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Volume
501 I| printemps the blood groweth and augmenteth, and in summer coler, in
502 VI| never had gone.~A burgess of Augulum named Jacques de Franque
503 V| exposition of the name. Augus is as much to say as growing,
504 V| was born in the city of Augustidinense. And he being a young child
505 VI| committed in the place. As S. Augustme saith: Sometimes souls be
506 VI| And after this, one, her aunt, had great pity of her,
507 IV| Campolymeath the city of Aurelia. Then Olybrius, seeing the
508 VI| the crown that is called aureole, they only shall sing the
509 IV| Iargo, n., treasure. ~aurier, n., laurel. ~Iepe, n.,
510 VII| after, nigh the rising of Aurora, the ship where the king
511 I| said in the Canticles: Veni auster et perfla hortum meum. Come
512 III| whom were Alphinian and Austridiman, and many other. When they
513 IV| Austin. ~S. Austin showeth authentically in a sermon of the right
514 VI| facound and speaking of authors and doctors. The second
515 III| lineage, was lecherous, avaricious, and a miscreant and paynim,
516 I| Holy Ghost. For evil people avaunt them to have done miracles,
517 IV| was a great wreaker and avenger on himself, and cut off
518 II| thou, Dacian? thou thyself avengest me of my torments. Then
519 III| horse and did justice in avenging the death of her son. On
520 VII| Maria, miracle of, iii. 101.~Avenir, a king in India, vii. 85.~
521 VII| puissant king which was named Avennir, which made great persecution
522 I| essential, it may safely be averred that it will be most helpful
523 II| and seat of Israel. If ye avert and turn from me, ye and
524 VII| Clare, vi. 195.~Sea-sickness averted by S. Erasmus, vii. 267.~
525 I| monument, when he said to them: Avete, God greet you; and then
526 III| that were envious durst not avise on her any evil fame. She
527 VII| S. Jerome, v. 2O1.~Women avoided by S. Arsenius, vii. 80-
528 V| but on S. Michael's day it avoideth twice and giveth way to
529 VII| protecttion, in the hope of avoiding or mitigating sea-sickness.~
530 VI| God, and to S. John his avowry that he would vouchsafe
531 I| having compassion, of the awaitings on him in speaking, in assaying
532 IV| awoke and said: Why have ye awakened me, my brethren? Our Lord
533 V| begotten of Egypt Secondly, in awaking or exciting from sloth and
534 I| past without a feeling of awe and veneration, mingled
535 III| hurted his left hand with his awl, and when he felt him hurt
536 I| masters over them to set them awork and put them to affliction
537 VII| chair fell off from the axletree, and that notwithstanding
538 II| shall do to you his mercy, aye soothly, and my soul shall
539 I| aliened, pp., separated. ayenbar, n., redeemer. ~bourdon,
540 I| and by the penny in us ayenbyeng. ~
541 III| other, whose arms were of azure with a saltire of gold,
542 II| that was from Tiphsa unto Azza, and had peace with all
543 I| began to make the tower of Babel which was great and high.
544 I| good men behind them, and backbite them, and do this wittingly
545 II| Media, to the Hircanians and Bactrians, and he entering into the
546 VI| swimming, and on a time baigned him in a water, and he mocked
547 II| snares. ~bained, pp., Fr. baigner, bathed. ~belues, n., whales,
548 VII| compassion went unto the bailey and prayed him for them,
549 V| realm, as mayors, sheriffs, bailiffs, and such other less offices,
550 I| ye should bring my hoar bair with sorrow to hell. Therefore
551 I| Redemptor? He laid out his bait to our deceiver and adversary;
552 I| bare all the meat of the bakehouse and birds came and ate of
553 I| me and the master of the bakers into prison, where we in
554 II| altars, and in especial one Balachyn did great persecution to
555 II| balance, and him seemed the balances were like even. Then they
556 IV| I have a daughter named Balbina which is sick of the gout,
557 III| fiend answered: I am called Balcefas; then the friar commanded
558 V| told the king that his god Baldach was overthrown and all to-broken,
559 V| naked, and made seven great balls of snow and purposed to
560 I| Latin Jaspar, Melchior, and Balthasar. And it is to wit that this
561 IV| of Marcian the emperor at Balthernas a marvellous church in the
562 VI| to her uncle, bishop of Bamberg, which received her much
