0-brand | brick-distr | diver-heife | heir-nidd | niece-rumin | rushe-two-e | twofo-ythan
Book, Chapter
1003 V, XIII | impenitent. And whereas he saw diverse books laid before him by
1004 0, Int | whole History a number of diversities between the pretended religion
1005 V, XXI | been a contention about the diversity in keeping Easter, and in
1006 V, XXIV | Prophets, and Part of Jeremiah, Divisions of Chapters, collected from
1007 IV, XI | wife firmly refused to be divorced from him; for which reason
1008 0, Life | yflaes ~aefter deothdaege ~doemid uueorthae.~Which being interpreted
1009 I, I | also frequently taken, and dolphins, as also whales; besides
1010 I, XII | inflicted by the enemy their own domestic broils, till the whole country
1011 II, XV | appointed him in the city Dommoc, and having presided over
1012 IV, XXV | Peace and safety," the doom of the aforesaid judgement
1013 I, XV | overran the whole face of the doomed island. Public as well as
1014 III, XXV | unto you, that he is the door-keeper, and I will not gainsay
1015 III, VII | the bishop the city called Dorcic,there to establish his episcopal
1016 IV, XXIII | This nun was resting in the dormitory of the sisters, when on
1017 II, III | in Kent, at thc city of Dorubrevis, which the English call
1018 V, XVII | furlong to the east of it, a double cave in the valley, where
1019 IV, XIX | himself. And it is not to be doubted that this might take place
1020 I, XXVII | desired his solution of some doubts which seemed urgent to him.
1021 I, XIV | morals, pestilence, and the downfall of the nation.~IN the meantime,
1022 III, XIX | which, casting his eyes downward, he saw, as it were, a dark
1023 V, XII | a crowd of evil spirits dragging five souls of men, wailing
1024 III, XXIII | Isaiah, "In the habitation of dragons, where each lay, might be
1025 0, Int | In Chapter 20 we have a dramatic climax to the book in the
1026 IV, XXV | snares of the flesh, and dreading too little the judgement
1027 II, I | the fear of the Lord, he dreads to do evil, and with all
1028 IV, III | hearts, and casting out the dregs of our sins, we may carefully
1029 V, XII | violent hail and cold snows drifting and sweeping through all
1030 II, XVI | to be fixed, with copper drinking-vessels hanging on them, for the
1031 V, XII | vapours of the fire fell, dropped down into the depths below.
1032 0, Int | German tribes.~The vision of Drytheim is inserted here, probably
1033 V, XII | say, "We marvel, brother Drythelm (for so he was called),
1034 III, II | made in haste, and the hole dug in which it was to be set
1035 0, Life | fresh. He "takes delight" ("dulce habui") in it all. It is
1036 0, Life | Fuller’s story of a certain "dunce monk" who set about writing
1037 V, XXII | conversation, under Abbot Dunchad, about eighty years after
1038 V, XIII | shall be dragged into the dungeons of hell."~Thus spoke that
1039 IV, IX | she abode one night, at dusk, plainly saw as it were
1040 V, XXIV | remaining time of my life a dweller in that monastery, I wholly
1041 I, XXVI | soon as they entered the dwelling-place assigned to them, they began
1042 I, I | snails, of which the scarlet dye is made, a most beautiful
1043 V, XXIV | especially the disease of dysentery.~In the year 761, Oengus,
1044 IV, XIII | The queen, whose name was Eabae, had been baptized in her
1045 IV, XXIX | of Cuthbert. Afterwards Eadbertwas ordained, a man renowned
1046 III, XXIV | Mercian chiefs, Immin, and Eafa, and Eadbert, rebelled against
1047 I, XX | hastened forward with renewed eagerness. But their approach was
1048 IV, XIX | another, to wit, Tondbert, ealdormanof the Southern Gyrwas; but
1049 V, XXIV | and Oengus; Theudor and Eanred died Eadbert added the plain
1050 I, XXXII | wars, famines, pestilences, earthquakes in divers places; which
1051 IV, III | whereupon they are presently eased of their infirmity, and
1052 III, XI | When no hope appeared of easing him in his ravings, the
1053 I, XV | called Old Saxony, came the East-Saxons, the South-Saxons, and the
1054 III, XXV | assigned the twentieth to Easter-Sunday, as believing that to be
1055 V, XXI | your houses; for whosoever eateth leavened bread, from the
1056 IV, XXVI | Anglian kingdom began to ebb and fall away for the Picts
1057 III, III | Which place, as the tide ebbs and flows, is twice a day
1058 V, XXIV | Father Job;~On the Proverbs, Ecciesiastes, and the Song of Songs;~
1059 IV, III | season like that of which Ecclesiastes says, "That there is a time
1060 0, Life | records. In the "Epistola ad Ecgbertum" he alludes to a short stay
