0-brand | brick-distr | diver-heife | heir-nidd | niece-rumin | rushe-two-e | twofo-ythan
Book, Chapter
501 I, XXVI | Roman walls remain. Roman bricks are used as old materials
502 IV, XXV | to adorn themselves like brides, to the danger of their
503 I, XI | the cities, watch-towers, bridges, and paved roads there made
504 III, IV | ninth year of the reign of Bridius, who was the son of Meilochon,
505 IV, XXIII | Britain with the glory of its brilliance. This dream was doubtless
506 0, Int | the "Monumenta Historica Britannica" (1848), Moberly (1869),
507 I, III | gave his son the title of Britannicus. This war he concluded in
508 IV, XXVI | Britain; and some of the Britonsregained their liberty, which they
509 I, I | narrowed down to the modern Brittany. That the Britons (or Brythons)
510 V, XX III| in the monastery called Briudun. He was consecrated in the
511 I, I | signifies a part.~Ireland is broader than Britain and has a much
512 I, XII | enemy their own domestic broils, till the whole country
513 III, I | Denisesburna, that is, the brook of Denis.~
514 I, I | Brittany. That the Britons (or Brythons)came from Gaul is doubtless
515 II, IX | servant, saw this, having no buckler at hand to protect the king
516 IV, XXV | monastery, and beheld its lofty build-wigs, the man of God burst into
517 V, XXI | desires and requests, sent the builders he desired, and likewise
518 I, I | for winter’s provision, or builds stables for his beasts of
519 I, XXVII | were, made them up into one bundle, let the minds of the English
520 IV, XIII | priests, Eappa and Padda, and Burghelm, and Oiddi, either then,
521 II, IV | years among the Franks and Burgundians, afterwards among the Suevi
522 II, XV | archbishop, from the parts of Burgundy, where he had been born
523 IV, X | blind woman, praying in the burial-place of that monastery, was restored
524 IV, XXV | of them except yourself busy about the health of his
525 V, XXIV | blood-stained and tyrannical butcher; Oswin was also slain.~In
526 I, XV | taken in the mountains, were butchered in heaps. Others, spent
527 II, I | people resorted thither to buy: Gregory himself went with
528 IV, XXII | of bonds on him, and the buyer perceived that he could
529 II, I | prayer, as it were, with the cable of an anchor, whilst he
530 V, VII | whatsoever himself had won, Caedwal, mighty in war, left for
531 V, XXIV | IV, 26.]~In the year 688, Caedwald, king of the West Saxons,
532 V, XIV | the depths thereof; and Caiaphas, with the others that slew
533 IV, XXIII | retired to the city of Calcaria,which is called Kaelcacaestir (
534 V, XXI | day so great a number of calculators, that even in our Churches
535 0, Int | that the monasteries kept calendars in which the death-days
536 III, XXII | to spare his enemies, and calmly forgave the wrongs they
537 I, X | of their soil, or fed on Campanian pastures his heart swells
538 II, XIV | Church in those parts. But in Campodonum, where there was then a
539 I, V | but a rampart, with which camps are fortified to repel the
540 I, XXIV | recommend to your charity, Candidus, the priest, our common
541 IV, XXIX | that time, with his wonted candour, signified to certain persons,
542 II, I | taken from thine own; thou canst restore it, when God calls
543 II, XX | of the Romans, or of the Cantuarians. And being old and full
544 III, XXVII | Egbert,two youths of great capacity, of the English nobility.
545 I, VI | vanquished by Asclepiodotus, the captain of the Praetorian guards,
546 V, XII | rude multitude insulting captured enemies. When that noise,
547 II, II | the Britons more rightly Car-legion. Being about to give battle,
548 I, X | s abusive language. The cardinal point in his doctrine is
549 IV, XIII | but none of the natives cared either to follow their course
550 V, XXIV | Franks, died; and his sons, Caroloman and Pippin, reigned in his
551 I, II | thickness of a man’s thigh, cased with lead, and fixed immovably
