Book, Chapter
1 0, Life | behoves us to believe that he lost nothing of his monastic
2 I, II | then caught in a storm, he lost a considerable part of his
3 I, II | wrecked. Forty of them were lost, the rest were, with much
4 I, III | the Roman state, he almost lost Britain; for in his time
5 I, XXVII| Church take more than it has lost of its worldly possessions,
6 II, I | I consider what I have lost, and when I behold what
7 II, I | behoves us to believe that he lost nothing of his monastic
8 II, II | that He would restore his lost sight to the blind man,
9 II, XII | Heaven to the king. Then he lost no time, but immediately
10 III, I | Edwin’s next successors lost both the faith of their
11 III, VII | kingdom; and not long after he lost also the dominion of his
12 III, XXIV | and was now killed, having lost his army and auxiliaries.
13 III, XXVII| called Rathmelsigi,and having lost all their companions, who
14 IV, IX | was at hand, she not only lost the use of her other limbs,
15 IV, X | that she might recover her lost sight, if she were carried
16 IV, X | without help: as if she had lost the light of this world
17 V, IV | the strength which she had lost for so great a time, she
18 V, V | ill, insomuch that having lost all use of his limbs, he
19 V, IX | of what was on board was lost, and the ship itself was
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