1061 I, XX | same word followed, and the echoes from the surrounding hills
1062 IV, II | of the Northumbrians was Eddi, surnamed Stephen,invited
1063 IV, XII | was Ethelwin ; the third Edgar; the fourth Cynibert, who
1064 0, Life | more for our profit and edification, he passed his last day
1065 IV, VII | and succeeding generations edified, and these are in the possession
1066 V, XXIV | Eadbert.~In the year 739, Edilhart, king of the West-Saxons,
1067 0, Int | printed on the Continent; the "editio princeps" is believed to
1068 0, Pref | particularly indebted to Mr. Edward Bell, who has kindly revised
1069 IV, XIII | bishop’s men having gathered eel-nets everywhere, cast them into
1070 I, XIV | memory of its mischievous effects, obliged many of them to
1071 III, XXIII | piece of bread, one hen’s egg, and a little milk and water.
1072 IV, V | death of the kings Oswy and Eghert, and of the synod held at
1073 V, VIII | full of days, for he was eighty-eight years of age; which number
1074 V, XX III| Britain; about two hundred and eighty-live years after the coming of
1075 IV, XIII | Wilfrid, land to the extent of eighty-seven families, to maintain his
1076 V, III | not be bent at all at the elbow; and he stood and said a
1077 III, I | aforesaid Eanfrid, as the eldest of them, became king of
1078 IV, XXIII | before, that is, before the election of the aforesaid man of
1079 0, Life | believes to be the miraculous element in his history. In whatever
1080 I, XVII | might oppose the raging elements. He, showing himself the
1081 V, XXIV | the year of our Lord 167, Eleuther, being made bishop at Rome,
1082 III, XXI | king, he was by his father elevated to the throne of that nation,
1083 II, VII | but still nobler by the elevation of his mind.~ In short,
1084 0, Life | related by Bede, and of Elfied, the daughter of Oswy, dedicated
1085 0, Life | were stolen by the priest, Elfred, and carried to Durham.
