Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |          was~ ~the quality of the disease, to shew it selfe by blacke
 2  Ind      |        either the~ ~nature of the disease would not endure it, or
 3  Ind      |        seemed to~ ~transferre the disease from the sicke to the sound,
 4  Ind      |          wherein one died of that disease,~ ~being toucht, or lyen
 5  Ind      |        wretched body dead of that disease,~ ~and hurled in the open
 6  Ind      |     physicke more certaine, for a disease so desperate, then to~ ~
 7  Ind      |          by~ ~any violence of the disease in themselves. So that of
 8    1,    6|    singular remedie against~ ~the Disease Pestilentiall in covetous
 9    2,    3|      might be easily done, and no disease~ ~offered to the Abbot,
10    2,    8|    reaching to the cause~ ~of the disease, made a doubtfull question
11    2,    8|           that some part of the~ ~disease had now discovered it selfe
12    2,    8|         prevent thy dying of this disease, a dreame this night~ ~hath
13    2,    9|         but sicke of~ ~all womens disease; returning from Paris to
14    3,    1|       sicke of the other Nunnes~ ~disease. Having awaked him, she
15    3,    8|           him perfectly cured, of disease so dangerous~ ~and offensive,
16    3,    9|    journey to Paris,~ ~but if the disease were no more then she imagined;
17    4,    2|          sicke of womens naturall disease, thinking every minute a~ ~
18    4,    7|          conversing with her: his disease was~ ~every way answerable
19    4,    8|           very loath any~ ~way to disease him, but sweetly to let
20    5,    9|           or by extreamity of his disease, chanced to dye, leaving~ ~
21    7,    3|          charme, of a~ ~dangerous disease which he had by Wormes.~ ~ ~ ~
22    7,   10|       also fell sicke of the same disease,~ ~because shee seemed Fleasing
23    8,    7|         him quickely of that Idle disease. And~ ~being more and more
24    9,    3|        ministred to~ ~him for the disease: they got both good fatte
25    9,    3|        friend; thou hast no other disease, but only~ ~thou art great
26    9,    4| circumstance, to cure the strange disease, which he~ ~imagined (by
27    9,    9|        cure~ ~of such a dangerous disease, in any woman so fouly infected.
28   10,    2|           cured him of a grievous disease, which he had in his stomacke,
29   10,    2|          ever learne, against any disease in the stomacke,~ ~was this
30   10,    2|          have cured your stomacks disease) deale~ ~with you as I doe
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License