Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |       accompany the body to the grave, and they not~ ~any of the
 2  Ind      |     throwne into the first open grave they found. Such was~ ~the
 3  Ind      |      beene carried along to the grave upon one Biere.~ ~ Moreover,
 4  Ind      |         bodies at rest in their grave; or else to listen, when
 5    2,    5|    makes him obedient, into the grave he~ ~goes, and being within,
 6    2,    5|        Andrea mewed up in the~ ~grave. Which when he perceived,
 7    2,    5|      any man came to open the~ ~Grave, then must he be apprehended
 8    2,    5|        meanes to get out of the grave, and afterward forth of
 9    2,    7|         And if in thy great and grave judgement (after the hearing
10    2,    8|       being growne to yeeres of grave discretion, doe~ ~never
11    2,   10|      ransome (in regard of your grave and reverend~ ~yeeres) but
12    3,    3|       faire Gentlewoman, to a~ ~grave and devoute Religious Friar,
13    3,    7|      bin newly risen out of his grave, and came thither~ ~purposely
14    3,    8|          was taken out of his~ ~Grave, and put into a darke prison,
15    3,    8|       that he came forth of his grave, and adored him as~ ~a Saint,
16    3,    8|      was newly risen out of his grave, and was a man as he~ ~had
17    3, Song|      his treacherous showes.~ ~ Grave on my Monument,~ ~ No true
18    4,    1|        should have~ ~any worser grave then gold, wherein my Father
19    4,    1|    enemy hath bestowed such a~ ~grave on thee, as thy greatnesse
20    4,    1|         in death)~ ~one publike grave containe both our bodies,
21    4,    8| honourable buriall both in. one grave. So,~ ~this poore couple,
22    6, Song|      keepe me dying in a living grave.~ ~ For I saw nothing dayly
23    7,    5|    becommeth them. And if those grave heads, which were the first~ ~
24    8,    9|       to her Chamber, in very~ ~grave and gracious manner. Concerning
25    9,    1|    caused to lye as dead in a~ ~grave, and the other to fetch
26    9,    1|  thereof, you~ ~would go to the grave, where Scannadio lyeth yet
27    9,    1|        take you foorth of~ ~the grave, and bring you thence (insted
28    9,    1|         thereof, to go to~ ~the grave where Scannadio was this
29    9,    1|           take him forth of the grave, and bring him home to her
30    9,    1|      not~ ~onely descend into a Grave, but also into hell, if
31    9,    1|    where Scannadio lay in his~ ~grave: but by the way as he went,
32    9,    1|        he may murther me in the grave? Which (if it should so
33    9,    1|    arguments; as he went to the grave, and removing the~ ~boordes
34    9,    1|        having first covered the grave againe. Not long had hee~ ~
35    9,    1|          to strangle him in the grave. But his fervent affection
36    9,    1|        on~ ~with courage to the grave.~ ~ Alessandro hearing his
37    9,    1|      and Rinuccio beeing in the grave, tooke Alessandro by the~ ~
38    9,    1|           The next morning, the grave of Scannadio being found
39   10,    4|     Madam Catharina, forth of a grave, wherin she was~ ~buried
40   10,    4|    happily recovered from her~ ~grave Signior Gentile lived long
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