563 III| to say fire or light and banal, that is to say response
564 VII| from him all his irons and bands, and he was brought into
565 I| ariseth and runneth over his banks. As Solomon saith: Which
566 V| company of holy angels as bannerer, and bearing the sign of
567 V| that was done, one of the bannerers, named Exsuperius, took
568 III| which abbey founded S. Banolanis disciple to S. Columbain.
569 IV| and there bathed, and made banquets in eating and drinking.
570 III| They said to him: Wherefore baptizest thou then? I baptize and
571 V| overhanging the sea. He is said of bar, that is as much to say
572 VI| Ethiopia. And found there also Baradach, a duke of the kings of
573 II| I shall sell thee to the barbaries. And then he took this Peter
574 VII| baptized, for he was of Barbary. Then answered the leper
575 II| poison or venom, and the barber said to the king that he
576 IV| a burgess of the city of Barcelona went to S. James about the
577 VII| of this sickness made a bargain with a physician for to
578 II| were in England, in Kent on Barham Down. And then History they
579 VII| redemptoris mater et Simon Bariona. Peter, Bishop of Compostella
580 II| there shall not an hound bark against thee. And because
581 V| which sometime had been a barker bitter and blind, against
582 V| God, and shall give great barkings against the enemies. For
583 IV| some man to bring to me a barley-loaf, and deliver it to me privily.
584 I| Lord all the locks, all the bars and shuttings been broken,
585 V| the Just, otherwise named Barsabee, Simon, and Jude. Then the
586 III| failing, for they that most basely serve them be most wretchedly
587 II| maker. Or else it is said of basilico a serpent, for he overcame
588 VII| a king, a Saracen, named Basilike that heard the fame and
589 VII| abbot Moses. And he took a basketful of gravel and came to them,
590 III| sent his son that hight Bassianus with many other lords' sons,
591 II| Or Sebastianus is said of basto, for by the help of Christ
592 II| another: Come with me to bathe thee. And the body that
593 VII| Barking monastery, vii. 68.~Bathing never practiced by S. James,
594 IV| inhabitants of that region used baths and ointments for the overgreat
595 VII| Louis. This Louis father battled and fought against the heretics
596 IV| him Cæsar. He was a great battler and man of war. Then when
597 VII| Henry, which was duke of Bavaria in the year ten hundred
598 II| battle. Then Bagoas his bawd, went into his privy chamber
599 IV| blessedness, or it is said of beata, that is blessed, and of
600 V| When I knew thee first thou beatedst away the infirmity of my
601 II| Sebastian is said of sequens and beatitudo, and astim and ana, that
602 VII| the name of, i. 33.~Jew beats the image of S Nicholas,
603 VII| the first saith our Lord: Beatus vir qui suffest tentationem,
604 II| the odour that the lord of Beaugency which was at a window and
605 III| lay upon the pavement all bebled. After this they put him
606 VII| wrote Lanfranc, prior of Beccanse. And Anselm came to him
607 II| 68 68 72 79 Thomas Becket], 82 88 91 93 95 96
608 II| martyr was son to Gilbert Beckett, a burgess of the city of
609 I| brother, and went into his bedchamber. After this he washed his
610 VII| the ground and had for his bedding, for sheets, for coverlet,
611 I| delivered us, to that we shall bedelivered of time, we shall come to
612 II| us of holy church, your bedemen, and give to us respite
613 V| and I shall arouse and bedew her body with so ardent
614 VII| store I ne have but a little beer within a little vessel and
615 III| said of a great mallet or beetle, which with one stroke maketh
616 VII| Why doubt you to saute and befight your enemy so that ye have
617 V| Life of S. Francis, first beginner of the friars minor, and
618 II| like as it appeareth in the beginnings of his evangel, and in the
619 VII| For the mass hath three beginniogs. For it began sometime at
620 I| Enos Cainan, and Cainan begot Malaleel, and Malaleel Jared,
621 III| Christ: He is come for to beguile and deceive our citizens,
622 VI| mightest well have been beguiled, for thou wert a frail man,
623 I| robbery and deceit, and beguiling other for to have their
624 VII| largely alms to the blind, beguines, daughters of God, and releved
625 I| law; how each man should behave him against other and what
