Day, Novell

 1    1,    1|  administred, accounting them for vile~ ~and unprofitable things:
 2    1,    1|          difference at all in his vile dealing. This Master Chappelet,
 3    1,    1|           dare you use any~ ~such vile words? If I had had the
 4    1,    4| conference to as pernitious and~ ~vile a purpose, I know not: but
 5    1,    7|       make Gentlemen to become as vile as~ ~themselves. For which
 6    1,    8|      teach me how you suffer such vile~ ~abuses, as daily are offered
 7    2,    6|         assurance, ashamed of the vile and base~ ~usage wherein
 8    2,    7|        should bee murthered in so vile manner: by gifts~ ~and faire
 9    2,    8|         be taxt with a servile or vile election.~ ~ These two speciall
10    2,   10|         to all other, that are so vile in their owne opinions,
11    3,    6|        strange woman, like a most vile~ ~and wicked man as thou
12    4,    5|            best suited with their vile purpose: they ran sodainly
13    4,    9|            I pluckt it out of his vile body with mine owne hands,
14    5,    8|           hand, giving~ ~her very vile and dreadfull speeches,
15    6,    2|        seating a Noble soule in a vile body, or Fortune, in~ ~bestowing
16    6,    2|         of esteeme, in the most~ ~vile and abject places of their
17    6,    3|             judgement might be as vile, as the speeches were scandalous.~ ~
18    6,    3|           if I should make such a vile adventure, I would~ ~looke
19    6,    5|     divers wayes, to~ ~hide under vile and contemptible Arts, the
20    6,   10|    savouring rather of their owne vile nature, who would~ ~brand
21    7,    3|        life, are rather much more vile then~ ~hee? Such is the
22    7,    4|           should be servile to so vile and slavish a condition.~ ~
23    7,    6|         after many~ ~terrible and vile oathes and vowes, hee ranne
24    7,    7|          would give thee any such vile speeches, with intent to
25    7,    8|             acquaint you with his vile qualities, and what a wretched
26    8,    1|           deepely offended at her vile answere,~ ~that his fervent
27    8,    7|         thee, I should kill but a vile~ ~inhumane beast, yea, one
28    8,    9|       Nose to fall at thy heeles: vile~ ~Traitor as thou art: for
29    9,    2|           give her very harsh and vile~ ~speeches, as never any
30   10,    3|       life is, or once to have so vile a thought of it as~ ~lately
31   10,    4|       threw her forth, as a thing vile and unprofitable.~ ~Neverthelesse,
32   10,    8|           should ever conceive so vile and degenerate a thought.~ ~
33   10,    8|       base~ ~minded people, their vile and contemptible language,
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