Day, Novell

 1    1,    1|           a common custome) to bee confessed~ ~once (at the least) every
 2    1,    1|          seeing thou hast so often confessed thy selfe, that I~ ~shall
 3    1,    1|            have bene so oftentimes confessed, yet am I willing now to
 4    1,    1|        even as if I had never bene confessed at~ ~all, and to make no
 5    1,    1|          nothing more was to bee~ ~confessed by Master Chappelet; he
 6    1,    1|              honest Friar that had confessed him, hearing he was dead,
 7    1,    1| observations) what~ ~Chappelet had confessed, as this most great and
 8    2,    8|        desiring that shee might be confessed by the~ ~Archbishop of Roane,
 9    2,    8|      matter to him alone; but also confessed the~ ~same before many other
10    2,    9|           of~ ~her selfe. Bernardo confessed, that his description of
11    2,    9|            which likewise himselfe confessed,~ ~and falling at the feet
12    3,    3|         very gladly would she be~ ~confessed, and onely had made her
13    3,    3|            her; and~ ~when she had confessed what she could, she had
14    3,    7|           Palermini,~ ~and he hath confessed the fact; whereupon the
15    3,    7|         did not, your selfe have~ ~confessed (beside that which I know)
16    3,    7|      himselfe, and then altogether confessed openly, that~ ~they did
17    3,    8|         Father, and she come to be confessed by him; which the foole~ ~
18    3,    9|        carriage to her husband; he confessed, that she had told~ ~nothing
19    3,    9|         but onely this; for now he confessed her to be his wife~ ~indeede,
20    3,   10|          gave up~ ~the battle, and confessed himself worsted. So putting
21    4,    2|            Gentlewomen, went to be confessed by this~ ~ghostly Father;
22    4,    3|     villanies her committed, she~ ~confessed the empoysoning of Restagnone,
23    4,    3|   desperate~ ~revenge, voluntarily confessed the fact, and what else
24    4,    3|         City before the Duke, they confessed~ ~their several notorious
25    4,   10|     fortunes together, desperately confessed,~ ~that he came with a fellonious
26    5,    7|          not on any deniall, but~ ~confessed truly what hee had done:
27    5,    7|          of his~ ~fortunes errour, confessed, that the claime of Phineo
28    7,    5|           unto Church, there to be confessed, and receive her Saviour,
29    8,    1|          to her Husband, which she confessed to be~ ~true, albeit greatly
30    9,    9|            before,~ ~perceived and confessed, it was now too soone. This
31   10,    7|           in degree; whereby she~ ~confessed, that she could not hope
32   10,    8|             weary of his life, and confessed that he had murdred a man,
33   10,    8|           multitude) seeing, truly confessed the deed. By meanes whereof,
34   10,    8|            bloudy fact, he plainly confessed,~ ~that hee himselfe had
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