000-aug | augme-cleav | cleft-discu | disee-fie | fierc-horri | horse-light | ligne-objec | obrut-publi | puerp-seque | sequi-thank | thara-whoos | whorn-zyphi
Volume
1001 II| him, and he hid him in the clefts of a broken wall, and incontinent
1002 VI| felicity. Or he is said of clementia, which is merciful. It is
1003 VII| Lord saith thus: Te igitur clementissime, etc., that is to say: Father,
1004 VI| name.~Clement is said of cleos, that is, glory, and mens,
1005 IV| And him thought that he climbed upon this tree and Askeberd
1006 II| on a time he sheared and clipped his sheep, to whom David
1007 V| shrine. ~clock, n., Fr, cloche, bell, ~complained, v.,
1008 VII| and did penance. The King Clodoveus of France uncovered Denis
1009 II| saint. ~Now it happed that Clodovius the king of France, which
1010 VII| religious builded churches, cloisters, dortoirs, and other edifices
1011 VI| church thou forgettest and closest to me the gate of thy pity.
1012 V| not of nature. And when he closeth the belly or womb, he worketh
1013 IV| sent him out again, and closing a wolf therein whose woodness
1014 VII| palace, and found doors and closures opening against him, and
1015 V| deserved to be bishop of Autun. Clotaire was dead. He was much grieved
1016 VI| were founden amending and clouting poor men's shoes, which
1017 V| he was constrained and so co-acted that he took at the last
1018 VII| embraseth or fryeth the coal, right so the orison said
1019 III| James is said of ja and of cobar, which is as much to say
1020 IV| holy oil. ~araign, n., a cobweb, vitriol may be meant. ~
1021 V| flies by the nets of their cobwebs. Hereof he confessed him
1022 IV| saith that Paul, from the cock-crow unto the hour of five, he
1023 IV| raising to life, and about the cock-crowing the dead body arose and
1024 II| health. And after this the cocks began to crow, at which
1025 I| Septuagint, and writes ' princeps cocorum.' ~palpation, n., touching.
1026 III| a worshipful lady named Cocovilla, which was of the senate,
1027 VII| Jesu Christ, saith: Panem coelestem accipiam, et nomen domini
1028 VII| Pater noster qui es in coelis, sanctificetur nomen tuum,
1029 I| magnificentia tua super cœlos, Lord God thy magnificence
1030 II| coarted, pp., constrained or coerced. coles, n., cabbages colestaff,
1031 III| he put away from him evil cogitations and thoughts, and will make
1032 II| they buried him. All his cognation and all his generation abode
1033 VI| Christ tofore God and if his cognisance sufficeth not to thee, no
1034 V| to Seraphim, in profound cognition as to Cherubim, and in perpetual
1035 I| bibliographical and historical coincidence, that while Wynken de Worde
1036 IV| forth three refroidours or colds, and bare in his heart three
1037 III| Columba, otherwise named Colinkillus, and S. Bride whom S. Patrick
1038 I| with bise; and a golden collar he put about his neck, and
1039 VII| and about his neck two collars, one of silver, the other
1040 IV| neighbours. In the book of collations of fathers he read curiously,
1041 I| appears to have industriously collected such legends as he could
1042 VII| and Gregory added thereto collects and songs to the lessons
1043 VI| of all men, wherefore, Ad Colossenses quarto, he was called of
1044 VI| like as Paul saith to the Colossians: Luke the leech saluteth
1045 III| Banolanis disciple to S. Columbain. His feast is the fifteenth
1046 VII| as once it appeared by a columbe or dove of marvellous splendour
1047 V| Gregory into the city of Columna, and Achate into a city
1048 II| combs of iron, and began to comb him on the sides within
1049 VII| them, and they were all combusted and burnt. And therefore
1050 I| Jerome saith thus: Sive comedam sive bibam, etc. As oft
1051 I| judge but no beseecher, he comes for to fight and not to
1052 I| meats of the earth that be comestible, that they may serve and
1053 I| son, I have done as thou commandedst me, arise, sit and eat of
1054 III| I shall do all that thou commandest me, and shall believe in
1055 IV| said: Pater, in manus tuas commendo spiritum meum, she gave
1056 II| diligently the charge of his commission, and that he was returned
1057 VI| right glad, and sent out commissions for to gather it, and spared
1058 I| which the bread and wine be commixed substantially into the proper
1059 VII| anon the priest saith: Haec commixtio, etc. And that commixtion
1060 I| come of great plenty and commodious, and the seven lean oxen,
1061 I| they returned and told the commodities of the land, but some said
