Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |          is highly mounted, the~ ~heate (elsewhere) too extreme
 2    1,    4|           enough (though~ ~wanton heate would not let him heede
 3    1,    5|        his honour, to quench this heate with wisedome discreetly.~ ~
 4    1,    9| disposition, that though naturall heate and vigour had quite~ ~shaken
 5    2,    2|     singularly comforted with the heate thereof, even as if hee
 6    2,    5|      affection in their youthfull heate, seeing~ ~beside the tears,
 7    2,    5|           time continued, and the heate of the~ ~day being somewhat
 8    2,    7|      cheefe minister of Venus, to heate the coolest blood.~ ~And
 9    2,    7|   regarding more his loves wanton heate, then~ ~reason, kindred,
10    2, Song|        day that I felt this fiery heate,~ ~ So sweete a passion
11    3,    3|           hope to set him in such heate, as shall make~ ~him leave
12    3,    7|           is, nor~ ~ ~ ~with what heate it is to be desired, but
13    4,    3|          us. Now, to qualifie the heate of our~ ~tormenting flames,
14    5,  Ind|         the Queene, finding~ ~the heate to enlarge it selfe strongly,
15    5,    4|           proceedeth~ ~on, so the heate encreaseth, and no expectation
16    5,    4|          complained~ ~more of the heate then before, not suffering
17    6,    7|        better way.~ ~Such was the heate of his spleene and fury,
18    6,   10|        the moneth of August, when heate is in~ ~the highest predominance,
19    7,    9|         so soone, and even in the heate of a yet turbulent sicknesse,~ ~
20    8,  Ind|              When midday, and the heate thereof was well over-past,
21    8,    2|       tell you~ ~more. Sir Simons heate made him hasty to promise
22    8,    3|       degree, and striketh such a heate on the plaine of~ ~Mugnone,
23    8,    7|    because the Sunne beginneth to heate extreamely: and~ ~as over-much
24    8,    7|           the Sun (in his highest heate) will~ ~be far more temperate
25    8,    7|         mitigation to the burning heate, but~ ~parched and wrinkled
26    8,    7|           of the~ ~Sunnes burning heate.~ ~ Well perceived the Scholler,
27    9,    4|          afterward,~ ~finding the heate to be unfit for travaile;
28    9,    6|         she~ ~Nicholletta.~ ~ The heate of affection thus encreasing
29    9,   10|      Sunne beginning to loose his heate; the Queene also knowing,~ ~
30   10,    1|           for a~ ~while, till the heate be a little more overpast.
31   10,    4|        not~ ~onely overswayed the heate of desire, which in many
32   10,    5|           to alter his~ ~inflamed heate, into most honourable respect
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