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
1502 VII| beginneth: Judica me deus et diseerne, and in the same psalm he
1503 VII| daughter Barbara, vi. 198.~Disembowelling, iii. 251.~Donatus, S. Jerome'
1504 VII| appearing right foul and disformed, and over foul in clothing,
1505 IV| would not leave them both disherited and orphans, he made his
1506 VI| Andrea, so foolish, that dishonoureth the other virgins. Then
1507 I| go conjointly out which disjointly entered, and let go out
1508 I| converted, which was called Dismas, like as it said in the
1509 III| received. And the judge did do dismember the mother with the child,
1510 II| never consent to sin, ne to disobey ne break the commandments
1511 I| Therefore then, we that have disobeyed the commandments of God
1512 I| their Saviour. After, they disordered them in eating, in drinking,
1513 VII| suffering from intestinal disorders, and it was probably for
1514 II| image of death and perpetual disordinance without ceasing. ~
1515 II| and of his building and dispence in his house, through the
1516 II| direption, n., pillage. disperipled, pp., scattered. ~empesh,
1517 III| injury done against a saint displeaseth greatly almighty God.~And
1518 VI| sicknesses be to me hard ne displeasing. And then answered she to
1519 III| Diesque nostros in tua pace disponas, atque ab æterna damnatione
1520 VI| to see the fair games and disports, and all had joy and pleasure
1521 V| of the orders and of the dispositions and offices of them, so
1522 II| said that this light was dispositive, sudden, and celestial,
1523 VII| that secretly blame and dispraise their neighbours them I
1524 V| that the prison should not disprofit him, but that he might have
1525 I| that he said: I am he that disputeth justice and righteousness
1526 VI| reasonable, and they be hounds disreasonable. This dissension which is
1527 IV| nature, ne none other soul dissemblable to us, ne dwelling in none
1528 V| illusion or an invention dissimuled of his brethren the friars?
1529 VI| said to him: Thou livest dissoIutely, and thou oughtest to serve
1530 III| still and to eschew all dissolutions.~Mary was afeared of the
1531 IV| pit of lions from their distempered hunger. Ought he not to
1532 I| And make therein divers distinctions of places and chambers and
1533 III| occasions by which they be distorned for to do well. But whosomever
1534 V| doubted yet to go in such distresses, but our Lord anon put in
1535 II| etc.: Vainly is the man distroubled which assembleth treasure
1536 IV| set upright. ~rese, n., disturbance. ~sacred, v., consecrated. ~
1537 II| their paws and ongles, and disturned, and all to-rent his body
1538 III| hath done derogation and disworship, wherefor by the law he
1539 I| clean life at the hours diurnal and nocturnal of this holy
1540 I| potestatem in multis et terram divides gratuito: Antichrist shall
1541 I| know by what miracle God divideth the Egyptian and Israel.
1542 IV| him, that understood well divinations. said to him: Thou shalt
1543 III| master of enchantments, which divined by the devil for him, said
1544 IV| knew it well, because the diviner had told him that he should
1545 I| S. Bernard: Caput illud divinum, etc. The head precious
1546 II| written Johannis, cap. i. Si dixerimus quoniam non peccavimus,
1547 I| confession, whereof David saith: Dixi confitebor, etc.: I have
1548 VI| make=caused to be made. ~dizaines, n., divisions of ten each.~
1549 VI| kept, which is in three dizains, that they may be purged
1550 V| fulfilled that church with his doctine.~There was a man, which
1551 I| Austin in the book, De doctrina christiana: By a woman he
1552 V| woman that he held. And Dodo, a cousin of them that had
1553 I| a buck in summer and a doe in winter, with which fee
1554 V| Or damianus is said of dogma, which is doctrine, and
1555 IV| say as cutte in Latin, and dolos, which is to say, as seeing.
1556 VII| of divers sicknesses and dolours only to have touched his
1557 II| these said sins. That he dolved him in the ground standing
1558 IV| enjoyed, the thrones sang, the dominanations made melody, the principalities
1559 VII| said: Emitte agnum domine dominatorem terrae; saying thus to God
1560 VI| Demophile: Like as a lord domineth over his servant, or a father
1561 VII| therefore it is called Oratio dominica, that is to say: Orison
1562 V| were some that were called dominics, for because they were so
