Day, Novell

 1    1,    1|            of him that prayeth, then ignorant devotion, committed~ ~to
 2    1,    1|          well you know, and I am not ignorant therein, that such things
 3    1,    2|      Merchants themselves~ ~were not ignorant, how farre the Christian
 4    1,    4|            there, and could not be~ ~ignorant but that the Maide was with
 5    2,    6| indifferently knowest, and art not~ ~ignorant of her father and mother:
 6    2,    8|            and blood.~ ~ Nor am I so ignorant, but publike knowledge of
 7    2,   10|          else whatsoever: for I~ ~am ignorant both of you and her, albeit
 8    3,    3|             I know, that you are not ignorant~ ~of my parents and husband,
 9    3,    5|           something) that others are ignorant in all things, who for the~ ~
10    3,    8|            visit her, and the simple ignorant Country people, carrying
11    4,    1|         royall Father, you cannot be ignorant, that you being composed
12    4,    2|          Brother of the Convent, yet ignorant of the businesse~ ~by him
13    4,   10|          thus proceeded. You are not ignorant~ ~Sir, what a lewde liver
14    5,    1|              to~ ~avoyd, and utterly ignorant of the Coast; for safety
15    6,    5|        delighted more to content the ignorant, then to please the~ ~judicious
16    7,    2|             Why, I that am a poore~ ~ignorant woman, a house Dove, sildome
17    7,    8|         Chamber-maide~ ~(who was not ignorant of the businesse) and by
18    7,    8|          fearing to be knowne, and~ ~ignorant also what his adversary
19    7,    9|              do not imagine~ ~mee so ignorant, as not to know the certaintie
20    8,    4|            Widdow, and~ ~you are not ignorant, how requisite a thing honestie
21    8,    6|             because they are utterly ignorant of our intention.~ ~Besides,
22    8,    7|            manner: for~ ~she was not ignorant in such darting glaunces,
23    8,    7|      affliction to you. But I am not ignorant, that you~ ~being vertuous,
24    8,    7|           therfore I~ ~must needs be ignorant, not onely of your Farme,
25    8,    7|          famous on thee.~ ~ I am not ignorant, that whatsoever I have
26    8,    7|            whatsoever) I am not so~ ~ignorant, that were there no other
27    8,    9|         cannot imagine you to bee so ignorant, but~ ~are certainly perswaded:
28    9,    1|      desperately affected, the one~ ~ignorant of the others intention,
29    9,    2|           poore Isabella, who beeing ignorant of their~ ~treachery, suspected
30   10,    5|               to do more; perhaps is ignorant in such actions, as can
31   10,    6|        conquer others, so~ ~I am not ignorant, in expressing the like
32   10,    7|     forgetfull of my selfe, in being ignorant of mine owne~ ~condition,
33   10,    7|              Soveraigne; you are not ignorant, how farre unfitting a word
34   10,    8|          extend in power, and am not ignorant also,~ ~how not once or
35   10,    8|           the understanding of the~ ~ignorant multitude, and heerein wee
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License