626 IV| thou wilt fulfil that thou behightest long sith to my hostess
627 III| could be imagined, that the beholders thereof may have dread and
628 I| Epistle ad Hebreos: Thou beholdest the rack of Jesu Christ;
629 V| In Syria, in the city of Beirout, there was a christian man
630 III| it is said as belasius of bela, which is habit,and syor,
631 III| glosing, or it is said as belasius of bela, which is habit,
632 II| a wound. blyven, pp. of 'beleave,' remained. broches, n,
633 V| Damian, to whose oath thou believedest, therefore we have hied
634 II| mystery, and if thou knew and believedst on it thou shouldst be saved.
635 I| the sacrifice would not belight nor burn clear in the light
636 VI| and swelling of great bellies for over great superfluity
637 VII| blowing and blasting of bellows, but they might see nothing,
638 III| The workmen drank their bellyful, and as oft as they would,
639 II| Nathan, Zadok the priest and Benaiah, and brought in to Sion.
640 II| said to him that he should bend his bow, and so he did,
641 VII| the mass finisheth by: Benedicamus domino, right so the priest
642 VII| Lord, saying: Jube domine benedicere, that is as much to say:
643 VII| following: Laudamus te, benedicimus te, glorificamus te, that
644 VII| their salvation, and coming beneurely unto his last days, took
645 VII| dolour he took the right beneurous rest of death. And who that
646 VI| when the king saw the great benevolence of our holy father the pope,
647 III| Limoges, where they were beniguly received of a matron that
648 II| wild oxen. bynomen, pp. of 'benim,' to take away. ~caricares,
649 I| drawing near, she named him Benoni, which is as much to say
650 III| he had showed this to S. Bentt, he sent them word that
651 III| him, for his hands were so benumbed and lame that he might not
652 III| wash her eyes, and anon she bepan for to see a little. When
653 V| name.~Bernard is said of ber, that is, a pit or well,
654 III| he ordained tofore that Bercuses should be abbot after him.
655 III| answered: In this world we bereputed as fools for the love of
656 II| be found with me but one besant or one piece of money, and
657 I| we see him a judge but no beseecher, he comes for to fight and
658 VII| or tomb is, and devoutly beseecheth and prayeth God, and the
659 VI| judges. As Bernard saith: It beseemeth well to establish such pastors
660 II| what people is this that besiege the mountains, or what or
661 V| him cruelly to be beaten, bespit and despised, and fast to
662 V| on high, for to shed and bespring beneath the waters of doctrine.
663 V| homicide, for thou art all besprongen with the blood. And the
664 III| the tempest ceased. Then Bessus, a priest that was present
665 III| Paris, which were over hard bestead and tormented of the enemy,
666 V| that might refrain their bestial thoughts, ne withdraw them
667 VI| sin, and many that lied bestially he fixed them in good works
668 II| quarters. ~Octroy, V. (Fr.), to bestow. ongles, n. (Fr.), claws.
669 VII| this alms is well set or bestowed on so much and so great
670 I| called Bethania, said of beth, that is to say an house,
671 I| the land of Moab against Beth-peor. And yet never man knew
672 I| and therefore it is called Bethania, said of beth, that is to
673 I| thou hast drunk of this beverage here, thou mayst never after
674 I| same place is named yet the bewailing of Egypt. The children of
675 VI| that time in thinking and beweeping the passion of Jesu Christ,
676 III| wise that they might not bewield them. Then said the provost:
677 IV| hour his blessed body all bewrapped in his innocent blood. Alas!
678 I| thus: Sive comedam sive bibam, etc. As oft as I eat or
679 I| researches and conjectures of bibliographers; but latterly Mr. R. Proctor
680 I| be remarked as a curious bibliographical and historical coincidence,
681 II| pestilence. Of these three God biddeth thee choose which thou wilt;
682 VII| agues.~benewrely, adv. (Fr. bienheureux), happily.~benewred, adj.,
683 VII| me a precious stone more big than the egg of an ostrich,
684 I| for he brought in first bigamy, and by him was committed
685 IV| thanksgivings. ~more, adj., bigger. mow, v., to be able. ~occision,
686 II| Eliphas the Temanite, another Bildad the Shuhite, and the third,
687 VII| sic albinus dicitur alias binas habens, that is to wit,
688 VII| Lady, iv. 248.~Monstrous births, vii. 135.~Mortuary beast,