1563 VI| desperation should have no dominion on the sorrowful, ne elation
1564 V| which namely were rebaptized Donatists and Manicheans; all these
1565 VII| the printer of the Legende dorée are due to the researches
1566 III| a mansion in the city of Dorobernence, which now is called Canterbury.
1567 VII| builded churches, cloisters, dortoirs, and other edifices convenable,
1568 II| For when he was old he so doted and loved them that they
1569 II| against vanity, falseness, and doubleness, for these three things
1570 VII| perfect and so charitable that doubtless his promotion was cause
1571 VII| last breath with a sweet dour and savour, and there he
1572 III| stood at the seaside by Dover Castle, they saw a ship
1573 VI| Jerusalem twelve thousand drachmas of silver, there to be offered
1574 I| GLOSSARY ~adderbolt, n., a dragon-fly, also the bolt of a crossbow. ~
1575 IV| and holiness, thou that drankest at the fountain of perdurable
1576 I| eaten and drunken a good draught of the wine, he said to
1577 VII| which they are set, are from drawings by EMILY S. FORD.~
1578 II| And David said to him: Why dreadedst thou not to put thy hand
1579 VII| Adrian hearing this said dreadfully in this wise: Ah! blessed
1580 VII| his sin, and terror and dreadfulness to all others. And how for
1581 I| wist not of it. And he said dreadingly: How terrible is this place,
1582 IV| was all abashed of this dreme, which anon after, he told
1583 VI| and dignity of meats, of drinks, of servants, of array,
1584 II| the smoke and fume thereof driveth away all manner kind of
1585 IV| bulls without governing or driving of any body drew it forth
1586 III| to learn the sciences of droit and of the law, and there
1587 I| tears coming from the heart dropping from the eyes. Fourthly,
1588 II| meiny, and possessions of droves of oxen and flocks of sheep,
1589 II| him in which he lay in his drunkenhood, where our Lord hath smitten
1590 II| them that they went through dry-foot, in which the innumerable
1591 IV| the tears of her eyes and dryed them with the hair of her
1592 III| therein, but if they pay two ducats, and therefore come but
1593 IV| cruce Petrus, eodem-Sub duce, luce, loco, dux Nero, Roma
1594 V| sociæ, cantemus honorem,~Dulcis amor Christi resonet ore
1595 I| signifieth that is sung: Dum complerentur dies pentecostes,
1596 III| in Ulster, in the city of Dunence, as it were in a cave with
1597 VII| n., tenth.~chartre, n., dungeon.~cheer, n., face.~coles,
1598 V| attempered so the manner of his duty, that he was not overhasting
1599 IV| eodem-Sub duce, luce, loco, dux Nero, Roma locus. That is
1600 V| Cleophas Salomeque.~Has duxere viri Joseph, Alpheus, Zebedeus.~
1601 II| sith that I knew that thou dwelledst in this region and in this
1602 I| caster out and not here a dweller. ~
1603 II| Judah. David then made him a dwelling-place in the hill of Sion in Jerusalem
1604 II| chapel of S. Nicholas in his dwellingplace; and did do hallow every
1605 V| that is the earth, and dya, that is clear or godly.
1606 VII| with them, and if thou !ead my master with thee thou
1607 I| Studebant omnes superbi de eadem stirpe progeniti, prospera
1608 III| great dilection, humour by eagerness of devotion, and seed by
1609 II| tribunes and centurions, earers and tillers of his fields,
1610 I| appear to have been among the earliest of printed books, the Legenda
1611 IV| king Harry the Third with earls and barons, which king himself
1612 II| slain. Anon there came an earthquaver, lightning and thunder,
1613 VI| and great murrain, great earthquaves, great hunger and great
1614 III| lost his light, and great earthquaving of the earth was, when our
1615 III| temporal goods and of great eases, and sometimes they made
1616 VII| that way, and therefore it easeth me now, for every good deed
1617 I| things; it shall be the easier to thee to bear the charge
1618 VI| the reins, for the more easilier to bear him. and the biting
1619 I| may be borne and suffered easily, for the love of God may
1620 VII| there abode till Saturday, Easter-even, and they departed and sailed
1621 VII| great fish, and kept their Easter-tide till Trinity Sunday, like
1622 VII| for ye have kept by two Easters the feast of the Resurrection
1623 VII| wherein they should keep their Eastertide.~And then they sailed forth,
1624 VII| should be more able and easy for him to sit on, and it
1625 V| wretched woman, and said: Thou eater of porret, ween thou to