1086 0, Int | by his date from writing Elizabethan English.~The work was again
1087 II, XIV | which is in the forest of Elmet.~
1088 I, XVII | forth the torrent of their eloquence and showered upon them the
1089 II, IX | cunning words his pretended embassy, he startled up on a sudden,
1090 III, XIX | and certain of the nobles, embellished it with more stately buildings
1091 0, Int | keep alive the smouldering embers of the faith.~BOOK III.—
1092 III, XXV | Finan, but, on the contrary, embittered him the more by reproof,
1093 II, XI | acknowledge their Creator by embracing the mystery of the Christian
1094 0, Life | recently his nation had emerged from barbarism and received
1095 IV, I | But Hadrian went first to Emma, Bishop of the Senones,
1096 I, XXVII | they are ordained: that all emoluments which accrue, are to be
1097 0, Life | considerable. He did not employ an amanuensis, and he had
1098 III, V | psalms. This was the daily employment of himself and all that
1099 V, II | made for him within the enclosure of the dwelling, in which
1100 II, XIV | build the church square, encompassing the former oratory. But
1101 I, II | cavalry was, at the first encounter, defeated by the Britons,
1102 III, XVIII | with them to battle, to encourage the soldiers. He was unwilling
1103 I, XXV | thus strengthened by the encouragement of the blessed Father Gregory,
1104 II, IX | called Tata, (a term of endearment) daughter to King Ethelbert.
1105 V, XXII | or rather never ceases endlessly to celebrate, with our Lord,
1106 II, VIII | patience, and the virtue of endurance, to the end that the hearts
1107 I, XXVII | afterwards unconsciously endured. But it is to be considered,
1108 IV, XX | in like manner Eulalia endures, scorched by the fierce
1109 II, VIII | Lord Himself says, 'He that endureth to the end shall be saved.''
1110 II, XVIII | of exhortation out of our enduring charity, do not fail further
1111 I, XII | unless they themselves were enervated by cowardice. Moreover,
1112 I, XX | headlong in their fear, were engulfed by the river which they
1113 III, XVIII | kingdom by Anna,the son of Eni, of the blood royal, a good
1114 IV, XXIV | sacred history or doctrine, enjoining upon him, if he could, to
1115 0, Life | he founded and which was enlarged by Abbot Ceolfrid. Here
1116 0, Int | Bishop Felix, under the enlightened King Sigbert, who had himself
1117 III, XXIX | Paul, whose doctrine daily enlightens the hearts of believers,
1118 III, XXIX | which shall stand for an ensign of the people; to it shall
1119 III, XIII | have suffered myself to be ensnared by sin, instead of keeping
1120 III, VII | another wife; whereupon a war ensuing, he was by him deprived
1121 V, IX | achieving either of these enterprises; for when he had made choice
1122 I, XXVII | in a mystery; for if she enters the church the very hour
1123 IV, XXVIII | and patient, most dilig entlyintenton devout prayers, and kindly
1124 IV, XI | because of this difficulty of entombing him, they had thoughts either
1125 V, XVI | west. It has eight doors or entrances in a straight line through
1126 V, XXIV | later hand, except, perhaps entries under the years 731, 732,
1127 II, XI | faith and of the benefits entrusted to your hands. That you
1128 III, XIX | followed accusations of the envious spirits against himself,
1129 I, XIV | enmity, quarrels, strife, envy, and other such sins. In
1130 IV, XVII | and their tenets; and at Ephesus, for the first time, of
1131 V, XXIV | metre, or rhythm.~A Book of Epigrams in heroic or elegiac verse.~
1132 IV, XIX | Easter, Whitsuntide, and the Epiphany, and then she did it last
1133 0, Life | which he records. In the "Epistola ad Ecgbertum" he alludes
1134 0, Int | translations. Some letters, epitaphs, and similar documents are
1135 0, Life | she was a year old.~The epithet "Venerable," commonly attached
1136 II, I | Gospel, which he divided equally into two volumes; and composed
1137 V, XIX | loved by his elders and his equals. Having served God some
1138 I, I | winter, that is, only six equinoctial hours. Whereas, in Armenia,
1139 0, Int | edition in 1722 marked a new era in the history of the book.
1140 III, IX | the apostates should be erased from the catalogue of the
1141 0, Int | there is an almost complete erasure of the chapters relating
1142 I, X | They tell that one, erewhile consumed with gnawing spite,
1143 II, XIX | Baithanus, bishops; to Cromanus, Ernianus, Laistranus, Scellanus,
1144 V, XXI | two-and-twentieth no less erroneously, though on the other side,
1145 II, XIX | letters of great authority and erudition for the purpose of correcting
1146 IV, XXII | recover, to prevent his escaping, he ordered him to be bound
1147 II, IX | words of the Apostle, "To espouse her to the one true Husband,
1148 0, Int | save Elizabeth’s time "in espying out the particulars," the
1149 0, Int | missionary activity and the establishment of Christianity throughout
1150 II, IV | Britons and Scots in great esteem for sanctity, believing
1151 0, Int | OVERVIEW~There are, it has been estimated, in England and on the Continent,
1152 0, Life | devotion ranks highest in his estimation, but he records with approval
1153 V, XXI | that it is much better to estrange from your countenance, already
1154 0, Life | notarius (=shorthand writer) et librarius (=copyist)," he
1155 IV, XXI | between the kings Egfrid and Etheired. [679 A. D.]~IN the ninth
1156 III, XXIII | monastery given him by King Etheiwald, consecrated it to the Lord
1157 III, XXIV | them slain; among whom was Ethelhere, brother and successor to
1158 III, XI | sister of the holy men, Ethelwinand Aldwin, the first of whom
1159 V, I | 699 A.D.]~THE venerable Ethewald succeeded the man of God,
1160 III, XIV | the hands of his reeve, Ethilwin, foully slew him and the
1161 IV, XVII | madness of Macedonius and Eudoxius, and their tenets; and at
1162 IV, XX | yielded not; in like manner Eulalia endures, scorched by the
1163 II, IX | the province one called Eumer, sent by the king of the
1164 IV, XX | the wild beasts; chaste Euphemia overcomes the accursed wild
1165 V, XXI | But by the industry of Eusebius, who took his surname from
1166 II, I | of our resurrection. For Eutychius, bishop of that city, taught,
1167 III, XXV | twenty-first. Nor does this evangelical and apostolic tradition
1168 I, XVII | the words of Apostles and Evangelists, mingling the Scriptures
1169 0, Int | Mercia, so lately itself evangelized, becomes a new missionary
1170 II, I | reward of thy works for evermore.~ Nor must we pass by in
1171 I, XXIII | journey, nor the tongues of evil-speaking men, discourage you; but
1172 IV, XXII | brother, he gave him an exact account of all his misfortunes,
1173 0, Life | and preserve him from the exaggerations of the conventual ideal.
1174 II, XVII | souls; that his prayers may exalt your kingdom and people,
1175 II, XIII | therefore, that if upon examination you find those new doctrines,
1176 0, Int | four oldest MSS., besides examining numerous others and collating
1177 II, X | idolatry, appears by the examples of the perishing of those
1178 V, XII | and one side of it was exceeding terrible with raging flames,
1179 V, XVII | height to Mount Sion, but exceeds it in breadth and length;
1180 I, XXXII | of former princes; and he excelled his predecessors in renown
1181 0, Life | appreciation of all forms of excellence. It is the unlearned brother,
1182 II, XI | Christian faith, continually excels in the performance of works
1183 V, XXIV | died.~In the year 737, an excessive drought rendered the land
1184 I, XXX | solemnity must be given them in exchange for this, as that on the
1185 IV, XXIV | the love of sin, and to excite in them devotion to well-doing
1186 IV, XIV | heard of it were wonderfully excited to implore the Divine mercy
1187 III, XXII | prevent or correct the sin, he excommunicated him, and commanded all that
1188 IV, V | received shall be under excommunication.~"VI. That bishops and clergy,
1189 III, XVII | stay there, and to make excursions from it to preach in the
1190 0, Int | MSS. (cf. Mayor and Lumby, Excursus II). In 1896 the Rev. C.