552 IV, V | Putta, bishop of the Kentish castle, called Rochester; Leutherius,
553 III, IX | should be erased from the catalogue of the Christian kings,
554 II, XIV | days, fully occupied in catechizing and baptizing; during which
555 0, Life | were translated to the new Cathedral, those of Bede were found
556 I, VIII | erected, and finished the cathedrals raised in honour of the
557 IV, I | the united effort of the Catholics, returned home, Deusdedit,
558 0, Int | patern of that sounde and Catholike faith planted first among
559 II, XIV | Quenburga, the daughter of Cearl, king of the Mercians.~
560 II, I | tossed up and down by the ceaseless waves of worldly affairs;
561 V, XXII | finished, or rather never ceases endlessly to celebrate,
562 V, XIX | were amazed, and the reader ceasing, they began to ask of one
563 II, V | own language, is called Ceaulin; the third, as has been
564 V, XXIV | Palladius was sent by Pope Celestine to the Scots that believed
565 I, XIII | reign, Palladius was sent by Celestinus, the Roman pontiff, to the
566 V, IX | compounded from "Columba" and "Cella." Egbert, having heard the
567 0, Int | sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; the first in England was
568 IV, XXIII | lived in banishment, under Cerdic,king of the Britons, where
569 V, XXI | and prayers and Paschal ceremonies, they should offer up these
570 IV, VI | Cerotaesei,that is, the Island of Cerot; that for his sister in
571 IV, VI | Thames, at a place called Cerotaesei,that is, the Island of Cerot;
572 II, VIII | true conversion and the certainty of the faith. Therefore,
573 I, XXVII | the Lord’s wheat of the chaff of its vices, and convert
574 II, II | Augustine was sitting on a chair. When they perceived it,
575 IV, XVII | and his tenets; and at Chalcedon, of 630, against Eutyches
576 I, XV | being of old lighted by the Chaldeans, consumed the walls and
577 II, XX | gold cross, and a golden chalice, consecrated to the service
578 0, Int | comes to the front as a champion of the Catholic rules. The
579 I, XXVI | began to come together, to chant the Psalms, to pray, to
580 0, Life | soul abode in the body, he chanted the ‘Gloria Patri’ and other
581 V, XVII | having round about it three chapels with vaulted roofs. For
582 0, Life | strongest condemnation.~A characteristic akin to this is his love
583 II, II | it, they were angry, and charging him with pride, set themselves
584 0, Int | the English Church." If charm and appropriateness of style
585 V, XXI | fall into the whirpool of Charybdis to be drowned. For when
586 I, XII | could be procured in the chase.~
587 IV, XXIX | might be supplied by the chastening pain of a long sickness,
588 I, XXVII | to make those whom they chastise their heirs, and preserve
589 II, V | scourge of Divine severity in chastisement and correction; for he was
590 I, XXVII | these times the Holy Church chastises some things with zeal, and
591 0, Life | human limitations. It is cheering to find that even he felt
592 V, XIX | beloved, respected, and cherished by his elders as one of
593 IV, XIII | peninsula, by the Greeks, a cherronesos. Bishop Wilfrid, having
594 0, Int | founder of the monasteries of Chertsey and Barking, the latter
595 I, XXXIV | the Britons than any other chieftain or king, either subduing
596 V, VII | kingdom, triumphs, spoils, chieftains, strongholds, the camp,
597 I, XXVII | even when there has been no child-birth, women are forbidden to
598 0, Life | we hear nothing of his childhood and early youth. One anecdote
599 IV, XXVII | church. From his earliest childhoodhe had always been inflamed
600 V, II | then taking him by the chin, he made the sign of the
601 IV, XI | the coffin. Hereupon they chipped away as much of the stone
602 V, XII | mouths and nostrils, tried to choke me; and threatened to lay
603 0, Int | Venerable Bede, so called in all Christendom for his passing vertues
604 0, Pref | Plummer, Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, Professor
