Day, Novell

 1    2,    5|       so that taking up a great stone in his hand, hee layed~ ~
 2    2,    5|      Tombe, and supported the~ ~stone, they varied also among
 3    3,    1|         became converted to a~ ~stone. And if (perchance) they
 4    3,    4|      understand how to make the Stone: as~ ~I will tell thee how,
 5    3,    4|       not~ ~say, that after the Stone is obtained, thou shalt
 6    3,    4|     apparant signes, that the~ ~stone is still in absolute forwardnesse,
 7    3,    4|         have the~ ~Philosophers stone, and thereby shalt be able
 8    3,    4| attaining to~ ~the Philosophers Stone, was close to the Chamber
 9    3,    4|    failed~ ~of the Philosophers Stone, Isabetta joyned in marriage
10    4,    1|    composition, and not made of stone or iron. Moreover, you ought
11    7,    4|        Well, by casting a great stone into the same Well. Tofano~ ~
12    7,    4|         hearing the fall of the stone into the Well, and being
13    7,    4|     where finding a verie great stone, which lay loose upon the
14    7,    4|       heavens, and so threw the stone~ ~downe into the Well. The
15    7,    4|          the fal of~ ~the great stone made such a dreadfull noise
16    8,    2|      request of lending him her Stone~ ~Morter, to make Greenesawce
17    8,    2|       treachery, sent him the~ ~Stone Morter with the Pestell,
18    8,    3|         to finde the~ ~precious Stone called Helitropium. Calandrino
19    8,    3|        kinde is a most precious Stone indeede, which our best~ ~
20    8,    3|        quoth Calandrino) is the Stone, and~ ~what coulour? The
21    8,    3|        to finde this~ ~precious stone, if possibly hee could:
22    8,    3|   should find out this precious stone, spending almost the whole
23    8,    3|    Mugnone: there is a precious stone to be found, which~ ~whosoever
24    8,    3| Buffalmaco demaunding how the~ ~stone was named. Now it fortuned,
25    8,    3|    quite forgot the name of the stone,~ ~and therefore said. What
26    8,    3|      Sunne shineth forth, every stone retaineth his~ ~true colour.
27    8,    3|      all three would go see the Stone.~ ~But Calandrino was verie
28    8,    3|       to bee possessed of the~ ~stone. On the Sonday morning,
29    8,    3|         to~ ~finde this strange stone.~ ~ Calandrino went stealing
30    8,    3|        onely found the precious stone;~ ~but also had some store
31    8,    3|         heele with~ ~this Flint stone, as should sticke by him
32    8,    3|       friends.~ ~ Hee threw the stone, and hit him shrewdly on
33    8,    3|        although the blow of the stone~ ~was painfull to him; yet
34    8,    3|       him on the backe with the stone. And thus all the way on
35    8,    3|     thee, to seeke a~ ~precious stone called Helitropium. And
36    8,    3|       found the rare~ ~precious stone that you speake of: and
37    8,    3|        vertue of that excellent Stone,~ ~undiscovered of you all.
38    8,    3|       had found the wonderful~ ~stone, and lost it by his wives
39    8,    3|     much paines in serch of the stone, as possibly he did, or~ ~
40    8,    3|           an admirable precious stone, was in danger to have dyed,
41    8,    6|    going to seeke the invisible Stone.~ ~ Needlesse were any fresh
42    9,    1|    these idle feares, and lying stone still, as if he had beene
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