Day, Novell

 1    1,    6|            Faith; who,~ ~although he laboured greatly to seeme a sanctified
 2    2,    6|           his eyes, and earnestly he laboured by~ ~kinde perswasions,
 3    2,    7|             implacable dangers, they laboured to their uttermost power,
 4    2,    7|            and affable actions, he~ ~laboured to compasse what he aymed
 5    2,    9|            then present,~ ~earnestly laboured to breake the wager, knowing
 6    2,   10|             extraordinary~ ~wealthy, laboured with no meane paines, to
 7    3,    1|          long a time? Quoth Lurco, I laboured in~ ~the Garden, which is
 8    3,    1|             a day,~ ~Massetto having laboured somewhat extraordinarily,
 9    3,    2|             whose~ ~heart and pulses laboured so strongly, that he said
10    3,    7|            sadnesse.~ ~ After he had laboured by all hopefull courses,
11    3,    9|           many woorthy husbands, and laboured by the~ ~motions of her
12    4      |             implacable winds; I have laboured to go, not onely by~ ~plaine
13    4,    3|            beyond all comparison: he laboured (by painfull pursuite) to
14    4,    4|              therein assist him, but laboured to divert him by their~ ~
15    4,    6|             the night following: she laboured very diligently to hinder
16    4,    8| perturbations. Notwithstanding, he~ ~laboured by all possible meanes,
17    5,    1|        safety of their lives,~ ~they laboured to land there if possibly
18    5,    1|         spared,~ ~although Pasimondo laboured importunately, to have them
19    5,    3|           reines of his bridle, he~ ~laboured to escape from them. But
20    5,    3|            familiar acquaintance: he laboured to procure some meanes,
21    5,    5|             was fifteene yeeres old, laboured to be possessed of her in~ ~
22    5,    7|             but death.~ ~ The Mother laboured by all meanes she could
23    6,   10|        Caprezio, which~ ~he had long laboured in search of; he bestowed
24    8,    2|            so~ ~that sweet Sir Simon laboured still in vaine, and could
25    8,    6|            not doe it.~ ~Albeit they laboured him very earnestly, yet
26    8,    9|        abhominable~ ~stinking place, laboured with all his utmost endevour,
27    8,    9|             againe.~ ~ The Physitian laboured to excuse himselfe, declaring
28    8,   10|              those Oxen which have~ ~laboured in the yoake most part of
29   10,    5|             thereof: but seeing he~ ~laboured meerly in vaine, after the
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