689 VII| he was delivered to Benet Biscop of Jarrow, for to learn,
690 I| double stole furred with bise; and a golden collar he
691 II| desired him to give those two bishopricks to some virtuous men. And
692 VII| subsequent issues till the final black-letter edition of 1527. There is
693 VI| dread, for it is like a bladder full of wind, which with
694 I| and swellings in their bladders, in such wise that the enchanters
695 II| for to accuse him of four blames, and brought him to the
696 II| apostle. And this vengeance blameth S. Austin in his book of
697 VII| the keeping of the queen Blanche his mother, sometime daughter
698 II| legend, which the blessed Blasius in the counsel of seventy
699 III| gave thereto the chief of Blason and the town Longchamp therewith.
700 III| pain which longeth to a blasphemer. And then forthwith they
701 VII| made for the swearers and blasphemers, at the commandment of the
702 V| shalt thou be tormented that blasphemest him that is very God! And
703 I| likeness of a blowing or a blast, as saith S. John, Johannis
704 I| called Rachel, but Leah was blear-eyed, and Rachel was fair of
705 III| God, that the sheep should bleat and cry in the belly of
706 II| heard the voice of the kid bleating, he said: See that it be
707 V| bath. ~blechures, n., Fr. blessures, wounds. ~boystous, adj.,
708 II| them on their knees, and blindfold, and the righter brandished
709 I| received spittings, buffets and blindfolding, of the Jews. Whereof S.
710 II| This that is said of the blinding of S. Matthew, I suppose
711 I| text, the translator has blindly followed him without any
712 VI| for a pillow, she took a block or a great stone; she lay
713 VI| For above the martyrdom of blood-shedding they suffered three other
714 IV| had fair branches full of blossoms and fruit. And on every
715 II| smote Job with the worst blotches and blains from the plant
716 II| blessure, n. (Fr.), a wound. blyven, pp. of 'beleave,' remained.
717 IV| John the Evangelist and Boanerges, that is the son of thunder,
718 III| after him, and so rudely boarded the ship of him that had
719 V| said of remige that is a boatman or a rower. Or it is said
720 V| entended with them that bode with him in fastings and
721 I| beasts were full of botches, boils, and blains and wounds,
722 I| in a great strength and a boisterous hand? I beseech thee, Lord,
723 I| shall let you go, and in a boistous he shall cast you from his
724 VI| that S. Edmund was more bold to abide and maintain the
725 VII| age, was with his brethren bolden and kept under the cure
726 IV| body was buried in a castle Bolsena between the old town and
727 I| a dragon-fly, also the bolt of a crossbow. ~adjousted,
728 VII| torments, they chained and bolted him hands and feet with
729 IV| wood, and of a beast called Bonacho, that is engendered in Galicia.
730 I| debts were quitted, and the bondmen were franchised and let
731 V| and Hernaldus the abbot of Bonevalle. S. Bernard was born in
732 V| covered his head with a bonnet, a scrip on his shoulder,
733 I| written: Et vidit quod esset bonum, quia in proximo sciebat
734 III| so great in the city of Bordeaux that all was on a flame.
735 II| city and went unto all the bordels of common women and said
736 I| took of the fiend sin by borrowing by usury, and wrote an obligation.
737 III| house the fee royal of that boscage, and all the rents thereto
738 I| pestilence, which was called the botche of impedimy. And that was
739 I| the History of Godfrey of Boulogne in the Conquest of Jerusalem,
740 III| down. He made Almaine and Bourgogne his tributaries, he ordained
741 III| bare him forth more than a bow-shot. And when S. Benet, which
742 II| the town of Brussels in Brabant. ~Therefore God took away
743 V| might enter therein for the brambles and thorns that were there.
744 III| was made of great meal and bran. Finally he made Eutichius
745 IV| spears in his hand, and brandishing them against the world,
746 VII| i. 34.~Blowing on idols breaks them, v. 78.~Body of man
747 I| something of the spirit which breathes forth from them, and a desire
748 VII| They took not the canonic breed, for the canons that were
749 VII| same time came into France, breezes or locusts innumerable which
750 IV| which came to the bridge at Brentford by London; and when he was