1191 0, Life | of good works and find an excuse for their error in their
1192 III, VII | bishopric of his nation. But he excused himself, and protested that
1193 II, XIX | cannot be ignorant how that execrable heresy has been condemned;
1194 0, Int | the Anglo-Saxon version, executed either by Alfred himself
1195 IV, XVI | kingdom of Heaven. Then the executioner came, and they joyfully
1196 V, XIX | to die with him; but the executioners, understanding that he was
1197 II, I | more and more roused to the exercises of a heavenly life.~ For
1198 I, XXVII | Holiness in Gaul, he should exert himself to the utmost, and
1199 0, Int | and "the very first which exhibits in an apparatus criticus
1200 V, XXI | years. After whom, Dionysius Exiguus added as many more, in order,
1201 0, Int | form of annalistic records existed before his time, and that
1202 I, XV | bearing his name, is still in existence in the eastern parts of
1203 I, XXII | only acquainted with the existing peaceable state of things,
1204 III, XI | movements, the priest used exorcisms, and did all that he could
1205 IV, III | mindful to await with earnest expectation. For with all his merits
1206 III, XII | he was one day anxiously expecting the hour when his fit was
1207 I, III | every side, undertook an expedition into Britain, which as it
1208 I, XII | undertake such troublesome expeditions for their sake, and advised
1209 I, XII | raised at public and private expense, the Britons also lending
1210 III, XXIV | Eanfled, his kinswoman, in expiation of his unjust death, begged
1211 III, XXV | better and more clearly explain our opinion in the English
1212 II, I | of our ancestors, which explains his earnest care for the
1213 V, XXIV | one Book of Allegorical Explanation concerning Christ and the
1214 I, XX | picked out the most active, explored the country round about,
1215 I, XXI | the judgement of all, the exponents of the heresy, who had been
1216 V, XXII | aside from the true path, expose their heads without a crown,
1217 II, I | he taught in his books of Expositions what virtues men ought to
1218 I, I | with the heat of the sun or exposure to rain, but the older it
1219 I, XXVII | And afterwards he added, expounding the same, "Out of the heart
1220 IV, XXIV | turned ere long into verse expressive of much sweetness and penitence,
1221 0, Int | of England, and these are expressly mentioned in the Preface.~
1222 0, Int | monasticism in this time of external peace.~The book closes in
1223 III, XXIV | resolved to blot out and extirpate all his nation, from the
1224 0, Int | Parenthetically we have extracts from letters, probably of
1225 II, X | the nations seated at the extremities of the earth in the knowledge
1226 III, XXIX | glad tidings? Who would not exult and be joyful at these good
1227 IV, XX | who of old conquered Eve; exultant the maiden triumphs and
1228 V, XII | whilst they themselves exulted and laughed. Among those
1229 IV, XX | a new-made bride, thou exultest in the tuneful hymn.~"None
1230 0, Int | apparently obtained directly from eye-witnesses of the events, much would
