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
3004 VII| God, and also to all human ligneage.~And the priest giveth the
3005 III| govern, two provinces named Liguria and Æmilia. Then when he
3006 IV| Ambrose, that say: We may liken the blessed Laurence to
3007 II| hear the word of God, and likeneth it to four manner of things:
3008 VII| heavenly creatures and earthly, liketh it you that we here present
3009 VII| had great sweetness and liking to learn, to teach and to
3010 III| n., river. ~fournil, n., limekiln. ~frushed, pp., bruised;
3011 I| et salva hominem quem de limo formasti, O thou King of
3012 IV| Oxfordshire, Leicestershire, and Lincolnshire. All this was called the
3013 VI| content with one poor coat lined with a mantlet; she used
3014 I| columns, with forty-four lines to the page. Two copies
3015 IV| of the pope that he had a link of the chain. And he kept
3016 VI| she came running like a lioness and cried: Alas! alas !
3017 V| hundred and eighty years, one Liprand, a devout king of the Lombards,
3018 V| that hour the soul of him liquefied, and the passion of Jesu
3019 VII| priest may betoken the two liquors that issued out of the side
3020 V| to bear, and of this word lis, litis, which is as much
3021 V| lordships, that is to say of Lisania and Abilina, and crowned
3022 I| and would not attend ne listen to her words, ne would not
3023 III| church all the tapers were lit divinely. Then S. Eusebius
3024 VI| unto our Lord, which is lite of the soul in heaven, which
3025 I| adan, n. This name means literally in the Hebrew (2 Kings xxv. ) '
3026 V| bear, and of this word lis, litis, which is as much to say
3027 IV| much to say as upon, and litos, that is a stone, as who
3028 VII| hast not taken heed of my littleness that appeareth withoutforth,
3029 VI| wherein he shone by virtuous liviing and good manners that he
3030 I| to the people for to make loam and clay, but let them go
3031 I| and our souls abhor and loathe this light meat. For which
3032 VI| whereof her chamberers loathed and laughed her to scorn.
3033 VI| man shall hate me for my loathliness. And then the bishop did
3034 VII| that a citizen of Paris who loathly swearing had blasphemed
3035 I| without breaking of any lock or seal he brought him into
3036 IV| Petrus, eodem-Sub duce, luce, loco, dux Nero, Roma locus. That
3037 IV| luce, loco, dux Nero, Roma locus. That is to say, Paul crowned
3038 III| honeysuckle, n., a rendering of locusta as the name of a plant.~
3039 IV| him into the parlour or locutory, and demanded him whereof
3040 IV| about evensong time in a loft, a young man named Patroclus,
3041 VII| the second to rhetors and logicians, and the third to sophisters,
3042 I| kings shall come of thy loins. The land that I gave to
3043 VII| flourished Master Peter Lombard, Bishop of Paris, which
3044 VII| of their name; vii. 109.~Londoners claim the body of S Erkenwold,
3045 VII| escried and said: Who be these longbeards? And then his wife said
3046 III| chief of Blason and the town Longchamp therewith. And after this
3047 VII| therefore were they called Longebards, and so after, Lombards,
3048 I| What been these and to whom longen they? Jacob answered: They
3049 VII| her husband S. Vincent of Longuys, made her profession in
3050 V| which be towards Italy, and lonian which be of the parts of
3051 V| was said of his country lonicus. Ionica, as saith Papias,
3052 III| from them and left them, lookafter none other thing but to
3053 VII| set such a cloth in thy looms that during thy life thou
3054 VI| S. Leonard unbindeth and looseth all them that be bounden
3055 IV| accordeth the absolution and loosing of the chains made to the
3056 VII| the office in the mass: Loquetur dominus pacem. And in the
3057 III| introit of the mass of them: Loquitur dominus pacem, and this
3058 I| Joseph thy son liveth and he lordeth in all the land of Egypt. ~
3059 IV| answered: Truly now thou losest thy days, and commanded
3060 II| restored double of all his losses. And Job lived after, one
3061 V| bishop twenty-two years much louably, and after that rested in
3062 VII| voice of him, and she cried louder and said: I would see you
3063 III| them, and them that were lousy and full of vermin he himself
3064 III| between thine arms whom thou lovedest as thy Lord, and kissed
3065 II| And then the priests came lowing as beasts, and the bishop
3066 I| greatly. And Abram fell down lowting low to the earth and thanked