1062 VII| or great utility of the commonweal, and then with short and
1063 VII| orison that beginneth thus: Communicantes, etc. In the which orison
1064 I| which the sacraments be communicated and administered; and some
1065 VI| on his side on whom the commutation is made of satisfaction
1066 VI| idols be full of devils, we comnmand them for to come out, and
1067 VI| endured this pain, the judge comnnanded that she should be led with
1068 VI| guest room. ~cene-thursday, comp. n., maundy Thursday. ~couthe,
1069 VI| lurking.~make, n., mate or companion.~maleurty, n., Fr. malheur,
1070 VII| We have a maiden, none comparable to her in wit and wisdom,
1071 VII| the great sea-ocean that compasseth all the world about, and
1072 VII| rewards for their victory, and compellest me to dispute with them
1073 I| blessing of me. Unnethe by compelling he taking it, said: Let
1074 VII| that I may worthily and competently announce the holy Evangel
1075 VII| said furthermore: Who so complaineth is no monk, who that holdeth
1076 I| and make an end of this complement and marriage this week,
1077 I| signifieth that is sung: Dum complerentur dies pentecostes, etc. The
1078 I| etc. Antichrist and his complices shall give abomination and
1079 VI| hereof saith S. Ambrose: Luke compriseth in his gospel all the virtues
1080 VI| his words that, they were compunct, and promised to be his
1081 V| himself. In that time he con-vanquished Fortunatus the priest, a
1082 III| guerir, healed.~heled, v., concealed.~honeysuckle, n., a rendering
1083 V| proper cell as fearing my conceits and thoughts, wherefore
1084 VII| ordure or filth of sin, he conceiveth by bitterness or smarting
1085 V| verses:~Anna soles dici tres concepisse Marias,~Quas genuere viri
1086 VII| 253.~Commandments, i. 281.~Concepton of our Lady. ii. 122..~Cornelius.
1087 I| translation that we are chiefly concerned, of which Caxton's version
1088 VII| destruction, iii. 161.~Jesus, concerning the name of, i. 33.~Jew
1089 III| Patrick's mother was named Conchessa, Martin's sister of France.
1090 II| wilt; now advise thee and conclude what I shall answer to our
1091 VII| these orisons the priest concludeth, saying: Per dominum nostrum,
1092 VII| to mistrust his earlier conclusions, and that up to the present
1093 IV| verily woe to me. Now the concourse of thy disciples coming
1094 IV| bond, I shall make her my concubine. And when she was presented
1095 VII| Unusquisque vero tentatur a concupiscentia sua, etc.: Every one is
1096 I| evil people whom they shall condemn by the works of their good
1097 V| him that he should make a confection of honey and wine and pepper,
1098 II| and Jonathan and he were confederate and swore each of them to
1099 II| number, and Solomon and Hiram confederated them together in love and
1100 VI| her, saying: Barbara, have confidence. and be firm and steadfast.
1101 VII| her, where she had a great confiict and battle to keep her virginity,
1102 IV| and take these things and confite them with the juice of porret,
1103 I| whereof David saith: Dixi confitebor, etc.: I have said and purposed
1104 V| Austin answered: Te dominum confitemur, and so they two together
1105 II| saying: O Lord God of Israel, conform me in this hour to the works
1106 II| of Jesu Christ, is made conformable to him everlastingly, to
1107 I| he is the beauty and the conformity of the bounty of God. Thirdly,
1108 II| our people. Cap. eodem: Confortatum est cor tuum, eo quod castitatem
1109 II| nescieris: ideo et manus Domini confortavit te. et ideo eris benedicta
1110 VII| dead, and then our Lady in conforting her said: My dear daughter,
1111 VII| in wit and wisdom, which confoundeth all wise men, and she saith
1112 V| questions, right appert in confounding heretics, and right catholic
1113 II| Continual dread is his confuse, and always in the sea is
1114 IV| tempt them that they speak confusedly, and that they meddle words
1115 V| the false condemning and confusing, and the doubtful in expounding.~
1116 II| Dæmonis aspectus, scelerum confusio, luctus. ~that is to say:
1117 IV| blood of the ram abode and congealed. The third day he came and
1118 VI| For he had on his arm a congelation of blood in manner of a
1119 III| and departed them in three congregations, so that they were departed
1120 I| habitation of saints of good congruity. For that heaven is without
1121 I| serpent, keeping an order and congruous number of curses. The serpent
1122 I| he was somewhat known by conjecting, as of his enemies, which
