Day, Novell

 1    2,    2|        resistance, and wrought strangely upon~ ~her flexible affections.
 2    2,    5| wonderfull amazement) he being strangely~ ~transported, replied;
 3    2,    9|        by thy mercy, I will so strangely disguise my selfe,~ ~and
 4    2,    9|    forme and fashion, remained strangely blacke for~ ~a long time
 5    3,    3|       done to incense~ ~you so strangely? Heare me dishonest wretch
 6    4,    3|  bloudie hatred;~ ~yea, and so strangely was reason or respect confounded
 7    4,    6|   observed to happen; and very strangely have come to passe.~ ~And
 8    4,    7|     but his body swolne, and~ ~strangely over-spred with foule black
 9    4,    8|        But the case was~ ~very strangely altred, because she was
10    4,    8|    weeping round about it; but strangely~ ~shrieking out aloud, she
11    4,    8|   meane admiration, they stood strangely gazing~ ~each upon other.~ ~
12    4,    9|       and made him to sit very strangely~ ~musing. At length, the
13    4,    9|       diet.~ ~ Poore Lady, how strangely was her soule afflicted,
14    4,   10|    braine, about a dead man so strangely come to life againe,~ ~knew
15    5,    1|      some Goddesse or no; so~ ~strangely was he metamorphosed from
16    5,    2|       she did, and looked very strangely about her.~ ~ The poore
17    5,    2|       shee~ ~hapned thither so strangely. And perceyving her to be
18    5,    4|      say, his senses became so strangely~ ~confounded; yet knowing
19    5,    9|    Bird, my Sonne is become so strangely~ ~desirous, as, if I doe
20    6,    9|  stoode all like men~ ~amazed, strangely looking one upon another,
21    7,    8|     Beatrix, dealte somewhat~ ~strangely, in the manner of beguiling
22    7,    9|       tongue and wit have very strangely wandred, both from reason
23    8,    3|     Buffalmaco. Bruno gazing~ ~strangely every where about him, as
24    8,    4|    proud conceite,~ ~presuming strangely beyond his capacity, and
25    8,    7|          my selfe; for I am so strangely benummed with colde, as
26    8,    7|     also cleft and~ ~chinkt it strangely, beside blisters and other
27    8,    7|      face, naked, scorched and strangely deformed: shee beganne to~ ~
28    8,    9|  ramping and stamping somewhat strangely:~ ~seeming as become of
29    9,    3|      thinks thy countenance is strangely~ ~changed, and surely it
30   10,    7| Statues, then~ ~living men, so strangely they were wrapt with admiration,
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