1ovet-conce | conci-fetch | fette-leade | leaf-quarr | quell-susta | swan-zethu
Chapter
2505 XXVII | gold, for Danae; into a swan, for Leda; into a satyr,
2506 XXV | as I told thee yesterday, swearing it by my Master's name,
2507 XXV | abhorred. For for a time it sweeteneth and tickleth the gullet,
2508 XXIX | seeing this foolish fellow swelling with empty pride, immediately
2509 XI | he cometh, he findeth it swept and garnished, but empty
2510 XII | commandments of God, and not swerve from them, and, after his
2511 XL | marvellous work he never swerved, never altered the rule
2512 VI | to my lord and master so swollen a tale about so doubtful
2513 VII | power grown feeble, and his swords have at last failed him
2514 XXX | dishonour my body which I swore to present unto thee chaste.
2515 XXVII | Horus her son to Byblos in Syria, seeking Osiris and bitterly
2516 VII | Law divinely written on tables of stone, which he delivered
2517 XXXV | his sins, and destroy the tablets of his debts, and set him
2518 XXX | evil one: "If, sir, thou takest thought for my salvation,
2519 INT | received of his lord the talent, buried it in the earth,
2520 XXII | confess that he hath been talking falsely and at random, and
2521 XXIII | keepeth hounds or falcons tamed for hunting, before the
2522 XXXVI | and instructed. And let no tare of heresy grow up amongst
2523 VI | commanded the pitched and tarred caskets also to be opened,
2524 VI | the king's son. There he tarried many days, and enquired
2525 XXVII | father, and cast him into Tartarus. Dost thou mark the delusion
2526 XXI | kindness, and therefore have I tasked myself to make known unto
2527 XI | and adoption as sons, and tasting of the divine mysteries,
2528 XXVIII | where no path was, for them tat trusted in him, who by the
2529 XVI | poverty, and clad in rags and tatters. Beside him stood his wife,
2530 II | how should I not rightly tax thee with ignorance of good,
2531 XXXVI | him, and besought him with team, upbraiding him for departing
2532 XXVIII | more mightily prevailed, tearing to pieces all their propositions
2533 XVIII | evils with which this world teems, which cruelly deceiveth
2534 XXX | purpose, and to soften the temper of his mind. Then the sower
2535 XII | frosts and rain-storms and tempestuous winds, others spending their
2536 XXXVIII| a few dates, planted and tended by Barlaam's own hands,
2537 XXIV | the servant of the good, tenderhearted, and all merciful Lord?
2538 IV | against the Christian knew the tenderness of his heart, how that,
2539 IV | and grudged him not that tending which he required. But the
2540 XXIV | and ridiculed the whole tenour of his life. He could not
2541 XXX | soul, and to slacken his tension of purpose, and to soften
2542 XVIII | without end, may more fitly be termed rich than thou, or any other
2543 XIV | that his reign would only terminate with his life, they would
2544 XXI | attest it, and record the terms; which if thou keep, thou
2545 XXXVII | endeavoured to overthrow and terrify Ioasaph by means of divers
2546 XXXVI | failing to show or teach you, testifying to all the faith in our
2547 XX | judgements. My soul hath kept thy testimonies, and loved them exceedingly.
2548 XXXIV | by many an example, and testimony of Scripture, he made an
2549 XXVIII | heard thereof from many texts of the Scriptures. But evil
2550 XXVIII | steadfastness of his nature. Theatres, horse-races, riding to
2551 XXVII | they might commit adultery, theft, murder and all manner of
2552 XXVII | sorceries, adulteries, thefts and unnatural crimes. But,
2553 XXXII | wrinkle of sin upon thee; and thenceforward it is in thy power ever
2554 XXIV | the belly and the members thereunder, which for a season please
2555 XIX | and supplication watching thereunto, in all patience and hope.
2556 XIX | the soul become accustomed therto and think light of them.
2557 XXVII | Hermes, a lusty fellow, a thief, and a covetous, a sorcerer,