1231 IV, XXIX | one another with bodily eyesight in this world. For I know
1232 II, I | last parts of the prophet Ezekiel, which seemed the most obscure.
1233 0, Life | have offered exceptional facilities for study. Benedict had
1234 0, Pref | has brought so many new facts to light, that it has been
1235 I, I | beautiful red, which never fades with the heat of the sun
1236 V, XIX | been dead, and only by his faint breathing showed that he
1237 0, Life | in an unusual degree of fairness to opponents. The Paschal
1238 III, I | abolish the memory of those faithless monarchs, and to assign
1239 II, IV | a state, might begin to falter, if it should be destitute
1240 IV, XXX | great compunction and with faltering tongue, the brothers did
1241 V, XX III| they were as well known and familiar to him as his native language.
1242 I, XXXII | order of the seasons, wars, famines, pestilences, earthquakes
1243 IV, XXIII | where he was also poisoned, fancied, in a dream, that he was
1244 I, XIX | were thatched with reed, fanned by the wind, was carried
1245 III, VIII | most noble abbess, named Fara, at a place called In Brige;
1246 IV, I | the Senones, and then to Faro, bishop of the Meldi, and
1247 I, II | eighty ships of burden and fast-sailing vessels, he sailed over
1248 I, XXVI | constant prayer, watchings, and fastings; preaching the Word of life
1249 II, XVII | people, and present you faultless before Almighty God. We
1250 IV, II | such things as he found faulty. Among the rest, when he
1251 II, I | warriors, now believes and fears the tongues of the humble!
1252 I, X | fruit of their soil, or fed on Campanian pastures his
1253 I, I | and is well adapted for feeding cattle and beasts of burden.
1254 IV, XXVI | bishop, the enemy made a feigned retreat, and the king was
1255 III, XXX | his faithful life in great felicity.~King Wulfhere, hearing
1256 IV, XVIII | Ceolfrid,his companion and fellow-labourer in that work, who was after
1257 0, Life | Cuthbert to Cuthwin.~"To his fellow-lector, Cuthwin, beloved in Christ,
1258 IV, XXV | told me by my most reverend fellow-priest, Aedgils, who then lived
1259 0, Life | in Christ, Cuthbert, his fellow-student, greeting and salvation
1260 I, II | command of Cassobellaunus, and fenced the bank of the river and
1261 I, XV | their success and of the fertility of the country, and the
1262 III, XXVII | face with tears, and prayed fervently to God that he might not
1263 IV, XX | gifts, bright amidst the festal torches; behold! the Bridegroom
1264 IV, XXV | sooner loosed from the inward fetters of sin, which lay heavy
1265 IV, VI | continues to cure many of fevers and other ailments; and,
1266 V, XVII | but more briefly and in fewer words, we have thought fit
1267 II, VII | where the fire raged most fiercely. The bishop, being carried
1268 V, I | water, in such sort that the fierceness of the storm ceased on all
1269 I, XXIII | about the one hundred and fiftieth after the coming of the
1270 IV, V | fell sick, and died, in the fifty-eighth year of his age.He at that
1271 I, XXIII | our Lord 582, Maurice, the fifty-fourth from Augustus, ascended
1272 III, XXIV | abbess; till, at the age of fifty-nine, the blessed virgin departed
1273 I, XIII | wall of that city, with fifty-seven towers, fell to the ground.
1274 II, V | governed his temporal kingdom fifty-six years, entered into the
1275 V, XXIV | martyrdom, together with fifty-three others; and Redger was consecrated
1276 V, XXII | wearing on their heads the figure of an unending crown. It
1277 IV, XXIII | a light shed from above filling all the place. Looking earnestly
1278 I, XXVII | body, is not defiled with filthy thoughts. In which case,
1279 0, Int | help to the Romans, the final departure of their protectors,
1280 0, Int | Mr. Plummer, however, finds it "very rarely available
1281 I, XXVII | that some be punished with fines, others with stripes; some
1282 0, Life | works, which he strove to finish; to wit, his translation
1283 III, VIII | prevented by death from finishing it, and was buried in the
1284 0, Life | to acquire, if possible, first-hand evidence; where this cannot
1285 IV, XIII | of God took three hundred fishes of divers sorts, which being
1286 IV, XIII | them to get their food by fishing; for their sea and rivers
1287 IV, XIX | beautifully wrought, and fitly covered with a lid of the
1288 II, V | was troubled with frequent fits of madness, and possessed
1289 IV, I | whose learning and age were fitter for the episcopal office.
1290 II, IX | inquiring what they thought was fittest to be done in that case.
1291 0, Int | of evangelization. Aidan fixes his see at Lindisfarne.