605 IV, XIV | immediately, looked in his chronicle, and found that King Oswald
606 V, XXIV | On the Books of Kings and Chronicles;~On the Book of the blessed
607 I, XXIX | vessels and altar-cloths, also church-furniture, and vestments for the bishops
608 0, Int | a kind of classic among churchmen, Alfred allowed himself
609 IV, I | Hadrian, born at Tarsus in Cilicia, a man instructed in secular
610 III, XXVI | barely sufficient to make civilized life possible; they had
611 II, I | rises to the stars; the claims of death shall not avail
612 III, VI | at such an act of piety, clasped his right hand and said, "
613 II, I | to instruct the different classes of their hearers, and how
614 0, Int | book had become a kind of classic among churchmen, Alfred
615 0, Life | influence the student of classical literature has passed into
616 V, XXI | revelation.~The same is the first clay of unleavened bread, concerning
617 I, XXXII | of your subjects by much cleanness of life, exhorting, terrifying,
618 V, XIX | condemned, but being altogether cleared of the faults laid to his
619 V, XVI | entrance to the tomb is now cleft in two; nevertheless, the
620 I, I | much healthier and milder climate; for the snow scarcely ever
621 0, Int | Chapter 20 we have a dramatic climax to the book in the overthrow
622 II, X | one gold ornament, and one cloak of Ancyra, which we pray
623 IV, V | August, at the place called Clofeshoch.~"VIII. That no bishop,
624 IV, XX | dedicated to God, then in the cloister dwelt, a bride dedicated
625 IV, III | the wind grew stronger, he closed his book, and fell on his
626 0, Int | Germanus and Lupus he follows closely the Life of Germanus by
627 0, Int | external peace.~The book closes in Chapter 24 with a chronological
628 V, XVI | and is covered with linen cloths. The colour of the said
629 0, Life | period of enfeebled health clouded the close of his life, and
630 I, XVII | enemies were put to flight, a cloudless calm ensued, the winds veering
631 III, XIX | honourably entertained by Clovis, king of the Franks, or
632 I, XII | language signifies the Rock Cluith, for it is close by the
633 III, XIX | Cnobheresburg, that is, Cnobhere’s Town; afterwards, Anna,
634 II, X | with the counsel of His co-eternal Word, and the unity of the
635 III, XXX | Sebbi, his companion and co-heir in the kingdom, with all
636 II, I | meet that such should be co-heirs with the Angels in heaven.
637 V, XII | supporting his declining age with coarse bread and cold water. He
638 V, XXIV | January, about the time of cock-crowing, was, for about a whole
639 0, Life | certain treasures in my coffer, some spices, napkins and
640 V, XXI | must be so, there is this cogent reason. It is written in
641 0, Int | sequence of events as a coherent whole.~The sources from
642 III, VIII | away with them the gold coin that had been brought thither
643 V, XIX | CHAP. XIX. How Coinred, king of the Mercians, and
644 0, Int | Caedmon, the destruction of Coldingham, prophesied by the monk
645 II, XI | worthy to obtain. Inflame the coldness of his heart by the message
646 0, Int | He has been the first to collate the four oldest MSS., besides
647 0, Int | examining numerous others and collating them in certain passages.
648 V, XV | advantage to our readers if we collect some passages from his writings,
649 0, Pref | Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, Professor Lindsay
650 V, X | the church of the city of Cologne, on the Rhine. And it is
651 V, XXIV | for about a whole hour, coloured blood-red, after which a
652 I, I | excellent pearls of all colours, red, purple, violet and
653 II, IV | aforesaid island, and the Abbot Columban, (Note: The most famous
654 II, XIX | and most holy Tomianus, Columbanus, Cromanus, Dinnaus, and
655 V, IX | Columba is now by some called Columcille, the name being compounded
656 V, XVI | and supported by twelve columns. Between each of the walls
657 II, XI | looking-glass, and a gilded ivory comb, which we pray your Highness
658 V, XXIV | but also by what sort of combat, and under what judge they
659 II, II | their prayers to God for the combatants, standing apart in a place
660 V, XIX | a most pleasing age and comeliness, and greatly desired by
661 I, XXVII | written in the Law, "When thou comest into the standing corn of
662 I, XXVII | defileth a man; but that which cometh out of the mouth, this defileth
663 III, XIV | command and request, was comforted, but the bishop, on the
664 I, XXX | wont to offer to the Devil, commanding them in His sacrifice to
665 IV, XIV | From that time, the day of commemoration of that king and soldier
666 I, XXVII | an issue of blood might commendably touch the garment of our
667 III, V | continence; it was the highest commendation of his doctrine with all
668 IV, V | anywhere received without commendatory letters from his diocesan.
669 I, XXVII | incurred some guilt. Lawful commerce, therefore, must be for
670 I, XXVII | the appetite of gluttony commits excess in food, and thereupon
671 V, XX III| filled with many and great commotions and conflicts, that it cannot
672 II, XII | being the first to break the compact I have made with so great
673 0, Int | succeeding editors are made comparatively light. Besides the most
674 I, I | in breadth, by which its compass is made to be 4,875 miles.
675 V, III | that it could scarce be compassed with both hands; and she
676 II, I | thereof: (for from my youth compassion grew up with me, and from
677 III, XIV | beggar; for he was very compassionate, a great friend to the poor,
678 III, XXVIII | belonging to the king, called In Compendio.He stayed some time in the
679 V, XXIV | those of my brethren, to compile out of the works of the
680 0, Life | treatises were, as he says, "compiled out of the works of the
681 0, Int | irregularity in Ceadda’s orders, he completes his ordination and makes
682 II, I | put up for sale, of fair complexion, with pleasing countenances,
683 0, Int | of Northumbria leads to complications in the episcopate. An important