1626 VII| palace, and she said: I.eave to say such things, it is
1627 VII| the water it ceased and ebbed away. The hood which he
1628 VII| Lyons the archbishop of Ebronycence of simony. For this archbishop
1629 II| mighty city, which he named Ecbatane, and made it with stones
1630 II| standeth in the hill of Ecbathanis. To whom Tobias said: I
1631 I| two first saith Solomon, Ecclesiastici xliii.: The firmament is
1632 I| the desert, read like the echoes of another world, so far
1633 VII| three manners, in ethic, economic, and politic. The first
1634 III| workmen entended to make the edificee each after his craft, it
1635 I| interest, in the course of editing two editions, I can testify
1636 VII| remain undetermined.~THE EDITOR~END OF VOL. VII~
1637 V| testament of his father effectually, and visited religious places
1638 I| water, which signified seven effusions of the blood of Jesu Christ.
1639 IV| they touched yet and yet eft again, and saw that he had
1640 V| mother, and were of the city Egea, and born of a religious
1641 III| abbot. And after that S. Egewin came to offer at his tomb,
1642 V| name.~Giles in English, and Egidius in Latin. And it is said
1643 VI| abiding in a town named then Eglesdon, and now is called Bury.
1644 I| David saith: A summo cœlo egressio ejus, etc. From the high
1645 III| and that was this Mary Egyptiaca aforesaid. But as soon as
1646 IV| psalm: In exitu Israel de Egypto, and then the companies
1647 VI| consumed him in such wise ehat there could not be found
1648 IV| had given to the church of Eichstadt, which he had in special
1649 V| lusty and much fair, of eight-and-twenty years of age. And when Natalie
1650 VI| and by the other twain. Eighthly, this gospel is marvellously
1651 III| our Lord two hundred and eighty-five, whose body a worshipful
1652 VI| and the year of his life eighty-one. And his cheer shone as
1653 I| delivered of Ishmael. Abram was eighty-six years old when Ishmael was
1654 VII| Lord fourteen hundred and eightythree, and the first year of the
1655 V| patiently himself to be ejected out of Piacenza, and went
1656 V| Bartholomew, that is from Ejulath unto Gabaoth. There thou
1657 VII| of Persia in the city of Elapis, he was come of christian
1658 III| damnatione nos eripi, et in electorum tuorum jubeas grege numerari.
1659 II| gold and silver, teeth of elephants and great riches. The king
1660 III| Denis, S. Rustique, and S. Eleuthere which now is called S. Denis
1661 I| said it clearly which said, Elevata est magnificentia tua super
1662 V| their members. Which were so elevated in pride that they made
1663 VI| let her of her prayers. Eleventhly, God of his grace had pierced
1664 VII| v. 85.~Loye of Noyon = Eligius. December 1, iii. 261.~Lucy.
1665 V| daughters, named Elizabeth, and Elind. Elizabeth was mother to
1666 VI| of a noble senator called Elinde, and desired that he would
1667 I| of Poti-phera, priest of Eliopoleos. ~Joseph went forth then
1668 II| him, that one was named Eliphas the Temanite, another Bildad
1669 VII| empire.~In that time was S. Elisabeth, daughter of the King of
1670 V| they buried it between Elisæum and Abdias, and at his tomb
1671 V| mother to John Baptist, and Eliud engendered Eminen. And of
1672 V| and was abbot after S. Elodien.~And in his time S. Marine
1673 | elsewhere
1674 III| found an enchanter named Elymas, which by his enchantment
1675 III| praised the name of god Elyon, and the tyrant smiling
1676 I| disciples which went to Emaus, which is as much as to
1677 VI| And there was a solemn embassy to the father of Ursula,
1678 I| indebted to the man who thus embodied for their benefit and instruction
1679 VII| signify lamentation and embracement of penance. And after that
1680 I| that is perfect in charity embraceth it ardently, and much people
1681 V| Christ. And then the emperor, embraised with ire, said: The injury
1682 VII| all even so as the blowing embraseth or fryeth the coal, right
1683 VI| work, which was desired to embroider certain garments to the
1684 VII| set, are from drawings by EMILY S. FORD.~
1685 VII| vi. 167.~Satan and his emissaries, v. 133~Scholastica, S.,
1686 IV| rack. ~empeshed, v., Fr. empeche, hindered. ~engine, n.,
1687 V| rack.~empeshment, n., Fr. empèchement, hindrance. ~enseign, v.,
1688 VII| detty, adj., due.~empesh (Fr.empècher), hinder.~encheson, n.,
1689 V| sweet and soft all mine empeshments and lettings, as it appertaineth,
