Volume
1 I| took away all misery, all infirmity, and all servitude. Whereof
2 I| he was transported from infirmity to virtue, from mortality
3 I| the day, but because our infirmity sufficeth not thereto, it
4 II| marvels that they profit in infirmity virtue, and giveth to our
5 III| desired his help from the infirmity of the throat, or required
6 III| for any other sickness or infirmity, that he would hear him,
7 III| God sent to him his old infirmity again, because of his misguiding,
8 IV| and his soul overcame with infirmity, iron, and adamant. What
9 IV| to languish by grievous infirmity of his body. And the dissolution
10 V| first thou beatedst away the infirmity of my sight, shining in
11 V| thereby to heal him of his infirmity: and S. Augustin answered
12 V| demanded of him how this infirmity happed to come to him, and
13 V| should profit to him in infirmity. And the king visited him
14 V| and he was grieved by long infirmity; then he made himself to
15 VI| puissance we believe that our infirmity be holpen by his power,
16 VI| be infinity, as for our infirmity. For we be feeble and weak,
17 VI| second is to have aid in our infirmity, for by ourselves we may
18 VI| no harm. Thirdly, for our infirmity that is, that we know what
19 VI| entered into desert, if infirmity of malady had not let him.
20 VI| her and visited her in her infirmity and languor. In the hour
21 VI| thine avow, and anon his infirmity took him again and would
22 VI| by feigned and dissembled infirmity, and have night and day
23 VI| wise after sickness and infirmity, health shall return, and
24 VII| when he was in his last infirmity, and that he might retain
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