3067 VII| out heretics, iii. 150.~lron made to swim, iii. 84.~Island
3068 II| Advent. and the book of lsaiah unto Christmas and after
3069 V| of the foresaid provost Lubrius, said that she was christian,
3070 II| invenisti graciam apud Dominum. Luca primo capitulo. ~When the
3071 III| tulerunt Jesum in Jerusalem. Lucæ, cap. ii. The ancient law
3072 VI| fervently. And this manner had Lucas in writing and in preaching.
3073 VII| others, for our Lord saith: Luceat lux vestra coram hominibus
3074 IV| night and let her lie. And Lucia, the virgin, took away the
3075 III| Armenia, with her daughter Lucina and all her household received
3076 II| aspectus, scelerum confusio, luctus. ~that is to say: worms,
3077 VII| against the strength of S. Lucv. ii. 135.~Pafuntius, abbot,
3078 VII| est in cruce, lu, id est, lugebant apostoli, ya, id est, jam
3079 VII| Lord saith thus: Beati qui lugent, quoniam ipsi consolabuntur,
3080 V| signs.~The two clerks, great luminaries of the world, that is to
3081 VII| be in the bishoprics of Lunensis, and be called the terms
3082 I| pp., bowed, used also for lurked. ~maleurte, n., Fr. malheur,
3083 III| church which is a mile from Lusarches, named Fosses, and closed
3084 V| went to the monastery of Luxen, there, serving our Lord,
3085 III| died tofore them all. Then Luxurius, which was his brother,
3086 I| Almighty God appeared to me in Luz which is in the land of
3087 I| which tofore was called Luza. And there he made a vow
3088 IV| Christopher went into the city of Lycia, and understood not their
3089 I| life of S. Roch: 'which lyfe is translated oute of latyn
3090 V| excused his brother. And when Lysias heard their renomee he made
3091 II| followeth the Life of S. Macarias, and. first the interpretation
3092 V| of Arabia that is named Macheronta. And Herodias did do bear
3093 I| be seen illusions, and machinations of fiends be seen grow and
3094 V| in guard that he should machine nothing against the realm.
3095 II| worshipped Jesu Christ. Also Macrobius saith in a chronicle that,
3096 V| Servatius, whose body lieth in Maestricht, upon the river of the Meuse,
3097 I| that is to wit Galgalath, Magalath, and Tharath. And in Greek
3098 VII| of S. Clement, vi. 255.~Maggot becomes a precious stone.
3099 V| followeth:~Primus ad ima ruit magna de luce superbus,~Sic homo
3100 V| precious stone which is named magnet, which draweth to him festues
3101 III| made the holy psalm saying: Magnificat anima mea dominum, and all
3102 I| our Lord: Cantemus domino magnificatus est, Let us sing to our
3103 I| glories that await us in the magnificent churches of France, which
3104 I| which said, Elevata est magnificentia tua super cœlos, Lord God
3105 I| mercy on them after the magnitude of his mercy. And our Lord
3106 V| Apocalypse: Factum est prelium magnum, Apocalypsis duodecimo.
3107 V| or it is said Matthew of magnus, and theos, that is God,
3108 VII| chronicle, in the parish of Magonce a wicked spirit smote on
3109 III| and S. Germain called him Magonius, and Celestinus the pope
3110 I| Chrysostom calleth these kings Magos, as wicked and evil-doers.
3111 I| God, and called that place Mahanaim. He sent messengers tofore
3112 I| wondered on it and said: Mahun, that is as much to say,
3113 I| manchild slay him, if it be a maid-child keep it and let it live.
3114 III| whole, was ashamed to be maimed, and made it to be bound
3115 VI| good manners, in port, in maintenance, and in continuance, that
3116 I| We shall seem to hear the majestic roll of the solemn chants
3117 V| cum Simone Judam,~Tertia majorem Jacobum volucremque Johannem.~
3118 II| said: I see the ire and mal talent of our Lord coming
3119 I| Pharaoh, Magi, which by their malefice made their marvels by the
3120 V| pollute.~malerous, adj., Fr. malheureux, evil disposed. ~meiny.
3121 III| thine idols be lords of thy malices, corrupters of all good
3122 III| a scholar that went from Maloigne unto Montpellier, and in
3123 II| both laws, and was born in Malyorke, and had been viceroy and
3124 V| name.~Mammertin is said of mamma, which is as much to say
3125 II| servant unto a devil named Mammon, and is bond and serf in
3126 I| heirs after thee. Every man-child and male shall be circumcised
3127 VII| Thessalonica that named was Manam, was much agreeable to God,
3128 V| he went to the city of Manasem in Lombardy, which was also