2558 XVIII | like an hide stretched over thin canes. And he wore an hair
2559 IX | and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink: I
2560 XIV | rocks, nor of thorns and thistles, but lieth altogether smooth
2561 XXXVI | God; high time to depart thitherward, where he himself shall
2562 I | Twelve Apostles, most holy Thomas, was sent out to the land
2563 VI | the ground be stony and thorny, and the wayside trodden
2564 VI | be found either stony or thorny-hearted, as thou saidest, but I
2565 XXII | turned their thoughts to the thorough sifting of the matter. "
2566 XX | They then, that are in the thraldom of wickedness, can hardly
2567 XII | bitter servitude. To-day its thrall is fattening on a thousand
2568 XVIII | shirts of palm fibre, all thread-bare and much patched, to mortify
2569 XXII | arrived in that place, he threw all the neighbour folk into
2570 XXXI | beast, sans tongue, sans throat, sans brains, sans inwards,
2571 II | of the divine oracles, he throughly purged his senses, and illumined
2572 IV | delight and sweetness, is well thrust from us. At the very moment
2573 XXVII | plundered and killed with thunder-stones, then is their nature no
2574 XXXII | divine wisdom, like one thunder-struck, he was smitten dumb. Now
2575 XXIV | lightning, or quell thee with thunderbolt, or overwhelm thee in the
2576 VII | they showed dead, struck by thunderbolts, or beating their breasts,
2577 XXI | slight labour. But, not to thwart thy willing mind, let the
2578 XXVIII | and may neither time nor tide ever pluck it out of thine
2579 II | and if there be any other tie greater than these? When
2580 XXXVI | Whereas he that is held by the ties of loyalty is steadfast
2581 XVIII | scorching sun, and drawn tight over his bones like an hide
2582 XII | a tree, to which he held tightly. There he established some
2583 XXII | he hath been in error." ~Tim king was delighted with
2584 XXXI | the skill of the mason, or timber-wright, or hammer-smith, thou hadst
2585 XXX | said to have circumcised Timothy on account of a greater
2586 XXVII | exile, finally slain by the Titans. If then Dionysus was slain
2587 XXVIII | teacher to tarry with me to-night, that we may take counsel
2588 XIII | Said he, `I have on leisure today to share thy troubles. I
2589 XXII | all costs. But though he toiled by the space of six full
2590 XL | hymns, and shed tears, the token of affection, over him,
2591 XXXI | defeat, for they bare visible tokens of their defeat, upon their
2592 XXIII | to pay thee tribute and toll from land and water, pretendest
2593 XL | King Barachias in costly tombs and conveyed by him into
2594 XXVIII | say unto our adversaries tomorrow: and do thou in turn take
2595 XV | leasing?' And in the same tone as he, but adding thereto
2596 V | bent double, grey-haired, toothless, and with broken utterance.
2597 XXXV | were within his palace, and tore them down to the ground.
2598 XXIII | his madness, and order the tormentors to cease. Then said he unto
2599 XIV | like the boundless rush of torrents that discharge themselves
2600 XIV | is wearied with continual tossing and crossing to and fro,
2601 XXXII | the word of salvation had touched the darkened vision of his
2602 XXVI | proclaimed it in every village town that no Christian need fear
2603 IV | a shadow, and, like the traces of a ship passing over the
2604 XXII | had gone through a great tract of desert, and made the
2605 INT | that which was given him to trade withal, will in no wise
2606 XIV | nothing of their laws and traditions, and of making him their
2607 XV | for choice, bring in their train crowns or punishments. For
2608 XXX | with dazzling ornaments and trained in all winsome ways: and
2609 XXXIII | righteousness. Thus did he, training himself to be king over
2610 XII | enemy of its friends, and traitor to such as carry out its
2611 XVIII | and battle have slain and trampled under foot, and carry him
