Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |          make our retreate to our Country houses, wherewith all of
 2  Ind      |        find here.~ ~ And although Country people die, as well as heere
 3    1,    1|        see, how the people of the Country~ ~came thither on heapes,
 4    1,    4|          him.~ ~ There was in the Country of Lunigiana (which is not
 5    1,    5|       chiefest Gentlemen~ ~in the Country together, to take due order (
 6    1,    5|           all the Hennes that the Country~ ~affoorded, shee commaunded
 7    1,    5|       rather, because he knew the Country~ ~to be of such quality,
 8    1,    5|       Hennes onely bred~ ~in this Country, and no Cockes? The Lady
 9    1,    8|          moane to the King of the Country. Whereupon it was tolde
10    2,    3|    travaile, they came to a small Country Village, which~ ~affoorded
11    2,    3|    inferior to few in my~ ~native country) would marry me to the King
12    2,    6|   imprisoned. Afterward, when the country of Sicely~ ~rebelled against
13    2,    7|  afterward, to~ ~be seene in that Country any more.~ ~ The Dutchesse
14    2,    7|        buriall, according to that Country custome. Which~ ~being done,
15    2,    7|      going before the King of the country, thus he spake~ ~to him.
16    2,    7|       whom I~ ~called unto in our Country language because I would
17    2,    8|          children, to forsake his country. The Lady being by nature~ ~
18    2,    8|         travailing thorough the~ ~Country with his sonne Perotto,
19    2,    8|       servant to an Earle of that Country, a Gentleman professing
20    2,    8|         mortalitie hapning in the Country, the~ ~greater part of the
21    2,    8|     Marshall and President of the country, lusty and in good~ ~health,
22    2,    9|           enter it, but rode to a Country house of his, standing about~ ~
23    2,    9|        rode~ ~merrily towards the Country house; divers things shee
24    2,    9|      desiring her to forsake that Country, and so left her to~ ~walke
25    2,    9|       remembrance of~ ~her native Country. At one especiall time among
26    2,   10|      himselfe at his house in the country, neere to the~ ~blacke Mountaine,
27    3,    1|         yong Hebrew pezant of the country, sturdy,~ ~strong and yet
28    3,    5|             is common through the Country.~ ~ I know (for my sake)
29    3,    6|     custome long observed in that Country) sporting~ ~along on the
30    3,    6|            and the custome of the Country, never disallowed such~ ~
31    3,    8|        came to passe, that a rich Country Franklin, named Ferando,~ ~
32    3,    8|           and the simple ignorant Country people, carrying no such~ ~
33    3,    9|             performed in his owne Country, reserving to himselfe what
34    3,    9|              After that the whole Country of Roussillion (by the policy
35    3,    9|     become a stranger to his owne Country: upon the~ ~returne of his
36    3,    9|         the cheefest men of the~ ~country, revealing unto them (in
37    3,    9|           and~ ~government of the Country, and signifying unto the
38    3,    9|          hers that dwelt in~ ~the Country, whereat the Count was much
39    4,    4|         shout, according to their Country manner,~ ~and commanding
40    4,    9|   Guardastagno, as also the whole Country of Provence, in regard of~ ~
41    5,    1|         exceeded all other of the Country in the goods of~ ~Fortune.
42    5,    1|          Farme of his owne~ ~in a Country Village, among his Peazants
43    5,    1|         any longer in the muddy~ ~Country. And albeit his Father was
44    5,    2|        such a barbarous unkinde~ ~Country, and not knowing what should
45    5,    5|            if I were in mine owne Country, as now I am in yours, I~ ~
46    6,    5|           of over-worn and ragged Country gray, as also two hoodes
47    6,    8|           some other parts of the country, which if shee found as~ ~
48    6,   10|          beside, that part of the country~ ~yeilded far more plentifull
49    6,   10|          the~ ~inhabitants of the Country generally, understoode little
50    6,   10|       simple men and women of the country, who had bin at morning~ ~
51    6,   10|          they any money in~ ~this Country, but such as is without
52    7,    1|       head towards Fiesola, and a Country Travailer~ ~passing by the
53    8,    2|           to tell you a tale of a Country mans wife, more~ ~to make
54    8,    2|      extraordinarily, and all the Country affoorded not such another~ ~
55    8,    6|         which continually haunt~ ~country houses, especially in such
56    8,    7|           in those parts~ ~of the Country, albeit they are so neere
57    8,    7|         fayre coole~ ~shades, and Country houses here and there dispersed;
58    8,    7|     perswading~ ~the poore simple Country people, that in a straunge
59    8,    9|       althogh he dwelt in a poore Country~ ~village, and by my mothers
60    9,    4|           taken by Pezants of the Country, clothed~ ~himselfe in his
61    9,    7| summer-house of his owne in~ ~the country, he dreamed one night, that
62   10,    1|           as~ ~to ride thorow the country, and in the company of Signior
63   10,    3|         remote parts, that in the Country of Cathaya, there lived
64   10,    9|       your acceptance of my poore Country house.~ ~But now this morning,
65   10,    9|        Signiour Thorello, I am by Country a Lombard, borne in a Citty~ ~
66   10,    9|          custome observed in my~ ~Country, that when any Stranger (
67   10,   10|           and great Lords in this Country, thou being the daughter
68   10,   10|           Grizelda, in her homely Country habite, humbled her selfe
69   10,   10|        home old Janiculo from his country drudgery, to~ ~live with
70   10,   10|          contrary, but that poore Country~ ~Cottages, may yeeld as
71   10,   10|        construction, and by~ ~our country demourance for so many dayes,
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