3129 I| of children, if it be a manchild slay him, if it be a maid-child
3130 III| It happed that, at the mandment of the Emperor, many bishops
3131 I| Esurivi et non dedistis mihi manducare; I had hunger and ye have
3132 I| attouching, for he is not maniable, ne may not be handled.
3133 VII| montem domini? Innocens manibus. Who shall ascend into the
3134 II| all angry answered: Now manifestly and openly is thine hope
3135 III| save to Alban, whom for his manliness and prowess he would retain
3136 II| to the Lord in cymbals, mannerly sing to him a new psalm.
3137 II| of S. Nicholas. And this manor was set by the land of the
3138 VII| he had been a thief or a manqueller, and brought him before
3139 I| experience of the bounty of his mansuetude and of the reformation and
3140 III| vestments with one coat and mantel, and hosed, and they appeared
3141 VI| one poor coat lined with a mantlet; she used never pendants
3142 I| could meet with, whether in manuscript or handed down by oral tradition.
3143 VII| story of the, vii. 134. ~Manuscripts, cargo of, iii. 193.~Mariners,
3144 III| comfort him, saying: Pax tibi Marce evangelista meus. Peace
3145 V| Sebasten. And then when Marcell was awaked, he marvelled
3146 VII| Pope. April 26, iii 143.~Marcellinus and Peter. June 3, iii.
3147 VI| army to winter him in these marches, sendeth to thee his commandment
3148 III| in battle against them of Marcomannos which came against him.
3149 VI| them unto martyrdom. And Marculus, bishop of Greece, and his
3150 V| n., gibes. ~juments, n., mares. ~kittled, v., tickled,
3151 V| And these right precious margarets came to one not noble, the
3152 I| number of every leaf in the margin: ~
3153 VI| he slept by the bridge of Margue, there appeared to him in
3154 V| soles dici tres concepisse Marias,~Quas genuere viri Joachim,
3155 I| he appeared to the three Maries which returned from the
3156 IV| and his father was called Marin, which by the commandment
3157 IV| duke of Syria and places maritime, and Martha with her sister
3158 IV| Paul looked up into heaven marking his forehead and his breast
3159 VI| to his preaching, and the marquis of Messence came upon her
3160 IV| the merits of her he made Martelle, chamberer of her sister
3161 V| is will or affection of martiage, for at the last she had
3162 IV| that place he made free. Martilla, her servant, wrote her
3163 VII| est in sanguine tincta. Martirii calicem gustant in carne
3164 VII| restoration, vi. 36.~Xaintes, martydom of Eutropius at, iii. 274.~
3165 IV| he came to this verse: Te martyrum candidatus, and therewith
3166 VII| that were there, were much marveled and sore troubled, also
3167 IV| patience of Jacob scripture marvelleth, which abode seven years
3168 VII| crosses may signify the three Marys seeking our Lord. And when
3169 I| me and you. Every child masculine that shall be born shall
3170 IV| the church of S. Sixtus a mason had been hired of the friars
3171 III| a countess of the castle Massino, which had special devotion
3172 VII| antiphonam: Alma redemptoris mater et Simon Bariona. Peter,
3173 IV| and some say it was S. Maternus, and others say that it
3174 VII| a letter that he sent to Matilda the countess, that the said
3175 V| king then sent to Ephigenia matrons and enchantresses, but for
3176 III| for a master as is said, Matt. xxiii.: Upon the chair
3177 VI| he laid him down upon a mattress, stretching on the earth,
3178 VI| inclined, which is a sign of maturity or ripe sadness. That epistle
3179 V| hasty. Or it is said of mauron, which, after Isidore, in
3180 VI| christian king named Notus or Maurus, which engendered a daughter
3181 I| the first man that found mawmetry and idolatry, which endured
3182 III| Genevieve, S. Colomba, S. Maxime, S. Julian, and specially
3183 II| therewith his spirit. And Maximilla, the wife of AEgeas, took
3184 V| divers parts of the realm, as mayors, sheriffs, bailiffs, and
3185 II| flowers and leaves, and the meadows about Amiens flowered and
3186 I| remembered him, among the meals, on the master butler and
3187 VII| shall demand thee what thou meanest, thou shalt answer: My lord,
3188 I| in this instance, for the meaningless words 'hole comen,' those
3189 II| that he became lazar and measel, and by the counsel of his
3190 III| appeared as he had been measell, he saw all shining ascending
3191 II| evil they lived, and how mechantly they died. Saturnus whom