751 VI| hls name.~Brice is said of breos, that is to say in Greek
752 VII| Archbishop of Dole in little Bretagne, and was born in a town
753 II| de Tracy, Sir Richard le Breton. On Christmas day S. Thomas
754 VII| with him the Bible and his breviary or portos, and so he, made
755 VI| exposition of this name Brictius or Brice is as much to say
756 I| they bear gold on their bridles, on their saddles and on
757 II| Christ hath given me most brightest habitation and dwelling,
758 III| tumulo tumulantur in uno, Brigida, Patricius atque Columba
759 VII| and the Cross, v. 126.~Cow brings forth a lamb, iii. 162.~—
760 I| Egyptians Iying dead upon the brinks of the sea. And the people
761 V| unto the death, so that Brison, on a night, which was chamberlain
762 VII| the folk of the country Brodile, the which wood, as I suppose,
763 IV| He was hosed with hosen broidered with gold above, which held
764 I| Zachary the prophet: He broileth and burneth the hearts as
765 VI| not bear her over a little brook. And the men that were in
766 V| faith and in the spirit of brotherly love of charity, said: My
767 VI| father ne mother, ne of his brothers, and he went to study and
768 V| and had left sucking, they brough her to the temple with offerings.
769 IV| to mine eyes, and to my brows a fountain of water, that
770 VI| a woman of the castle of Bruane named Pleniere which had
771 VI| to the King's palace at Bruham. And after their labour,
772 VII| rains blood at, vii. 123.~Bruill abbey, vii. 201.~Bulgaria
773 I| Fr. fruisser, to crush or bruise. ~goliards, n., jesters
774 VII| except that right there he bruiseth not the bread, but to that
775 IV| balance, this burnt and bruled Laurence brought forth a
776 III| to sick.~From the time of Brunehilde queen, unto the time of
777 II| right high, the child took a brush full of water and sprinkled
778 II| Flanders and the town of Brussels in Brabant. ~Therefore God
779 IV| entered then in sign of a bubble, to the end that he should
780 I| yearly fee, that is to wit, a buck in summer and a doe in winter,
781 IV| rdshire, Nottinghamshire, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire, Leicestershire,
782 VII| germeth and bringeth forth new buds in all the places of the
783 V| gave to her in japing a buff, and said plainly, that
784 I| where he received spittings, buffets and blindfolding, of the
785 I| goliards, n., jesters or buffoons. guerished, v., Fr. guerir,
786 VII| satisfied.~releved, v. tr., built or set up.~renomee, renown.~
787 I| found one of the rods that burgeoned and bare leaves and fruit,
788 V| holy man saw within the burgh, on the ground, the devils
789 III| another flood that hight Burin, that same angel aforesaid
790 III| and said: S. Vital thou burnest me, and the seventh day
791 VI| that they were borne of the burthens. And they entering with
792 V| prayedest with tears and buryedest the dead men, I offered
793 VII| speaking, and in his needs or businees to work truly and well.~
794 II| and bringeth to him many businesses and evil rest in making
795 II| the selling or I in the buying; and thus it was oft bought
796 VII| S. Rocke, v. 7.~Gratian buys the Papacy, vii. 133.~Gregory,
797 III| cruse or bottle for oil.~bydwong, v., to refrain or keep
798 III| which he kept silence, and bydwonge his life and his soul from
799 III| sung this anthem: Regina cæli lætare, etc., and S. Gregory
800 III| unto God, whose bodies S. Cæsarius, upon the morn finding no
801 VII| and that he was in that caitifness that the covetise of his
802 I| Sarah to make three ashy cakes and sent his child for a
803 V| were sent into the land of Calabria, S. Gregory into the city
804 V| Possidonius, bishop of Calamente, compiled his life, as Cassiodore
805 VI| they come from the years of calamity and maleurty unto the years
806 IV| Spain, of a town called Calaroga, of the diocese of Osma,
807 I| answered our Lord: Torcular calcavi, etc. The press I have turned
808 I| kalked, v., reckoned or calculated. ~leasings, n., lies. louings,
809 III| certain relation. For in the calendar of Bede it is said that
810 V| name.~Calixtus is said of caleo, cales, that is to say,
811 V| Calixtus is said of caleo, cales, that is to say, eschauffe
812 V| body in the cemetery of Calipodium.~
813 VII| of Lausanne, v. 21.~Bird calls on S. Thomas of Canterbury,
