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
2502 I| great multitude of hungry horse-flies, as many as the dust of
2503 I| Canticles: Veni auster et perfla hortum meum. Come wind of the south,
2504 III| and sang with high voice: Hosanna! Then S. Eutrope himself
2505 I| supper, whereof is said, Hosea ii.: I shall lead man's
2506 V| church.~His clothing, and hosing, and shoeing, and all his
2507 II| marvellously great alms and made hospitalities. It happed that he received
2508 VI| did all that longed to a hospitaller. And when she had no poor
2509 I| come thither, because the hostelries were all taken up, they
2510 V| of Rome tofore the Lord Hostience, which afterward was pope
2511 I| Then the serpent which was hotter than any beast of the earth
2512 III| body of our Lord for to housel me, for sith I entered into
2513 VII| must make his habitation or housing more spacious and greater
2514 IV| her. Hell, full of malice, howleth, and the cursed devils cry
2515 VI| heard the voices and the howlings of devils, which complained
2516 I| were innumerable, and an huge great multitude of beasts
2517 VII| this he saith: Deus qui humanæ substantiæ, etc., in the
2518 VII| it had been gotten by him humanly. He confessed him oft and
2519 I| church, or even tread the humbler stones of an ancient parish
2520 I| was wroth. Moses was the humblest and the meekest man that
2521 I| right convenable by the humiliation, by the fulfilling and affliction,
2522 I| apostle ad Philippenses; Humiliavit se ipsum. Thirdly, Jesus
2523 III| There be three manners of humilities, as S. Ambrose saith that:
2524 III| was right sore founded in humilty. He was marvellously piteous
2525 VI| kernels full of corrupt humours, which engendered foul worms,
2526 VII| Detrahentem secreto proximo suo hunc persequebar; that is to
2527 VI| rewardeth for one simple, a hundredfold. Believe ye this that I
2528 III| Nicasius the martyr, whom the Hungarians martyred, and after, in
2529 I| day and came home sore an hungred, and found Jacob having
2530 IV| with the hound upon him and hunted and chased him out of the
2531 I| tiller of the earth, and an hunter. And Jacob was simple and
2532 VI| not keep him. Sometime he hurtled strongly against the ground,
2533 V| succour and help in all our hurts, blechures and sores, and
2534 V| eighty-seven.~It happened that a husbandman after that he had laboured
2535 V| named Gotard,which had great husbandry, and had a great family
2536 VII| in the sea. One perfectly hydropic or filled with dropsy was
2537 IV| Hyppolitus is said of hyper, that is as much to say
2538 V| sovereigns, the second is said Hyperphania, that is, the mean apparition,
2539 VI| then thou art untrue and a hypocrite. For how be it that he believeth
2540 I| meretrices, etc.: To the hypocrites and pharisees he saith that
2541 V| and that other is said Hypophania, that is, the most low apparition.
2542 II| that is in Lebanon unto the hyssop that groweth on the wall,
2543 VII| Jacinctus. September I l, v. I20.~Jacob, i. 207.~James the
2544 VII| of S. Peter's chains, iv. I59.~Alexandrine of Perugia,
2545 IV| whom the cure of the Church i8 committed, correct and amend.
2546 VII| Aldhelm. May 25, iii. I92.~Alexis, July 17,vi. 205.~
2547 V| disciples unto him for to Iabour there in his holy purpose,
2548 VII| wild beasts? Now blessed Iady, help me that almost am
2549 VII| church of S. Timothy, and Iaid him tofore the gate and
2550 I| Canaan, Ethei, etc, unto the Iand flowing milk and honey,
2551 IV| favour. ~jument, n., a mare. ~Iapacium, n., sorrel. ~Iargo, n.,
2552 IV| Iapacium, n., sorrel. ~Iargo, n., treasure. ~aurier,
2553 VII| Thou art not he, for John ic made an angel and is not
2554 IV| was stoned in Lystra. In Iconia and Thessalonica he was
2555 V| arguments of Aristotle, and ideas of Plato, and the enseignments
2556 VII| which have not been so far identified.~ABDON. July 30, iv. 141.~
2557 I| Museum has succeeded in identifying the type as proceeding from
2558 V| sore as unconning and an idiot, and suspended him of his
2559 VI| the most vile, of the most idiotic, and of the least, be ennobled,
2560 I| answer shall we give when in idlenesse is none excuse? And Prosper
2561 II| answered: Doth Job dread God idly? If so were that thou overthrewest
2562 V| taken Rome, and that the idolaters and false christian men
2563 II| scholastic saith, and was king of Idumea and paynim; he took a wife