3192 VII| him: Amen dico tibi: hodie mecum eris in paradiso, that is
3193 VII| In that time flourished Medard and Gildard brethren, both
3194 V| son king, which was named Medasan, and when Syrois, his oldest
3195 V| And to every each setting medicinally the remedies of the passions,
3196 V| and sick men refused their mediciner and healer, the city refused
3197 VII| Amen.~After, the priest meditating and thinking on the passion
3198 VI| death-fee.~moyenne, adj., medium.~pens, n., wings. ~rechauf,
3199 VII| of the said debonair and meedful king. Not long after, a
3200 IV| loved no less sorrows than meeds, for he reputed those sorrows
3201 I| was the humblest and the meekest man that was in all the
3202 I| Enoch gat Irad, and Irad Mehujael, and he gat Methusael, and
3203 III| towns, servants, and great meinys, and all this she despiseth
3204 I| refrain melancholy. The melancholious man naturally is cold, covetous
3205 VII| September 22, v. 158.~Mellonin = Melanius of Rouen. October 22, vii.
3206 I| came Lot and two daughters, Melcha and Sara. ~Now I shall speak
3207 II| Jonathan and Abinadab, and Melchi-shua, sons of Saul. And all the
3208 I| Damascus. And in Latin Jaspar, Melchior, and Balthasar. And it is
3209 I| had taken tofore, that was Melech, daughter of Ishmael, son
3210 IV| miracles. At the Isle of Melita a serpent bit his hand,
3211 VII| information of S. Austin and S. Melitus, was informed in the faith
3212 I| Jerusalem which is called Mello, in the mountain of Sion,
3213 VII| God to him that he had a melodious and fair voice at church,
3214 III| the Romans. He conquered Melun, and the land Iying by Seine
3215 VII| beginneth thus: Unde ut memores, etc. In the which orison
3216 I| evermore, and this is my memorial from generation to generation.
3217 I| omnibus verbis et prodigiis mendacibus. Of Antichrist it is said
3218 I| him in the crib, a poor mendicant, and over him the stars.
3219 VI| cleos, that is, glory, and mens, that is, mind, as it were
3220 V| absentum rodere vitam,~Hanc mensam indignam noverit esse sibi:~
3221 I| instruction a picture of the mental attitude of the age in which
3222 III| written this scripture: Mentem sanctam, spontaneam, honorem
3223 I| to God: Illumina oculos meos, that is to say, Lord, give
3224 VII| street, that was called Merce, five miles from Antioch,
3225 II| thy servant ne meed of thy mercenary remain in no wise with thee.
3226 I| our region, and to these merchandises the noble merchant Jesus
3227 IV| therefore our Lord converted her mercifully to penance, and because
3228 I| Matthew xxi.: Amen dico quia meretrices, etc.: To the hypocrites
3229 III| black bird, that is called a merle, came on a time to S. Benet
3230 V| that day he was gladder, merrier, and sweeter than the other.
3231 VI| preaching, and the marquis of Messence came upon her by whom she
3232 VII| a child, took one of the messes of the meat from the board,
3233 V| Lucian, into the city of Messina. And the other twain were
3234 I| the fifteen books of the Metamorphoses, in which be contained the
3235 II| Father we dare not, for it is meted and measured, and we must
3236 I| in earth. And by reason, methinketh, he might do no less, considering
3237 I| Irad Mehujael, and he gat Methusael, and he gat Lameth, which
3238 VII| to be able.~mystery, Fr. metierr, work or business.~notorily,
3239 IV| and builded their church metropolitan, that is to say the archbishop'
3240 I| Fr. malheur, unhappiness. mezny, n., company or retinue.
3241 I| also in September tofore Michaelmas, and these be the third
3242 VI| the bare ground. And about mid-night all that straw was set afire.
3243 VI| in Kent, and Sigbert in Middlesex, were converted to the faith
3244 I| bare and open. Ham, his middlest son espied it, and laughed
3245 I| he abiding in sorrow, the Midianites carried Joseph into Egypt,
3246 VII| by help and mystery of midwifery was had out one piece after
3247 IV| he is greater, and more mightier than thou, when thou art
3248 VII| demand after, who is most mightyof all, and when thou knowest
3249 IV| air. ~Yet saith the same Miietus, and also it is said in
3250 I| daughter of Bethuel, son of Milcah wife of Nahor, brother of
3251 VI| weigheth on me more than a mill-stone or a tower, and it is given
3252 I| was taken and bounden to a millstone and cast in the river of
3253 VI| commanded to hang on their necks millstones, and in the winter time,