814 I| was made, and his sister Calmana. They came out of Paradise
815 III| be sacrificed, which anon calved or brought forth a lamb,
816 I| Museum, and the other in Cambridge University Library. There
817 IV| provost Olybrius, that time in Campolymeath the city of Aurelia. Then
818 II| enemies. They have overthrown Cananeum the king, Jebusee, Pheresee,
819 III| which place is called now Candia, for their martyrdom, and
820 IV| this verse: Te martyrum candidatus, and therewith he gave up
821 V| the banners, were named S. Candidus, S. Innocent, S. Exsuperius,
822 VII| natural. For if I have a candlelight, every one may take of the
823 V| martyrs in that church, who a canker had consumed all his thigh.
824 VI| was made and professed a canon-regular, wherein he lived so devoutly
825 VII| service. They took not the canonic breed, for the canons that
826 VII| and remembering the new canonisation of the blessed S. Louis,
827 VI| it seemed that he would canonise her tofore ere she was buried.
828 I| gladness, saying: Quomodo cantabimus canticum domini, etc. Thus
829 VII| exposeth it thus: Alle, id est cantate, lu, id est laudem, ye,
830 I| saying: Quomodo cantabimus canticum domini, etc. Thus leave
831 VII| waves were gone, there was a canvas that hung over his head
832 V| referam nescio. Quia quem celi capere non poterant, tuo gremio
833 III| Patrick's father was named Caprum, which was a priest and
834 I| Ascendisti in altum, cepisti captivitatem, etc.: Lord, thou hast ascended
835 II| adv., quickly. prise, n., capture ~quarfox, n., four meeting
836 I| Whereof saith S. Bernard: Caput illud divinum, etc. The
837 I| generally translates, reads 'car il estoit prince des gueux,'
838 VII| bound him to a pillar and carded his skin with iron cards,
839 VII| carded his skin with iron cards, and then they roasted him
840 VII| break and burst, of which he cared nothing, for he suffered
841 I| Having read every page very carefully six times, with unabated
842 VII| vii. 134. ~Manuscripts, cargo of, iii. 193.~Mariners,
843 II| benim,' to take away. ~caricares, n,, figs. cautelously,
844 I| gospel of Nicodemus that Carinus and Leucius, sons of old
845 II| rich man in the mount of Carmel that hight Nabal, and on
846 I| overthrown the horsemen and carmen in the sea. And Miriam the
847 III| alms that abide in their carnalities, they seem to be good without
848 VII| Martirii calicem gustant in carne fideles.~After, followeth
849 VII| corpore sancto. Prima suam carnem. Sanctosque secunda sepultos.
850 III| the garden to dance and carol for to move the monks to
851 I| out thine arms across in caroling and gladness, and I stretch
852 IV| company of virgins make noble carolling of the glory of her. Hell,
853 VI| were Severus, Severianus, Carpoforus, and Victorinus, which by
854 IV| and perpetual. There was a carter named Peter which yoked
855 II| and shall make them his carters and riders of his horse
856 VI| craft of sculpture or of carving, and Diocletian would have
857 IV| Dominic spake to the prior of Cassamary of the Cistercians in the
858 V| miracle in a town named Cassel, in the bishopric of Tyrdone,
859 III| England, in the time of Cassibelaun, king of the Britons. And
860 V| Calamente, compiled his life, as Cassiodore saith in the book of noble
861 V| drank always he vomited and casted out, so that he was nigh
862 I| and not to be overcome, a caster out and not here a dweller. ~
863 VII| serve his spirit by diverse castigation or chastising, he used the
864 II| Confortatum est cor tuum, eo quod castitatem amaveris, et post virum
865 IV| And when he is pursued he casts out of his belly behind,
866 II| afternoon, and when his caterer should have bought fish
867 VII| name.~KATHERINE is said of catha, that is all, and ruina
868 VII| 154.~Peter the Apostle in Cathedra. February 22, iii. 50.~Philip
869 II| tofore the Arians and to the Catholics that the doors of the church
870 I| and their meiny, and his cattle and his substance, and came
871 I| noble lordship, as chief causer of the achieving of it,
872 I| never none such into our cavern. This is an assailer, and
873 III| thy cat, with whom thou ceasest not to stroke and play,
874 I| sicut sanguis, et stellæ ceciderunt super terraim. Then shall
875 VII| London died, whose name was Cedda, and by consent of the king
876 IV| chamberer of Martha, and S. Cedony which was born blind, and