2612 XX | grace of the Holy Ghost, now transfer thyself wholly to the Lord'
2613 XI | made good his defeat, and transferred the victory to his own side.
2614 XII | one party, it immediately transferreth the resources of its ingenuity
2615 XIX | by his might, maketh and transformeth, through his divine operation,
2616 XXVII | them by God, nor do they transgress their proper bounds, according
2617 IX | carcasses of the men that have transgressed against me: for their worm
2618 XXX | by dispensation, at times transgressing a commandment on account
2619 XV | with things fleeting and transient purchasing for thyself things
2620 INT | Indians, delivered unto me, translated from trustworthy records.
2621 XL | miracles and cures, during the translation and deposition of their
2622 IV | which they had long been in travail, slandered this good man
2623 INT | lives of them that have travelled on the road before us; which
2624 XIV | rejoicing the eyes of the traveller with the brightest sights,
2625 XV | saith the Lord, are the travellers along the strait and narrow
2626 XIV | but winning supplies for travelling to life eternal, for ye
2627 I | West-ward, while others traversed the regions North and South,
2628 XII | But, as they have dealt treacherously, it proveth itself treacherous
2629 XXVIII | residue of my life, that, treading in the footsteps of his
2630 XVI | and brought him into his treasure-house, where he showed him much
2631 XXXVIII| looking everywhere for his treasured friend, the aged Barlaam.
2632 XIV | thereon, that thou mayest treat them as something alien
2633 XIV | tyrannical and troublesome world treateth mankind, shifting men hither
2634 II | the monastic order, while treating with greater honour the
2635 XXXIX | vanity, and all despiteful treatment of the adversary, and set
2636 XXX | himself, immediately he trembled from head to foot, and,
2637 XIX | the devil; for the devil trembleth and quaketh at the virtue
2638 XX | forgive all those that have trespassed against thee, and with alms
2639 XIV | I held judgement in the tribunal of my soul, and I came to
2640 XXIII | should be many to pay thee tribute and toll from land and water,
2641 XXXIX | length of the time, nor the tricks of devils. But, strong in
2642 X | the unattainable, and thou triest to catch me, though thou
2643 XXXVII | austere life, and may not be tripped up through ignorance of
2644 XXX | fulfil me one other small and trivial desire of mine, if thou
2645 XXX | with the whole devilish troop under him. So the evil spirit,
2646 XIV | how this tyrannical and troublesome world treateth mankind,
2647 XXX | which she purposed, and were troubling him with the suggestion
2648 INT | unto me, translated from trustworthy records. It readeth thus. ~
2649 II | and Righteousness, I will truthfully tell thee all." Then spake
2650 IX | Holy One of Israel." ~"In tune therewith saith also another
2651 XXXIV | and confessing him, and tuning lips of exultation to sing
2652 XXIX | his neighbour a drink of turbid dregs, by the help of the
2653 XXXIV | over, but he seemed to be twanging on a broken string, and
2654 XII | others thought of food twice only in the week: others
2655 XXV | beginning of the world in the twinkling of an eye stand alive before
2656 XXVII | thunder-bolt, because of Tyndareus, son of Lakedaemon, and
2657 XXXVIII| comforts or repose, and tyrannized over sleep as over a wicked
2658 XXIV | holy man have I learned the ugliness, ill savour and insensibility
2659 IX | shut.' But they that were un-ready (whom rightly he calleth
2660 XXXIV | I am now abominable and unacceptable to Christ, being a rebel
2661 XXX | shameful intercourse? I am not unacquainted with the Christian books:
2662 VI | say anything falsely or unadvisedly to thine excellent majesty.
2663 XIII | ungrateful friends, and the unavailing hardships that he had endured
2664 II | still more foolish gods, unaware of the real giver of all
