Volume
1 I| picturesque can scarcely fail to be charmed with such
2 I| observant reader can scarcely fail to note the difference between
3 I| we entend to do well we fail, it we do pain to resist
4 I| their spirit they shall fail. And therefore saith he:
5 I| perdurable and shall never fail at the altar of the heart.
6 II| beauty, whose works never fail, whose riches never minish,
7 II| wretches what do ye, why fail and wax faint your hands?
8 II| We shall see who shall fail of us, or thou in the selling
9 IV| such gifts that never shall fail, and granteth that they
10 IV| time that they began to fail, and were so weary that
11 IV| God, for they that beat me fail and be faint, require thy
12 IV| Laurence, which would not fail his workmen, did do multiply
13 IV| that the death should not fail him at torment ne fail him
14 IV| not fail him at torment ne fail him at the end. We read
15 IV| entendements celestial shall not fail, but shall be called very
16 V| their will till she should fail and die. And then he entered
17 VI| spiritual riches, thou therefore fail not, ne look not unto thy
18 VI| obedience that she should fail no day but that she should
19 VI| blessed soul, and without fail her glorious conductor is
20 VI| lady, cease! for I begin to fail and am all burnt, and he
21 VII| then the butchers began to fail and were weary. From the
22 VII| noble a realm should not fail of succession royal, the
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