1292 I, XVII | as if because resistance flagged, the tempest gathered strength,
1293 0, Life | he writes. Yet he never flags. Through all the outward
1294 II, X | temples, and the deceitful flatteries of auguries, you believe
1295 IV, XX | away, and the dark serpent flies.~Rage fills the foe who
1296 V, XII | cracking pieces of ice were floating about him, which he had
1297 I, XVII | wished-for shore. A multitude flocking thither from all parts,
1298 III, XXIV | the great rains, was in flood, and had overflowed its
1299 I, I | hot springs, and from them flow rivers which furnish hot
1300 0, Life | singularly clear, simple, and fluent, as free from obscurity
1301 II, XII | For whither shall I now fly, when I have for so many
1302 III, XI | to gnash his teeth, to foam at the mouth, and to writhe
1303 III, IX | still, hung his head, and foamed at the mouth, and, at length,
1304 IV, XX | Cecilia joyously laughs at the foemen's sword.~"Many a triumph
1305 I, XI | put to death by his own follower Count Gerontius, at Vienne.~
1306 II, IV | Annegray, Luxeuil, and Fontaines), worked for twenty years
1307 III, XXV | Picts and the Britons, who foolishly, in these two remote islands
1308 II, X | worship, and despising the foolishness of temples, and the deceitful
1309 I, II | fleet, no small number of foot-soldiers, and almost all his cavalry.
1310 V, XVII | are to be seen the last Footprints of our Lord, the place where
1311 V, XXI | small power, to follow the footsteps of the most blessed chief
1312 I, XXVII | in her wisdom, and so, by forbearance and blindness often suppresses
1313 IV, XXVIII | which signifies "at the two fords," in which Archbishop Theodore,
1314 0, Life | of souls from the body:~Fore then neidfaerae~naenig uiuurthit~
1315 III, XIV | after, the bishop’s gloomy foreboding was fulfilled by the king’
1316 III, XVI | hurt, and all afraid, they forebore any further attempts against
1317 II, I | and in the Church, was his forefather, Nor did he show his nobility
1318 V, XXI | they may show on their foreheads that they also willingly,
1319 I, XV | into the island, and the foreigners began to increase so much,
1320 I, XXII | forsake his people, whom he foreknew, but sent to the aforesaid
1321 IV, XXIV | said, he seems to have had foreknowledge of his death.~
1322 II, XIV | country, and as many as were foreordained to eternal life believed
1323 V, XX III| without doubt one was the forerunner of the day, and the other
1324 III, XIX | irruptions of the pagans,and foreseeing that the monasteries would
1325 II, XIV | Thrydwulf, which is in the forest of Elmet.~
1326 V, X | Church, whereof he had been forewarned by a revelation; nor that
1327 I, XXVII | sinned in Paradise, they forfeited the immortality which they
1328 III, XXII | his enemies, and calmly forgave the wrongs they had done
1329 III, II | put it into his bosom; and forgetting, when he went to bed, to
1330 V, XIII | those whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins are covered."
1331 V, XIII | time with the fruits of forgiveness. Of whom it is manifest,
1332 I, XX | their general. And now a formidable host of foes drew near,
1333 II, X | own image and likeness, forming him out of the mire of the
1334 II, IX | the thegns, whose name was Forthhere.~ On that same holy Easter
1335 I, XII | guard was placed upon the fortification, where, dazed with fear,
1336 I, I | cities, besides innumerable forts, which were all strongly
1337 II, XX | our Lord 633, being then forty-eight years of age, and all his
1338 I, XIII | Theodosius, the younger, the forty-fifth from Augustus, succeeded
1339 V, XX | monastery, this being the forty-first year after he was sent by
1340 I, XVI | of those enemies, about forty-four years after their arrival
1341 I, XI | son of Theodosius, and the forty-fourth from Augustus, being emperor,
1342 IV, XXVI | have now enjoyed for about forty-six years. Among the many English
1343 I, X | the son of Theodosius, the forty-third from Augustus, succeeding
1344 0, Life | the verse, "Hic sunt in fossa Bedae . . . ossa," went
1345 V, XVI | set up as another altar, four-cornered, at the east end of the
1346 IV, XXIX | tenth part, not only of four-footed beasts, but also of all
1347 V, XVII | encompassed with a wall foursquare, their heads lying to the
1348 IV, X | when this was done, and a fragrancy of wonderful sweetness arose,
1349 I, XX | rocks, but even the very frame of heaven above them; and
1350 IV, XXII | that account if he would frankly confess who he was. This
1351 III, IX | the beast ceased from his frantic kicking, and, after the
1352 III, V | this island, then, and the fraternity of these monks, Aidan was
1353 V, VII | Baptism, he should soon be freed from the bonds of the flesh
1354 V, XII | terrible with flaming fire and freezing cold, is the place in which
1355 IV, III | a certain man that had a frenzy, wandering about everywhere,
1356 III, V | their fast on Wednesdays and Fridays, till the ninth hour, throughout
1357 V, X | How Wilbrord, preaching in Frisand, converted many to Christ;
1358 IV, XXII | he sold him to a certain Frisian at London, but he could
1359 V, XXIV | ordained Frithbert, and Frithwald bishops; and the priest
1360 I, VI | the enemy to infest the frontiers. When, therefore, an order
1361 III, XIX | winter weather and a hard frost, and the man was sitting
1362 III, XXVI | they governed shows how frugal and temperate he and his
1363 I, XXVII | child be baptized, since the fruitfulness of the flesh is no offence
1364 III, XVIII | he lived in banishment, a fugitive from the enmity of Redwald.
1365 I, XXVII | then the sin is known to be full-grown. The seed, therefore, of
1366 III, XIX | its souls, to his brother Fullan, and the priests Gobban
1367 0, Int | interesting commentary and the fullest references to the various
1368 III, I | but ravaging them like a furious tyrant, he at length put
1369 V, I | presently returned, and raged furiously during the whole day; so
1370 V, XVII | what it then was, has, one furlong to the east of it, a double
1371 V, XIX | bishop sent him to Rome, furnishing him with a guide and supplying
1372 V, II | some word," said he; "say ‘gae,’ " which, in the language
1373 I, I | Celtic race, the Goidels or Gaels, appears to have been in
1374 III, XXV | door-keeper, and I will not gainsay him, but I desire, as far
1375 V, XI | of the Wilts; but, in the Gallic tongue, Trajectum. The most
1376 0, Life | an angel had filled the gap with the word "venerabilis."