1123 I| dreams, and sent for all conjectors and diviners of Egypt, and
1124 III| coming of the sickness, and conjectured that it came of overmuch
1125 I| baffled the researches and conjectures of bibliographers; but latterly
1126 IV| comforted. ~conjured, v., Fr. conjurer, exorcised. ~dalve, v.,
1127 V| came between, crying and conjuring by the name of Jesu Christ
1128 IV| see them. And then, by the conmmandment of Decius, he was beaten
1129 V| like wise he should not conne have it thence. Then the
1130 I| Godfrey of Boulogne in the Conquest of Jerusalem, with other
1131 VII| is to say mass, also to conscrate the body of our Lord, the
1132 I| faciant in eis judicium conscriptum, etc. To the end that they
1133 VII| Foxwhelp, ii. 212.~Germain consecrates S. Genevieve, iii. 286.~
1134 I| words of Jesu Christ and so consecrateth the sacrament. The which
1135 VII| very love he assenteth and consenteth to believe firmly all the
1136 I| nevertheless it is not consequent that whosoever have the
1137 II| to me, or haply thou hast conserved and kept me for some other
1138 I| of French must have been considerably less than that we are willing
1139 I| eight things, of which the considerati the nativity of Jesu Christ
1140 I| altar be signified seven considerations that we ought to have unto
1141 VII| qui lugent, quoniam ipsi consolabuntur, that is to say: Blessed
1142 III| nails, and gave his cries consonant into his mother, as he should
1143 IV| He reputed the tyrants conspiring their fury into the apostles,
1144 VI| death long time after, when Constans was emperor, and that the
1145 VI| tribune of the knights under Constantian and Julian Cæsar. And Martin
1146 V| Ionicus. And Methodius of ConstantinopIe indited his life and his
1147 III| people to the faith. And Constantinus the priest wrote his life
1148 I| the Prophet that saith: Constitue domine legislatorem super
1149 III| and not willing to die, constituted and ordained himself judge
1150 VII| country without any other constitution. And he being thus in great
1151 V| do miracles. Thirdly, in constraining, for to constrain the impediments
1152 I| glory in glory, in essence consubstantial by generation, semblable
1153 V| borne in Rome tofore the consuls, which were in terror of
1154 VII| be and shall be unto the consuming or end of the world, and
1155 VII| witnessing the name of Jesu, consummated there his martyrdom. Many
1156 III| he said, Joh. cap. xix. Consummatum est, that is to say: All
1157 V| master, where the place was contaimng the space of a foot where
1158 I| Anthony Vernard at Paris. It contains the lives of many French
1159 VII| that other: Let us make contentions together like as men of
1160 IV| Decius for to take away the contentious and subdue them to Rome.
1161 II| VOLUME TWO~Contents ~ 3 3 14 20 24 25
1162 IV| hallowed of us, and made continuous with all others. And it
1163 VI| that saith: Surget gens contra gentem, that is to say,
1164 IV| gentiles. In Lystra was a contract which he lost and redressed.
1165 VII| wicked spirits. Thirteen contracts, or filled with paralysis,
1166 I| was called the water of contradiction, where the children grudged
1167 VII| ordinance of God ought not to be contraried. And anon he sent for the
1168 I| given penance. Some other contrarien, and to them is given hardiness
1169 V| beheaded only. And this contrariety may be assoiled in this
1170 I| of Genoa, who laid under contribution for his purpose the Lives
1171 VII| it be, who with good and contrited heart cometh to the church
1172 II| a monk, then the devils contrived many evils, and when they
1173 III| Beelzebub? The devil said: He contriveth all evil, and when we come
1174 V| non poterant, tuo gremio contulisti. Which is to say: Holy and
1175 V| with me. Now shall each contumacious knight feel not only for
1176 IV| bed of iron, that Laurence contumax may lie thereon. And the
1177 VII| said no words tumelous or contumelious, ne other disordinate words.
1178 VII| and villainies to Fiacre, contumelying and blaspheming him, and
1179 VII| as he yet that of late convalesced and issued out of a grievous
1180 VI| was a maid of the castle Convary which sat on a time in a
1181 VI| this foresaid vision may be conveniently expounded as here followeth.
1182 VI| goodly, with him was I most conversant. And among all others there
1183 VII| art thou old, and where conversest thou, for from thee I will
1184 VI| that made all things, and convertest them that err. And our Lord