1690 VI| which changest realms and empires, if those things be true
1691 II| fleshly love; thirdly, unto an emplaister, because it healeth the
1692 II| made ready venom for to empoison his father, for a maid,
1693 I| them that were captives emprisoned, and the servitude thou
1694 III| the vessel that they had emptied, and it was brought to her;
1695 I| no small degree will it enable them more fully to understand
1696 VII| christian faith, but he, enamoured of the love of God, as Phineas,
1697 VI| that when her mother was enceinted or great with child of her,
1698 V| so that in the feast of Encenia, that was the dedication
1699 IV| pope saith, was taken and enchained and put into a deep tower,
1700 II| enchanters that they should enchant the fiend, but as soon as
1701 II| might never move her for all enchantery. Then Paschasius did do
1702 V| to Ephigenia matrons and enchantresses, but for all them, when
1703 III| He hath deceived us by enchantry. Aphrodisius said: His God
1704 IV| named Syro and her mother Encharia. The father of her was duke
1705 I| vestments of light, they enchauffe and inflame us in charity.
1706 V| is hot by heat, so is he enchauffed of the fire of the divine
1707 VI| medicine amending is that which encreaseth health, and that is the
1708 I| keep spiritually that is encumbered in his conscience with deadly
1709 II| falseness of his servants as by encumbering of his strangers. For when
1710 VII| that right gladly I shall endeavour me to fulfil it. S. Flacre
1711 VII| our Lord for to teach and endoctrine the people unto the way
1712 II| there was such a woman in Endor. Saul then changed his habit
1713 IV| great a son, so thou whom he endued with so great glory shouldst
1714 IV| by months, but many years enduring in agony, and always appeared
1715 II| king, Jebusee, Pheresee, Eneum, Etheum and Amoreum, and
1716 III| the glorious virgin should enfant Jesu Christ; and I wretched,
1717 III| virgin and a clean maid hath enfanted and childed her maker and
1718 V| master of the work and kept Enfemia without hurt, sitting upon
1719 I| Secondly, he is hot for to enflame the hearts. Whereof Jesu
1720 III| throat, and had his eyes all enflamed and said to him, Benet!
1721 VII| said with heart and mouth enflameth the devotion. Secondly,
1722 V| that is joyousty, which enforceth her oft to perish, so that
1723 I| while Wynken de Worde was engaged in printing the last of
1724 VI| world, but fortune only, of engendrure and hap, doth all, like
1725 V| sight of.~artillour, n., engineer,~avoid, v., to destroy.~
1726 VII| that he would break these engines to the praising of his name,
1727 VI| And in this persecution Englishmen were nigh destroyed, and
1728 I| translated oute of latyn into Englysshe by me, William Caxton.' ~
1729 I| made, ~engrassed, pp., Fr. engraisser, to fatten or enrich. enseigned,
1730 IV| entailed, pp., Fr. entailler, engraved. ~esbatements, n. (Fr.),
1731 IV| it shall please thee to enhabit it, transport me to thee,
1732 V| waters. That is of God, which enhanceth the minds of doctors on
1733 I| from his land. But I shall enhard his heart, and shall multiply
1734 IV| through the world, and for to enhaunce the christian faith against
1735 I| Octavian made to cut and enlarge the ways and quitted the
1736 III| that were in darkness, he enlightened them in the faith. After,
1737 VII| the which God, creator, enluminator, and saviour be thanked,
1738 V| king heard this he began to enrage and departed all wood and
1739 IV| versifier in this wise: Ense coronatus Paulus, cruce
1740 III| went into desert in giving enseignement to them that be regenerate
1741 III| people, S. Germain, by the enseignements of the Holy Ghost, espied
1742 III| the womb, and left foul enseigns and tokens, and the sick
1743 V| showed to her how she should ensiew the steps of her mother.
1744 V| round about the temple, and ensigned and graved with his finger
1745 II| he was beaten for to be enstrengthened, he burnt to be purged,
1746 III| dwell in. And the night ensuing, S. Basil saw in a vision,
1747 VI| idol, but they would not entail ne carve it, ne consent
1748 IV| instructed. ~entailed, pp., Fr. entailler, engraved. ~esbatements,
1749 II| which of them both should entame or begin to take of the
1750 V| that he might more freely entende, and more continually, to
1751 IV| earthly, but induced by the entendements celestial shall not fail,