2564 V| kittled, v., tickled, excited.~Ieasings, n., Iies. ~lettrure, n.,
2565 V| and he accounted himself Ieast and most low. And at the
2566 II| man, in which abbey she Ied so holy a life that at the
2567 I| otherwise than the said English Iegend is, which was before made,
2568 IV| the place was so strait in Iength and in breadth. And when
2569 IV| treasure. ~aurier, n., laurel. ~Iepe, n., a basket. ~letted,
2570 IV| found the place, anon they Iet dig up the body, and took
2571 VI| that other, with a. b. c. Ietters of grewe, and he found also
2572 V| lettrure, n., learning. ~Ieye, v., stain or pollute.~malerous,
2573 I| chapter: Fecit signa ut etiam ignem facerit de celo in terram
2574 I| another olimpium; another igneum; another siderum; another
2575 II| umbrae, flagellum, frigus et ignis, Dæmonis aspectus, scelerum
2576 V| palm tree, et cetera. His ignobility or unworthiness was turned
2577 VII| Adrian, September 8, v. II2.~Advent, i. 1.~Agatha. February
2578 V| excited.~Ieasings, n., Iies. ~lettrure, n., learning. ~
2579 III| The Iife of S. Alphage Bishop and
2580 I| Isaiah the prophet, Isaiah Iix.: We all shall roar like
2581 I| generally translates, reads 'car il estoit prince des gueux,'
2582 V| so many cursednesses or ill-haps. And the third thing that
2583 I| destruction, neglect, and ill-usage still impress us with wonder
2584 VII| sponsam, salvator visitat illam, with so great melody that
2585 VII| monks toward the abbey of S. Illaries, but they had great tempests
2586 I| saith S. Bernard: Caput illud divinum, etc. The head precious
2587 VI| supposed that he had been illuded by art magic, and commanded
2588 I| an hymn which beginneth: Illuminans altissimus. And therefore
2589 I| not over hasty upon the illumination that they had received of
2590 II| caitiffs of the devil and be so illused and deceived that they issue
2591 I| significations. It is said illuser or deceiver, enchanter,
2592 I| enchanter, and wise. They been illusers or deceivers because they
2593 VII| three windows, vi. 201.~—illustrated by three drops of water,
2594 IV| Jeronimus in his book, De viris illustribus, that the thirty-sixth year
2595 IV| hindered. ~engine, n., imagination. ~enseigned, v., Fr. enseigner,
2596 III| foulest death that could be imagined, that the beholders thereof
2597 III| generation, of erudition, of imitation, and of adoption. He was
2598 IV| should say the psalm: Beati immaculati. And when the soul came
2599 III| good to behold, and it is immaterial in essence, in setting celestial,
2600 VI| saith S. Augustine: O the immeasured pity of our Lord, which
2601 V| about a king, some work immediately about the person of the
2602 I| eternity, in situation of immobility, and in circumference of
2603 I| sancte fortis, sancte et immortalis miserere nobis. Item, John
2604 I| glorified. Seventhly, he arose immortally, for he shall never die,
2605 VII| exhibuistis membra vestra servire immunditiae, et iniquitati ad iniquitatem,
2606 I| of others in intention to impair his good name and fame,
2607 III| church, and without any impediment I entered into the church.
2608 V| constraining, for to constrain the impediments and destourbles, and this
2609 VII| unto our Lord, cui honor et imperium.~
2610 II| city should be destroyed, impetered and had grant of our Lord
2611 III| Purification of Our Lady.~Postquam impleti sunt dies purgationis Marie
2612 I| is by this that is said: Imponebant manus super eos et accipiebant
2613 VI| other great oppressions and importable charges among the commonalty.
2614 I| ages, none holds a more important place than the Legenda Aurea
2615 VI| And when he saw them so importunate and showed so great perils,
2616 VII| multitude of stars, and imposeth to each one their names,
2617 II| us an hard yoke and great impositions, now thou hast not so much
2618 III| it shall not be imputed impossibility of her health for to be
2619 VI| taillage, n., toll or impost.~to-frushed. adj., much
2620 VI| the dead.~truandise, n., imposture. ~undern, n., from sunrise
2621 I| wise that they said it was impregnable and that the people were
2622 I| neglect, and ill-usage still impress us with wonder and admiration,-
2623 V| it dried up. Thirdly, in impressing in our hearts the memory
2624 I| the visage by continual impression. Secondly, to have care
2625 V| him for he left never to impugn against them, the clerks
2626 IV| with the chalice by the impulsion and thrusting of the paynims