2665 XXV | this bitter disgrace and unbearable reproach, shall they be
2666 XXII | betray any other monasteries unbeknown to ye. We will not endure
2667 XXIX | joyful, hoping that the unbridled and boastful tongue would
2668 XXVI | saw the steadfastness, and unbuxomness of his son, who yielded
2669 XXXVI | sudden changes, keep thou unchanged a pious mind. To change
2670 XVII | uncreate, unturning and unchanging God. Else how could diverse
2671 XVIII | not for that we would be unclothed, but clothed upon, that
2672 XXX | damsels, fair of face, but uncomely of soul, supplied the evil
2673 XXVI | changed the glory of the uncorruptible God into an image made like
2674 XXXIII | them to the ground, and uncovered their foundations, leaving
2675 XVII | by the providence of the uncreate, unturning and unchanging
2676 XXIII | death for Christ his sake undaunted. ~In such divers tortures
2677 XXIV | immutable, unchangeable, undefinable, the fountain of goodness,
2678 V | calamity shall fall? or is it undefined and unforeseeable?" "What
2679 XVIII | that death, which all men undergo, as death." ~The elder answered, "
2680 XXIII | the torment that he had undergone, with free voice and radiant
2681 XVI | thereon, they descried an underground cavernous chamber, in the
2682 XL | to distribute,' and thou understoodest not my saying. But now,
2683 XII | sin; which also our Lord underwent for our sakes, and rightly
2684 XXXVI | he might not win through undetected, for, early on the morrow,
2685 XXV | enjoyment of all glory and of an undisputed kingdom, and happiness of
2686 XXXVII | of any comfort, and the unendingness of his toils. In a word,
2687 XVI | well, O king, and even more unendurable is our life reckoned by
2688 XXIII | king's threats, but stood unflinching, and said, "We are not commanded
2689 XIV | had awhile absolute and unforbidden use, and took a great store
2690 V | or is it undefined and unforeseeable?" "What man," said they, "
2691 IV | prove that our charge is not ungrounded, call him to thee privately;
2692 XXV | thereof, that I have at times ungrudgingly lavished all the stores
2693 XXI | grievous misfortunes that unhappily overtook man, after the
2694 XXV | and stand by and keep me unhurt by any working of Satan.
2695 VII | or, for foul and shameful unions, taking the forms of animals.
2696 XXXIII | superstitious error, and to unite them to Christ; and he pointed
2697 XIII | Bear no grudge for my past unkindness, and refuse me not.' The
2698 XXXV | to measure to exceed the unmeasurable." ~With such comfortable
2699 XXIII | iniquities, and violently and unmercifully murdering the servants of
2700 II | being planted in my heart, unmoved, was preserved ever until
2701 XXXVI | containing his letter, and, unobserved of all, went forth from
2702 XI | garnished, but empty and unoccupied, not having received the
2703 XXXVI | maketh our own trespasses unpardonable, even as thou hast heard
2704 V | companions to suffer nothing unpleasant to come in his way, but
2705 XVIII | all is food provided from unploughed lands, and a ready table
2706 XXXIV | suffered us until now to go unpunished. Long have we deserved to
2707 XXXVIII| And he kept his ardour unquenched from beginning to end, ever
2708 XXXII | canst thou tell of them but unreason and shamefulness, and vain
2709 XIV | They labour painfully under unreasoning impulse, on no sure or firm
2710 I | he waged a truceless and unrelenting warfare. Hence, of a truth,
2711 V | knowledge. But he longed with an unrestrainable yearning, to meet with the
2712 XXVI | kindred, for the honest and unrestrained enquiry that should be held
2713 XV | friends of the mammon of unrighteousness; that, when ye fail, they
2714 II | reply, at once courteous and unruffled: "If it be thy pleasure,
2715 XXXIV | superstitious error, leaving nothing unsaid and nothing undone to win
2716 XVII | and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his
2717 XXI | adjured him to continue unshaken in good works, and with