684 III, XXIII | love the bishop. So then, complying with the king’s desires,
685 V, IX | Columcille, the name being compounded from "Columba" and "Cella."
686 II, X | that no keenness of wit can comprehend or express how great it
687 V, XXI | Cyril also, his successor, comprised a series of ninety-five
688 V, XXI | some of them. For though it comprises but one of them, that is,
689 I, XXVI | to be voluntary, not by compulsion. Nor was it long before
690 III, XXV | a thing of naught. He so computed the fourteenth moon in our
691 V, XXI | not only in fixing and computing the moon’s age, but also
692 III, XXVII | had lain quiet awhile, his comrade awaking, looked on him,
693 III, XIX | as also concerning the comrades of his warfare, whosoever
694 IV, XXVII | no man present dared to conceal from him the secrets of
695 IV, XVI | the king, who then lay in concealment in those parts to be cured
696 I, XXVII | this the holy preaching concedes to them, and yet fills the
697 I, XXX | of God. We have been much concerned, since the departure of
698 II, I | mind shaken with temporal concerns. By their company he was
699 I, XXVII | mind with dread of the very concession. For when Paul the Apostle
700 0, Int | at length ;and the Book concludes with a piece of Northumbrian
701 III, XXVII | story from his own lips,) concluding that he was at the point
702 I, VIII | Great] born of Helena, his concubine, emperor of the Gauls. Eutropius
703 III, XXV | my stead; because we both concur with the other followers
704 I, XXVII | defiled even without the concurrence of the will, a defect arises
705 I, XVII | seem by saying nothing to condemn themselves. An immense multitude
706 0, Life | calls forth his strongest condemnation.~A characteristic akin to
707 I, XXVII | courses, insomuch that the Law condemns to death any man that shall
708 III, VIII | he appointed fitting and condign punishments for the offenders.
709 0, Life | life of man under present conditions. Balance, moderation, or
710 I, V | revolt of almost all the confederated tribes; and, after many
711 III, XI | greatly loved and venerated, conferring upon it many honours. It
712 I, XXVII | Christ, and it was not for confessing Christ that he was killed,
713 V, XXIV | and Passion of St. Felix, Confessor, from the metrical work
714 II, XVII | persisting in good actions, and confesssing Him the Creator of mankind?
715 I, XII | came back, and growing more confident than they had been before,
716 V, XXI | faith and works; nay, I confidently declare, that many of them
717 II, VIII | faith. Therefore, firmly confiding in the long-suffering of
718 III, XIII | fame of the renowned Oswald confined to Britain, but, spreading
719 IV, XVI | northern ocean, daily meet in conflict beyond the mouth of the
720 III, XXVIII | dwelt in England either conformed to these, or returned into
721 0, Int | the Celtic Churches into conformity with Rome.~BOOK I.— In Book
722 IV, III | dispel their pride, and confound their boldness, by recalling
723 I, XVIII | and the authors thereof confuted, and all the people settled
724 0, Life | canonical hours and the congregations of the brethren. What if
725 I, XXVIII | bishops or others, do you, in conjunction with him, carefully inquire
726 IV, XXVIII | purpose: they all knelt, and conjured him by the Lord, with tears
727 II, IV | epistle, entreating and conjuring them to keep the unity of
728 0, Int | the miracles and visions connected with him are described.
729 I, XV | real intentions were to conquer it. Accordingly they engaged
730 I, VIII | as if displaying their conquering standards in all places,
731 I, XV | the agency of the pitiless conqueror, yet by the disposal of
732 0, Int | Northumbrian history, Ethelfrid’s conquests of the Britons and the defeat
733 V, XXI | abroad, though their inward consciences agreed in a like grace of
734 I, XXVII | sprang, because what he had consciously thought of, that he afterwards
735 I, XXVII | But if it deliberately consents, then the sin is known to
736 0, Int | the Picts and Scots and consequent miseries of the Britons,
737 V, XXI | the foregoing year, and consequently is not meet for the celebration
738 I, XXVII | commended for their praiseworthy consideration; but when they are carried
739 V, XIX | eager activity, and the consistency and maturity of his thoughts;
740 III, XXIV | of the Southern Mercians,consisting, as is said, of 5,000 families,
741 II, X | its own greatness, it so consists in invisible and unsearchable
742 IV, XI | himself to sleep, and saw a consoling vision, which took from
743 II, IX | he learned that they had conspired to murder him. So he returned
744 I, XI | put him to death. His son Constans, a monk, whom he had created
745 IV, XVII | Anus and his tenets; and at ConstantinopIe, of 150, against the madness
746 V, XI | not long after he himself constituted other bishops in those parts
747 0, Int | to St. Columba, and its constitution, the character of its monks
748 III, VII | king should do this without consulting him, returned into Gaul,
749 III, XIX | fires which would kindle and consume the world. One of them was
750 IV, XVIII | extent it was clear from the contagion of heretics, gave this matter
751 0, Life | between the active and the contemplative life. It seems to attain
752 I, XVII | choosing rather to hazard the contest, than to undergo among the
753 0, Int | orthodoxy and unites with the continental Churches in repudiating
754 I, XXVII | oppressed, the mind thence contracts some guilt; yet not so much
755 I, X | was rather increased by contradiction than suffered by them to
756 V, XII | of his death, in so great contrition of mind and mortifying of
757 II, II | discern even this?" – "Do you contrive," said the anchorite, "that
758 0, Int | published at Antwerp. It is a controversial work, intended to point
759 IV, XVII | free from all such taint, convened an assembly of venerable
760 0, Pref | to present in a short and convenient form the substance of the
761 0, Int | religious life in Gaul, for convents are still scarce in England.~
762 0, Life | the exaggerations of the conventual ideal. With all his admiration
763 V, X | of their ealdorman, and converse with him, they should turn
764 IV, XXIV | down there, and had been conversing happily and pleasantly for
765 III, XXII | did, used to endeavour to convince him that those could not
766 III, XXV | Disputing with Finan, he convinced many, or at least induced
767 III, XI | person and restrain his convulsive movements, the priest used
768 V, XXIV | Ethelwald died also, and Conwulf, was consecrated in his
769 0, Int | request of Oswald, who nobly cooperates with Aidan in the work of
770 IV, XVIII | monastery, and have been copied by many others elsewhere.
771 I, XXVII | but the pleasure is in the copulation of the flesh, whereas there
772 0, Life | shorthand writer) et librarius (=copyist)," he writes. Yet he never
773 0, Life | advantages with regard to copyists which a member of one of
774 III, XXV | Aquila and Priscilla at Corinth;for no other advantage than
775 0, Pref | Charles Plummer, Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford,