877 II| of were of gold, and the ceiling of the house of Lebanon
878 III| called him Magonius, and Celestinus the pope named him Patrick.
879 V| referam nescio. Quia quem celi capere non poterant, tuo
880 III| this anthem was, Gaudent in celis animæ sanctorum, wherein
881 II| Remigius went in to the cellar and made the sign of the
882 II| out of their cloister or cells, if they converse long with
883 III| Easter after, and was named Celonier because she was raised in
884 VII| appropinquabit enim regnum celorum. That is to say: Do you
885 V| Gaimas, of the lineage of Celtic barbarians, which strongly
886 VI| brochets. n.. spikes.~celyers, n., secret abodes. ~cenacle,
887 IV| bonds and instruments and cement, and the stone taken away
888 III| S. Julian was bishop of Cenomanence. It is said that it was
889 III| they should sacrifice and cense tofore the gods, S. Urban
890 VI| at the last executed the censures against them that vexed
891 III| priest wrote his life to S. Censurius, bishop of Auxerre.~
892 V| verse: Ecce vetus Thebea centum jacet obruta portis; that
893 I| France, which even after centuries of destruction, neglect,
894 IV| sacrifice, delivered him unto a centurion, then being christian, by
895 I| saith: Ascendisti in altum, cepisti captivitatem, etc.: Lord,
896 VII| accomplish the commandments ceremonial of the faith, and, Lord,
897 VII| his sister was brought to Ceromane, Charles the monk would
898 I| reasons. ~First, for the certification of his resurrection. And
899 VII| own hands administered and cerved them both of meat and drink.
900 V| Rocke went to the city of Cesena which is a great city of
901 V| there two years with S. Cezarien, bishop of that city, and
902 I| end of Persia, from the Chaldeans whereas is the flood of
903 V| Achate into a city named Chale, where yet at this day they
904 III| thereto, but we can get no chalk ne lime. Then said the holy
905 VI| holy bishop S. Wulstan, was challenged that he was not able of
906 II| she sent for the priests Chambris and Charmis and said to
907 III| she went then into the champain to a city named Vorulana,
908 III| cellarer, n., steward. ~champaine, n., campagna. ~cherety,
909 IV| of the virtue of God not changeable, said, when the wine failed:
910 VI| all things be put, which changest realms and empires, if those
911 VII| they came to a ruisel or channel and would have passed it,
912 IV| holy. And the chanter of chanters entuned more excellently
913 I| majestic roll of the solemn chants of Advent and the rejoicings
914 II| brought to him from Egypt and Chao. What shall I all day write
915 VII| beside him he did do make two chapels, and many sick men were
916 I| work was great and over chargeable to me to accomplish, I feared
917 VI| sometime thou gavest and chargedst me unworthy with this staff.
918 VI| oppressions and importable charges among the commonalty. For
919 V| showed it to his sister, charging her to tell it to nobody
920 V| came a woman to him for to charm him, and thereby to assuage
921 I| can scarcely fail to be charmed with such wonderful tales
922 II| and departed, they came to Charram which is the half way to
923 I| things put out the devil and chaseth him away. By the water is
924 II| virtuous of life, smiting in chastening his body, and master in
925 I| everliving creations of Geoffrey Chaucer. Verily there is a plentiful
926 IV| council. ~chauffed, v., Fr. chauffer, warmed or comforted. ~conjured,
927 II| feeling of any more heat or chauffing, than he entered in. After
928 III| mocked.~jowes, n., Fr. joues. cheeks.~lessed, pp., diminished. ~
929 VII| then the abbot came and cheered S. Brandon and his monks,
930 VI| to his people amiable and cheerful, to wretches and needy men
931 IV| and all fat meat, eggs, cheese and wine; she ate but once
932 II| and worshipped Ashtareth, Chemosh and Moloch, idols of Zidonia,
933 VII| to the end that they may cherish thereon that sweet Lamb
934 III| in chastising rebels and cherishing good and welldisposed people.
935 I| burning, and a platter full of cherries, and bade him eat, and he
936 IV| lauds and praisings of the cherubins, and possessed on all parts
937 IV| king also of Derbyshire, Cheshire, Shropshire, Staffordshire,
938 I| of Troy, the Book of the Chess, the History of Jason, the