2627 III| because it shall not be imputed impossibility of her health
2628 V| because of his singular and inaccustomed name, the opinion of his
2629 V| well smelling. He was hot inburning love, humble in conversation,
2630 IV| Simon then, as he made his incantations upon the dead body, he was
2631 I| world. And our Lord came incarnate among them, asking and seeking
2632 I| sacrament of matrimony his Incarnati purpose is for to leave
2633 VI| of thee preachers of the incarnatio and of all other things,
2634 III| Thus, as he was alone, and incensed the altar, the angel Gabriel
2635 VII| night and the hours thereof, incessantly be wasted and approached
2636 VII| at the Nativity, i. 51.~Incestuous mother confounded by S.
2637 V| healed without cutting or incision.~Then, when his departing
2638 III| the said church, at the incitation of S. Genevieve, and S.
2639 II| send him his angels; and inclining his head he saw the angels
2640 I| French saints who are not included in the work of Voragine,
2641 III| world saying: Heu me quia incolatus meus prolongatus est; for
2642 I| sermon of the Pentecost: The incommutable deity of the Blessed Trinity
2643 IV| because that the gift of grace incomparable surmounteth greatly this
2644 I| spake in them, and t by his incomprehensibility. For the third, he is said
2645 I| the water of lightness and inconstancy. The seventh reason is because
2646 III| and so hard that he was inconvertible, because no man might convert
2647 I| with precious stones, but incorporate. To whom, for a soft bed
2648 IV| thou assembledst pain thou increasedst his glory, thine engine
2649 V| strange mouth. But the tongue increaseth it not, but blame minisheth
2650 VII| to the sinners showed him increpatively, for he promised misericord
2651 VII| much anguishous for the incustomable thing thereof. And another
2652 I| Phison. This goeth about Inde. The second is called Gijon,
2653 I| later times have been deeply indebted to the man who thus embodied
2654 V| friends by this foul and indecent begging, and put him away,
2655 IV| Parthians, them of Media, the Indians, the Scythians, the Ethiopians,
2656 VII| placed against a name indicates that it is not found in
2657 I| of any. It is without any indication of place of printing, date,
2658 VII| man. He held hospitality indifferently for the poor pilgrims in
2659 IV| shall be excluded from all indigence and need; and if thou wilt
2660 V| rodere vitam,~Hanc mensam indignam noverit esse sibi:~that
2661 VII| is: Corpus tuum quod ego indignus, etc., that is as much for
2662 III| he left his writing and inditing. Then began his malady to
2663 VII| sixth petition is: Et ne nos inducas in tentationem. That is
2664 V| excusing him, said. He had indulgence in his heart, but he obtained
2665 I| own age he appears to have industriously collected such legends as
2666 V| delectable of trees. The indwellers of that region be of great
2667 VII| repaired, vi. 14, 18.~Wheat inexhaustible by prayers of S. Nicholas,
2668 V| to be tormented with fire inextinguishable. And Cyprian said: Then
2669 II| gain and winning of their infamy they might be sustained.
2670 III| in which the Virgin Mary infanted and childed Jesu Christ,
2671 I| this saith S. Austin: O infantia, cui astra subduntur, etc.
2672 VI| written this verse: Ex ore infantium, God, thou hast performed
2673 IV| thee, so where thou art the infantment or fruit of my womb that
2674 V| them that were beneath and inferior, discipline; to her enemies,
2675 IV| double death, corporal and infernal, and this instrument that
2676 VI| great multitude, which be infinity, as for our infirmity. For
2677 II| the evangelist was not so infirm, but that he might get for
2678 V| Christ was marvellously infixed in his heart. And then he
2679 I| this is that burneth and inflameth the hearts. And is compared
2680 II| and returned to the king informing him that he was yet at Canterbury,
2681 III| anguish. Then he which was infrigidate and cold for joy, stretched
2682 V| burnt. And whiles they were ingathering, as it is said in Scholastica
2683 II| to say master, for he was ingenious against the fallacy of the
2684 I| to them that be full of ingratitude. I have redeemed you and
2685 I| us necessary. To that he inhabiteth in us, by faith he illumineth
2686 I| what shall avail me mine inheritance if I die, and what shall
2687 VII| second, that ye be a great inheritor, and the greatest that liveth
