Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |   company, being shut up in such houses, where no sicke body~ ~should
 2  Ind      |    whereof, the most part of the houses were~ ~become common, and
 3  Ind      |  forsooke the City,~ ~their owne houses, their Parents, Kindred,
 4  Ind      |      although they died in their houses; yet first~ ~they made it
 5  Ind      |       already dead) out of their houses, laying~ ~them before their
 6  Ind      |          and banished from their houses, went wildly wandring abroad~ ~
 7  Ind      |       fed at night home to their houses,~ ~without any government
 8  Ind      |         Palaces! How many goodly Houses! How many noble~ ~habitations,
 9  Ind      |        If we returne home to our houses (I know not whether your
10  Ind      |          retreate to our Country houses, wherewith all of us~ ~are
11  Ind      |        so much the lesse, as the houses~ ~and dwellers there are
12    2,    3|        from which~ ~of these two houses he came, I say, that in
13    2,    5| possessions,~ ~both in Pallaces, Houses, and Lands, all which we
14    2,    5|    losses, he bestowed Lands and houses on us here, beside~ ~a continuall
15    2,    5|        see reserved betweene two houses, for eithers~ ~benefit to
16    2,    5|        thus be molested in their houses,~ ~with foolish idle words,
17    2,    5|      Ruffian (as sildome~ ~bawdy houses are without such swaggering
18    2,    7|         was directly over divers houses, which the long~ ~continuance
19    2,    7|        chance among the~ ~ruined houses, where lay the dead bodies
20    2,    8|           they ran to the Counts houses, to arrest his person, and
21    2,    9|         lefte~ ~at home in their houses. Quoth the first, I cannot
22    4,    2|   returning home to their owne~ ~houses, with their conquered spolle
23    4,    3|        also the goods~ ~in their Houses; and then, under colour
24    4,    3|         of beautifull~ ~dwelling houses in the City, with al due
25    4,    7|          make his abiding in the houses of the~ ~Noblest persons;
26    5,    1|          bee~ ~celebrated in the houses of Pasimondo and Hormisda:
27    5,    1|          will enter into~ ~their houses, while they are in the middest
28    5,    1|          corner in the Brethrens houses, but it sung joy in the
29    5,    3|      farre off she was from such houses, where she~ ~might have
30    5,    5|  Neighbours came foorth of their houses, with lights,~ ~staves,
31    5,   10|            the roome, (as in all Houses we commonly see the like)
32    6,    2|       and abject places of their houses, as being subject to least~ ~
33    6,    9|        Florence, men of the best houses in every quarter, had a
34    6,    9|      Graves and~ ~Tombes are the houses of the dead, ordained and
35    6,    9|      like)~ ~must at last be our houses. To let us know, and all
36    6,    9|        not farre from our owne~ ~houses, or how soone we shall be
37    6,   10|    returned in all hast to their houses, where~ ~one telling this
38    7,    1|      which haunts our~ ~Countrey houses, whereof I have often told
39    7,    5|        being lockt~ ~up in their houses all the Weeke long, imployed
40    7,    5|       neede, of clambring~ ~over houses in the night time like Cats,
41    8,    2|        would man them from their houses, when~ ~they had any occasion
42    8,    3|    regard they were all in their houses at dinner.~ ~ Calandrino,
43    8,    6|      continually haunt~ ~country houses, especially in such scattering
44    8,    6|        departing home unto their houses, very much~ ~displeased
45    8,    7|        Cattle about theyr owne~ ~houses, or in remote and shadie
46    8,    7|      coole~ ~shades, and Country houses here and there dispersed;
47    8,    8|     tearmed Zeppa di Mino, their houses Neighbouring~ ~together
48    8,    8|        others Company, and their houses allowed equall welcome to~ ~
49    8,    9|        to have issue by; and few houses are there in the~ ~world,
50    8,   10|        wil rather sell all~ ~the houses I have, then breake my honest
51    9,    1|          entred into the~ ~verie houses of the dead, thence to convey
52   10,    3| goodliest,~ ~and most beautifull houses (in manner of a Princes
53   10,    6|        from all other dwelling~ ~houses, hee bought a parcel of
54   10,    8|  simplest stocke in Rome.~ ~ "My houses and publique places, are
55   10, Song|         repaired home~ ~to their houses.~ ~ - THE END -~ ~ ~
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