1185 II| conversion ~Conversion is said of convertor, I am turned, or is as much
1186 VII| his father, whereof he was convicted, and was shorn a monk.~About
1187 I| Genevieve and S. Louis. ~Convincing proof that this is the book
1188 I| spring, prince of the cooks-See Nebuzar-adan. propice, adj.,
1189 I| rain, and refresheth and cooleth the air and the earth. Thus
1190 VII| twenty-four monks, all in royal copes of cloth of gold and a royal
1191 III| said of jaculum, a dart and copis smiting, which is to say
1192 VII| saith: Luceat lux vestra coram hominibus ut videant, etc.,
1193 I| of inestimable value. The corbels of roof and cloister vaulting
1194 VI| whom the body resteth at Corbigny. And when this Leonard was
1195 VII| inciting us saith: Sursum corda, that is to say that the
1196 IV| him bounden to the city of Corduba. And made them there to
1197 VI| virgins, which was named Cordula, was sore afeared, and hid
1198 III| mother, in the castle named Corfe. But when the queen saw
1199 I| small and white like to coriander. And they wondered on it
1200 VI| wrote of him (Secundo ad Corintheos octavo): Of whom the laud
1201 I| toucheth the Apostle ad Corinthios xv. Therefore is there first
1202 IV| raised Tabitha ; he baptized Cornelia; with the shadow of his
1203 I| made of square stones four cornered, that is to say of spiritual
1204 I| stalk, full and fair of corns, and as many other ears
1205 III| many other lords' sons, of Cornwall, Wales, Scotland and Ireland,
1206 VII| lady of a province named Corocania, and saw that this Mahomet
1207 III| anointed and sacred at their coronation. And after, he was of good
1208 IV| versifier in this wise: Ense coronatus Paulus, cruce Petrus, eodem-Sub
1209 IV| requires" me to lose my coronet When the duke had heard
1210 VI| she made more than fifty corporas, and sent them in fair towels
1211 VII| perception is this, Perceptio corporis tui, etc., and may be the
1212 III| hour of noon there was the corps of a young man brought to
1213 V| and more, but among other corrections, I will set herein one miracle,
1214 II| him: Thou enemy of God, corrupter of the law,. wherefore hast
1215 I| dabis sanctum tuum videre corruptionem: Thou shalt not suffer thine
1216 IV| time chosen to be bishop in Cotoranense, but he refused utterly,
1217 III| stain. ~tigurion, n., a cottage, used also for a shrine
1218 V| about midnight the child coughed and arose all whole, and
1219 III| share to make clean his coulter, it cleaved to his hand.
1220 VII| might go but one alone, and coulters and swords of sharp iron
1221 II| treachery and sin, and thou counselledst with the devil. Repent thee,
1222 I| to another wrongfully, or counselleth or helpeth to grieve another
1223 VII| had her hands as lame and counterfeited for cause of a sickness
1224 III| was chosen pope, and was countermanded and came again to Rome.
1225 V| lest by the reason of the counting of the time should be said
1226 VII| conjoin thee unto me by coupling of marriage, for the patriarchs,
1227 III| Latin, and French, and read coursably the Scriptures in these
1228 III| of all Flanders, and of Courtrai. He had a certain place
1229 V| because I dwell in the courts of great lords, which thing
1230 VII| queen his mother, by the cousel of his barons he assented
1231 III| Elizabeth and our Lady were cousins-german, daughters of two sisters.
1232 VI| ship ne boat ready, ne they couth not the craft of rowing,
1233 VII| bitterness or smarting so great a coutrition that he therefore returneth
1234 II| for when I was a cold thou coveredst me. And when he awoke he
1235 VI| that thou holdest it for cowardice, and that I have not done
1236 IV| they put serpents in their cradles for to prove if they be
1237 VI| defoul her, who was named Cradok, the son of a king named
1238 II| figs. cautelously, adv., craftily. chevisshed, v., achieved
1239 VII| with him, and at the last crave him into three pieces, and
1240 I| It is not less to him to create things than to change things.
1241 I| Romanorum or the everliving creations of Geoffrey Chaucer. Verily
1242 III| said to him: Credo, till to creatorem cœli et terræ; his uncle
1243 I| eighth chapter: Supra quod credi potest universe vastabit;
1244 VII| chosen Octavian, Johannes Cremensis of the title of S. Calixtus,
1245 VI| emperor, which was then at Cremona, she assembled in a garner
1246 III| as much as he might, and crept upon his hands unto the
1247 III| gibbet with Modestus and Crescentia his nurse, which always
1248 VII| 27, v. 172. ~Crisaunt = Crescentius. October 25, vi. 59.~*Crispin.
