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1 I| rested, not for that he was weary, but ceased his operation,
2 I| give him some, for he was weary and much hungry. To whom
3 I| her husband and said: I am weary of my life because of the
4 I| and so his hands were not weary until the going down of
5 I| of Edom, and began to wax weary, and grudged against our
6 II| after this that when he was weary of burying dead men, he
7 II| wilderness in his prayer and was weary, he said to our Lord, Lord,
8 III| was that S. Dunstan was weary of prayer, then used he
9 III| gladly, and because he was weary of travail, of fasting and
10 III| long that their hands waxed weary; and the people hoped that
11 III| went, and that they were weary and sore travelled by the
12 IV| the apostles, and never weary of preaching of the Word
13 IV| began to fail, and were so weary that they might no more.
14 IV| debonairly, and because he was weary of travail and fastings,
15 IV| to sleep; and when he was weary and necessity of sleep constrained
16 IV| maiden: O Ciriacus, thou art weary of travel, and he said:
17 IV| travel, and he said: I am not weary, but am governed overall
18 V| which never suffer him to be weary ne to be an hungered, he
19 V| travail by these hard and weary journeys, ne my body to
20 V| Then at the last he being weary for to travail, lay down
21 V| On a time S. Francis was weary of going, and rode upon
22 V| Leonard of Assisi, was also weary of going, and S. Francis
23 VI| they that beat him were weary, and after was put in prison,
24 VI| passed and the people be weary for to abide, wherefore
25 VII| the occident and never be weary, and when thou shalt have
26 VII| butchers began to fail and were weary. From the first hour of
27 VII| wherefore all the monks were so weary of that trouble that they
28 VII| please all men, and was weary and grieved and half overcome,
29 VII| in a church, and he being weary rested him upon a bench,
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