1377 IV, XIX | wise, instead of the open gaping wound with which she had
1378 V, IX | still corruptly called "Garmans" by the neighbouring nation
1379 0, Life | his hin iongae ~huaet his gastae ~godaes aeththa yflaes ~
1380 III, XXII | of the Thames. In these, gathering a flock of Christ’s servants,
1381 III, XI | upon all and intent they gazed," anxiously waiting to see
1382 V, VIII | consecrated in the stead of Gedmund, bishop of the Church of
1383 III, VI | always humble, kind, and generous to the poor and to strangers.~
1384 II, I | be said of his immortal genius, which could not be crushed
1385 V, VIII | northern mouth of the river Genlade. He was a man learned in
1386 III, VII | from Asterius, bishop of Genoa, but on his arrival in Britain,
1387 V, XIX | psalms and weeping. Sighing gently, he asked where Acca, the
1388 0, Int | plant the faith among the German tribes.~The vision of Drytheim
1389 I, II | was making war upon the Germans and the Gauls, who were
1390 I, XI | by his own follower Count Gerontius, at Vienne.~Rome was taken
1391 I, I | from here across the sea to Gessoriacum, the nearest shore in the
1392 IV, XI | character, either by word or gesture. Wherefore, calling to him
1393 II, V | against the nation of the Gewissi, they were all slain with
1394 0, Int | translation by the Rev. L. Gidley was published. The present
1395 II, XI | silver looking-glass, and a gilded ivory comb, which we pray
1396 II, XIII | mare. Having, therefore, girt a sword about him, with
1397 I, XII | the midst of it the city Giudi. On the Western Sea, that
1398 V, XVII | cords, shine through the glass as far as Jerusalem; and
1399 II, XIV | absolution in the river Glen, which is close by. This
1400 IV, X | could not see the least glimpse of light. Having continued
1401 0, Life | These are but a few of the glimpses afforded us of the personality
1402 0, Life | the body, he chanted the ‘Gloria Patri’ and other words to
1403 IV, XVII | Lord Jesus Christ, as they glorified Him, neither adding aught
1404 IV, XVII | those whom they received; glorifying God the Father, Who is without
1405 III, XI | and began to cry out, to gnash his teeth, to foam at the
1406 I, X | erewhile consumed with gnawing spite, snake-like attacked
1407 III, XXI | monastery which is called At the Goat’s Head.8The aforesaid priests,
1408 III, XIX | Fullan, and the priests Gobban and Dicull,and being himself
1409 0, Life | iongae ~huaet his gastae ~godaes aeththa yflaes ~aefter deothdaege ~
1410 II, XIII | Derwent, and is now called Godmunddingaham, where the high priest,
1411 IV, XIII | and received him as his godson when he came forth from
1412 V, VIII | Sunday the 29th of June, by Godwin, metropolitan bishop of
1413 0, Int | life of war and bloodshed, goes to Rome to receive baptism
1414 I, XXVII | Gospel, "Not that which goeth into the mouth defileth
1415 I, I | of the Celtic race, the Goidels or Gaels, appears to have
1416 V, XVI | westward, is seen the church of Golgotha, in which is also to be
1417 0, Int | debate in the Witenagemot at Goodmanham and the baptism of the king
