No sonne, were he never so old of yeares, might not marry. —Ascham.
The first of these is equivalent to "He didn't never say no villainy in all his life to no manner of man,"—four negatives.
This idiom was common in the older stages of the language, and is still kept in vulgar English; as,—
I tell you she ain' been nowhar ef she don' know we all. —Page, in Ole Virginia.
There weren't no pies to equal hers.—Mrs. Stowe.
Exceptional use.
There are sometimes found two negatives in modern English with a negative effect, when one of the negatives is a connective. This, however, is not common.
I never did see him again, nor never shall.—De Quincey.
However, I did not act so hastily, neither.—Defoe.
The prosperity of no empire, nor the grandeur of no king, can so agreeably affect, etc.—Burke.