2718 XI | our true faith continueth unshattered, even if somewhat of the
2719 XI | leech, he hath mixed for our unsteady and sin-loving heart the
2720 XVI | myself, thanks to thine unsurpassable speech, I renounce the vanity
2721 XII | riches and luxury, to walk unswervingly in the way of the commandments
2722 XXX | his soul lying fallow and untilled, and thus easily sow therein
2723 XXV | Christians have I conversed. By untiring enquiry and ardent search
2724 X | save thyself from this untoward generation.' `Arise thou,
2725 XXIX | left no device and deed untried, yet have I found no remedy
2726 XXII | and journeyed a-foot over untrodden and pathless ravines, he
2727 XVII | providence of the uncreate, unturning and unchanging God. Else
2728 XXIV | to mine adversaries. With untutored mind and childish judgement
2729 XV | find these unharmed and unwasted for my enjoyment? How must
2730 XXXVI | were parted from him, and unwillingly went home, often turning
2731 XXVIII | sins, which, wittingly or unwittingly, I have sinned from childhood
2732 XXXIII | find thee in all points unyielding to the persuasion of my
2733 VI | the king thereof, and had upbraided him for his untimely humility,
2734 XII | with smoke: for it is an uphill task, and one not easy of
2735 XXXVI | water-course, his hands uplifted to heaven, saying the prayer
2736 XXX | dazzling gold, with high uprear'd parapets, built of gems
2737 XXXIII | the middle of the city he upreared for Christ, his Lord, a
2738 XVII | thy purpose, and how truly upright is thine heart. But the
2739 XIX | is incomprehensible. In uprightness of heart and without question
2740 XXXVI | there arose a clamour, an uproar, and a mighty cry and confusion,
2741 XIX | and labour be required to uproot it. And the reason that
2742 XIII | and dread creditors, who urge that strict rendering of
2743 XXVIII | read before all, wherein he urged him to plead without fear
2744 VIII | fictions; but by good works be urgent to lay hold on that immortal
2745 VI | fire, cruelly burning and urging me to learn the answer to
2746 XXXV | that which had been useless useful. Furthermore he and his
2747 XXVII | victuals, and for other uses of men, it riseth and falleth
2748 | using
2749 IV | suspicion, that thou wouldest usurp his kingdom, and he spake,
2750 XXXIX | his departing words and utterances, his last orisons and blessings. ~
2751 XVIII | have done it better than by uttering such words as thou hast
2752 V | V. ~But meanwhile, the king'
2753 XXVII | madman, a drunkard, and vagabond, how could he be a god? ~"
2754 IV | breathing fire, as they say, "Ye vagabonds and deceivers," he cried, "
2755 XXXI | loudly declared that he valued nothing so much as the love
2756 XIV | also present things will vanish in the darkness of the days
2757 VII | third day he rose again, vanquishing death and granting us the
2758 XV | exceeding high place of vantage, `O ye sons of men, how
2759 XVII | is subject everywhere to variableness and change, in the world
2760 XVII | of Sun and Moon have not varied: the order of day and night
2761 XII | with miracles, signs and various virtues and made the voice
2762 XXIX | of wickedness had greatly vaunted them over Theudas' victory,
2763 XXX | soul, inspiring him with vehement love for the damsel, and
2764 XL | regions round about, to venerate and view the bodies of these
2765 XXXV | superstitious error. He venerated the sign of the life-giving
2766 VIII | that are punished, their vengeance being co-eternal with them. ~"
2767 XXX | and the pirate was well versed in Scripture, being verily
2768 XVII | skilfully builded, or a vessel fairly framed, taketh note
2769 XXI | thee my old and worn out vestment, and take one that is new,
2770 VI | VI. ~There was at that time
2771 I | poverty, and choked with many vices, for he was of the Greek
2772 XXXI | hand upon thy mouth, thou victim of folly, that commendest