2688 IV| wherefore he suspended him, and inhibited him his mass. Wherefore
2689 IV| his suspending and thine inhibiting, and restore thee again
2690 V| said, and wrote, for the inhibition of the general council,
2691 II| he suffered the pain so inhuman, changed to him all this
2692 III| being abhorred of this inhumanity, went their way. After this
2693 VII| immunditiae, et iniquitati ad iniquitatem, ita nunc exhibete membra
2694 VII| servire immunditiae, et iniquitati ad iniquitatem, ita nunc
2695 I| brought the sheep into the innermost part of the desert he came
2696 VII| ascendet in montem domini? Innocens manibus. Who shall ascend
2697 VI| and in the clergy nothing inordinate; and among the common people
2698 VII| 29, iii. 132.~Felix, said Inpicis. January 14, ii. 221.~Felix,
2699 III| and the pope sent divers inquisitors thither of the order of
2700 I| books which afford us an insight into he popular religious
2701 I| sins, as for that he is insinued, or showeth that the sinner
2702 I| Pope: The Holy Ghost is the inspirer of the faith, giver of Science,
2703 I| Holy Ghost where he will he inspireth the hearts, but thou knowest
2704 III| but for the sharpness and inspiring of the Holy Ghost, to the
2705 V| dowry of virtues is not only instruct in letters of Latin, but
2706 VII| S. Gregory, iii. 66.~----instructs S. Ambrose, iii. 114.~Angels
2707 III| nights all that time was insufferable heat, so that neither trees
2708 VII| bishop Pharon, testifying and insuring that the holy man Fiacre
2709 VI| after his death began great insurrections through all the world. For
2710 IV| scattered. droiture, n. (Fr.), integrity. ~eculee, n., the rack. ~
2711 I| alteration made a passage intelligible; but, as I have said, there
2712 VI| Evangelist the prayer: O intemerata, and on day, for certain
2713 VI| Humber, and there made war, intending to conquer this land. Howbeit,
2714 V| their heads and beheld him intently. And he passed forth by
2715 II| without speeding of their intents, and came into England again.
2716 VII| Gloria in excelsis sit inter angelos, that is to say,
2717 V| saint S. Rocke, that by his intercession and prayer we may be delivered
2718 IV| blessed prayers and his intercessions we may have part. Amen. ~
2719 VI| abundantiam multiplicatis intercessoribus largiaris: Lord, give to
2720 VI| fifth is for the debt of interchanging neighbourhood, for the saints
2721 VII| the martyr had to surname Intercisus, and was of noble lineage,
2722 I| obscurities generally or to interfere with the translator's language. ~
2723 I| of him: Robustos quippe interficiet, et cetera; he shall slay
2724 III| which he would not gladly intermeddle, and went his way and departed;
2725 I| age was ended. The seventy interpreters say that this first age
2726 IV| awoke and were raised and intersalued each other, and had supposed
2727 II| came, and when they had intersaluted each other, Constantine
2728 IV| life, howbeit that by short interval or space of time thou shalt
2729 VII| by persons suffering from intestinal disorders, and it was probably
2730 II| rent their clothes, and intolerable dread fell on them, and
2731 VII| anchorites.~avaled, v. intr., went down.~axes, n., agues.~
2732 VII| Domine, non sum dignus ut intres sub tectum meum: sed tantum
2733 VII| disciples, saying: Orate ne intritis in tentationem, that is
2734 VII| occurs on p. viii. of the 'Introduction' to this book. I should
2735 VII| work. In time of a great inundation or flowing, which covered
2736 II| our Blessed Lady. ~Maria invenisti graciam apud Dominum. Luca
2737 VII| informed that his later investigations have caused him to mistrust
2738 I| the office of the mass: Invocavit me, etc. And the Church
2739 II| psalm. Fully joy ye, and inwardly call ye his name, and so
2740 VII| long have we dwelled here io this abbey. And we came
2741 II| we have nothing but a rye Ioaf which he gave to God against
2742 IV| behead him, and suffer him no Ionger to live upon the earth.
2743 V| of his country lonicus. Ionica, as saith Papias, is one
2744 V| languages of Greeks. Or Ionices be said a manner of round
2745 V| manner of round pillars. Or Ionicum is said a foot of versifying
2746 V| philosopher he was named Ionicus. And Methodius of ConstantinopIe
2747 V| of the City of God that Ionique is a kind of philosophers,
2748 II| fearful voice: Thou that hast Iost mind and wit, wherefore
2749 VII| world, then was preferred a Ioud voice perfectly, coming
