Day, Novell

 1    1,    1|          soever it happen,~ ~this mans dying here, must needs be
 2    1,    1|           complained to the poore mans parents,~ ~saying, that
 3    1,    1|          which sundered the sicke mans Chamber~ ~from theirs, heard
 4    1,    4|          of respect, or some such mans~ ~daughter, as would not
 5    1,    6|         he well knowing, that the mans faculties were great,~ ~
 6    1,    6|          me, covetousnesse of one mans meate, doth ill agree~ ~
 7    2,    8|       made, that he was a~ ~poore mans Son, that every day came
 8    2,    8|     Children tooke~ ~in the poore mans company; albeit he was offended
 9    2,   10|           your wife, or any other mans else whatsoever: for I~ ~
10    3,    2|   sleeping, and clipt~ ~away each mans locke from his right eare,
11    3,    3|      perceived, how high the holy mans anger mounted, did~ ~nothing
12    3,    4|      trust her selfe in the young mans company, but onely in~ ~
13    3,    4|           the edge~ ~of the young mans appetite. After infinite
14    3,    5|      tempt~ ~the power of another mans wit or experience. But because
15    3,    6|       this husbandrie for another mans ground, thou~ ~hast (against
16    3,    7|           so hatefull against the mans~ ~life, because he would
17    4,    2|         and was bidden in a poore mans House; on the day~ ~following,
18    4,    2|      wholly referred to the poore mans care and trust, thus~ ~he
19    4,    6|            desiring more the dead mans company, then theirs whom
20    4,    6|         him, that~ ~never was any mans death, more to be bemoaned
21    4,    7|          she was~ ~guiltie of the mans death. Wherefore, in the
22    4,   10|         Hereupon, the cure of the mans leg must needs be prolonged,
23    4,   10|          in his cure of the poore mans legge; and calling~ ~for
24    4,   10|         should dye for some other mans offence, and~ ~hoping his
25    5,    3|           spent, albeit the~ ~old mans words did much dismay her,
26    5,    7| likelyhood of this poore wretched mans; thus he conferred~ ~with
27    5,    7|           age is~ ~equall to this mans time, and by the red blemish
28    5,   10|        chance) treads on the yong mans~ ~fingers that lay hidden
29    5,   10|          his foote on the~ ~young mans fingers, treading so hard,
30    6,    2|          a~ ~taste of this honest mans Wine, perhaps it is so good,
31    6,    8|         as if she~ ~had bene some mans best Gelding, sprucely thus
32    8,    2|           you a tale of a Country mans wife, more~ ~to make you
33    8,    7|           wrapping them up in his mans~ ~Cloake, went thence to
34    8,    9|          serving readily, at each mans command of the company.
35    9,    6|        worthy to be a~ ~very good mans wife: this night shee hath
36   10,    4|           regard she was a worthy mans wife) and consequently,
37   10,    8|        Praetor,~ ~let no innocent mans bloud be shed for it, but
38   10,    9|    Thorello, giving credit to the mans words, because they were~ ~
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