2773 XXII | Barlaam worsted, and our side victorious, will doubtless join the
2774 XXII | will doubtless join the victors; the more so that he counteth
2775 XL | sacred hymns over them, and vied one with another to light
2776 XII | with hunger and thirst and vigil, that there they might come
2777 XXII | he kept himself with all vigilance, seeking to attain purity
2778 II | There, by fastings and vigils, and by diligent study of
2779 VII | VII. ~Again therefore Barlaam
2780 VIII | VIII. ~When the king's son had
2781 XXXII | deceit, whom thou, in thy vileness and bondage to sin, dost
2782 XXXII | and bondage to sin, dost vilify, did by signs and wonders
2783 XXVI | heralds proclaimed it in every village town that no Christian need
2784 XXIV | shouldest prove a knave and villain, an impostor and rebellious
2785 IV | evil." The authors of this villainous charge against the Christian
2786 XXIX | weave his web. He made his villainy sharp as any razor and did
2787 VII | undefiled, even after birth, the virginity of her that bore him. He,
2788 V | witnessed, and the form of his visage was changed by the strangeness
2789 IX | crieth thus, `God shall come visibly, even our God, and shall
2790 IV | and rock themselves in visionary hopes. ~Another day, when
2791 XXX | heart on the memory of the visions, in longing for the good
2792 XXI | the frequency of Barlaam's visits to the palace; and one of
2793 XVI | things most necessary and vital, many and great the blessings
2794 XXIII | the thought of death more vividly before us than do the bones
2795 XIX | and walk worthy of the vocation wherewith thou wast called,
2796 XVII | all things proclaim, by voices that cannot be heard, that
2797 VIII | thus, toward the end of his volume, saith he that is the flower
2798 XXX | nay, I have met with many volumes in mine own country, and
2799 XI | like a dog, return to our vomit, it shall happen unto us
2800 XXXVI | where I may perform my vows which I made unto him. Now,
2801 XXVII | the raven, the kite, the vulture, and the eagle. Others again
2802 XXII | them in breathless haste, vying one with another, who should
2803 I | orders, and against them he waged a truceless and unrelenting
2804 XXVI | worship and adore them, how waggest thou tongue against them,
2805 XII | shadow with lamentations and wailings. What is the end thereof,
2806 XXXI | hath builded and not man, waited a while and then said unto
2807 XXXIV | death of us sinners, but waitest for us to return and repent,
2808 XXIV | bedesmen? When have they walked, or received any impression
2809 XI | the grace of baptism) `he walketh through dry places, seeking
2810 V | he was again taking his walks abroad, he happened with
2811 XIX | hog, that delighteth to wallow in mire, the soul, that
2812 XXV | world, and, like swine, wallowed in the mire of sinful lusts,
2813 XXXI | hath been made light, the wanderers have found the way, they
2814 XXV | lost the right pathway, and wanderest over terrible cliffs and
2815 XXXIII | but the house of Abenner waned and grew weak, even as the
2816 XXVII | than the sun, waxing and waning, suffering eclipse. Wherefore
2817 XXVII | for one who is lame and wanteth men's aid to be a God. ~"
2818 XXX | all the comeliness of that wanton damsel and her fellows was
2819 XXXI | a god. Had there been no warders nigh at hand, thou hadst
2820 XV | that are her lovers, and warmeth and brighteneth them. But
2821 VI | heralds of my God, when they warned me, in gentler tones than
2822 III | heedful of the astrologer's warning, and it was this most that
2823 XXXIII | them to his own palace, washing their feet, and cleansing
2824 IX | trouble and distress, a day of wasteness and desolation, a day of
2825 XVII | and preserved, and ever watched over by the providence of
2826 XI | keep ourselves with all watchfulness that so we fall not into
2827 XIX | prayer and supplication watching thereunto, in all patience