2750 I| louings, n., praisings. Iowted, pp., bowed, used also for
2751 V| Virgin Mary descended of the Ioyal line, and had cousinage
2752 VII| Beati qui lugent, quoniam ipsi consolabuntur, that is to
2753 III| of our Lord God that none Irish man shall abide the coming
2754 VII| thee from ire, for if the irous raised dead men it should
2755 VII| thou hast lost which am irrecuperable, and yet thou weenest to
2756 II| house and to keep herself irreprehensible, that is to say, without
2757 V| immortal, or else sentence irrevocable of damnation shall be pronounced
2758 II| anoint one of the sons of Isai, otherwise called Jesse,
2759 VII| s pillars, i. 179.~Judas Iscariot, the birth and parentage
2760 IV| would be so crucified: Hæc Isidorus. ~That same day Peter and
2761 VII| found in all subsequent issues till the final black-letter
2762 I| Isaiah Ixiii.: Quis est iste qui venit de Edom, etc.:
2763 VII| iniquitati ad iniquitatem, ita nunc exhibete membra vestra
2764 V| a kind of philosophers, Italian, which be towards Italy,
2765 VII| succeeded, and when the Italians had oft-times broken the
2766 VII| saying thus: Pax vobis et iterum, Pax vobis; Peace be with
2767 VI| book of Clement, called Itinerarium, not be apocryphum, as who
2768 VI| himself set in his book named Itinerary, specially unto that place
2769 VI| Gloucester, which then was young, Iusty, fresh, and newly wedded,
2770 II| made him also a throne of ivory which was great and was
2771 I| died for sinners, Matthew ix.: Non vend vocare, etc.:
2772 I| Isaiah recordeth, Isaiah Ixiii.: Quis est iste qui venit
2773 III| ready. Or James is said of ja and of cobar, which is as
2774 I| and Zilla; of Adah he gat Jabal which found first the craft
2775 III| following were written: Hic jacent in Duno qui tumulo tumulantur
2776 V| Ecce vetus Thebea centum jacet obruta portis; that is to
2777 VII| and as some say he was a Jacobite and preached the circumcision,
2778 VI| burgess of Augulum named Jacques de Franque had a child of
2779 III| Or James may be said of jaculum, a dart and copis smiting,
2780 III| between Jerusalem and port Jaffa, by a town called Ramys,
2781 V| to him: These be devils, jailers of our Lord, whom he sendeth
2782 VII| Quiriacus, lo ! how I let thee jangle! I have heard oft such words;
2783 IV| a river, and talked and jangled there of fables and idle
2784 V| and that wicked men and janglers hold me for evil. For I
2785 IV| but she eschewed not the janglery of her tongue, and she was
2786 IV| Felicitas, whose names be Januarius, Felix, Philip, Silvanus,
2787 I| disease of the groin. ~jape, n., jest or scoff. jonkes
2788 III| by the city of Joppa or Japh. And in another place it
2789 VII| delivered to Benet Biscop of Jarrow, for to learn, and after
2790 I| the Chess, the History of Jason, the History of the Mirror
2791 I| and Damascus. And in Latin Jaspar, Melchior, and Balthasar.
2792 VI| also water ran out of the jaw of the ass to Samson which
2793 III| well that my father was jealous over my mother, and much
2794 II| overthrown Cananeum the king, Jebusee, Pheresee, Eneum, Etheum
2795 I| Perizzites, Hivites and Jebusites. The cry of the children
2796 II| first daughter's name was Jemima, the second Kezia, and the
2797 II| be noble histories, as of Jephthah, Gideon, and Sampson, which
2798 IV| Arians led Eusebius into Jerapolin, a city of Palestine, and
2799 I| his prey. Whereof saith Jeremy the fourth chapter, Ascendit
2800 III| went anon to the abbey of Jervaulx, and there he was a monk,
2801 I| of the groin. ~jape, n., jest or scoff. jonkes of the
2802 I| or bruise. ~goliards, n., jesters or buffoons. guerished,
2803 II| v., beseech. ~japes, n., jests or scoffs. ~kele, v., cool. ~
2804 III| secundum legem Moisi, tulerunt Jesum in Jerusalem. Lucæ, cap.
2805 VII| restored at Paris, iii. 265.~Jewish usurer justified by S. Nicholas,
2806 II| another wife called Ahinoam of Jezreel, and both two were his wives. ~
2807 IV| named Felix and his mother Joanna, of whom he came as of the
2808 VI| always in her malady glad and jocund, and ne ceased of prayer.
2809 II| Israel, whose names were Joel and Abiah. And these two
2810 III| died on the cross he said, Joh. cap. xix. Consummatum est,
2811 II| Epiphanes and his mother Johane. He was begotten in the
2812 IV| surnames. He was said Simon Johanna, which is as much to say
2813 V| majorem Jacobum volucremque Johannem.~But it is marvellous for