3254 II| heart, the gall, and the milt, and keep them by thee;
3255 VI| likeness of Venus or of Minerva, whom every each he knew,
3256 I| feeling of awe and veneration, mingled with an earnest longing
3257 VII| from the time and reign of Minim that was king of Assyria,
3258 V| increaseth it not, but blame minisheth it. I am sorry sometime
3259 IV| honour, and to him that ministereth to thee. The angels shall
3260 II| I in parting and thou in ministering, let us see who shall overcome. ~
3261 V| is taken in his pity or ministration. The prelacy in angels is
3262 V| addresseth them in all the ministries divine, and commandeth to
3263 V| Christum, Jacobum secunda minorem,~Et Joseph justum peperit
3264 IV| his court. Upon a time a minstrel sang tofore him a song in
3265 VII| was wont to be given to minstrels. In that time was so great
3266 III| over waters and ditches, mires and hedges, and ever this
3267 VII| plenty and the multitude of mirths and consolations that is
3268 V| the paynims, and to the misbehaved men in all things. And S.
3269 IV| that lest peradventure the misbelieved men should say that the
3270 II| them by any occasion, the misbelievers would say that they were
3271 III| exhortation the prey of caitiffs misbelieving, in bringing them to the
3272 II| villainy or thou shalt have a mischance hastily. The unhappy man
3273 VI| Turks, and did to them many mischiefs, and were tormented with
3274 V| it at the dinner to her mischievous mother. And then Herod was
3275 III| wailing for the horror of the miscreance of Trajan. Then answered
3276 VI| thou no contrition for thy misdeed? But sith thou repentest
3277 VI| commanded that he should not misdo him, but let him go, and
3278 V| damage of things, and of misdoing of the body. On a time he
3279 VII| considering that he hath misdone to have received his Saviour
3280 VII| honest, ne according, to misentreat the holy body by violent
3281 VII| of life. And howbeit that miseration and pity was growing in
3282 V| by sacrifice, as he said: Misericordiam volo et non sacrificium,
3283 VII| his sister, seeing this misfortune, took the same beam between
3284 VI| long after she had twain misfortunes. First she was barren, and
3285 III| infirmity again, because of his misguiding, and at the last he fell
3286 I| xvi., Vado ad eum qui me misit, etc.: I go to my father,
3287 III| said not well of him, but mislaid, but anon God so chastised
3288 III| man which was grievously mismade; then said S. Ambrose: The
3289 I| the printer has left gross misprints uncorrected in his text,
3290 VI| them from him that had so missaid of him, and from their goods
3291 IV| hath sustained till now missaying of thee. And then began
3292 VII| ye not, for ye were never missed there in all this time,
3293 IV| abode not his time it was misshapen, which yet he made to be
3294 III| they make their maidens mistresses greater than their wives,
3295 I| have. And hereof the faith mistrusteth not, ne hope slacketh not,
3296 V| alleged, v., Fr. alleger, mitigated.~ampulles, n., flasks or
3297 VII| the hope of avoiding or mitigating sea-sickness.~The text here
3298 VI| from the pains, ne to the mitigation of them, ne lessing of it,
3299 V| as it is read in libro de mitrali officio: The said Cosdroe,
3300 I| autem spiritus sanctus: quem mittet pater in nomine meo ille
3301 VII| by the virtue of the same mixion the people may be united
3302 III| purely, without company and mixture of one bee with another,
3303 VI| of S. Clare, making great moan and sorrow. Then S. Clare
3304 IV| said to them in guile and mockage, for she knew well that
3305 VII| tarrier of time, and he mocketh us and our gods, he deserveth
3306 III| punished by right great moderation. She was marvellous debonair
3307 VI| she was, as well in the modulation of the bird as in the expulsion
3308 III| purgationis Marie secundum legem Moisi, tulerunt Jesum in Jerusalem.
3309 V| of charity took away the moisture of the rain from them.~A
3310 VII| abbot of the convent of Molesine, and twenty-one monks with
3311 II| abashed and their hearts mollified, that almost they were returned
3312 II| worshipped Ashtareth, Chemosh and Moloch, idols of Zidonia, of Moabites,
3313 VII| in Latin Tincillacensis Monasterium, where he ne did show of
3314 V| words and refused always his monestements and treachings. And then
3315 III| passed the mountains of Mongus Sourgus one of their servants