1249 VI| man, which was saved in a crevice of the rock, but for all
1250 III| him. Then when the cock crew, the younglings appeared
1251 III| bare this holy body, two cripples were made all whole, and
1252 III| forfeited.~Now it happed that Crispinus, which was one of the governors
1253 VII| orison beginneth: Domine Jesu Criste, qui ex voluntate patris,
1254 III| them, and with hooks and crochets of iron did do tear their
1255 VII| faith, and go must they with Cromatius and Tiburtius for to save
1256 V| and horribly disfigured, crookbacked and lame, which was in that
1257 II| passeth in going right without crooking by right long line; and
1258 V| take the charge and the crosier. And at the last he was
1259 II| Edward Grim, that was his crossier put forth his arm with the
1260 I| small house. tourbe, n., a crowd. tree treen, n., wood. trewage,
1261 IV| turbes or tourbes, n., crowds. ~turmes. n., assemblies. ~
1262 VI| collect where it is said: Qui crucis mortificationem jugiter
1263 VII| stand without he had two crutches or staves under his arms,
1264 II| answered: Who art thou that cryest and wakest the king? And
1265 IV| spare the little child that cryeth, I pray you to tarry a while,
1266 VII| and his father was called Cryspobachia, and was a right great philosopher,
1267 I| another siderum; another crystallinum; and another empyreum; the
1268 V| to flee unto the city of Ctesiphont. And at the last Cosdroe
1269 I| chapter, Ascendit leo de cubili, etc. The lion is risen
1270 VII| of his eyes a stake of a cubit long, and when the people
1271 I| chapter, where he saith: Cujus adventus erit secundum operationem
1272 II| of the cross, not for his culp and trespass, but for our
1273 III| perfection, how well that the culpe of sin may well be defaced,
1274 VII| and assiduously grew the cultiving of God and the honour of
1275 IV| as son of a dove, or of a culvert He was obedient when our
1276 III| a time, as he went from Cumea to Milan for to seek the
1277 V| withstand. ~celyer, n., cupboard or store place. ~chasse,
1278 V| in this hour debonair and curable: I pray to our Lord that
1279 III| whereas he visited and saw curates that were not good, ne propice
1280 V| of our Lord in medicinal curation and healing.~
1281 VI| medicine curing is that which cureth the malady, and that is
1282 VII| cabbages.~crisp, adj., curly.~cruel, adj., stern.~detrenched.
1283 III| undercovering, and thus he died cursedly.~Thus end the Lives of four
1284 V| constrained to have so many cursednesses or ill-haps. And the third
1285 IV| his books, which had no custody, fell in the water, and
1286 V| that is to wit, from the customance of sin. The third effect
1287 III| melody. And after that S. Cuthhert would no more keep sheep
1288 IV| which is as much to say as cutte in Latin, and dolos, which
1289 II| joyed in ye to the Lord in cymbals, mannerly sing to him a
1290 II| lineage, and also they of Cyrenia and Alexandria, and of them
1291 VI| were many men, for the pope Cyriacus and other bishops, and Ethereus
1292 VI| place, and that the blessed Cyril, bishop of Morianne, brought
1293 II| taught of a priest named Cyrinus, which did marvellously
1294 IV| And her father was named Cyrus, and her mother Eucharis.
1295 I| Whereof David saith, Non dabis sanctum tuum videre corruptionem:
1296 I| in his eleventh chapter: Dabit eis potestatem in multis
1297 VII| that saith thus: Petite et dabitur vobis, etc., that is to
1298 I| scripture of Daniel, Daniel xi.: Dabunt abominationem et desolationem
1299 IV| barbarians which had taken Dacia and the country about, and
1300 II| flagellum, frigus et ignis, Dæmonis aspectus, scelerum confusio,
1301 IV| Thou art rightfully called Dagnus, for thou art the death
1302 VI| arrayed with all manner of dainties, and when they had well
1303 V| John was, and there he dalf and found a pot, and the
1304 VI| led her unto a town called Dallasion, and there the judge commanded
1305 V| which is in the utter end of Dalmatia and of Pannonia. He, being
1306 VI| covered with a cloth named a dalmatic, and one that was vexed
1307 V| vices. Damian is said of dama, which is a beast humble
1308 VII| ne in no manner of wise damaged. A woman sore aggrieved
1309 V| then Denis was baptized and Damaris his wife and all his meiny,
1310 I| fifth reason, as saith John Damascenus: in March and in printemps
1311 III| disponas, atque ab æterna damnatione nos eripi, et in electorum
1312 VII| that the beauty of that damosel was more foul and stinking