2814 VII| end that even so as flesh joineth itself to flesh, and spirit
2815 VII| we ought to put our hands jointly, praying to him devoutly,
2816 V| from their vanities, their jollities, and doing outrages, and
2817 III| city of the Jewry named Jonapatam, in which Josephus was duke,
2818 IV| It pleased him to keep Jonas in the belly of the whale
2819 VII| out of his court all the jongleurs, and gave to poor men all
2820 III| which is by the city of Joppa or Japh. And in another
2821 I| And also in the book of Josuah is written the xiv. chapter:
2822 III| mocked.~jowes, n., Fr. joues. cheeks.~lessed, pp., diminished. ~
2823 III| After, when S. Marcial had journeyed long by divers countries
2824 III| feats of knighthood there in jousting and tourneying, which was
2825 III| request. In which tourney and jousts Bassanius and his fellowship
2826 IV| suffered. Then Julian died, and Jovinian reigned, and the Arians
2827 II| name. ~Hilary is said of joyousness, for he was joyous in the
2828 V| perilous chamberer, that is joyousty, which enforceth her oft
2829 VII| blessing of our Lord, saying: Jube domine benedicere, that
2830 III| et in electorum tuorum jubeas grege numerari. At the last
2831 III| Julian is as much to say as jubilus, singing, and ana, that
2832 V| justum peperit cum Simone Judam,~Tertia majorem Jacobum
2833 III| almighty God to show his judgement on them, and God sent to
2834 V| defended of men when thou judgest him, nor be withdrawn when
2835 VII| of God be other than the judgmenta of men. And when they would
2836 VII| the which psalm beginneth: Judica me deus et diseerne, and
2837 I| written, Qui non credit jam judicatus est; he that believeth not
2838 III| Gascony, where he saw a juggler who mocked his words. The
2839 VI| Qui crucis mortificationem jugiter in corpore suo pro tui nominis
2840 VII| the apostles. A woman that Julia had to name, which of long
2841 VII| 16, iii. 45.~*Juliet, or Julitte. June 16, iii. 225.~Justin.
2842 I| jonkes of the sea, n,, juncus acutus, the great sea rush.
2843 VI| them to him in the form of Juplter or of Mercury, and otherwhile
2844 II| Silvester was son of one Justa and was learned and taught
2845 I| his resurrection made the justification of our sins. She enseigneth
2846 III| Lord, living in all the justifications, and holding all the commandments
2847 I| our sins and arose for to justify us. Of the second: Like
2848 VI| sold us to a woman named Justine which hath holden us as
2849 VII| exhibete membra vestra servire justitiae in sanctificationem, that
2850 I| southward and dwelled between Kadesh and Shur, and went a pilgrimage
2851 VI| in the beginning of his kalendar: There is no day, except
2852 III| another abbey that is called Karolosence, and there by election he
2853 II| made strong again, and be kempt again in new torments. And
2854 VII| make shirts, sheets and kerchiefs for her paramours. The good
2855 II| second Kezia, and the third Keren-happuch. There was nowhere found
2856 VI| within the shell was the kernel, she heard the sermons ententively
2857 I| from the press of Peter Keyser, a rival of Anthony Vernard
2858 II| name was Jemima, the second Kezia, and the third Keren-happuch.
2859 II| Lord than to offer the fat kidneys of the wethers. For it is
2860 I| shall be blessed all the kindreds of the earth. ~Abram was
2861 I| multitude of beasts of divers kinds. The time that the children
2862 II| fell upon Saul the son of Kish. And they sought him and
2863 III| as I told thee, now thou kissest my hand as of a priest.~
2864 IV| this Paul took falcons and kites, and made of them doves,
2865 VII| monks they should make many kneelings, and that they should adore
2866 IV| followeth the Life of S. Kenelm, Kng and Martyr. ~S. Kenelm,
2867 VII| Devil's compact with a knignt, iv. 248.~Devils cast out
2868 I| cometh to the gate or door he knocketh with his cross, saying:
2869 I| that be married. The second knocking at the door signifieth the
2870 VII| branches be cut off, the knot that remaineth, in his time
2871 II| Jews, and crucified by the knyghts, how sayst thou that it
2872 VII| for chamberlain, iii. 101.~Kyrkil the Danish leader, iii.
2873 VI| maundy Thursday. ~couthe, v. (kythen) gave. ~culex. n.. a gnat.~
2874 VII| 94.~Cyprian. September l6, v. 142.~Dantian. September
2875 VII| Achilleus. May 12, iii. l79~Adam. i. 169.~Adrian, September
2876 V| rest than to have honour laborious. But at the last he was
