Volume
1 II| to thee, and that now a wound transitory be given to thee,
2 II| monsters. blessure, n. (Fr.), a wound. blyven, pp. of 'beleave,'
3 III| together and laid it on the wound, and anon he was whole.
4 IV| both, fifty times. From his wound sprang out milk into the
5 IV| harm, and the two adders wound them about her neck and
6 IV| remove for the pain of the wound. At the last he remembered
7 IV| a young child that lay wound in small clouts in his mother'
8 IV| out of the fountain, and wound his tail about the legs
9 V| and surgeons to heal his wound, and offered him many gifts,
10 V| never lay medicine to his wound, ne receive their gifts,
11 V| is seen on this day the wound in the throat of the image;
12 V| health and hide not my sin ne wound. The fourth is the great
13 V| seek and search for the wound. And that done, the plant
14 V| in the palm of his hand a wound as it had been of an arrow,
15 V| of an arrow, out of which wound there issued so great pain
16 VI| let us see if he have a wound in his head that he gat
17 VI| and saw the sign of the wound, and then they wist well
18 VI| brake his arm, and a great wound in his head. And it happed
19 VII| mother over the water, he wound his hands in his mantle,
20 VII| thou shalt be beaten by wound celestial. Then commanded
21 VII| him upon his belly, and wound out his guts or bowels out
|