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   Day, Novellgrey = Comment text

 1    2,    5|          neck; he stood as a man confounded with admiration, and~ ~she
 2    2,    5|     beside.~ ~ Now was Andrea so confounded this extremity of courtesie,
 3    2,    6|        these words, stood as one confounded with~ ~admiration, reputing
 4    2,    7|       Table, hee began (as one~ ~confounded with admiration) to observe
 5    2,    7|    Antigonus~ ~(who stood as one confounded with mervaile) if he had
 6    2,    9|    witnesses, to heare his lye~ ~confounded by his owne confession,
 7    3,    8|        heard these words, as one confounded with much~ ~amazement, thus
 8    3,    9|          hearing this, stoode as confounded with admiration; for~ ~full
 9    4,    1|  Daughter, he became~ ~extreamly confounded with greefe thereat. Once
10    4,    3|  strangely was reason or respect confounded in her, as no~ ~revenge
11    4,    5|        head, whereat they became confounded with~ ~amazement.~ ~ Fearing
12    4,    7|         all her senses meerely~ ~confounded, at such a strange and uncouth
13    4,    7|            thus hath hapned, and confounded our senses with no common
14    4,    9|        soule, which I wish to be confounded in eternall~ ~perdition,
15    4,    9|          a body without a soule, confounded with the killing of so deare
16    4,   10| Chamber-maide heard, they were~ ~confounded with most strange admiration,
17    5,    4|     senses became so strangely~ ~confounded; yet knowing how hainously
18    5,    8|           he stoode a~ ~while as confounded with feare and pitty, like
19    5,    9|        with him; as one~ ~almost confounded with admiration, in all
20    6,    7|          Rinaldo standing as one confounded, for such a foolish and~ ~
21    7,    8|          Husband, and seeming as confounded with amazement, said. How
22    8,    4|  embracing him: it made him so~ ~confounded with shame, as he had not
23    8,    8|         which of them stood most confounded with~ ~shame, either Spinelloccio
24    9,    1|          should become of him:~ ~confounded with the like griefe and
25    9,    2|  chastisement. Poore~ ~Isabella, confounded with feare and shame, as
26   10,    3|           CANNOT BE VIOLENCED OR CONFOUNDED, BY THE~ ~ MOST POLITICKE
27   10,    3|         to take away~ ~his life: Confounded with shame, hee acknowledgeth
28   10,    3|     harsh nature~ ~became meerly confounded with shame: So throwing
29   10,    3|   Mithridanes, being exceedingly confounded with shame, bashfully~ ~
30   10,    5|         hee began now to be more confounded with admiration, when he~ ~
31   10,    8|           Now although Titus was confounded with shame, to yeeld consent,
32   10,    8|         courtesies, done to him: confounded with griefe and~ ~desperate
33   10,    8|    Marcus Varro stood like a man confounded with admiration, being very~ ~
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