Day, Novell

 1  Ind      |        healing, or compelled by poverty, kept~ ~still within their
 2    2,    3|       come to nothing, and then poverty opened their eyes, which
 3    2,    3|        now to what an ebbe~ ~of poverty it was falne, only thorow
 4    2,    3|       was to be~ ~expected, but poverty and misery of life for ever.
 5    2,    4| Landolpho Ruffolo, falling into poverty, became a Pirate on the~ ~
 6    2,    4|        from the lowest depth of poverty, to a Royall estate~ ~of
 7    2,    4|      likely to fall into as low poverty: he resolved to~ ~die, or
 8    2,    4|         home in such wretched~ ~poverty; yet, seeing how other men
 9    2,    9|       with his wife; upon whose poverty he so prevailed, by earnest~ ~
10    3,    1|    person,~ ~began to pitty the poverty of his condition; but much
11    3,    3|    afflicted~ ~with such extrem poverty, that it was most Pittifull
12    3,    9|       evill report:~ ~onely her poverty was the maine imbarment
13    3,    9|      worke dishonour upon~ ~her poverty. But indeede, some apparances
14    3,    9|    prize my daughters spotlesse poverty at as high a~ ~rate, as
15    3,    9|         the degree of honour.~ ~Poverty made the poore Lady, very
16    3,    9|         reputation.~ ~ Although poverty might well have tutored
17    4,    1|        servant.~ ~Neverthelesse poverty impayreth not any part of
18    4,    2|        him, as the time and his poverty did~ ~permit; and day drawing
19    4,    3|        where they dyed in great poverty.~ ~ ~ ~ When the King perceyved
20    4,    3|         purposed to releeve his poverty, by friendly furthering
21    5,    2|       who~ ~upbraiding him with poverty, tolde him plainly that
22    5,    9|        flight. His low ebbe and poverty, no~ ~way quailing his love
23    5,    9|        honest kind of contented poverty.~ ~ Hereupon, the young
24    5,    9|      her, he said. Madam,~ ~the poverty of this place is such, that
25    5,    9|         height of spirit, which poverty had no power to abase.~ ~
26    5,    9|        worthy Gentleman, though poverty had disgraced him~ ~in the
27    5,   10|         your part not to suffer poverty to~ ~bee unsupplyed. I will
28    8,    9|         jocondly, and~ ~in such poverty. It was related to him further
29   10,    8|      reduced to such~ ~extreame poverty, disgrace and misery, but
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