939 II| brother of Sempringham, and so chevissed that he went over sea. ~
940 II| cautelously, adv., craftily. chevisshed, v., achieved his purpose.
941 VII| of a man, and a hen had a chicken with four feet.~And after
942 V| his clerks brawling and chiding because they would do fornication
943 II| suffer of every man beatings, chidings and wrongs, for very affinity
944 I| translation that we are chiefly concerned, of which Caxton'
945 VII| in France, that is to wit Childebert and Dagobert, and was extract
946 IV| conceivedst, enjoy thee that childedst the light of clearness,
947 VII| recovered by miracles. Two dumb childien and divers others that had
948 V| and by ensample that the childings long abiden be wont to be
949 IV| himself, when he overcame his childish age by virtue of his courage.
950 II| Nephthali yet did he nothing childishly. Also when all other went
951 VI| royal she renounced all childishness, and set herself all in
952 I| here the apostle calleth chirographe or obligation, the which
953 V| he preached, the swallows chittered and sang, and anon by his
954 V| hear each other for the chittering and noise of birds he said:
955 VI| Normandy should be put to their choice, whether they should abide
956 II| every town singing with choirs and timpanes against the
957 VI| this morsel of bread may choke me if I consented to his
958 VI| abode in his throat and choked him, so that his breath
959 V| contrary to them that be choleric. This is had in the History
960 VI| Augustine saith: Virginity chooseth to follow the life of angels
961 I| will strike no responsive chord in their hearts. But to
962 I| followed her with timpanes and chords, and she went tofore singing
963 II| achieved his purpose. chore (for 'cor'), n., a Hebrew
964 II| household thirty measures, named chores, of corn, and sixty of meal,
965 VII| together, and thereof was said chorus, a quire or company. But
966 II| prayed him that he would christen him. And when S. Remigius
967 I| in the book, De doctrina christiana: By a woman he was deceived,
968 VII| all Sundays of the year, Christmas-day, Epiphany or twelfth day,
969 VII| followeth except, the Sundays, Christmasday, Easterday, Whitsunday,
970 I| saith S. Austin: Adscendente Christo paves, etc.: Jesu Christ
971 VII| Brandon had dwelled there from Chrisunas even till the twelfth day
972 II| informed in the faith by S. Chrysogony. The foresaid S. Anastasia
973 II| and coming down into the churchward they began to dread and
974 VI| not that Edward whom the churls of the country worship as
975 III| which had a wife named Ciborea, and on the night that Judas
976 III| contained in the life of Cicely, Virgin and Martyr.~
977 V| Thou liest, thou art a Ciceronian, and no christian man, whereas
978 V| S. Peter which is called Cieldore, or heaven of gold in English.
979 I| est niger tanquam saccus cilicinus: et luna facta est sicut
980 III| opened and swallowed all the cinders and ashes that were left.
981 VI| adornments of her head, as circles or chaplets, and lay them
982 I| as despaired, had cried: Circumderunt me gemitus mortis, and after
983 V| amarus, that is bitter, and cis, that is to say, vomiting
984 II| the emperor sent to him a citation that he should come to Rome
985 III| say as all, and gratus and citius, which is as much to say
986 VII| great science both in right civil and in canon law, and also
987 VI| Augustine in the book, De Civitate Dei, and saith: They be
988 IV| thence he came to the city of Clacense, and there he healed a nobleman
989 II| before the curtain, and clapped his hands together, weening
990 VII| me will in such manner clarify, that none ordure or filth,
991 VII| Latin understood by s. clark though unlettered, vi. 178.~
992 IV| books of the prophets and clasp them, for we now have none
993 VII| the researches of Mons. A. Claudin, the historian of early
994 VII| marvelled much how the earth clave and ditched by itself only
995 II| bestow. ongles, n. (Fr.), claws. ouches, n., jewels. ~phitoness,
996 III| the end that we may more cleanlier worship them. Then the prince
997 V| deafness. Thou hast enlumined, cleared, and hast put away my blindness.
998 VII| many men s eyes, shining clearer than the sun, and how that
999 VI| eloquent and fair speakers, the clearest wits and cunning, and most
1000 I| hurtle together and shall cleave in four parts, and each
|