1752 IV| and wherefore and how thou enteredst here? And he answered: I
1753 VII| and tokening that when we enterprise a good work for to do, we
1754 VII| miracle of, vi. 196.~Angel entertained by S. Gregory, iii. 66.~----
1755 VII| my husband by the false enticements of thy wife, innocently,
1756 IV| that the two bodies were entombed together, and then was there
1757 V| these two lineages should entresemble together for great mystery.
1758 III| Matthias, which forthwith was enumbered with the other eleven, and
1759 II| made three hosts and have enveigled thy camels and taken them,
1760 VII| saved. And the Saracens, enveloped in darkness, affirm that
1761 I| and this signifieth the environing or going about the altar.
1762 II| Confortatum est cor tuum, eo quod castitatem amaveris,
1763 II| honour of our people. Cap. eodem: Confortatum est cor tuum,
1764 IV| coronatus Paulus, cruce Petrus, eodem-Sub duce, luce, loco, dux Nero,
1765 I| saith: Auferes spiritum eorum et deficient et in pulverem,
1766 I| which is in the field of Ephron the Hittite against Mamre
1767 I| And is said of this term epi, which is as much as to
1768 V| Paul came to Athens, the Epicurean philosophers and Stoics
1769 V| philosophy. There were also Epicureans, which said that all felicity
1770 V| death of pestilence and epidemic, and that we may so live
1771 VII| seven sleepers, iv. 121.~Epileptic cured by S. Clare, vi. 189.~
1772 VII| Mahomet fell oft in the epileptical passion, and when the lady
1773 III| the body of the blessed Epimachus, whom the said Julian had
1774 II| kin, and his father was Epiphanes and his mother Johane. He
1775 VII| his mind for to make his epitaph, and in no wise he could
1776 IV| pageants. ~esprised, pp., Fr. epris, smitten. ~facound, adj.,
1777 V| And there came to her S. Equicius, and the devil began to
1778 I| that the Scripture saith: Erant omnes pariter, they were
1779 I| Austin: Crux latronum qui erat supplicium, etc. The cross
1780 II| foremost father Adam, for Adam erected and addressed him against
1781 VII| holy Evangile, Gavisi sunt ergo discipuli, viso domino,
1782 III| ab æterna damnatione nos eripi, et in electorum tuorum
1783 I| he saith: Cujus adventus erit secundum operationem Sathanae
1784 VII| Erasmus. June 2, vii. 267.~*Erkenwolde. April 30, vii. 67.~Eufemia.
1785 II| him the ring and did their errand, whereof the king was abashed,
1786 V| answered: Brother, thou errest, for thou weenest that the
1787 VII| thou sayest, all the earth erreth and thou only sayest truth,
1788 IV| tribulations? Why hast thou not erst taken away the soul from
1789 III| reason of generation, of erudition, of imitation, and of adoption.
1790 I| the twenty-fifth chapter: Erunt signa in sole, luna et stellis,
1791 II| slain, and unnethe thou escapedst the commandment of death,
1792 II| joying in his victory, in my escaping and in your deliverance.
1793 IV| Christ, and her courage was eschaufed and moved, and great abundance
1794 V| cales, that is to say, eschauffe or make warm. For he was
1795 IV| Lord eleven hundred, would eschewe the mortality that was in
1796 II| but put out thy voice and escry him freely, and father,
1797 VI| said in the Second Book of Esdras the fourth chapter. The
1798 II| and all the mighty men in Esebon, and have taken their lands
1799 III| was Elizabeth, daughter of Esmeria, which was sister of S.
1800 VI| three months, and in that espace of time the king and more
1801 IV| weeping, and give to them esperance and hope of the resurrection
1802 VII| said, certain spies came to espie them, whereof Alboin had
1803 I| may know that ye be none espies and that ye may receive
1804 III| Maker, and Lord. He was so espired that human nature which
1805 I| Holy Ghost maketh when He espriseth him of his love. And hereof
1806 IV| air alway, awaiting and espying where we may assail rightful
1807 VII| knew the truth of the two esquires and of the duke that found
1808 VI| and as he reproved and essayed to draw him to his law,
1809 V| mensam indignam noverit esse sibi:~that is to say: Whosoever
1810 I| of it be not absolutely essential, it may safely be averred
1811 I| not written: Et vidit quod esset bonum, quia in proximo sciebat
1812 VI| came riding by a church in Essex called Havering which was
1813 IV| The second cause of the establishing of this feast was because
1814 V| refuse ye so follily the establishments of the city of Rome? Wherefore