1313 V| ana, that is above, or of damum, that is sacrifice. Or Damianus
1314 VII| steep, thick, strait, and so dangerous, that it seemed to man's
1315 VII| chamberlain, iii. 101.~Kyrkil the Danish leader, iii. 122.~Latin
1316 VII| Cyprian. September l6, v. 142.~Dantian. September 27, v. 172.~Daria.
1317 VII| mine old age, thou hast darkened the light of mine eyes,
1318 VI| much to say as God, and of das, that is to say, give. And
1319 I| indication of place of printing, date, or printer, and until quite
1320 VII| shall mowe feel the sweet dawning of this precious blood and
1321 VI| righteousness to shine like as a day-star. But, brother, we have trespassed
1322 V| been knights that had by day-time been within, and had watched
1323 VII| Wautrud saw in a vision, five daya before the death of the
1324 VII| thither where they came by daylight. And then said Noddo to
1325 V| cried and hast broken my deafness. Thou hast enlumined, cleared,
1326 VII| their hands, distributing or dealing to every one of them a certain
1327 VI| ecclesiastical heriot or death-fee.~moyenne, adj., medium.~
1328 IV| from innumerable evils. His deaths were so many that they may
1329 VII| crucify him, for he is deathworthy. And therefore maketh the
1330 V| and have moved strifes and debates in a wedding, and have shed
1331 VII| petition is: Et dimitte nobis debita rostra, sicut et nos dimittimus
1332 VII| sicut et nos dimittimus debitoribus nostril; that is to say;
1333 I| therefore, he departed from the debtors. And this debt here the
1334 IV| church fell down, or was in decay, S. Swithin would anon amend
1335 VI| and confess that I have deccived you of all that I have said
1336 VI| place, and when Theonia was deceased out of this world, this
1337 II| the world and said: It is deceiving, transitory and bitter,
1338 III| holy Scriptures against the deceptions of the fiend, and especially
1339 VII| Northamptonahire, vi. 230.~Caxton declares himself translator of the
1340 VI| a sermon to the people, declaring her virginity, and how she
1341 VI| my mouth that mine heart decline not into words of malice,
1342 II| this anthem: Pulchra es et decora filia Jerusalem; that is
1343 VII| say thus: Quasi sponsam decoravit me corona, et quasi sponsam
1344 III| and Jonathas amabiles et decori.~
1345 II| religion dost against the decrees of princes? And as the blessed
1346 IV| learn the science of the decretals, droits and law. And there
1347 III| Remigius did hallow and dedifie it. The said king did increase
1348 I| shall say, Esurivi et non dedistis mihi manducare; I had hunger
1349 II| and all the delights and deduits of the world, and all to
1350 I| come to mine. Right just deemer, judge him to be mine for
1351 I| in later times have been deeply indebted to the man who
1352 II| have liefer to die than to defame and slander my mother so
1353 V| men come to heaven by the defaming of wicked men more than
1354 VII| prove his demand, and the defendant shall be believed by his
1355 VI| ordained for to die. Thou defendedst them not only from death,
1356 VII| orisons, that thou wilt not defer to me the grant of it. When
1357 I| Auferes spiritum eorum et deficient et in pulverem, etc. Lord
1358 V| when his own conscience defileth him not. And because he
1359 VII| suffer these passions without definition? And they answered: Who
1360 VI| was sent thither a man to deflower and corrupt the virgin,
1361 I| said to Joseph: I am not defrauded from the sight of thee,
1362 I| of his body, for he was deified and came from the Deity,
1363 II| answering said: If thou of deignest to hear me I shall tell
1364 VI| came to them and said: God deigneth not to have service by force,
1365 I| devil Lucifer, which was deject and cast out of heaven,
1366 IV| blamed him grievously of his delayment and negligence. And anon
1367 I| Abel born, and his sister Delbora. ~When Adam was an hundred
1368 VI| unto the time that he had deliberated of what torments he might
1369 I| sweareth by advice and by deliberation, but a man should swear
1370 VI| sun is sweet, and it is delightable to the eyes to see the sun.
1371 II| voice that said to him: Thou delightest thee more in playing with
1372 I| to labour needily, but in delighting and recreating him, and
1373 III| fair fountain and a much delitable place, and began sore to
1374 VII| S, Alphage at, iii. 121.~Delphic Oracle prophesied Christ'
1375 VII| them, and forthwith they delved with such staves as they
1376 I| judge: Right true judge deme and judge this sinner to