2877 V| chastity.~On a time a poor labourer was almost lost in a wood
2878 VII| mortal subtlety when thou labourest to draw us by the ensamples
2879 VI| suffer her sleeves to be laced till the solemnity of the
2880 I| rent their clothes, and laded their asses again, and returned
2881 V| with all their charge and lading. And when the brethren saw
2882 V| believed in our Lord. And Laertia, wife of the foresaid provost
2883 III| this anthem: Regina cæli lætare, etc., and S. Gregory put
2884 II| Tu gloria Jerusalem, tu laetitia Israel, tu honorificentia,
2885 VII| sustain on my lips such laidure or shame as long as I shall
2886 VI| nails of their fingers, and lainers or latchets of their skin
2887 I| ponds, and upon all the lakes where any water is, in that
2888 V| interpretation of his name.~Lambertus is said of lampos in Greek,
2889 VII| humility in weepings and lamentations he must lead after, joy
2890 I| affection. And where thou lamentest, and thereas thou despoilest
2891 VII| nourished, and called him great Lamissio, and said that he should
2892 IV| S. Peter ad Vincula, at Lammas. ~The feast of S. Peter
2893 V| God. Or he may be said of lampas, a lamp, which giveth light
2894 V| name.~Lambertus is said of lampos in Greek, which is as much
2895 VII| of grapes, and they there landed and thanked God, and gathered
2896 III| clerk that was there named Langiso fell down off an high stair
2897 III| prophet; friend of the spouse; lanterne; an angel voice; Elias;
2898 II| is to say victory, and of laos, people, so Nicholas is
2899 IV| araign, vert, pelletre, lapacium and the juice of porret;
2900 II| clamours, the terrors, and the lapidiments that the fiends do to me,
2901 IV| refectory or fraitour, and the laps of their mantles, that hung
2902 I| quia in proximo sciebat eum lapsurum. For yet he was not perfect
2903 V| And yet he doubted of the largeness of the place, and S. Michael
2904 VI| multiplicatis intercessoribus largiaris: Lord, give to us by the
2905 IV| Ciriacus went gladly with largo and smaragdo, with all things
2906 VII| therewith came a dark mist which lasted long after, which feared
2907 VI| fingers, and lainers or latchets of their skin were cut out
2908 VII| another time, another woman of Latininak put one of her feet within
2909 IV| ten days after, and the Latins, and all they that so consented,
2910 I| Wherefore saith S. Austin: Crux latronum qui erat supplicium, etc.
2911 II| done in gold, silver and latten, it passeth my cunning to
2912 | latterly
2913 I| lyfe is translated oute of latyn into Englysshe by me, William
2914 VII| est cantate, lu, id est laudem, ye, id est deum vel dominum,
2915 IV| read that same time. Deum laudemus. And soon after she died
2916 V| immaculate virginitas, quibus te laudibus referam nescio. Quia quem
2917 I| It is not so, for thou laughedst. When they had rested Abraham
2918 III| Ambrose to him: Thou that laughest, beware that thou fall not
2919 I| our Lord to Abraham: Why laugheth Sarah thy wife, saying in
2920 III| solace in this world, and the laughings ought to be recompensed
2921 VI| of the idols made a great laughter, and said to the duke: These
2922 IV| crowned with a crown of gold laureate, and going out of Bologna
2923 IV| forks of iron. Then said Laurenee to Valerianus: Learn, thou
2924 VII| that is to wit: Gloria, laus et honor tibi sit rex Christe.
2925 VI| religiously clad, which was his lavender and had washen his clothes,
2926 V| to blame the jollity and lavish life of some clerks and
2927 VI| accompanied by song.~lavas, n., lavishness or freedom. ~leasings, n.,
2928 I| to this people, which be lawless, that they shall take thee
2929 VII| Landry. June 10, vii. 187.~Lawrence. August 10, iv. 208.~Leo.
2930 IV| the first is that he was a layman. In the second he was a
2931 II| a window and was sick of lazary, smelled the odour and was
2932 III| with staves and scourges leaded, all naked, and after they
2933 VII| be beaten so cruelly with leaden malles, that all his veins
2934 IV| me with sharp chains and leadest me away. And Valerian cried
2935 IV| Montoia, which is but half a league from S. James. Then S. James
2936 V| knew her not for the great leanness that she had. And Pelagien
2937 II| the money in gold, and he leant upon the staff. And when
2938 I| leap, and divers others leaps of Jesu Christ, S. Ambrose
2939 III| a girdle of wool, or of leather, cut out of an hide or a
2940 I| made to Adam and Eve two leathern coats of the skins of dead