3316 V| named Patrick and his mother Monica. He was sufficiently instructed
3317 VII| quasi sponsam ornavit me monilibus. That is to say, that our
3318 VII| Oremus. Praecepti salutaribus moniti, etc., and here he inciteth
3319 VII| hear his good doctrines and monitions spiritual, and humbly to
3320 II| belues, n., whales, or sea monsters. blessure, n. (Fr.), a wound.
3321 VII| saith: Quis ascendet in montem domini? Innocens manibus.
3322 IV| the gests of the Earl of Montfort, that one day as S. Dominic
3323 IV| to see the sun rising at Montoia, which is but half a league
3324 III| went from Maloigne unto Montpellier, and in leaping he was broken
3325 V| Amadour, bishop, and of moo other saints; and because
3326 VII| with a fell and spiteful mood the judge said to him: Thou
3327 VI| gospel. For he proceeded morally, that is to say by morality,
3328 V| He went on a time by the morass of Venice and found there
3329 I| answered and said: Ne forte moriamur, lest haply we die, which
3330 VI| blessed Cyril, bishop of Morianne, brought the holy body unto
3331 VII| born to be king, germ of W. Morris' story of the, vii. 134. ~
3332 I| matins because that the morrowtide he drowned the Egyptians
3333 II| nothing but bear stone and mortar and other things to the
3334 VII| which fell and died at Mortaria whereas Charles overcame
3335 III| piece wherein the socket or mortice was made, wherein the body
3336 VI| where it is said: Qui crucis mortificationem jugiter in corpore suo pro
3337 II| Reginald Fitzurse, Sir Hugh de Morville, Sir William de Tracy, Sir
3338 VI| away by no means, and the moss that groweth on these stones
3339 II| then answered saying: Well mote ye walk, and our Lord be
3340 V| sunbeams be full of small motes, which is small dust or
3341 I| time, but he had sudden motion. Secondly, he is hot for
3342 II| that he handled waxed anon mouldy and hoar, that no man might
3343 IV| as did Elijah, and thou mountedst not as Paul did unto the
3344 I| ascension of Jesu Christ is our mounting and lifting up, and where
3345 VII| the Romans, which were at Mountport, and slew from noon to evensong
3346 II| unto Jerusalem till the Mounts of Ethiopia, for to obey
3347 VII| of Lent ne signifieth but mournings, and it is to wit that the
3348 VI| much lead. Then the lord Mouvalt, her uncle, lift up his
3349 II| tillers of his fields, and mowers and reapers of his corn,
3350 V| that glory? And he said, mowing marvellously: It is too
3351 V| say as sovereignty, and of moys, that is to say water. And
3352 | Mr
3353 IV| This dead body must be cast mto the sea, or else we all
3354 VII| And his mother desired muchto see him and his brethren,
3355 V| tofore the gate an hundred mues of wine.~On a time, they
3356 II| Ora pro nobis, quoniam mulier sancta es, etc. Item cap.
3357 VI| propitiationis abundantiam multiplicatis intercessoribus largiaris:
3358 VI| profitably, constantly and multiplyingly. For above the martyrdom
3359 I| Dabit eis potestatem in multis et terram divides gratuito:
3360 III| and converted innumerable multitudes of people to the faith of
3361 VII| orison that beginneth thus: Munda cor meum, etc., in the which
3362 VI| and their song was: Regnum mundi, which is sung in the praising
3363 V| dead; and after, the cruel murderer stuck his sword in his throat,
3364 II| hands? Ye have overcome murderers and adulterers, so that
3365 I| and by the salt is showed mure discretion, and by the ashes
3366 I| that they may drink and the murmuration of them may cease. Our Lord
3367 VI| great pestilence, and great murrain, great earthquaves, great
3368 V| presume to intermit ne to muse on high things of the godhead,
3369 V| good Denis, these be the mutations of divine things, and in
3370 IV| man of the bishopric of Mutina, as Calixtus the pope saith,
3371 III| that S. Julian ate never no mutton, and anon after a fever
3372 V| wisdom Denis saith, in his mystical theology: The divine Bartholomew,
3373 II| Shuhite, and the third, Zophar Naamathite. And when they saw him from
3374 III| church of S. Felix and S. Nabor in such wise that he neither
3375 III| and beheld this little nacelle and the child therein, which
3376 VII| the desert this holy man nad lost his way, and wist not
3377 V| in the city that is said Nadaber, found there two enchanters
3378 I| not remain as much as a nail that shall be necessary
3379 I| his hands. The sixth, in nailing his feet, and the seventh,