1377 VII| To whom the prince said: Demean thee not disordinately,
1378 II| saved thee, and thou art demeasured in worldly love and fleshly.
1379 VII| Dedication of a Church. i. 149.~Demetrien. October 8, vii. 182.~Denis.
1380 II| years, and she left her demoiselle free. And after this she
1381 I| and sometimes monstrous or demoniacal gargoyles of the exteriors,
1382 I| in gifts of grace, and in demonstration of glory. And these three
1383 I| etc., and showeth many demonstrations that she suffereth, as well
1384 VII| is divided in three, in demonstrative, in probable, and in sophistical.
1385 VI| Denis saith in an epistle to Demophile: Like as a lord domineth
1386 I| epistle that he made to Demophilus saith that Jesu Christ after
1387 I| this psalm: Ad vesperum demorabitur fletus, etc.: At evensong
1388 VI| sacrament he fell in a soft and demure laughing, so that the lords
1389 VII| vi. 2-3, 244.~Daughter denies her father, iv. 95.~David'
1390 VI| but mine own conscience denieth me it, that I may not believe
1391 II| Marcel is as much to say as denying to do evil, or it is said
1392 VII| and the cause why thou departedst from thy country, also where
1393 I| and health of my father dependeth of this child, and see that
1394 VII| thence forthon portray ne depict the form or figure of the
1395 I| and at the same hour he depoiled hell. Taking midnight largely,
1396 I| Psalmist Sing ye to him in deporting your voice. The third, that
1397 VI| his fellows, seeing his depredation, entered into his house
1398 VII| land, but because of little depth in some places, and in some
1399 I| angels made Lord of the deputations to them beneath. When Jesu
1400 IV| and he was king also of Derbyshire, Cheshire, Shropshire, Staffordshire,
1401 III| gods, and to them hath done derogation and disworship, wherefor
1402 I| facerit de celo in terram descendere. Antichrist shall make such
1403 I| assoil the sinners when thou descendest into hell, them of thy party.
1404 VII| over sea, ii. 121.~Christ descends from a crucifix, vii. 173.~—
1405 I| Nativity, the Passion, his descension into hell, his resurrection,
1406 IV| marvellous praising, thou deservedst the power and dignity of
1407 III| and envious, because he desgned not to have a fellow. Another
1408 VI| is said in the collect: Desideratam nobis tuæ propitiationis
1409 IV| they whom thou lovedst and desiredst with all shine heart, like
1410 I| Dabunt abominationem et desolationem templi, etc. Antichrist
1411 VI| he was of evil habit and despicable of cheer, and one there
1412 III| that my gods know you to be despisers of them, they will that
1413 VI| suffered many villainies and despises of the servants of his father,
1414 VII| three principal torments or despisings that our Lord suffered in
1415 II| for as much as they have despited and villained the blood
1416 IV| perils, ne had no shame of despites, but was ever ready unto
1417 I| destroyer, and no sinner but a despoiler, we see him a judge but
1418 I| lamentest, and thereas thou despoilest thee of thy rays natural,
1419 V| be the man that should be desponsate and married to the Virgin
1420 VII| that the blessed doctor desputed, read, or wrote, or argued,
1421 IV| this life, and shall be destitute of the presence of thy life.
1422 V| constrain the impediments and destourbles, and this appertaineth to
1423 IV| detrenched, p. a., O. Fr. destrancher, hewed in pieces. did do
1424 VI| orison and prayer of S. Clare destroubled and put from their emprise.
1425 I| not debtor, a breaker and destroyer, and no sinner but a despoiler,
1426 IV| be our people that thou destroyest, and defend the empire of
1427 I| find desire of evil, he destroyeth it; if he find vain dread,
1428 IV| became. ~A merchant was detained of a tyrant, and all despoiled,
1429 VII| 141.~Thief miraculously detected, iv. 59.~---and S. Edward
1430 V| There was a knight which detracted the works and miracles of
1431 VII| David the prophet, saying: Detrahentem secreto proximo suo hunc
1432 VII| wherefore cost thou with thy devilish works convert all the people
1433 III| Austin, in libro de Trinitate deviseth of three manners of life,
1434 V| craft of speaking and of devising, all them of divisions of
1435 I| præsentis appetere, adversa devitare, opprobria fugere, gloriam
1436 III| say ye: will ye have these devlls for your gods and worship
1437 V| swallow of perdition, and the devourer of souls. I have deceived
1438 II| himself. And thou wretch devourest the great fishes, and restest
