Book, Chapter
1 I, III | there came to pass a most grievous famine in Syria, which is
2 I, V | been victorious in all the grievous civil wars which happened
3 I, XII | followed a massacre more grievous than ever before; for the
4 I, XIV | meantime, on a sudden, a grievous plague fell upon that corrupt
5 I, XXI | his youth laboured under a grievous infirmity; for the sinews
6 I, XXVII | to known that this is a grievous sin. Let them fear the dread
7 II, I | I bear appears the more grievous."~ So spake the holy man
8 II, IX | child in safety, and without grievous pain. The king, delighted
9 III, II | soon tormented with a most grievous pain in the broken part,
10 III, IX | presence, lamented the girl’s grievous calamity, he gave them an
11 III, XIX | book; and what joyous or grievous tidings he learned from
12 IV, V | still alive, but hindered by grievous infirmity from administering
13 IV, IX | suddenly seized with a most grievous bodily disease, under which,
14 IV, XIII | the province, whereupon a grievous famine fell upon the people
15 IV, XIV | received the faith of Christ, a grievous pestilence fell upon many
16 IV, XV | province was reduced to more grievous slavery: Ini, likewise,
17 IV, XIX | occasion. Always, except when grievous sickness prevented her,
18 V, II | man labouring under any grievous infirmity, or want, whom
19 V, III | flesh, laboured under a grievous sickness, for she had been
20 V, III | by the assuaging of the grievous swelling; and the maiden
21 V, IV | had lain sick of a very grievous disease for nearly forty
22 V, XIII | and was tormented with grievous pains. The king coming to
23 V, XX III| fortnight. At which time a grievous blight fell upon Gaul, in
24 V, XXIV | almost, two years, divers grievous sicknesses raging, but more
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