Book, Chapter
1 I, V | there, at York, he fell sick afterwards and died, leaving
2 I, XIX | destroyed; and what the sick and helpless man defended,
3 I, XIX | servant, all the wonders the sick man performed cannot be
4 II, II | enter His kingdom. Let some sick man be brought, and let
5 III, II | water, which they give to sick men or cattle to drink,
6 III, IX | fighting for his country, sick men and cattle are frequently
7 III, IX | to their friends who were sick. This custom came so much
8 III, IX | is it surprising that the sick should be healed in the
9 III, IX | provide for the poor and the sick, and to bestow alms on them,
10 III, IX | his horse on a sudden fell sick, stood still, hung his head,
11 III, IX | landlord, who had long been sick of the palsy; and when the
12 III, X | would be of use for curing sick people, and proceeding on
13 III, XI | had already healed many sick persons. The abbess thereupon
14 III, XIII | oak, and gave it to the sick man to drink. He presently
15 III, XVII | fields about it. When he was sick they set up a tent for him
16 III, XIX | studies. There, falling sick, as the book concerning
17 III, XIX | Latineacum,2and falling sick not long after, departed
18 III, XXIII| there was plague, and fell sick and died. He was first buried
19 III, XXVI | preach, baptize, visit the sick, and, in a word, to take
20 III, XXVII| of the chamber, where the sick lay, in the morning, and
21 IV, I | Quentavic; where, falling sick, he stayed some time, and
22 IV, III | put into water and give to sick cattle or men to drink,
23 IV, V | the Northumbrians, fell sick, and died, in the fifty-eighth
24 IV, VI | wont to be carried when sick, is kept by his disciples,
25 IV, VI | ailments; and, not only sick persons who are laid under
26 IV, VI | it, when carried to the sick, are wont immediately to
27 IV, XI | inquired about the state of the sick man they had come to visit,
28 IV, XIV | in the place where he lay sick, when on a sudden, through
29 IV, XIV | Oblation to be carried to the sick boy.~Soon after this, the
30 IV, XVIII| crossing the sea, he fell sick and died; and his body,
31 IV, XXIV | to which those that were sick, and like to die, were wont
32 IV, XXX | of God, fell grievously sick, and his fever daily increasing
33 V, III | CHAP. III. How he healed a sick maiden by his prayers. [
34 V, III | him to go in and visit the sick maiden. Wherefore he went
35 V, IV | a thegn’s wife that was sick, with holy water.~THE same
36 V, IV | thegn, whose wife had lain sick of a very grievous disease
37 V, IV | sent to the woman that lay sick some of the holy water,
38 V, IV | mother, who, having been sick of a fever, arose at the
39 V, VII | white garments, he fell sick, and was set free from the
40 V, XII | his house. This man fell sick, and his sickness daily
41 V, XIII | In the meantime, falling sick he betook himself to his
42 V, XIV | being damned. For he falling sick, and being brought to extremity,
43 V, XVIII| the dust thence for the sick, and put it into water,
44 V, XVIII| brought health to many sick men and beasts; so that
45 V, XIX | Britain, on a sudden he fell sick, and the sickness increasing,
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