776 I, XIV | grievous plague fell upon that corrupt generation, which soon destroyed
777 II, X | man, that are made out of corruptible matter, by the hands of
778 V, IX | which reason they are still corruptly called "Garmans" by the
779 III, XXVII | with daily food without cost, as also to furnish them
780 III, XXVIII | towns, the open country, cottages, villages, and castles;
781 IV, XVII | the five holy and general councils of the blessed fathers acceptable
782 I, XXVII | the union of the married couple iniquity, but the will itself.
783 I, XIX | the day came, with good courage he set forth upon his journey.~
784 V, IX | had made choice of most courageous companions, fit to preach
785 III, XIV | pleasant in discourse, and courteous in behaviour; and bountiful
786 0, Int | can perceive a failure of courtesy on the one side met by an
787 V, XIX | love of piety, built these courts and consecrated them with
788 IV, XXXI | day washed in the sea the coverings or blankets which he used
789 V, XII | either to be dreaded or coveted, which were hidden from
790 IV, XI | nothing to himself, but rather coveting to remain poor in spirit
791 III, XIX | his works. The next was of covetousness, when we prefer the riches
792 I, XII | barbed weapons, by which the cowardly defenders were dragged in
793 V, XII | And when in the winter the cracking pieces of ice were floating
794 I, XV | the mountains, woods and crags.~
795 IV, VII | light which came in at the crannies of the doors and windows,
796 I, XVII | counsels and determined to crave aid of the Gallican prelates
797 I, XXIII | journey, were seized with craven terror, and began to think
798 III, XXVII | vessel, and skimming off the cream in the morning, drank the
799 I, XXVII | people by the means of a creature as His representative, that
800 II, X | greater benefit of all His creatures, by the fire of His Holy
801 IV, XIV | had been told him by most creditable brothers of the same monastery.
802 IV, XVII | as it is delivered by the creed of the holy fathers, and
803 V, XIII | are now with great torment creeping into the inward parts of
804 II, I | knew how to utter barbarous cries, has long since begun to
805 0, Int | its bearing on the great crisis of his life is related;
806 0, Int | exhibits in an apparatus criticus the various readings of
807 III, XIX | endure the disturbance of the crowds that resorted to him, leaving
808 V, XXI | taught, in like manner, to crucify the flesh with its affections
809 I, XII | them, overthrown by the cruelties of foreign races, might
810 I, XXXI | remembrance of your guilt may crush the vanity which rises in
811 V, XVI | place of our Lord’s Cross, a crypt is hewn out of the rock,
812 I, XXVIII | brotherly charity is to be cultivated. And, since it often happens
813 0, Life | received Christianity and the culture which it brought with it
814 0, Life | handed over by kinsmen ("cura propinquorum") to Abbot
815 V, XXI | degree of a clerk, must needs curb themselves the more strictly
816 II, XVI | and every year miraculous cures are wrought in that place,
817 III, X | that it would be of use for curing sick people, and proceeding
818 V, II | ready of speech, with hair curling in comely fashion, whereas
819 IV, XXVI | Heaven; and though such as curse cannot inherit the kingdom
820 IV, XXVI | that those who were justly cursed on account of their impiety,
821 II, II | they assail us with their curses." He, therefore, commanded
822 IV, VII | them, and were singing the customary songs of praise to the Lord,
823 V, XIX | government of the Abbot Cuthbald; and by the ministry of
824 IV, XXVII | caused the holy and venerable Cuthbertto be ordained bishop of the
825 V, XXIV | died.~In the year 750, Cuthred, king of the West Saxons,
826 0, Life | but my want of learning cuts short my words. Nevertheless,
827 III, XXI | he had married his sister Cyneburg,3 the daughter of King Penda.~
828 IV, XIX | testify. But the physician, Cynifrid, who was present at her
829 III, XV | of little credit, but by Cynimund, a most faithful priest
830 V, XXIV | Beornred began his reign; Cyniwulf, king of the West Saxons,
831 III, XXIV | hostage at the court of Queen Cynwise,in the province of the Mercians.
832 IV, XXXII | being built near the river Dacore,has taken its name from
833 II, XX | Gaul to be bred up by King Dagobert, who was her friend; and
834 III, VI | silver dish full of royal dainties was set before him, and