1815 VI| saith S. Ambrose: Who may esteem more greater beauty than
1816 IV| without darkness, bounty not estimable. Give to the earth without
1817 I| translates, reads 'car il estoit prince des gueux,' but here
1818 VI| in that hour was taken, estrained, haled forth and mocked,
1819 I| past in asking medicine; it estraineth as to that which is to come
1820 I| perished, to whom he shall say, Esurivi et non dedistis mihi manducare;
1821 II| scales. stagne, n., Fr. etang, lake. sweven. n., a dream. ~
1822 V| volo et non sacrificium, etcetera. And also they that be whole
1823 IV| with my disciple Paul. And Ethea my wife and Selimus my son,
1824 I| into the land of Canaan, Ethei, etc, unto the Iand flowing
1825 VII| after her baptism, was named Ethelburga. And S. Erkenwold counselled
1826 III| and bade him go to Dame Ethelreda, abbess of that place, and
1827 I| æreum; one other called ethereum; another olimpium; another
1828 II| Jebusee, Pheresee, Eneum, Etheum and Amoreum, and all the
1829 VII| divided in three manners, in ethic, economic, and politic.
1830 V| read in the dictes of the Ethnicians that there was in Bithynia,
1831 IV| king died, and then his son Ethult was made king after him.
1832 VI| the commandment of Dioc]etian they were put into tuns
1833 VI| manner. Abgarus the son of Euchania to Jesus, blessed Saviour,
1834 IV| named Cyrus, and her mother Eucharis. She with her brother Lazarus,
1835 II| houseled, v., administered the eucharist. ~impetre, v., beseech. ~
1836 IV| hundred and twenty-six. Then Eudosia, daughter of the said Theodosius
1837 III| Nicomedia, which was named Eulogius, and he was a paynim, and
1838 V| God. Or Eufemia is said of euphoria as sweetness of sound. Sweet
1839 III| to her two virgins named Euphrosyne and Theodora, which had
1840 V| named Antimas, Leontius, and Euprepius, our country is Arabia,
1841 III| said city, which was named Euscelle, was baptized. When her
1842 III| the city, which was named Euseblus, and was of the lineage
1843 V| found dead wretchedly. And Eusemia was buried in Chalcedonia,
1844 IV| in a sermon to Paula and Eustochia her daughter: That book
1845 IV| found written in the History Euthimiata in the third book of the
1846 VII| him, which was also named Eutides, and he did many battles,
1847 IV| departed from the faith of God, Evadrian the provost was reproved
1848 V| he expounded the lesson evangelic, how the angel Gabriel was
1849 VII| saith: Sequentia sancti evangelii, et cetera, in making the
1850 III| saying: Pax tibi Marce evangelista meus. Peace be to thee Mark,
1851 VI| in his epistles: Secundum Evangelium meum, that is, after my
1852 VII| natural and moral, upon the evangiles, in so much that the holy
1853 V| earth, this part is not evenly ne righteously divided.
1854 I| the Gesta Romanorum or the everliving creations of Geoffrey Chaucer.
1855 | everywhere
1856 II| thence was sent the abbot of Evesham to the pope with other clerks
1857 II| cardinal which for more evidence took the leg of the capon
1858 I| kings Magos, as wicked and evil-doers. For first they were full
1859 I| did him much sorrow, and evil-entreated him. And he being wroth
1860 V| this he took Nebridius and Evodius, and his mother, and returned
1861 VII| prayers. Another time at Evreux a child fell under the wheel
1862 VII| accustomed to wear. He held the ewer and also the towel while
1863 II| Exultavit cor meum in domino, et exaltatum est cornu meum in deo meo,
1864 I| lineage. As he had said: Cum exaltatus fuero, etc. When I shall
1865 IV| christian men, and without examination made them to be tormented
1866 V| other kings, right so he excelled all other doctors, after
1867 IV| reproach, the nature of Mary is excepted, the which is the nature
1868 V| he sendeth to punish the excesses, but I can remember me of
1869 I| earlier. rechaet, n., in exchange for, in place of. renommee.
1870 V| Secondly, in awaking or exciting from sloth and that is signified
1871 I| on the Good Friday three excusations in the person of Jesu Christ
1872 I| for to slay malefactors in executing of justice or for other
1873 II| to raise up. righter, n., executioner. routed, v,, snored. ~sacre,
1874 VI| him away. Then let every executor beware that he execute well
1875 VI| the souls of whom their executors and friends set not by them,
1876 IV| things, that in the sea thou exercisest thy cursed works? To whom
1877 VII| evermore unto tears, and he exercising and occupying him in this