2828 XXXVII | as the hart desireth the water-brooks, so longeth my soul after
2829 XXXVI | they discovered him in a water-course, his hands uplifted to heaven,
2830 XXXVII | quite destitute in that waterless and dry desert. And so at
2831 XL | thee, saying, `When thou waxest passing rich, thou wilt
2832 XX | every care of this life, and waxeth superior to human passions,
2833 XXVII | truth which leadeth its wayfarers unto the eternal kingdom
2834 XVIII | cometh this garment that thou wearest?" The elder answered,"I
2835 XIV | safe place of refuge, is wearied with continual tossing and
2836 XVIII | breast-plate of righteousness, and wearing the helmet of salvation,
2837 XXIX | began Theudas to weave his web. He made his villainy sharp
2838 XVI | and I heartily desire to wed-her.' But the old man said unto
2839 XXX | that have stained their wedding-garment are piteously cast out,
2840 XI | that abominateth sin and weepeth, as saith the prophet David, `
2841 VIII | and truthful Judge, shall weigh everything in the balance
2842 XXVI | therefore consider that thou art weighed in the balance. If thou
2843 XXXIV | heart; and he told him many weighty sayings concerning God,
2844 XXXVIII| forfeited the reward of his well-doing. He subdued himself to watchings,
2845 XVII | same time I think upon the well-ordered structure and preservation
2846 XXVIII | his conversation, I may be well-pleasing to thee my God and Lord." ~
2847 XXXI | immortal, the beginning and well-spring of good, whose power is
2848 XV | others that come from deep wells are brackish or sulphurous,
2849 I | to some to journey to the West-ward, while others traversed
2850 XXXVI | the Lord.' Consider the wheel of men's affairs, how it
2851 V | him license to go abroad whensoever he would, charging his companions
2852 XXI | in order the good things wherefrom we excluded ourselves by
2853 IV | those hermits and monks, wheresoever they be, whom I have banished,
2854 XIX | laying hold on eternal life whereunto thou wast called. But remove
2855 | Whereupon
2856 XXVI | these unwise orators who had whetted their tongues like a sharp
2857 XXVIII | scourging some severely with whips of oxhide, besmearing their
2858 XV | like the dust carried and whirled about to and fro by the
2859 XXXVI | round and round, turning and whirling them now up, now down: and
2860 XXIV | you; and I loathe their wickednesses and, hating them with a
2861 XXXIII | father to all, orphans, and widows, and beggars, a loving and
2862 XXVII | livelihood (for he is a needy wight), and in the end, they say
2863 IV | grievously crushed by a wild-beast. Seeing him passing by,
2864 XII | entreated, wandering in wildernesses and mountains, and in dens
2865 XXVIII | not in ignorance, but by wilful wrongdoing, throwing thyself
2866 XXVII | no longer one, but their wills are divided, and are all
2867 XXIX | than a leaf shaken with the wind. They shall not endure to
2868 XXI | slippery, deadly, crooked and winding pathway, hast ministered
2869 XXV | listened to his father's windy discourse and foolish opposition,
2870 XXX | streets with bright rays; and winged squadrons, each of them
2871 XVII | he can do all things, and winketh at the sins of men, because
2872 XVI | to God for small mercies winneth great ones? Therefore I,
2873 XXXIX | reckon, well-nigh an hundred winters old, and have now spent
2874 XXVII | Wherefore let thy foolish wise-acres refrain from babbling idly
2875 XV | hindrance toward whatever it wisheth, whether to virtue or to
2876 INT | which was given him to trade withal, will in no wise pass over
2877 IV | this instant, that ye were withdrawing even as I commanded you?
2878 VI | because they had no root, they withered away. And some fell among
2879 XXXV | Lord of all, save only to withhold pity from them that turn
2880 XXX | king's spearman, they say, wittily replied that they were called, "
2881 XXVIII | be forgiven; sins, which, wittingly or unwittingly, I have sinned