835 I, I | for, in their language, Dal signifies a part.~Ireland
836 I, I | they are to this day called Dalreudini; for, in their language,
837 0, Int | defeat of Aedan, king of the Dalriadic Scots, at Degsastan in 603
838 V, XV | Land, travelled also to Damascus, Constantinople, Alexandria,
839 IV, II | Rochester in the roam of Damianus. [669 A.D.]~THEODORE came
840 I, XVIII | doctrine of the bishops.~This damnable heresy being thus suppressed,
841 V, IX | Frisians, the Rugini, the Danes, the Huns, the Old Saxons,
842 V, V | of his servants, who lay dangerously ill, insomuch that having
843 I, XVII | of the tempest, and the dangers they had occasioned, and
844 0, Life | on the plea of illness is dated November, 734. If we may
845 0, Int | out that two of the MSS. dating from the eighth century (
846 III, VII | dedicated to God, the man whose daughterhe was about to receive in
847 III, VIII | and they also sent their daughters there to be instructed,
848 0, Life | thanks. And when the mornino dawned, that is, on the Wednesday,
849 V, XXI | morning, when the Lord’s day dawns, they should celebrate the
850 IV, XIX | the time of matins till day-break, she continued in the church
851 V, XIX | length, on the fifth day, at daybreak, as it were awakening out
852 IV, VII | the utmost brightness of daylight.~
853 I, XII | the fortification, where, dazed with fear, they became ever
854 II, XI | he may put from him the deadness of an evil worship, and
855 III, IV | the Scottish tongue called Dearmach—The Field of Oaks. From
856 0, Int | kept calendars in which the death-days of saints and others were
857 0, Int | the translator of to-day, debarred by his date from writing
858 I, XXIX | brother; but after your decease, he shall so preside over
859 II, XVIII | the room of him that is deceased. To which end also we have
860 III, XIX | wit, with what subtlety of deceit the devils recounted both
861 II, X | hearts all the accursed deceitfulness of the snares of the Devil,
862 II, XI | worship of idols, and the deceits of temples and auguries,
863 II, V | council of wise men, judicial decisions, after the Roman model;
864 0, Int | related; finally we have the decisive debate in the Witenagemot
865 0, Int | death in that year, the decline of Northumbria, the flight
866 V, IV | house and dine. The bishop declined, saying that he must return
867 V, XII | Ireland, supporting his declining age with coarse bread and
868 II, XVI | veracity, whose name was Deda, told me concerning the
869 V, XXII | converted them from that deep-rooted tradition of their fathers,
870 V, XII | pass that as they went down deeper, I could no longer distinguish
871 III, XXV | them was a most zealous defender of the true Easter, whose
872 I, XII | weapons, by which the cowardly defenders were dragged in piteous
873 III, XVII | afflicted, and relieving or defending the poor. To be brief, so
874 II, XI | inspiration, you should not defer to strive, both in season
875 IV, IX | that it may be no longer deferred than this next night." Having
876 III, XIX | light thing to rob and to defraud the weak. These fires, increasing
877 I, XXXIV | called Degsastan, that is, Degsa Stone. In which battle also
878 II, X | the power of the Supreme Deity cannot be expressed by the
879 I, XXVII | begins to arise. But if it deliberately consents, then the sin is
880 II, IX | a long time in silence, deliberating in the depths of his heart
881 I, XVII | them. At length, after long deliberation, they had the boldness to
882 V, XII | that we should enter that delightful place, my guide, on a sudden
883 IV, XXV | drinking, talking, and other delights; the very virgins dedicated
884 III, V | obtain the, salvation it demanded, but grieving that they
885 I, XVII | obstructed by the malevolence of demons, who were jealous that men
886 I, X | point in his doctrine is his denial of original sin, involving
887 I, XXI | that the withered limb was denied the power to walk. All the
888 III, I | Denisesburna, that is, the brook of Denis.~
889 III, I | called in the English tongue Denisesburna, that is, the brook of Denis.~
890 III, II | was afterwards to happen, denoting, that the heavenly trophy
891 I, X | his perfidious doctrine, denying the assistance of the Divine
892 0, Life | godaes aeththa yflaes ~aefter deothdaege ~doemid uueorthae.~Which
893 0, Int | Abbot Hadrian to the various departments of education there. Finding
