Day, Novell

 1    1,    1|      the presence of so great a Judge; but onely~ ~to himselfe,
 2    2,    1|         answeres.~ ~Whereat the Judge, waxing much displeased,
 3    2,    1|      downe to the~ ~ground, the Judge still demaunded of him,
 4    2,    1| whereupon hee thus spake to the Judge. My Lord, I am heere~ ~ready
 5    2,    1|     answers.~ ~ Well (quoth the Judge) thou requirest but reason;
 6    2,    1|       in his shirt~ ~before the Judge, very shrewdly shaken with
 7    2,    1|      quaking pitifully. For the Judge would not heare any thing
 8    2,    4|        a man, not being able to judge, whether he were~ ~alive,
 9    2,    8|   censure of a just and upright judge, a fault of~ ~divers conditions (
10    2,   10| embraced the Christian faith) a judge better~ ~stored with wisedome
11    2,   10|      mutuall contentment.~ ~The Judge being married, and the Bride
12    2,   10|   continuall requests, that the Judge~ ~failing in plea for his
13    2,   10|        the Sea, then either the Judge was~ ~willing they should
14    2,   10|     away with him. When Signior Judge~ ~had seene this theft (
15    2,   10|         arrive at Monaco,~ ~the Judge and his Law cases were almost
16    2,   10|       report had acquainted the Judge, where~ ~and how his wife
17    2,   10|       to. When time served, the Judge discoursed the occasion
18    2,   10|   Pagamino answered.~ ~ My Lord Judge, you are welcome hither,
19    2,   10|       it certainly, replyed the judge, that she is my wife, and
20    2,   10|        Which when my Lord the~ ~Judge beheld, (who expected to
21    2,   10|     have not seene you. My Lord Judge conceived in his minde,
22    2,   10|        worthy~ ~reputation of a judge, when you fall from that
23    2,   10|  resolved determination.~ ~ The Judge hearing these words, was
24    2,   10|     purpose not to part.~ ~ Our Judge was now in a wofull perplexity,
25    3,    3|       any tidings of him. Now~ ~Judge you, holy Father, whether
26    3,    5|        take hold of them, onely Judge you the best, and so the
27    4,    1| Guiscardo: and then if you will Judge truly, and without affection,~ ~
28    4,    2|    wiser, in taking upon you to judge of beauty. Much other idle
29    4,    4|       you shall the more easily Judge of what I~ ~now aime at.
30    4,    7|      upon the~ ~out-cry.~ ~ The Judge, without any delay at all,
31    4,    7|       her: in~ ~presence of the Judge they smiled thereat, mocking
32    4,    7|       speedy expedition.~ ~ The Judge standing amazed, and all
33    4,    7|      sent for, and before the~ ~Judge would depart thence, he
34    4,    7|   whereof, in conjecture of the judge, and all the rest, the whole
35    5,    1|        would needs now become a Judge of beauty,~ ~coveting earnestly
36    6,    7|         to bee cited before the Judge.~ ~From whom she delivered
37    6,    7|     perswasions, looking on the Judge with a~ ~constant countenance,
38    6,    7|         being our Potestate and Judge, if it be so, by my~ ~Husbands
39    7,    4|      that all thy friends~ ~may Judge of thy behaviour, and know
40    7,    4|       of thy wife; for all will Judge it~ ~to be no otherwise.
41    7,    7|          quoth she) and then be Judge your self, whether I have
42    8,    1|         pardon, especially of a Judge not~ ~over-rigorous: as
43    8,    2|    should helpe me before the~ ~Judge, when I shall be called
44    8,    5|    plaide a merry pranke with a Judge~ ~(belonging to the Marquesate
45    8,    5|        by the board whereon the Judge placed his~ ~feete. Then
46    8,    5|        to the other. Oh my Lord Judge (cryed~ ~Maso out aloud)
47    8,    5|        owne use.~ ~ Worthy Lord Judge (cryed Ribi, on the other
48    8,    5|     Maso haling and tugging the Judge by the sleeve, would not~ ~
49    8,    5|      clamourous contending, the Judge being~ ~very willy willing
50    8,    5|    Justice.~ ~ By this time the Judge was dismounted from the
51    8,    5|      thinking he had shamed the Judge sufficiently, went away,~ ~
52    8,    5|        the hearing of a~ ~wiser Judge. And Maso forbearing to
53    8,    5|        view.~ ~ The worshipfull Judge Messer Niccolao stood all
54    8,    5|    heere in Florence, to make a Judge sit bare Breecht on the
55    8,    7|         desire, and are able to Judge~ ~truely of my love and
56    8,    7|   temptations, I am not able to Judge, or to say, what resistance~ ~
57    8,    9|         best able your selfe to judge: In which~ ~regarde, remember
58    8,    9|         Salicete, when he was~ ~Judge and Potestat over the people
59    9,    3|        Faire Ladies, the paltry Judge of the Marquisate, whereof~ ~
60   10,    8|       as being better able to~ ~Judge of the perfections, remaining
61   10,    8|         cheekes, he said to the Judge Varro, it was none but I
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License