Day, Novell

 1    2,    2|        starve there to death with cold.~ ~ The Chamber-maide, being
 2    2,    4|            benummed with extreame cold.~ ~ Good wines and comfortable
 3    3,    8|           his temples, throwing~ ~cold water and vinegar in his
 4    3,   10|     Rustico that he shivered with cold when~ ~another man would
 5    4,    6|         every part of his body as cold as ice: whereupon, she was
 6    4,    8|           which she felt to be as cold as yce: whereat marvailing
 7    4,    8|         forth, and all~ ~his body cold, as not having any life
 8    5,    3|           and he almost dead with cold,~ ~having stood quaking
 9    6,   10|         not onely would warme the cold water in his belly, but~ ~
10    7,    2|         selfe hath~ ~risen in the cold to shut the doore, to prevent
11    7,    3|        ordinary colour, to expell cold onely,~ ~but not to appear
12    7,    5|            which was~ ~extreamely cold and windle) his Armor much
13    7,    5|          thine owne~ ~doore all a cold Winters night, perswading
14    8,    7|     Gentleman. One whole night in cold Winter, she caused the Scholler~ ~
15    8,    7|         quivered in his head with cold, as a Dog could not be more~ ~
16    8,    7|       beare~ ~to him? Is not this cold sufferance of his, able
17    8,    7|     dancing in~ ~the snow, to the cold tune of his teeths quivering
18    8,    7|     because I am almost dead with cold; whereto thus she answered
19    8,    7|       most miserablest~ ~night of cold, frost and snow, that ever
20    8,    7|         in~ ~such an extremity of cold received. Immediately, they
21    8,    7|          so great and dangerous a cold.~ ~ But after he was become
22    8,    7|     imprecations (feeling greater cold, then willinglie~ ~she would
23    8,    7|           as then it had: and the cold which he~ ~suffered, was
24    8,    7| well-neere frozen to death~ ~with cold, and meerly buried with
25    8,    7|     endure: remember the extreame cold which you caused mee to~ ~
26    8,    7|       intermixe some part of that cold with the~ ~present heat,
27    8,    7|         death with~ ~extremity of cold. Pray that the Evening may
28    8,    9|         the rather, because it is cold weather, and you Gentlemen
29    8,    9|    easie-frozen fellowes, because cold weather is very familiar~ ~
30    8,    9|     staying there~ ~(quaking with cold) awaiting when the Beast
31    8,    9|           starved to death in the cold~ ~like Dogs, and, by your
32   10,    4|           whom I tooke out of the cold~ ~street, where her parents,
33   10,    5|    although it be subject to much cold, yet it is pleasant, in
34   10,    5|     weather then in extreamity of cold, every being~ ~covered with
35   10,    5|          and the kindnesse growne cold in Signiour Gentile,~ ~by
36   10,    8|         him for his distrust, and cold credence of his~ ~friendship:
37   10,   10|           walke so nakedly in the cold streets.~ ~ Dioneus having
38   10, Song|          comforts hourely hot and cold.~ ~ If Love were free, etc.~ ~ ~ ~
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