Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |    risen, accounting over much sleepe to be very~ ~hurtfull, they
 2    1,    4|        being newly arisen from sleepe, and~ ~walking softly about
 3    2,  Ind|      dancing, and then went to sleepe a while, from which being
 4    2,    3|     and my people, must gladly sleepe on the~ ~tables and benches:
 5    2,    3|     amorous~ ~desires, that no sleepe at all could enter his eyes,
 6    2,    3|       the~ ~night had bestowed sleepe on all the rest; with a
 7    2,    5| seeming as newly raised from~ ~sleepe, called to him, saying;
 8    2,    5|        of drinke then wit: goe sleepe, goe sleepe, and~ ~come
 9    2,    5|      then wit: goe sleepe, goe sleepe, and~ ~come againe to morrow:
10    2,    5|        man, and~ ~suffer us to sleepe I prythee. How now (quoth
11    2,    5|       man) be gone, and let us sleepe; if thou~ ~have any thing
12    2,    5|         as~ ~angry to have his sleepe disturbed: trembling and
13    2,    5|        night wilt not~ ~let us sleepe. And so hee clapt to the
14    2,    5|   falne, but~ ~quietly gone to sleepe in the house, that sleepe
15    2,    5|      sleepe in the house, that sleepe had beene thy last in~ ~
16    3,    1| Massetto~ ~immitating a Dogges sleepe, heard all this conspiracie
17    3,    1|        downe so~ ~carelesly to sleepe, that somthing was noted
18    3,    2|    place, who could not as yet sleepe, for joy~ ~of atchieved
19    3,    2|  refuge was, to make~ ~shew of sleepe, in expectation what the
20    3,    3|       past, me thought in~ ~my sleepe, that divers spirits of
21    3,    4|         wholly abstaining from sleepe,~ ~slumbering, or so much
22    3,    4|     either they walke in their sleepe, or being~ ~awake, talke
23    3,    8|    entrance them with a deadly sleepe, and deprive them~ ~of all
24    4,    1|        the houre of mens first sleepe, and~ ~according as he had
25    4,    5|   ghost appeared to her in her sleepe, and shewed her in what~ ~
26    4,    5|      she fell into a trance or sleepe; and dreamed, that the~ ~
27    4,    5|       she seemed to see in her sleepe, should~ ~carry any likelyhood
28    4,    6|      most~ ~evidently in their sleepe.~ ~ I meane not to commend
29    4,    8|       were soone overcome with sleepe, by reason of his painefull~ ~
30    4,    8|      and hearing her husband~ ~sleepe so soundly, that his snoring
31    4,    8|     forbeare a little while to sleepe, for heere is thy loyall
32    4,   10|      procure a kinde of a dead sleepe, and endure so long a space,
33    4,   10|     after he fell into a sound sleepe,~ ~according to the powerfull
34    4,   10|        thou art not allowed to sleepe here. Ruggiero being thus
35    4,   10|      And although his naturall sleepe was broken, and his senses
36    4,   10|           whereby finding me a sleepe, she was enforced to hide
37    4,   10|      to procure a dead seeming sleepe: And so related the whole~ ~
38    5,    1|       veiled~ ~over with sound sleepe, that kept them fast enclosed
39    5,    2|   brought her now into a sound sleepe,~ ~the woman gave many cals
40    5,    4|     woman? Cannot our Daughter sleepe, except she heare the~ ~
41    5,   10|        will to eate, then to~ ~sleepe, desired her to let him
42    6,  Ind|        and then some~ ~went to sleepe, others played at the Chesse,
43    6,    8|       bene newly awaked from~ ~sleepe, began in this manner.~ ~
44    7,  Ind|    when they were risen from~ ~sleepe, and the rest from their
45    7,    4|          had now more neede of sleepe, then drinke; getting him
46    7,    4|     not (as yet)~ ~capeable of sleepe, nor willing to sit alone
47    7,    5| casteth my Husband into a dead sleepe, and,~ ~understanding him
48    7,    8|       so that he~ ~never durst sleepe, untill she were by him
49    7,    8|    Simonida~ ~being in a sound sleepe, and Arriguccio waking,
50    8,    7|        gastly through lacke of sleepe: he lay downe on h bed,
51    8,    7| immediately after~ ~your first sleepe, seaven times you must bathe
52    8,    7|     After she had to her first sleepe (according to the Schollers~ ~
53    8,    7|  afterward laid him~ ~downe to sleepe.~ ~ In the meane while,
54    8,    9|   people are in their soundest sleepe, to stand upon one of those~ ~
55    9,    6|    layd them down to rest, but sleepe they could not, albeit~ ~
56    9,    6|     and Panuccio fearing, lest sleepe seazing on him, he might~ ~
57    9,    6|    darkenesse? If~ ~all should sleepe, yet I have courage sufficient
58    9,    6|      about the roome~ ~in your sleepe, dreaming of wonders in
59    9,    8|   whatsoever Talano saw in his sleepe, was not anie dreame, but
60   10,    8|      lost both his feeding and sleepe, so that through~ ~debility
61   10,    8|       at last he fell~ ~into a sleepe.~ ~ It fortuned that two
62   10,    9|       melancholly, as food and sleepe forsooke him, whereupon,
63   10, Song|      the world awaked out of~ ~sleepe, the Master of the Houshold
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