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 1  Ind      |         oftentimes for gaine, they lost their owne lives.~ ~ In
 2    1,    2|            within himselfe; I have lost all the paines which I did
 3    1,    2|              labour not altogither lost, in regard he bestowed it
 4    1,    4|         alone into the Chamber, he lost a~ ~great part of his former
 5    1,    6|         ill imployed and utterly~ ~lost, as if it were throwne into
 6    2,    1|         one of them saide, that he lost his purse~ ~eight dayes
 7    2,    3|             them, all credit being lost with them, and no repayment
 8    2,    5|       memory since,~ ~hath utterly lost it. But truely, it is no
 9    2,    5|         quoth he) how soone have I lost a~ ~Sister, and five hundred
10    2,    5|        poore man, albeit thou hast lost thy money, yet~ ~art thou
11    2,    5|         with thy money, thou hadst lost thy life likewise. But~ ~
12    2,    6|          with two Goates,~ ~having lost her two Sonnes, and thence
13    2,    6|        perceyved, that now she had lost her children, as~ ~formerly
14    2,    6|          helpe the recovery of her lost powers; wherefore her spirits~ ~
15    2,    6|       backe some part of my former lost hopes: and with these~ ~
16    2,    7|            to bee satisfied, hee~ ~lost both himselfe and his best
17    2,    8|        lesse welcom to him, having lost his deere Love, and second~ ~
18    2,    8|           they were left by him as lost and forlorne.~ ~ Eighteene
19    2,    9|     Merchant,~ ~named Ambroginolo, lost a great part of his goods.
20    2,    9|         his feete, in a moment she lost her~ ~manly voyce and demeanour,
21    2,   10|        done since the~ ~day when I lost you: but by this your uncivil
22    2,   10|        never saw merry day since I lost thee.~ ~ Sir (quoth she)
23    3,  Ind|          SOMETHING, SUPPOSED TO BE LOST~ ~ ~ ~ The morning put on
24    3,    4|          but it will bee utterly~ ~lost if thou fayle in the least
25    3,    5|           nor Tourneying, nor many lost mornings and evenings, nor~ ~
26    3,    7|          his Love, after hee had~ ~lost it.~ ~ Sometime there dwelt
27    3,    7|         her, which he had formerly lost, without any offence in
28    3,    9|          in minde, because she had lost~ ~the company of Bertrand.~ ~
29    4,    4|           of his owne life, having lost her for whom he onely desired~ ~
30    4,    6|        dismall~ ~deed, as you have lost his kind company here in
31    4,    6|           in me, because thou hast lost him before I knew him.~ ~
32    4,    7|         excepted: that as Andreana lost her lover in a~ ~Garden,
33    4,    7|           these two poore Lovers~ ~lost their lives. For, just in
34    4,   10|        rather then suffer it to be lost without just cause, she
35    4,   10|           all my hopes are utterly lost. Let me entreat you~ ~therefore (
36    4, Song|    Although I found my liberty was lost.~ ~ But now mine error I
37    5,    1|       termed by every one.~ ~ This lost kinde of life in him, was
38    5,    1|          unfortunate lover Chynon, lost his faire Iphigenia, having~ ~
39    5,    1|           a matchlesse beauty, and lost~ ~her againe in so short
40    5,    2|              thought to be dead or lost in her owne Fathers house;
41    5,    2|          since I~ ~heard thou wast lost, and never any tydings knowne
42    5,    3|              replied; that she had lost her company in the Forrest,
43    5,    5|     dismall~ ~bloody combustion, I lost a little Daughter, about
44    5,    6|        Calabria, searching for his lost~ ~Love in every angle: at
45    5,    7|            same Sonne which he had lost;~ ~wherefore, the teares
46    5,    8|           that Anastasio had soone lost all sight of them, and could
47    5,   10|            spirit; how much time I lost without any profit. And
48    5,   10|      without any profit. And yet I lost not~ ~all, for I would not
49    5, Song|   attention?~ ~ Thoughts, have you lost your quiet silent sleeping.~ ~
50    6,  Ind|            having past the heaven, lost her bright splendor, by
51    6,    4|         that meanes you might have lost your Supper.~ ~ This sodaine
52    7,    3|   religious paynes, we had utterly lost our childe, for he had~ ~
53    7,    4|            thy labour is~ ~meerely lost, because heere is no entrance
54    7,    5|           first, because hee had~ ~lost his supper: next, having
55    7,    5|          wisedome~ ~became utterly lost, when thou felst into that
56    7,    5|            jealousie) thou hast so lost thine understanding, that~ ~
57    7,    8|            her like a man that had lost his Senses: for~ ~well he
58    7,   10|         thou hadst beene~ ~utterly lost. Those things (quoth Tingoccio)
59    7,   10|       things (quoth Tingoccio) are lost, which cannot be~ ~recovered
60    7,   10|    recovered againe, and if I were lost, how could I then be heere
61    8,    2|           sweet Sir Simon, that he lost his wonted sprightly behaviour,~ ~
62    8,    2|           gowne (both~ ~well neere lost for lacke of repaiment)
63    8,    3|        which he imagined to have~ ~lost:) could not collect his
64    8,    3|         the wonderful~ ~stone, and lost it by his wives speaking
65    8,    7| perfections, and were (well-neere) lost in~ ~them beyond recovery:
66    8,    7|         over-rule the heart of her lost friend, as hee should bee
67    8,    7|          more, to recover my deare lost~ ~Lover againe, whom I value
68    8,    7|       honor and loved friend are~ ~lost for ever.~ ~ Having thus
69    8,    7|        recovering him whom you had lost; wherein~ ~you merit not
70    8,    7|               Now, concerning your lost lover, for whose sake you
71    9,    1|            so happen) my~ ~life is lost, and yet the occasion never
72    9,    1|           all my labour is utterly lost.~ ~ Perplexed with these
73    9,    4|            while, he had not onely lost his money, but all the~ ~
74    9,    4|          him also how much hee had lost at the Dice: Wherewith~ ~
75    9,    7|            ensue, there is nothing lost by shunning and avoiding
76   10,    3|          his~ ~life, which had bin lost, if the other would have
77   10,    8|           more~ ~afterward, til he lost both his feeding and sleepe,
78   10,    8|       other, and so she is utterly lost, without all possible meanes
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