1439 II| end, whereas cruel flame devoureth the souls of miscreants
1440 V| that is to say light, and dian, that is to say God. For
1441 VII| tectum meum: sed tantum dic verbo, et sanabitur anima
1442 VI| For the first: Jam non dicam vos servos et cetera, I
1443 VII| prayer of S. John, ii. 169.~Dicer, the, and S.Bernard, v.
1444 V| these verses:~Anna soles dici tres concepisse Marias,~
1445 V| his table:~Quisquis amat dictis absentum rodere vitam,~Hanc
1446 II| which in Greek is said didimus; or else Thomas is said
1447 V| of Æneas and complained Dido which died for love. Also
1448 III| of the mass these words: Diesque nostros in tua pace disponas,
1449 VII| courage to sobriety and good diet, to humility and misericorde,
1450 VI| again.~There was a man named Dietrich which was grievously vexed
1451 I| that Fulgentius saith: It differenced from the other stars in
1452 III| Ephesus. The first Philip differenceth from this Philip, for he
1453 I| hagiological preferences of the different nationalities. It is with
1454 V| given power to do all things difficult which be pertaining to divine
1455 VI| and doctors. The second diflference is of martyrs, of whom the
1456 VII| Constantine, there was a man digging in a long wall, as it is
1457 II| paschal lamb that she had, and dighted and set it tofore him, and
1458 VII| perdurable. Quod ipse præstare dignetur qui cum patre et spiritu
1459 VII| all the people, answereth: Dignum et justum est, right even
1460 VII| three times: Domine, non sum dignus ut intres sub tectum meum:
1461 VII| much humbly, devoutly, and dilgently the confessions of his parishioners.
1462 VII| never changed his habit, but diligenely exercised the office of
1463 II| written: Honor regis judicium diligit. The honour of the king
1464 I| clearly, but have their eyes dim. Therefore, after we be
1465 VII| taketh it unworthily, he diminisheth himself. The fourth miracle
1466 VII| The fifth petition is: Et dimitte nobis debita rostra, sicut
1467 VII| debita rostra, sicut et nos dimittimus debitoribus nostril; that
1468 III| And S. Simeon said: Nunc dimittis servum tuum domine, etc.
1469 VII| ready for to eat, and at dinner-time he called and made to be
1470 V| wherefore he eschewed the great dinners and the feasts. And the
1471 VI| then by the commandment of Dioc]etian they were put into
1472 VII| leave of the bishops and diocesans, ever going on foot, preached
1473 II| should fast and pray in their dioceses three days for him to the
1474 IV| wicked and evil judge, named Dion, which did do make a tub
1475 V| as some say he is said of Dionisia, that is, after Isidore,
1476 VII| the, and S.Bernard, v. 22.~Dioscurus' daughter Barbara, vi. 198.~
1477 II| up this ring out of the dirt or mire, and they may not.
1478 V| great rewards, be not now disagreeable to him that hath so much
1479 VII| the elevation was done, disappeared and vanished away. A post
1480 III| Flaccus, seeing himself disappointed and mocked, turned himself
1481 VI| they that serve you, and be disarmed, whom I nourish for your
1482 VII| cometh, as when they may discern black from white, they begin
1483 II| groweth on the wall, and discerned the properties of beasts,
1484 III| they had cure of, he would discharge them and put them out of
1485 VII| drink and made it lean and disciplined it, as another S. Paul,
1486 VII| other secret abstinences and disciplines. Humility, beauty of all
1487 VII| Evangile, Gavisi sunt ergo discipuli, viso domino, etc., that
1488 IV| commanded that they should not disclose it till he was risen from
1489 V| in arms of battle for to discomfit all the rebels of the empire
1490 II| lechery, lord of the faith, discomfiture of devils, and surety of
1491 VII| laboured ever to appease all discordance and strife after his power,
1492 V| torments, he was of them discoriate and flayed quick, and died
1493 II| you in such wise that ye discounsel your friends from the everlasting
1494 II| said: Thou hast this day discouraged the cheer of all thy servants
1495 VII| have said that whatever discoveries have been made as to the
1496 VI| last consummation. He began discreetly, and that was after other
1497 VII| SS. Peter and Paul, how discriminated, iv. 25.~Books of S. Dominic
1498 I| long time to advise and to discuss it. And he laboured for
1499 VII| which lightly he made to be discussed and soon after justly urged.
1500 VII| and head bare.~Of diligent discussing of causes and matters he
1501 I| his puissance; and by the discussion and reproving of my sins
|