894 0, Life | may consider, ere the soul departs, what good or evil it hath
895 0, Int | to his real subject, he depends on earlier authors. Here
896 III, XXVII | year, a sudden pestilence depopulated first the southern parts
897 I, XXVII | our nature itself is so depraved, that it appears to be defiled
898 III, XXIV | people from the hostile depredations of the pagans, and, having
899 I, XIV | submit themselves to the depredators; though others still held
900 IV, III | of singing and rejoicing descend from heaven to earth. This
901 IV, III | with a company of angels, descending from heaven, who, having
902 I, XXII | To other crimes beyond description, which their own historian,
903 I, XV | that time, to have remained desert to this day, between the
904 IV, XIX | stones, and came to a small deserted city, not far from thence,
905 I, III | Romans to give up certain deserters. No one before or after
906 I, VIII | themselves in woods and deserts and secret caves, came forth
907 V, XIX | mention has been made above. Designing to go to Rome, to plead
908 I, XXIII | good work, than to think of desisting from one which has been
909 V, XIV | among them, to the end that, despairing of salvation, he might himself
910 I, XXIX | he signified that he had despatched the pall to him, and at
911 II, II | servant of Christ; but if he despises you, and does not rise up
912 0, Int | self-dedication of Egbert, who is destined to play a prominent part
913 0, Int | ii; and the Namur MS. A detailed account of these, as well
914 II, XI | from it by the darkness of detestable error?~ "Wherefore, applying
915 V, XXI | rightly to be abhorred and detested by all the faithful, than
916 III, XVII | of Easter; nay, heartily detesting it, as I have most manifestly
917 IV, II | manner. Now at the time when Deusdledit died, and a bishop for the
918 0, Life | when the plague of 686 devastated the monastery, the Abbot
919 0, Int | Chapter 9 we enter upon a new development of the highest importance
920 V, XXI | though on the other side, deviate from the right way of truth,
921 V, XX III| with their own territories, devise no plots nor hostilities
922 0, Life | it is perhaps as wholly devoid of incident as any life
923 IV, XXVII | other teachers. But he, devoting himself entirely to that
924 0, Life | opportunities for prayer and devotional study, even while he was
925 III, XXVI | and having performed his devotions in the church, departed.
926 I, XXXIV | in the morning he shall devour the prey, and at night he
927 III, XVII | consumed by the fire which devoured all about it. This miracle
928 IV, XXV | The time is at hand when a devouring fire shall reduce to ashes
929 0, Life | he was admitted to the diaconate, and received priest’s orders
930 II, I | judgement was as a robe and a diadem. I was eyes to the blind,
931 II, I | and composed four books of Dialogues, in which, at the request
932 IV, V | judgement, as defined by us, I dictated to be written by Titillus
933 I, XXVII | be kept in mind, and it dictates the measure of the punishment,
934 V, XV | authority was the teaching and dictation of Arculf, a bishop of Gaul,
935 0, Life | might have had. "Ipse mihi dictator simul notarius (=shorthand
936 IV, XIII | Scottish nation, whose name was Dicul, who had a very small monastery,
937 III, XIX | and the priests Gobban and Dicull,and being himself free from
938 0, Life | Who, triumphing this day, didst ascend above all the heavens,
939 0, Int | the settlement of minute differences of reading."~The first modern
940 IV, XXVIII | ordered the brothers to dig a pit in the floor of the
941 II, I | enfeebled by the weakness of his digestion, and oppressed by a low
942 IV, XXVIII | sober mind and patient, most dilig entlyintenton devout prayers,
943 0, Life | age, when his eyes were dim, was induced by certain "
944 V, XXI | in no wise anticipated or diminished; but rather ordains, that
945 II, XIX | Tomianus, Columbanus, Cromanus, Dinnaus, and Baithanus, bishops;
946 II, II | and over which the Abbot Dinoot is said to have presided
947 IV, V | commendatory letters from his diocesan. But if he shall be once
948 V, XXI | nineteen years. After whom, Dionysius Exiguus added as many more,
