Volume
1 I| nourisheth and engendereth rain, and refresheth and cooleth
2 I| Thirdly, he engendereth rain, the which descendeth by
3 I| after seven days I shall rain upon the earth forty days
4 I| prohibited, and forbidden to rain no more. The seventh month,
5 I| said then to Moses: I shall rain read to you from heaven,
6 II| the mire, how many in the rain, how many so cold that their
7 III| wind, your promises be but rain, and your menaces be as
8 III| heaven such a tempest of rain and of orage, that it covered
9 III| fair and clear, and a great rain fell down so that for nothing
10 III| right so forthwith the rain and storm came, and then
11 III| there came never dew nor rain upon the earth, but burning
12 III| and tempest of wind and rain arose which troubled much
13 III| a fair miracle, for the rain fell on all the corn in
14 III| for her love made wind and rain to cease. All sick men that
15 IV| descended from heaven much rain, and of this vision and
16 IV| troubled with great floods of rain, he made the sign of the
17 IV| cross and chased away the rain from him and from his fellow
18 IV| that he would send them rain, and he sent to them so
19 V| another monk wrote it, a rain came suddenly upon them.
20 V| hid the parchment from the rain, and S. Bernard said: This
21 V| letter in the midst of the rain without being wet, and yet
22 V| away the moisture of the rain from them.~A great multitude
23 V| and because of the great rain that fell that night, he
24 V| anon there came a great rain and quenched the fire, so
25 V| to come down in manner of rain. And in the last stage he
26 VI| preaching, had not one drop of rain, and they that went away
27 VI| for there fell so much rain in the high street that
28 VII| fell down from heaven like rain. It is read that in the
29 VII| which were meddled with the rain, and destroyed the vines,
|