1878 I| produce the Music Gallery at Exeter, the South Porch at Lincoln,
1879 VII| prep., praising.~mat, adj., exhausted.~meiny, n., retinue. ~meschant (
1880 VII| ad iniquitatem, ita nunc exhibete membra vestra servire justitiae
1881 II| pleasure, comfort demene, v., exhibit did do make = caused to
1882 VII| scripture saith: Sicut enim exhibuistis membra vestra servire immunditiae,
1883 III| Clovis, did do make by the exhortement of this holy virgin, for
1884 VII| by my counsel and by my exhortment shall make thee to suffer
1885 V| of God for the wrongful exiling and condemning of the holy
1886 IV| Peter began the psalm: In exitu Israel de Egypto, and then
1887 V| and that is signified in Exodi duodecimo, where the angel
1888 III| the Life of S. Peter the Exorcist or Deacon.~S. Peter the
1889 I| increase in them virtue, and expel vice and sin, that by the
1890 VII| woman, vii. 143.~Serpents expelled from Ireland by S. Patrick,
1891 VI| all, like as I have found expertly of myself, which was informed
1892 IV| believe it, than rashly to explain it, and he proved it afterward
1893 VII| 205.~Evangelist's symbols explained, vi. 47.~Famine in Jerusalem,
1894 I| instance of this occurs in the explanation of the supposed etymology
1895 I| territory hitherto but little explored. ~In such histories as that
1896 VII| miserable and poor persons, exposing himself to it with his good
1897 III| a son by four manners of expositions, he is said son in scripture
1898 IV| by name: God save thee, expositor of my comfort, howbeit that
1899 I| men whose faith found its expression in the glories and mysteries
1900 VI| modulation of the bird as in the expulsion of the devil. That bird
1901 III| desire well ordinate and expurged them from the dust of all
1902 I| but as is supposed in an extasy or in a trance; in which
1903 II| men. And when the angel extended his hand upon Jerusalem
1904 I| demoniacal gargoyles of the exteriors, will have a newer and fuller
1905 IV| there came a great wind and extinguished and did out the lights.
1906 VII| country of Toulouse, and extirpated their heresy, and as he
1907 VII| that they had rehearsed the extraction of their parents, and spake
1908 I| that he availed himself of extraneous help in the work of translation
1909 I| he died. They went in the extreme ends of the wilderness,
1910 III| openly. ~asprely, adv., extremely. ~avaled, v., descended. ~
1911 II| is one of the canticles: Exultavit cor meum in domino, et exaltatum
1912 V| flesh from his ear unto his eyelids, and he felt no pain.~He
1913 I| have now seen with mine eyen thine health which bringeth
1914 II| sight. And it shall be a fable and proverb, and thy house
1915 V| He had never study in new fabrics nor buildings, but eschewed
1916 VII| Alleluia, id est, salvum me fac domine, Sir, save thou me.
1917 I| Fecit signa ut etiam ignem facerit de celo in terram descendere.
1918 I| works were good and said: Faciamus hominem, etc. Make we man
1919 I| like as David saith: Ut faciant in eis judicium conscriptum,
1920 I| saccus cilicinus: et luna facta est sicut sanguis, et stellæ
1921 V| said in the Apocalypse: Factum est prelium magnum, Apocalypsis
1922 I| nothing else of our father's faculty and of the heritage of his
1923 VI| Paradise, and they shall never fade, ne wither, ne lose their
1924 III| and be nourished, and she fained herself to be great with
1925 II| Philistines, his heart dreaded and fainted sore, he cried for to have
1926 III| stand for feebleness and faintness, but oft fell down to the
1927 IV| Saracens, and led ofttimes to fairs for to be sold, but alway
1928 VII| fetched.~fiables n., the faithf'ul.~flom, n., river.~foison,
1929 III| him and smote him with his falchion on the head, and gave and
1930 VI| and with their staves and falchions delivered the child whole
1931 V| vanquished. And like as the falcon taketh the bird, right so
1932 IV| change. But this Paul took falcons and kites, and made of them
1933 VII| v. 219.~Precious stone falls from heaven, v. 87.~Precious
1934 V| in her malice ne in her falsity. And because that truth
1935 VII| fame, the people named it Fama Costi, and yet unto this
1936 VII| that is: Ferro, flamma, famæque. Also pope Sergius wrote
1937 VII| unto this day is called Famagosta; in which city he and the
1938 I| which should have read 'fames venues,' (femmes veuves)
1939 V| Rocke, and there beheld how familiarly the hound delivered the
