326   10,    9|          to be sent thither of his life, his Wife would~ ~questionlesse
327   10,    9|            upon the perill of your life, to be~ ~at Pavia againe
328   10,   10|              miserable prooves the life of man, who is bound to
329   10,   10|        should lead~ ~a comfortable life. And therefore without any
330   10,   10|              of her rare course of life, devotion, charity, and
331   10,   10|          intend to loose mine owne life, I must accomplish what
332   10,   10|        them as dearely as her owne life:~ ~rash opinion might have
333   10,   10|            something should~ ~take life, which might be converted
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