1418 II, I | by nation a Roman, son of Gordianus, tracing his descent from
1419 I, XVII | splendour of their wealth, with gorgeous apparel, and supported by
1420 II, VII | the bodily infirmity of gout, but his mind was sound
1421 IV, III | chief of her thegns, and governor of her house. As the fervour
1422 III, XIV | serve him. Among all the graces of virtue and moderation
1423 IV, XIX | of the English, is called Grantacaestir, (Grantchester, near Cambridge)
1424 IV, XIX | is called Grantacaestir, (Grantchester, near Cambridge) and presently,
1425 II, XVIII | bestow on His servants He grants to us in His bounty, graciously
1426 I, XI | Rhine, ravaged all Gaul, Gratianus, a citizen of the country,
1427 I, XXVII | judgement of God, lest, for the gratification of their carnal desires,
1428 I, XXX | that, whilst some outward gratifications are retained, they may the
1429 0, Pref | ways I wish to express my gratitude to various correspondents
1430 III, IX | perfectly recovered, began to graze hungrily on the green herbage.
1431 III, XXV | in Africa, Asia, Egypt, Greece, and all the world, wherever
1432 III, X | particular spot of ground greener and more beautiful than
1433 III, X | the cause of the unusual greenness in that place must be that
1434 II, XII | who you are, and why you grieve, and the evils which you
1435 III, V | salvation it demanded, but grieving that they had not received
1436 I, XXVII | soldier of our Lord’s host, groaned and said, "I see another
1437 I, XIII | Aetius, thrice Consul, the groans of the Britons." And in
1438 0, Int | probably on chronological grounds ("his temporibus"), and
1439 IV, IV | inhabitants; being the same that, grown from a small beginning to
1440 IV, XXIV | him, nor any quarrel or grudge. They answered, that they
1441 V, XXII | had willingly, and without grudging, taken heed to impart to
1442 II, I | company he was not only guarded against the assaults of
1443 IV, XXIV | Who being the Almighty Guardian of the human race, first
1444 V, X | up their lodging in the guesthouse of a certain township-reeve,
1445 II, I | of mystic meaning. By his guiding love he brought the Angles
1446 II, VIII | granted to you, not with guiltiness, but with the benefit of
1447 I, I | Picts.~There is a very large gulf of the sea, which formerly
1448 IV, III | there blew a sudden strong gust of wind, when he was reading
1449 V, I | same was wrought; to wit, Guthfrid, the venerable servant and
1450 V, XXIV | three books.~On the song of Habakkuk, one book.~On the Book of
1451 IV, XXVIII | it became in all respects habitable, at the desire of the man
1452 III, XIII | life, to correct my sinful habits, and wholly to devote anew
1453 0, Life | takes delight" ("dulce habui") in it all. It is a life
1454 IV, XXIII | year, and which is called Hacanos. There was in that monastery,
1455 III, VII | where no other teacher hadbeen before him. Hereupon at
1456 V, XX III| bishops are Aldbert and Hadulac; in the province of the
1457 V, XII | neighbourhood of his cell lived one Haemgils, a monk, and eminent in
1458 I, XXVII | mind being agitated, he hag incurred some guilt. Lawful
1459 III, II | brothers of the same church of Hagulstald, whose name is Bothelm,
1460 V, XII | intolerable for violent hail and cold snows drifting
1461 I, XVII | favouring winds till they were halfway between the coast of Gaul
1462 V, XXII | persist in their errors, halting and turned aside from the
1463 V, XXIV | of the world; one of the Halting-places of the Children of Israel;
1464 IV, XVI | the river Homelea, (The Hamble)which runs into the aforesaid
1465 V, XVI | feet in length, and three handbreadths above the floor; the entrance
1466 I, XVIII | laid together, he took up a handful of dust from the place where
1467 I, II | where, being first roughly handled in a battle, and then caught
1468 III, XI | and immediately bade her handmaiden go and fetch her the casket
1469 IV, II | born. Nor were there ever happier times since the English
1470 IV, XXIV | and had been conversing happily and pleasantly for some
1471 I, XIV | not fail to plunder and harass the Britons from time to
1472 I, II | whence they grievously harassed the Romans with repeated
1473 V, XII | he replied, "I have seen harder things." And so, until the
1474 III, XVI | Penda!" These words were hardly uttered, when the wind immediately
1475 II, XI | endeavour to soften the hardness of his heart by carefully
1476 II, V | son Eadbald proved very harmful to the still tender growth
1477 IV, XXIV | animal,2 turned it into most harmonious verse; and sweetly singing
1478 III, XXIV | Heruteu,or, "The Island of the Hart," at that time ruled by
1479 IV, XXIII | monastery called Heruteu, (Hartlepool) which monastery had been
1480 I, XX | of the holy bishops; who, hastening to them as they had promised,
1481 IV, III | come in to him. He went hastily in, and the bishop said
1482 IV, III | and carrying an axe and hatchet in his hand, he came to
1483 V, XX III| the most part, as a nation hate and oppose the English nation,
1484 I, XIV | in particular, cruelty, hatred of truth, and love of falsehood;
1485 III, XVII | authority in reproving the haughty and powerful, and at the
1486 0, Life | from tranquillity" which haunts us all, but which we have,
1487 III, XIII | which made such widespread havoc in Britain and Ireland,
1488 I, I | three days: no man makes hay in the summer for winter’
1489 I, XX | danger; many of them, flying headlong in their fear, were engulfed
1490 III, XI | desired that some of that health-bringing dust might be given her,
1491 I, I | than Britain and has a much healthier and milder climate; for
1492 III, II | hands, till the earth was heaped up by the soldiers and it
1493 I, XV | mountains, were butchered in heaps. Others, spent with hunger,
1494 I, XXV | undoubtedly assured to those that hearkened to it everlasting joys in
1495 II, X | with all the goodwill of heartfelt love, to exhort your Highness,
1496 I, XXVII | whilst they were still heathens, are said to have been joined
1497 0, Int | the victory of Oswald at Heavenfield in 634 A.D. Christianity
1498 V, V | up, and, shaking off the heaviness of his infirmity, dressed
1499 IV, XXIII | tears and lamentations, and heaving deep sighs, told her that
1500 II, XIX | should be kept with the Hebrews on the fourteenth of the
1501 III, II | called in the English tongue Hefenfelth, or the Heavenly Field,which
1502 IV, IV | the Island of the White Heifer. Arriving there, he built
|