Day, Novell

 1    1,    1|   betooke my selfe~ ~to a meane estate of Merchandise, desiring
 2    1,    6|        what wofull and wretched estate you~ ~will be, when you
 3    1,    6|         once at Paris, in poore estate, as commonly he could light
 4    1,    6|      doth ill agree~ ~with mine estate and calling. What though
 5    1,    9|      woman,~ ~being then in the estate of widdowhood, named (as
 6    2,    2|          sound stability in his estate, but above all (and best
 7    2,    3|     seating them againe in good estate.~ ~ ~ ~ The fortunes of
 8    2,    4|         of poverty, to a Royall estate~ ~of dignity; as the discourse
 9    2,    6|     they both returned to great estate and~ ~credit.~ ~ ~ ~ The
10    2,    6|   mother: concerning thine owne estate, as~ ~now I purpose not
11    2,    6|    concerning the life and good estate of Henry Capece. For, even~ ~
12    2,    7|        a lingering~ ~lamentable estate of life, as death were a
13    2,    7|         restore me to my former estate, I~ ~pray thee do it: but
14    2,    7|  blamelesse to your Father, and estate you as fairely in his love,
15    2,    7|         instant in very~ ~poore estate, yet desirous to revisite
16    2,    8|        woman of poore and meane estate, having no other helpe for~ ~
17    2,    8|      the City, and in the poore estate of beggars, they~ ~craved
18    2,    8|    lived a long while in that~ ~estate very painfully.~ ~ His daughter
19    2,    8| respecting her~ ~dejected poore estate, after the bitter passage
20    2,    8|        answerable to his high~ ~estate and calling, which was as
21    3,    2|  mischance. The occurrences and estate of the whole Realme, being
22    3,    4|    strive to climbe from a good estate, to a seeming better; doe
23    3,    7|        in health, and~ ~in good estate; if he had the fruition
24    3,   10|       houshold, to know in what estate all matters were, because
25    4,    1|        left her in a~ ~widdowed estate, and then she returned home
26    4,    1|        once already had, in the estate of my marriage, perhaps
27    4,    2|    compassionate his distressed estate, laid him in his owne bed,~ ~
28    5,    4|         in the very flourishing estate of his~ ~youthfull time,
29    5,    5|          and setled his whole~ ~estate in good order; he left a
30    5,    9|        supporting his penurious estate, without suite or meanes~ ~
31    5,    9| Brethren. This kind of widdowed estate doth like me~ ~so well,
32    5,   10|       the woman entred into the estate of marriage. And Fortune
33    5,   10|        those delights which the estate of marriage~ ~afforded,
34    6,    4|    alwayes in our Citie, in the estate of a Noble Citizen,~ ~beeing
35    7,    2|         purposes, but where her estate~ ~seemed weakest, his supplies
36    7,    7|     falling into decay of~ ~his estate, by over-bountifull expences;
37    8,    7|    delight was to~ ~live in the estate of Widdowhood, desiring
38    8,    7|    choisely respected in either estate.~ ~ But, as oftentimes it
39    8,    7|        he went to see~ ~in what estate she was; as also to send
40    8,    9|         of them both,~ ~of what estate and condition they were.
41    8,   10|         better part of my whole estate,~ ~converting the same into
42    8,   10|           I have established my estate here in your City.~ ~ Having
43    9,    4|   himselfe at Sienna,~ ~in such estate as he liked, and upon the
44    9,   10|    maintenance in his contented estate, provided himselfe of a
45   10,    8|         his poore and miserable estate, but strove to~ ~have him
46   10,    8| accident, the povertie of his~ ~estate, and what occasion should
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