bold = Main text
   Day, Novellgrey = Comment text

 1  Ind      |      beene~ ~slaine without any offence: yet Lawes have allowed
 2  Ind      |        of our health, and lesse offence or mollestation~ ~then we
 3    1,    4|       Monke having committed an offence, deserving to be very greevously~ ~
 4    1,    4|         more assuredly in the~ ~offence committed; being not a little
 5    1,    4|    Chamber doore, that so~ ~the offence being knowne to them all,
 6    1,    4|     imposing silence on eithers offence: they convayed the~ ~poore
 7    1,    6|        received for~ ~one poore offence, above three hundred peeces
 8    1,    8|       punish~ ~with justice the offence of others, but also suffered
 9    1,    8|         Justicer, for the least offence offered against~ ~the honour
10    1,    9|           occasions of irkesome offence, it shall seeme injurious,
11    2,    2|    Rinaldo. Sir, let~ ~it be no offence to you, that I desire to
12    2,    6|         worthy (for so great an offence) of all cruell punnishment,
13    2,    8|    whereto Fortune (without any offence in him or~ ~them) had thus
14    2,    9|         I never~ ~committed any offence, whereby to deserve the
15    2,   10|         live secured from all~ ~offence to holy Saints, and not
16    3,    3|   honest women, yet without any offence in~ ~them. It hath often
17    3,    3|         in regard of his former offence, as also this other~ ~so
18    3,    7|      formerly lost, without any offence in him,~ ~as his innocent
19    3,    7|     father, for the ingratefull offence~ ~by her committed, and
20    3,    7|       have~ ~committed no foule offence, should not bee punished,
21    3,    7|   information,~ ~concerning the offence imputed to Aldobrandino,
22    3,    8|         committed any notorious offence, deserving to be punished~ ~
23    4,    1|    woman, or~ ~as checkt by the offence committed, but carelesse
24    4,    1|         sole occasion of~ ~this offence, if it doe deserve the name
25    4,    1|      doe deserve the name of an offence. And this I~ ~dare assure
26    4,    1|     mourne for his owne wilfull offence. Neverthelesse, if but~ ~
27    4,    3|          women (let men take no offence at my words) are farre more
28    4,    5|             Fearing least their offence might come to open publication,
29    4,    6|        intirely affected. If my offence heerein doe challenge the~ ~
30    4,    9|  acknowledgement of his heinous offence, which repentance (too late)~ ~
31    4,   10|         dye for some other mans offence, and~ ~hoping his future
32    5,    4|      were the ground of thine~ ~offence: to free thee from death,
33    5,    6|         Sir, if true love be an offence, then theirs may be termed
34    5,    6|          if it may be termed an offence to~ ~love, and in such lovely
35    5,    7|        yours, doth discover our offence, which a Fathers pity may
36    5,    7|      such~ ~order for mine owne offence, by the discreete counsell
37    5,   10|       against her, knowing your offence as great as hers? Questionlesse,~ ~
38    6,    7| approove the guiltinesse of her offence: a day being~ ~appointed (
39    6,   10|       over-long stay might give offence, they~ ~departed thence
40    7,    1|     distaste of her by anger or offence:~ ~determined to arise indeede,
41    7,    4|     must flie upon the supposed offence, or lose all thy goodes
42    7,    9|   perswaded, that the guile and offence of this false~ ~appearance,
43    7,   10|     then this, for a grievous~ ~offence by mee heretofore committed
44    7,   10|           demaunded of mee what offence it was, whereto thus I answered.
45    8,    1|       she that falleth into the offence, onely through~ ~intire
46    8,    5|         merriment without any~ ~offence, and that is the maine reason
47    8,    7|        amends, for one nights~ ~offence only committed. Content
48    8,    7|    ought alwayes to exceede the offence, which (as yet) I am~ ~farre
49    8,    7|      greevous to thee, and mine offence appeared so great, as neither
50    8,    7|         unhappy night) was mine offence, so let not~ ~over-violent
51    8,    8|       some satisfaction for her offence committed~ ~promised that
52    8,    8|         the~ ~same kinde as the offence was committed. He hath bin
53    9,    6|  WHEREIN IS MANIFESTED, THAT AN OFFENCE COMMITTED IGNORANTLY,~ ~
54   10,    8|      the great evill, the great offence, and the great~ ~injurie
55   10,    8|     compunction for so foule an offence: upon~ ~which eremptorie
56   10,    8|         on thee) to confesse an offence by thee never~ ~committed?
57   10,    8|        and he~ ~would make mine offence the occasion of his death.
58   10,    8|      these men is guilty of the offence, wherewith so wilfully~ ~
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