Volume
1 I| time that the sun shall be black as a sack, gross and rude,
2 I| clear. And anon the porter black and horrible among them
3 I| seven orders. Thirdly, the black cross. Then this Litany
4 I| of Litanies. For it with black clothes. And peradventure
5 I| Lord, and covered him with black in such wise that he gave
6 I| then it is covered with black cloth, and this representeth
7 I| countries, therein be blue and black men. Ham had that to his
8 II| pieces, in such wise that a black dog brought the right arm
9 II| form of a little child all black, and fell down at his feet
10 II| was set in judgment, and black men bringing forth his wicked
11 II| must be delivered to these black moors or fiends. And when
12 III| happed after this that a black bird, that is called a merle,
13 III| in likeness of a little black child, drew him out of the
14 III| appeared to S. Benet all black, and ran upon him with open
15 III| a creature which was all black over all her body, of the
16 III| and established therein black monks and endowed it, and
17 III| there he saw one person black, sitting on a great chair,
18 III| full of horrible people and black which had spears and swords.
19 III| given to them brown bread, black and rough, which was made
20 III| Marcellin and S. Peter to the black isle and there beheaded
21 III| fiends, like Ethiopians, more black than coals, and had terrible
22 IV| and bound there a great black dog at the door of the house,
23 IV| help me. Then came there a black shadow, saying to him: Hie
24 IV| was called Nerluc, and the Black Lake, because there be woods
25 IV| there be woods shadowous and black. And there the blessed Martha,
26 V| them: He hath his hairs black and crisp, his skin white,
27 V| to them an Ethiopian more black than thunder, the face sharp,
28 V| which thou hast made of black, white and shining, and
29 V| altar of S. Austin at the black frirs at Antwerp, howbeit
30 V| of treason, thou art said black and dark, daughter of darkness,
31 V| Isidore, in Greek is said black. He had bitterness for his
32 V| multiplying of good works; black by despising himself. And
33 V| scalded, burnt, made dry and black like to the skin of a Morian
34 V| seemed that a foul dove or black culver flew about him whilst
35 V| Isidore, a precious stone black, which is good against drunkenness.
36 VI| And anon two Ethiopians, black and naked, issued out of
37 VI| there came some horrible black men and did all that they
38 VI| ground, and his body was all black, and suddenly borne away
39 VI| Abingdon, saw in a valley many black fowls like crows or ravens,
40 VI| and torn with the other black birds, and threw him from
41 VII| man of Ethiopia, that is a black man, that hewed wood and
42 VII| morn early he clad him in black and came weeping with his
43 VII| one white and that other black, which without ceasing gnawed
44 VII| as when they may discern black from white, they begin to
45 VII| came thereabout a cloud black and dark, and Anthony saw
46 VII| Provost, the, who embraced black pots and pans, ii. 149.~
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