3380 VI| was another, of whom he nameth the name. Thirdly, he was
3381 II| and begat on her a son, naming after his own name Tobias,
3382 III| did, for by him I have won nany souls, and by thee I shall
3383 IV| ascended. ~sndary, n., a napkin. ~sumpters, n., pack-horses
3384 IV| to say as marvellous, and naris, that is, by discretion,
3385 IV| can find in the world, in narrations of holy fathers, of the
3386 VI| merits of S. Clare there nas seen sign ne token thereof.~
3387 II| Then came Achiacharus and Nasbas, cousins of Tobias, joying
3388 IV| said death of saints, but natality. The child appetiteth to
3389 I| preferences of the different nationalities. It is with an early French
3390 I| error of "a name' for 'a navire,' which the translator simply
3391 VII| said: O thou deliverer of Nazarenes, receive the branch of the
3392 IV| names. ~Nazarien is said of Nazareus, that is as much to say
3393 V| woodness and went unto Gregory Nazianzen, bishop of Constantinople.
3394 VII| down. Then Narses went to Neapolin, and sent to the Lombards
3395 I| lives of the saints more nearly approaching his own age
3396 II| hast cleanly servants and neat chamberers. And what weenest
3397 I| Moab upon the mountain of Nebo into the top of Pisgah against
3398 V| And after this he took Nebridius and Evodius, and his mother,
3399 I| moyen, n., middle, mean. ~Nebuzar - adan, n. This name means
3400 VI| hands for to provide to them necessarily to live, and exercised the
3401 I| work there, not to labour needily, but in delighting and recreating
3402 VI| which with the pricking of a needle is anon gone away and come
3403 VI| full of brochets of small needles, and thereon small rings,
3404 I| centuries of destruction, neglect, and ill-usage still impress
3405 VI| for the cleansing of our negligences. For howbeit that we hallow
3406 VI| the debt of interchanging neighbourhood, for the saints make of
3407 V| when he came to the city of Nemausense, he raised the son of a
3408 V| gerar, that is holy, and of nemus, that is to say a wood.
3409 II| they said: Of the tribe of Nephthalim, of the captivity of Nineveh.
3410 III| light. Or Nereus is said of nereth, that is a lantern, and
3411 IV| which tofore was called Nerluc, and the Black Lake, because
3412 III| castle, which was called Nerva, and was cousin to the emperor
3413 II| post virum tuum, alterum nescieris: ideo et manus Domini confortavit
3414 V| quibus te laudibus referam nescio. Quia quem celi capere non
3415 II| sons that they do righteous ness and alms, that they may
3416 II| slept. And from a swallow's nest above there fell down hot
3417 V| swallows which made their nests, to whom he said: My sister
3418 III| thorns and wallowed among the nettles, so that his body was torn
3419 VII| will of the shameful Venus, neverthelatter he shall not have the victory
3420 IV| when any was made Cæsar, neverthemore he was Augustus ne emperor,
3421 I| the exteriors, will have a newer and fuller meaning if we
3422 III| man duly reason after the nght of his cause. But he found
3423 III| church by his predication, Niceta and Aquila showed unto the
3424 III| quaint, saying that such nicety was filth of the soul, and
3425 II| Or Nicholas is said of Nichor, that is the resplendour
3426 II| Bishop. ~Nicholas is said of Nichos, which is to say victory,
3427 V| Maximian was in the city of Nicodemia, whereas he sacrificed to
3428 II| that all the province of S. Nicolas suffered great famine, in
3429 V| of his sister nor of his nieces might none evil suspicion
3430 I| chapter. Sol factus est niger tanquam saccus cilicinus:
3431 VII| daily service and office and nightly, save the song. Ambrose,
3432 I| called Gijon, otherwise Nilus, and that runneth about
3433 V| paynims. And when he was nine-and-twenty years old he was ordained
3434 V| she was barren unto the ninetieth year, and had only Isaac,
3435 II| Eli. Eli was at that tide ninety-eight years old, and his eyes
3436 VI| college the pots were failed. Ninthly, how in straitness S. Clare
3437 I| the gospel, Johannis xvi.: Nisi enim abiero, etc. But if
3438 VII| Gertrude, and the abbey Nivelle, of the gift and foundation
3439 VII| born he founded a noble nnonastery, which is at this day named
3440 V| little village in which some noblemen dwelled; among whom there
3441 II| which had a more fairer and nobler heritage than his was, the