949 II, IX | had a two-edged dagger, dipped in poison, to the end that,
950 V, XX III| evening, as it were presaging dire disaster to both east and
951 V, II | Holy Cross on his tongue, directing him to draw it back so signed
952 0, Int | it is apparently obtained directly from eye-witnesses of the
953 IV, IX | for many years, been so disabled in all her body, that she
954 III, XIV | when the causes of their disagreement increased, he murdered him
955 V, XXI | happen before the equinox, disagrees with the doctrine of the
956 0, Life | other saints. The shrine disappeared at the Reformation, and
957 IV, XXXII | touched it; nor did his faith disappoint him. It was then, as he
958 I, III | therefore, among countless other disasters brought by him upon the
959 III, XXX | suffering from the aforesaid disastrous plague, Sighere, with his
960 III, XXVII | plague prevailed no less disastrously in the island of Ireland.
961 III, XIV | better times. He therefore disbanded the army which he had assembled,
962 II, X | illustrious consort, who is discerned to be one flesh with you,
963 II, XI | set at rest; and that we, discerning more fully the light of
964 V, XXI | think your wisdom easily discerns that it is much better to
965 IV, III | shot out lightnings, and discomfited them.’ For the Lord moves
966 III, XIX | things. The third was of discord, when we do not fear to
967 I, XXIII | tongues of evil-speaking men, discourage you; but with all earnestness
968 III, IV | and monk;of whose life and discourses some records are said to
969 IV, III | became holy men, they were discoursing of the life of the former
970 II, II | first to a certain holy and discreet man, who was wont to lead
971 II, I | ought to live; with how much discrimination they ought to instruct the
972 I, XXVII | married people, in that women disdain to suckle the children whom
973 V, XIX | king of the Northumbrians, disdained to receive him. But he died
974 IV, XIX | bodies possessed, and other diseases were at divers times healed;
975 IV, XXXII | a youth whose eyelid was disfigured by an unsightly tumour,
976 IV, XXXII | there never had been any disfigurement or tumour on it.~ ~
977 V, XII | farther by degrees, sore dismayed by that dread sight, on
978 IV, VI | taking offence at some act of disobedience of Wynfrid, bishop of the
979 I, XX | save them. They fled in disorder, casting away their arms,
980 IV, III | of judgement to come; to dispel their pride, and confound
981 I, XXVII | of assigning portions, or dispensing hospitality and showing
982 I, VIII | holy martyrs, and, as if displaying their conquering standards
983 IV, IX | spoke; then, as if somewhat displeased, she said, "I can in no
984 V, XIII | his outward industry, than displeasing to him for his neglect of
985 I, XV | pitiless conqueror, yet by the disposal of the just Judge, it ravaged
986 II, X | and all that in them is, disposing the order by which they
987 I, I | amalgamated with the Celts who dispossessed them (Rhys). Others regard
988 III, XXVI | for there was no small dispute about that also,) and went
989 III, XXV | truth in Gaul or Italy. Disputing with Finan, he convinced
990 IV, III | evening, unperceived or disregarded by the keepers of the place,
991 II, XII | what I told you before, she dissuaded him from it, reminding him
992 0, Life | is incomprehensible and distasteful to the modern reader, but
993 I, XXVII | woman her courses are a distemper. If, therefore, it was a
994 I, XXVII | procure a remedy against distempers? Thus to a woman her courses
995 0, Int | to the student in keeping distinct the different threads of
996 III, XIX | that among other things he distinctly heard this refrain: "The
997 III, XI | mouth, and to writhe and distort his limbs. None being able
998 I, II | he was suddenly beset and distracted with wars and sudden risings
999 I, XIV | meantime, the aforesaid famine distressing the Britons more and more,
1000 III, V | world, but delighted in distributing immediately among the poor
1001 I, XXVII | whom we have spoken that a distribution was made unto every man
1002 0, Life | the mediaeval churchman’s distrust of pagan authors, he constantly
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