Volume
1 I| came and appeared in human nature and flesh. The second is
2 I| of that he came in human nature to the world, and of that
3 I| coming of our Lord in our nature human, they be of joy and
4 I| vanquished in the law of nature of the default of the knowledge
5 I| by grace. He is thine by nature, he is mine by his misery,
6 I| sodomites that did sin against nature were dead and extinct; for
7 I| he might not suffer that nature human, which he had taken,
8 I| taken of a person divine and nature human, and Jesus inasmuch
9 I| his manners, by name, by nature, by nativity, by puissance,
10 I| Christ, in the which our nature ascended into heaven and
11 I| disordinate, for sanguine of his nature is full of fleshly concupiscence.
12 I| excellent noblesse. As to the nature divine, he was son of the
13 I| sovereign, and as to the nature human he was born of the
14 I| well for the reason of the nature as for the reason of the
15 I| should enjoy of that they saw nature human ascend to heaven,
16 I| right fair because of their nature and of their glory. Of which
17 I| have we gotten when our nature is lift up unto the right
18 I| Ascension: This day the nature of our humanity hath been
19 I| descendeth, for that is his nature. Whereof saith the wise
20 I| water hath the virtue and nature to refresh and cool. Whereof
21 I| or river Phison, of his nature ariseth and springeth over,
22 I| reason is taken after the nature of his love. Love is signified
23 I| James in his chronicle: All nature of beasts, of birds, and
24 I| and therefore took our nature to the end that making himself
25 I| receivest is not that thing that nature hath formed, but it is well
26 I| hath greater might than nature, for by benediction ofttimes
27 I| by benediction ofttimes nature hath been changed. Moses
28 I| up and it turned into the nature of a rod. Thou seest then
29 I| grace of the prophet the nature hath been changed twice,
30 I| ceased, and came again to his nature of water as it was before.
31 I| proper place, against his nature returned against the hill.
32 I| which hath wrought above nature, when the stone giveth water
33 I| water which he may not by nature? Marah, which was a river
34 I| the which iron, after his nature, sank down to the bottom
35 I| which is a thing above nature, for the weight of the iron
36 I| hath thus wrought above nature, and then, sith that benediction
37 I| converted things against nature, what shall we say of the
38 I| Christ. Was not that above nature that Jesu Christ was born
39 I| demand of the ordinance of nature, thou knowest that the woman
40 I| conceived above the ordinance of nature, and alway remained a virgin.
41 I| ordinance of the precious nature of Jesu Christ, when he
42 I| Christ, when he is above all nature? He that was born of the
43 I| against the law of God and of nature, and against the decree
44 I| which was misused against nature, wherefore God was displeased
45 I| defended all sin against nature, in what manner it be done
46 II| oil that burned, against nature, in water, and burned stones
47 II| saw it long burn against nature. Then they came to this
48 II| that S. Ambrose saith: The nature of light is such, she is
49 II| over-great pride. Scripture then, nature, creature, fortune, business
50 II| returned to their first nature. Thus received they the
51 II| and yet by necessity of nature him behoveth to descend
52 II| reformed into their first nature, he raised a widow from
53 II| and the sun which by his nature should go low, that day
54 II| movings, that one is of nature, another of overmuch plenty
55 II| so be hardened, so out of nature, and so cruel, that also
56 II| vestment, which he took of our nature human, and clad him therewith
57 II| Basil said, how well that by nature he should have died anon
58 III| blessed Son which in human nature had redeemed and saved the
59 III| The dove which is of her nature simple and without gall,
60 III| Virgin, and take on her nature and flesh human for to save
61 III| child against the course of nature, and may abide a virgin?
62 III| conception which is above nature, the angel said to her this
63 III| cousin unto saints, and of nature born with creature human.
64 III| Trinity came down and took our nature and became man and suffered
65 III| old of age, and barren by nature of her body, hath conceived
66 III| against double or treble nature, they made great joy and
67 III| was so espired that human nature which was pure in him might
68 IV| other thing, ne none other nature, ne none other soul dissemblable
69 IV| man made by craft than by nature human. And then the people
70 IV| confess that thou art above nature human. And thus as he was
71 IV| out of this reproof, the nature of Mary is out thereof,
72 IV| that hast received of the nature human the death which may
73 IV| God, be marvellous above nature and be more to doubt than
74 IV| this general sentence the nature taken of the virgin. And
75 IV| out of that reproach, the nature of Mary is excepted, the
76 IV| excepted, the which is the nature that he took of her. For
77 IV| in worshipping man above nature, and in worshipping more
78 IV| but to the unity of bodily nature. If grace without property
79 IV| of especial and temporal nature may make unity, how much
80 IV| have said have not kept nature, for we doubt not but grace
81 IV| entireness of Mary than nature. And then our Lord maketh
82 V| an humble herb and of hot nature and well smelling. He was
83 V| milk, so fed she them with nature of goodness.And as long
84 V| the child, and is first nature of blood, and after it is
85 V| engendered Joseph.~Joseph then by nature is son of Jacob by descent
86 V| son that was born, was by nature his that engendered him,
87 V| venger of sin and not of nature. And when he closeth the
88 V| is said for the life of nature, of grace, and of glory,
89 V| Urban, and when he felt that nature failed in him he asked for
90 V| come from the conduits of nature? And he said to her: In
91 V| they said that: The God of nature suffered death, or else
92 V| or else the ordinance of nature in this world was dissolved,
93 V| elements lived, or the God of nature suffered, and the elements
94 V| from heaven, and took our nature human, and suffered death
95 VI| elements, to change them, above nature, to cure it, above the souls
96 VI| surmounteth all conditions of nature human, by which men be associate
97 VI| given to her, above all nature of man, force and power
98 VI| germane of grace and of nature and be now heritors of the
99 VI| against the wall, desiring by nature to help him, but might and
100 VI| holiness, for the author of nature enhanced her in a manner
101 VI| enhanced her in a manner above nature. When this holy maid was
102 VII| that the plenteous gifts of nature and grace may spring of
103 VII| Now, uncle, sith God and nature have wrought so great virtues
104 VII| beauty, which was above nature, he was sore abashed and
105 VII| new strength which passed nature, and said to her: Come my
106 VII| falling, which was against nature and reason, and a fair miracle,
107 VII| must sleep for weariness of nature, he would say to sleep:
108 VII| seemest a man of prudent nature, but thy words accord nothing
109 VII| descended from heaven and took nature human. And then Nachor began
110 VII| by the feebleness of his nature was reputed and holden as
111 VII| cause that they be of one nature, and the misericorde of
112 VII| touching the divinity be of one nature with the Father and the
113 VII| he would take with this nature another nature, that is
114 VII| with this nature another nature, that is our human, for
115 VII| therefore he would take nature of God and man, for to render
116 VII| semblance or likeness of nature.~The first is that the substance
117 VII| our Lord that is sovereign nature, may do by virtue of his
118 VII| done in God. Ensample of nature. For if I wot a thing secret,
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