3442 VII| and so forth as followeth. Nocherius, Abbot of S. Gall, made
3443 I| at the hours diurnal and nocturnal of this holy solemnity,
3444 I| tunes of accord in his song. Noema, sister of Tubal-cain, found
3445 V| open my wounds lest any noieful humour corrupt ne rot the
3446 II| when Maximus, bishop of Nola, and Valerian, fled the
3447 III| issued out anon wold he, nold he, by the flux of the womb,
3448 VII| said thus: Veni domine et noli tardere, that is for to
3449 VI| nobis domine, non nobis, sed nomini tuo da gloriam, that is
3450 VI| jugiter in corpore suo pro tui nominis amore portavit: he bare
3451 V| commandment and have seen the non-power of him, but I shall amend
3452 VII| which he did make for the nonce, to the which he administered
3453 V| holy father which was named Nonnon, bishop of Heliopolis, which
3454 VI| there was S. Edmund, king of Norfolk and Suffolk, which took
3455 V| holy wood. Or it is said of norma, that is to say law, whereof
3456 VI| called Ralph, and was a Norman born, and the sinews of
3457 VII| Agatha. iii. 39.~Catesby, Northamptonahire, vi. 230.~Caxton declares
3458 VI| made nuns at Catesby in Northamptonshire by the labour of their brother
3459 VI| arrived in the country of Northumberland, and robbed and destroyed
3460 VII| wind and drove the ship northward, whereas they saw an island
3461 VI| and hear not, they have noses, and smell not, they have
3462 I| surrexerit vane est fides nostra: If Jesu Christ had not
3463 VII| nos dimittimus debitoribus nostril; that is to say; Pardon
3464 VII| Gratias agamus domino deo nostro, that is to say: Yield we
3465 III| mass these words: Diesque nostros in tua pace disponas, atque
3466 I| in the work of Voragine, notably those of S. Genevieve and
3467 III| but they spake ne said nothin, and they much doubted that
3468 I| semblable of majesty and nothing-unlike, and of eternity semblable. ~
3469 I| said Job, capitulo xix.; Noti mei quasi alieni recesserunt
3470 II| country with his company, and notified to all them that he might,
3471 I| saints, and also some other notory deeds and acts of times
3472 III| That taper is kept yet at Notre Dame de Paris. A woman which
3473 IV| Staffordshire, Herefo rdshire, Nottinghamshire, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire,
3474 VI| was a christian king named Notus or Maurus, which engendered
3475 III| sendest to us of that thou nourishest thy beasts with. Of which
3476 VII| their refection or food of nouriture divine, and soon after returned
3477 V| vitam,~Hanc mensam indignam noverit esse sibi:~that is to say:
3478 II| unbound him, and they might in nowise touch him for their arms
3479 VII| ought to be despised, and nowithstanding that the virtues be accomplished
3480 III| would do to her any grief or noyance against her vow, and gave
3481 V| Ne will ye not grieve ne noye in the earth ne in the sea,
3482 VI| torment this beast that noyeth nothing, and anon he departed.
3483 VI| and good ensample for to nsaintain and govern them. And in
3484 VII| of our Lord Jesu Christ nuisable and letting to the sinners.
3485 III| electorum tuorum jubeas grege numerari. At the last when S. Gregory
3486 I| judgment, as it is said, Numeri xi.: I shall give to my
3487 VI| prison by the commandment of Numerianus, but the stench was anon
3488 VII| Friars forbidden to visit nunneries, vi. 178.~Gaimas the Arian,
3489 VII| wives, that is to wit two nurses, which did nourish him,
3490 III| born of the province of Nursia, and was sent to Rome for
3491 VI| was needful, which was the nurture of Holy Scripture, and said
3492 IV| wit, natural heat, humour nutrimental, and reason of seed. Then
3493 VII| is to be filled, and of nux, that is a nut, for the
3494 I| divers works and books, I ne nyste what work to begin and put
3495 V| much to say as two, and nysus, which is to say lift up,
3496 V| had none other masters but oaks and holm-trees, this confessed
3497 VII| brown, made of barley or oats, his pottage was of great
3498 I| people of the earth, for thou obeyedst to me. Abraham then returned
3499 I| rightful before him, and obeyest his commandments, and keep
3500 I| from my people, because he obeyeth not my statute and ordinance.
3501 VII| a nun by the hands of S. Obier and of S. Amand, and anon
3502 V| said against, as some would object. About the year of our Lord
3503 IV| for to argue against his objections. And that night the heretics
|