Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |        much as they might) the weake and sickly: In misery and~ ~
 2  Ind      |       still within their house weake and faint, thousands falling
 3  Ind      |       offensive,~ ~suspitious, weake spirited, and fearefull:
 4    1,    1|      be a manifest note of our weake wisedome; the people knowing
 5    1,    1|       Lombard,~ ~that lay very weake and sicke in their house.
 6    2,    6|    pale, and~ ~wanne, and very weake was she also of her person,
 7    2,    7|      up her head, and began~ ~(weake as she was) to call first
 8    2,    7|        had stolne, being~ ~but weake and slenderly guarded; in
 9    2,    7|       am a fraile, simple, and weake woman, therefore I dare
10    2,    8| resistances, that not onely so weake~ ~a woman as I am, but any
11    2,    8|       house, which being too~ ~weake for warranting his safety
12    3,    1|   errour, that~ ~build upon so weake a foundation.~ ~ Not farre
13    3,    1|        logs of wood, which the weake~ ~strength of Lurco had
14    3,    4|     And in regard he was but a weake~ ~witted man and a gourmand
15    3,    7|       women, yea, and men~ ~of weake capacity, to credit whatsoever
16    3,    7|        terrifie~ ~unsetled and weake consciences, by horrible
17    3,    8|         I know not, shee was a weake woman,~ ~he a divelish deluding
18    3,    9|  because hee was~ ~continually weake, crazie, and sickly, kept
19    4,    1|     then was requisite in~ ~so weake a body. Continuing thus
20    4,    1|       remaineth in this poore, weake, and aged body. Yet, if
21    5,    3|         untill hee became~ ~so weake and faint, what with extreame
22    5,    4|    compared with ours? Can our weake and crazie bodies, feele~ ~
23    7,    5|        bad minded man, being~ ~weake and shallow in his owne
24    7,    7|      perswasions: that being a weake woman, and not willing to
25    7,    9|         Do you not see, in how weake and feeble~ ~condition my
26    8,    7|        thy malice upon a poore weake woman, for the Eagle~ ~disdaineth
27    8,    7|        and mighty, wherof such weake wits as have made no experience,~ ~
28    8,    7|   arrivall, being~ ~altogether weake, faint, and wonderously
29    9,    4|     manifestly observed by the weake wit of Calandrino. Who needed
30   10,    6|        he be, but I~ ~hold him weake and easie to be vanquished,
31   10,    7|         and brought me to this weake condition as now thou~ ~
32   10,    9|        Gentlemen, let not my~ ~weake Womanish discretion appeare
33   10,   10|      incivility, especially in weake and shallow~ ~understandings.
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