Day, Novell

 1    3,    1|           sleeping under an Almond tree, having then very~ ~litle
 2    3,    3|          Garden, and climbing up a tree which standeth close before~ ~
 3    3,    3|           night season, mount up a tree~ ~before her Chamber window,
 4    3,    3|         Garden Wall, ascending the Tree, and entering at the Casement,~ ~
 5    4,    1|          to the strong stumpe of a tree being~ ~by it; by meanes
 6    5,    3|          the bridle~ ~unto a great tree, uppe he climbed into the
 7    5,    3|           he climbed into the same Tree, fearing to be~ ~devoured (
 8    5,    3|          he should fall out of the tree;~ ~but sate still greeving,
 9    5,    3|          this while sitting in the Tree, so full of griefe, as no~ ~
10    5,    3|       stood quaking so long in the Tree; at length by continuall~ ~
11    5,    3|       descended downe out of the~ ~Tree, (yet not without much feare)
12    5,    8|           pluckt up the plant of a Tree, which~ ~handling as if
13    7,    1|       those things under a Peach~ ~tree, which adjoyned to the fields
14    7,    9|      Wherefore, climbe up into the Tree, and cast me downe one or
15    7,    9|            did. Being aloft in the Tree, and throwing downe~ ~some
16    7,    9|            my Ladie: but if~ ~this Tree could affoord the like kindnesse
17    7,    9|            bin, I would climb this tree, to see those idle wonders~ ~
18    7,    9|         when I was~ ~aloft in that Tree, it seemed manifestly to
19    7,    9|           didst climbe up into the Tree, neither mooved otherwise,
20    7,    9| Nicostratus beholding aloft in the tree; cryed out~ ~to her, saying.
21    7,    9|          as when he climbed up the Tree:~ ~but yet he thought his
22    7,    9|           so I, being above in the Tree, had my sight most falsely~ ~
23    7,    9|      supporting her selfe by~ ~the tree, said. It appeareth Sir,
24    7,    9|           but in the height of the tree, and changing~ ~againe up
25    7,    9|          villanous~ ~and deceiving tree, shall never more shame
26    7,    9|          Axe, and hewing downe the tree,~ ~so soone as the Lady
27    8,    7|         must climbe up~ ~upon some tree, or else upon an uninhabited
28    8,    7|         but rather the trunke of a Tree halfe burned, lying flat
29    8,    9|       trembled like a leafe upon a tree, not~ ~knowing indeede where
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