2882 V | acquaint thee with none of the woes of life." When the young
2883 XL | ineffable glory; and greatly wondering, he raised to his Lord a
2884 XXXI | carved stone and graven wood and called it God. Next
2885 XXVII | countless miracles that he had worked amongst them. Wherefore
2886 XXIV | the lovers thereof, and workers of iniquity are imprisoned
2887 XXVII | being sawn and chiselled by workmen's axes, growing old and
2888 VII | took the serpent for the workshop of his own guile. Through
2889 XVIII | live in sin, and serve the world-ruler of them that are dragged
2890 XXIII | flesh, to be meat for the worms to feed on. Wherefore also
2891 II | to deprive us of God, the worst of deprivations, and, in
2892 XXI | wise could I requite thee worthily for thy much kindness, and
2893 XIII | of all, and said, `Thou wottest, friend, that I ever jeopardied
2894 IV | in speech or converse any wound or damage be found, I will
2895 XIX | they that neglect small wounds often bring mortification
2896 XVI | without hands, and the apparel woven by God, and the incorruptible
2897 XXII | this message, at daybreak wrapt his cloak around him and
2898 IV | yonder, find it hard to be wrenched from this present world,
2899 XXXVIII| well from practice how to wrestle with the invisible spirits
2900 XXXVII | made toil light. Thus he wrestled with many sundry misfortunes
2901 XXVIII | the world, and came to the wrestling-school of the monastic life. He
2902 XXIII | ourselves to remember their wrestlings and lovely conversation,
2903 XXVI | themselves miserably and wretchedly. ~Now came on Nachor, in
2904 XII | quickly abaseth to the utmost wretchedness, making them a foot-stool
2905 XXXII | pollution, with no spot or wrinkle of sin upon thee; and thenceforward
2906 IX | have ye heard them from the writers of history. But, when it
2907 XXVIII | ignorance, but by wilful wrongdoing, throwing thyself into depths
2908 XXXVI | offer, saying, "O king, how wrongful is thy judgement, and thy
2909 XXVIII | of the gods, as they be wrongly called, and hast established
2910 X | X ~But Ioasaph was filled
2911 XI | XI. ~Ioasaph said unto him, "
2912 XII | XII. ~To this said Ioasaph, "
2913 XIII | XIII. ~Ioasaph received this
2914 XIV | XIV. ~Again said Ioasaph, "The
2915 XIX | XIX. ~With such like doctrines
2916 XL | XL. ~Then did Ioasaph embrace
2917 XV | XV. ~Said Ioasaph unto the
2918 XVI | XVI. ~Ioasaph said unto the
2919 XVII | XVII. ~Said Ioasaph unto Barlaam, "
2920 XVIII | XVIII. ~Ioasaph said unto him, "
2921 XX | XX. ~"Wherefore a practician
2922 XXI | XXI. ~With such moral words
2923 XXII | XXII. ~After Barlaam was gone
2924 XXIII | XXIII. ~After many days Araches
2925 XXIV | XXIV. ~After the monks had made
2926 XXIX | XXIX. ~Now about the same time
2927 XXV | XXV. ~In such wise did the father
2928 XXVI | XXVI. ~When the king heard these
2929 XXVII | XXVII. ~"By the providence of
2930 XXVIII | XXVIII. ~When Nachor had fully
2931 XXX | XXX. ~"A certain king was grieved
2932 XXXI | XXXI. ~Again therefore the king
2933 XXXII | XXXII. ~Theudas said unto him, "
2934 XXXIII | XXXIII. ~As for the king, when
2935 XXXIV | XXXIV. ~When king Abenner saw
2936 XXXIX | XXXIX. ~Thus did Barlaam and Ioasaph
2937 XXXV | XXXV. ~King Abenner was pricked
2938 XXXVI | XXXVI. ~In a few days, after he
2939 XXXVII | XXXVII. ~Thus this noble man went
2940 XXXVIII| XXXVIII. ~Now two full years spent
2941 XXXVI | and all ye shall see m"y face no more. Wherefore
2942 XXXIX | the debt of nature, and, yielding up the ghost to God, might
2943 XXXVI | life here, and death the yoke-fellow of the flesh. If thou consider
2944 II | gladness and enjoyment the yoke-fellows are dejection and pain.
2945 XXX | him, crying, "Look you how yond damsel hasteth to bring
2946 III | instructors and servants, youths right seemly to behold.
2947 XXVII | many children, Dionysus, Zethus, Amphion, Herakles, Apollo,
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