Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |         persons speaking to the sicke, comming to see~ ~them,
 2  Ind      |         any foode whereon~ ~the sicke person fed, or any thing
 3  Ind      | transferre the disease from the sicke to the sound, in very rare
 4  Ind      |       to flie thence from the~ ~sicke, and touching any thing
 5  Ind      |        in such houses, where no sicke body~ ~should be neere them.
 6  Ind      |        being all dead, or lying sicke~ ~with the rest, or else
 7  Ind      |     many among them~ ~becomming sicke, and making a generall example
 8  Ind      |         of men and women fell~ ~sicke; finding no charity among
 9  Ind      |       imployed; but to give the sicke person such things as hee
10  Ind      |     this extreame calamity, the sicke being thus forsaken of~ ~
11  Ind      |         shee was,~ ~but falling sicke, shee must of necessity
12  Ind      | convenient remedies, (which the sicke by no meanes~ ~could attaine
13  Ind      |        faint, thousands falling sicke~ ~daily, and having no helpe,
14  Ind      |        none but dead bodies; or sicke persons~ ~transported from
15  Ind      |  executors of them are dead and sicke. And if not these, more~ ~
16  Ind      |    occasion made us forsake the sicke and sad Cittie. But,~ ~because
17    1,    1|        it fortuned that he fell sicke, and the two brethren sent
18    1,    1|        to the Chamber where the sicke man lay, they~ ~entred into
19    1,    1|         for to send him~ ~away (sicke as he is) we shall be greatly
20    1,    1|    suddenly expulsed our house (sicke to death as he~ ~is) it
21    1,    1|            as oftentimes we see sicke persons to be possessed
22    1,    1|         that lay very weake and sicke in their house. And one
23    1,    1|   partition, which sundered the sicke mans Chamber~ ~from theirs,
24    1,    1|   Convent; that if any one fell sicke~ ~in neede, distresse, or
25    2,    8|          Princesse, even almost sicke to death for your sake,
26    2,    8|         they repairing to their sicke Sonne,~ ~the Mother began
27    2,    8|        deere sonne, wast~ ~thou sicke for this? Be of good cheare,
28    2,    9|          then shee, who was but sicke of~ ~all womens disease;
29    3,    1|       to do:~ ~but let mee fall sicke and dye, before I helpe
30    3,    1|        resolved, almost falling sicke of the other Nunnes~ ~disease.
31    4,    2| asseverations: fell~ ~instantly sicke of womens naturall disease,
32    4,    8|      birth, Leonardo being very sicke, and~ ~having setled all
33    4,   10|     with weeping, but also made sicke~ ~our hearts with sighing:
34    5,    9|     Husband to Madam Giana fell sicke, and his debility of body~ ~
35    5,    9|          Gentleman, became very sicke, whereat his Mother greeved~ ~
36    5,    9|        the Lady, in care of her sicke Sons~ ~health, was up and
37    5,    9|         would have her for your sicke Sonne; it~ ~is no meane
38    6,    1|        whereby shee~ ~became so sicke; that, converting her distaste
39    7,    3|        of them chanceth to fall sicke, the~ ~Physitian must minister
40    7,    3|        was sudainly~ ~extreamly sicke, and (as good Fortune would
41    7,    9|        now come forth of your~ ~sicke Chamber, to be ruffled and
42    7,   10|        Mother. Meucio also fell sicke of the same disease,~ ~because
43    8,    7|     friend, who fell~ ~suddenly sicke of the head-ake, onely through
44    9,    3|    possible that I should~ ~bee sicke, and feele no paine or distaste
45    9,    3|         to be growne extreamely sicke, and see that~ ~thou layest
46   10,    4|         cost, he recovereth the sicke person to his former~ ~health.
47   10,    7|       to see so bright a beauty sicke, and would helpe it, it
48   10,    9|   Afterward, Thorello~ ~falling sicke, by Magicall Art, he was
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