2941 VI| Or he is said Lebbæus of lebes, that is a vessel of heart
2942 VII| was a man that lived much lecherously; the holy man reproved him
2943 III| this fellow went up to the lectern whereas S. James preached,
2944 VII| spared not the travail of lecture and of books, and every
2945 V| art of medicine, and of leechcraft, and received so great grace
2946 I| seventh: O Emmanuel rex et legifer noster veni ad saluandum
2947 IV| multitude of the celestial legions came against her with great
2948 V| of pena, pain, and lego, legis, to gather. For she gathered
2949 I| saith: Constitue domine legislatorem super eos. Thus shall he
2950 I| king's son also, which was legitimate, was more noble, and in
2951 V| said of pena, pain, and lego, legis, to gather. For she
2952 IV| Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire, Leicestershire, and Lincolnshire. All this
2953 VII| parents; she had convenable leisure to do her will, as she that
2954 VII| would have been love or leman unto an earl, and he would
2955 VII| him. A man that was called Lemicius, who heartily loved and
2956 IV| another name was called Lemobia, for haply she had two names,
2957 III| Who so giveth to the poor lendeth for a vaile. The reward
2958 VII| Germain, iii. 209.~Plautilla lends S. Paul her keverchief,
2959 VII| James, iii. 159.~Beams lengthened miraculously, iv. 217, vii.
2960 I| penitential pleadings of the Lenten season and the triumphal
2961 VI| every year she fasted two lentens to bread and water only,
2962 VII| And when Adrian was dead Leon was set upon the See of
2963 V| which be named Antimas, Leontius, and Euprepius, our country
2964 VII| and Felicity were slain of leopards, and S. Saturnine had his
2965 VII| chronicle, that the Earl Leopold and his wife fled into a
2966 IV| Damascus he was let by a lepe down of the wall. In Jerusalem
2967 III| is to say my brother, and lesa, that is health, as who
2968 IV| out the third time without lesion or hurt. And yet the heretics,
2969 I| because that coler should be lessened and refrained, of which
2970 III| now is called S. Denis de Lestree. There be yet the holy bodies
2971 II| the office of a martyr: Letabitur justus, and then all the
2972 V| all mine empeshments and lettings, as it appertaineth, for
2973 V| repentant that she sent him a lettter by a messenger thus saying:
2974 I| Nicodemus that Carinus and Leucius, sons of old Simeon, arose
2975 VII| Alle, id est, altissimus levatus est in cruce, lu, id est,
2976 IV| Galicia, and was engendered of Leviathan, which is a serpent of the
2977 VI| And Maurice, bishop of Levicana, the city, uncle of Babilla
2978 III| Germain of Auxerre and S. Lew of Troyes, elect of the
2979 VI| a day as they came from Lewkenor to Abingdon, saw in a valley
2980 V| suffering of death, than to leye his holy hands in the blood
2981 VI| by devout contemplation, lia by busy operation, lacking
2982 VI| Now shall I prove thee a liar against the very truth.
2983 III| honorem deo dedit et patriæ liberationem fecit; which is as much
2984 II| of the synagogue called libertines, of a religion so named
2985 I| copies lurking in foreign libraries, but I have not been able
2986 I| in Cambridge University Library. There may of course be
2987 III| came in to the province of Libya, to a city which is said
2988 V| Bartholomew preached first in Licaonia, and after in India, and
2989 V| man from the city named Licerius, and demanded them, saying:
2990 I| none other thing but on lickerous meats and viands for his
2991 VI| and a hound beside him licking his wounds. For the wolf
2992 III| which tofore was called Lidda, which is by the city of
2993 VII| king demanded him what he liefest had of all that he had seen,
2994 V| Meuse, in the bishopric of Liège. And Anne had three husbands,
2995 VII| and to us all your humble liegemen, without ye take better
2996 III| in the water, and she set lier to prayer. Then, as the
2997 V| some in another, as be lieutenants, captains of chivalry, and
2998 III| eleven years, and was named Lieven, which, for the long usage
2999 I| laboured in great pain. Thou liftest up thine arms in joy, and
3000 III| from the city and river of Ligerim, but the women scorned and
3001 I| they heard thunder and lightening and saw a great cloud cover
3002 II| more to have seen her, and lighting lights all went about her. ~
3003 VII| great rains, thunders, and lightnings, and tempests, that never
|