1940 VII| minors, said sometime to his familiars: O God, how this alms is
1941 II| tribes and dukes of the families, for to bring the Ark of
1942 II| of sheep, and she was a famous woman and dreaded God greatly.
1943 IV| supposed that they had done it fantastically, to mock him by magic, and
1944 VII| him over all measure; so farforthly that all creatures shall
1945 III| forth the oxen for to go the faster, and he answered not one
1946 II| what thou doest I do, thou fastest and I eat not, thou wakest
1947 I| because that holy Church fasteth and prayeth that she have
1948 III| of Quintianus, and upon Fastion his friend, by whose counsel
1949 IV| that hath displeased thy fatherhood, or what thing hast thou
1950 II| me, and show to me your fatherly love that ye owe to me,
1951 I| pp., Fr. engraisser, to fatten or enrich. enseigned, v.,
1952 IV| home with other beasts, fatter, and gave more milk than
1953 IV| he converted them in the fatth, and commanded them that
1954 V| towns, the castles, and the faubourgs, they be deputed to the
1955 VII| Pardon to us our misdeeds and faults, as we forgive others the
1956 VI| and his father was named Faustinianus, and his mother Macidiana.
1957 II| S. Austin in his book of Faustius, and saith that this was
1958 I| Nebuzar-adan. propice, adj., favourable. pulment, n., pottage. ~
1959 IV| Constantine the emperor favouring them, Julius the pope sacred
1960 V| his sovereign honours and favours ot the people, him seemed
1961 V| down to every brother and fawned them with his tail, like
1962 VI| resurrection. For as some say, the fawns of the lion be as they were
1963 VII| for truth that the king feareth that thou wilt assail his
1964 VII| loaves, and every Sunday and feast-day twenty-four loaves, and
1965 II| them. When they had thus feasted each other, Job sent to
1966 IV| never wert touched, all features and all creatures praise
1967 I| Et sui roris aspersione fecundet, where she prayeth that
1968 VI| my hands, for they be so feebled by my biting that I feel
1969 III| and all puissant, now thou feedest him that all the world feedeth,
1970 VII| vi. 200.~Romain the monk feeds S. Benet, iii. 81.~Rosamond,
1971 VII| which it seemeth that thou feelest no torment, and therefore
1972 VI| debonair, when our faith feeleth God to be sovereign good,
1973 V| praise him lest it be by feigntise of the devil, let him be
1974 III| world, they destroyed the feilowship of the fiend and followed
1975 III| age of four years which felI in a pit, he was therein
1976 III| mocked, turned himself unto Felicula, fellow of S. Pernelle,
1977 IV| going out of thy house, fellest in fornication, and hast
1978 VI| which was worst in all felonies. And as well for the victory
1979 IV| faith of our Lord was so felonously demened, for anger and heaviness
1980 IV| and like as thou never feltest conceiving by none atouchment,
1981 V| eu, that is good, and of femme that is a woman, that is
1982 I| have read 'fames venues,' (femmes veuves) into 'seine venues,'
1983 VI| Barbara answered: These three fenestres or windows betoken clearly
1984 III| there laid in a worshipful feretory or shrine, where our Lord
1985 V| Jerome divided the psalter by ferias, and to every feria a nocturn
1986 V| his name.~Felix is said of fero, fers, that is to say as
1987 IV| excluded all woodness and ferocity from them, and brought to
1988 V| Felix is said of fero, fers, that is to say as to bear,
1989 V| then he sent the provost Fescennius of Rome to Paris against
1990 II| again. After this on a high festival day of our Lord when that
1991 VII| INDEX OF SAINTS, PATRIARCHS, FESTIVALS OF THE CHURCH AND SOME OTHER
1992 V| magnet, which draweth to him festues and straws, how much more
1993 VII| ordinary.~festue, n., a straw.~fet, v. fetched.~fiables n.,
1994 VII| wroth and evil apaid, and fette a rod for to beat her daughter
1995 I| to the second, of less or fewer he was known for Jesu Christ.
1996 V| summon him to do good against fiattering and blandishes, and that
1997 III| their conversation, without fiction and pride. And it is to
1998 VII| full merry noise like a fiddle, that him seemed he heard
1999 VII| calicem gustant in carne fideles.~After, followeth Agnus
2000 I| non surrexerit vane est fides nostra: If Jesu Christ had
2001 VI| and all other things, and fie on your devils, which have
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