Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |         feares, that the~ ~very haire on my head declareth my
 2    2,    1|       ground, having him by the haire on his head, and tearing
 3    2,    7|        haling me along~ ~by the haire of my head: neither teares
 4    2,    8|         spoken, but tearing her haire, and renting her~ ~garments
 5    2,    9|       fashion: then cutting her haire, and quaintly disguised~ ~
 6    3,    2|        marke, by shearing the~ ~haire of his head. Whereupon,
 7    4,    5|  consumed, but by the lockes of haire,~ ~they knew it to be Lorenzoes
 8    4,   10|      Fiammetta, whose lockes of haire were curled, long, and~ ~
 9    5,    1| commending the tresses of~ ~her haire, which he imagined to be
10    5,    5|        a~ ~little the lockes of haire, depending over her left
11    5,    8|     from the middle upward, her haire dishevelled on her shoulders,
12    5,    8|         all this discourse, his haire~ ~stood upright like Porcupines
13    6,   10|        man of litle stature red haire, a chearfull countenance,
14    6,   10|       selfe,~ ~rising thicke in haire, blacke and amiable, he
15    7,    8|  cutting away the lockes of her haire (thinking he~ ~had doone
16    7,    8|       off a great deal of her~ ~haire, giving her the most villanous
17    7,    8|    lockes supposed of his wives haire, and adding withall; that~ ~
18    7,    8|       her face unblemished, her haire comely~ ~ordered, and differing
19    7,    8|       also~ ~the cutting of her haire, the least shew of all which
20    7,    8|        not these~ ~the locks of haire, which I my selfe did cut
21    7,    8|         and cut those lockes of haire from my head. Alas Sir,~ ~
22    7,    8|         did cut those lockes of haire from my head; it is more~ ~
23    7,    8|      beat her, but also cut the haire from her head. And~ ~having
24    7,    9|      when you plucke mee by the haire~ ~of my head, and yet I
25    8,    3|          catching frer~ ~by the haire of the head, and throwing
26    8,    3|    sitting in a corner, all the haire (well-neere) torne off her~ ~
27    8,    7|    setting aside thy~ ~borrowed haire, and painted beauty, which
28    8,    9|        being of~ ~black shagged haire, wherwith being cloathed,
29    8,    9|        the Physitian saw, his~ ~haire stood on end, he quaked
30    9,    1|         assaulted him; that his haire stoode on end, every member
31    9,    5|        White veyle, because her haire hung loose~ ~about her,
32    9,    8|      cap on his head, and not a haire staring out~ ~of order,
33    9,    8|  Phillippo, catching him by the haire of the head, trampled~ ~
34    9,    8|        face, hardly leaving any haire on his head, and dragging~ ~
35    9,    9|       where~ ~taking her by the haire of her head, he threw her
36    9,   10|     then handling her disheveld haire, termed them the~ ~goodly
37   10,    6|     some fifteene yeares, their haire resembling wyars of Gold,~ ~
38   10,   10|       for her, and plaiting her haire over her shoulders,~ ~hee
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