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Volume
3504 V| vetus Thebea centum jacet obruta portis; that is to say:
3505 I| translator's language. ~The observant reader can scarcely fail
3506 V| beloved and most clean in observing and embracing of chastity,
3507 III| and I find him the more obstinate. To whom S. Austin said:
3508 VI| wist not. For, if he should obstinately deny it, he dreaded lest
3509 I| to 'by ship' as being the obvious meaning. The text has been
3510 VII| tears, and he exercising and occupying him in this holy operation
3511 VII| Life of S. Erasmus does not occur in the first edition of
3512 I| Ghost to say, Nunc viderunt oculi mei salutare tuum: I have
3513 III| Esther secundo. Quod omnibus oculis amabilis videbatur: The
3514 I| to cry to God: Illumina oculos meos, that is to say, Lord,
3515 IV| hundred and nine years and odd days. But in the time of
3516 VI| in the isle of Vulcan, S. Odille heard the voices and the
3517 V| other servants, by this odious ardour of pestilence, and
3518 III| ambra, which is much sweet, odorant and precious, and also it
3519 VI| bridge was a meadow, sweet, odorous, and adorned full of all
3520 III| and God was smelled and odoured by him over all where as
3521 III| Almaine, of the abbey of Oetenbach, which had a grievous gout
3522 IV| and meekly did all the offces, and her services were acceptable
3523 VII| pray God, then he saith the offertory. ~After, the priest taketh
3524 V| the same common woman, and officer of the king's hall, assembled
3525 IV| pelletre, n,, pyrethrum officinarum, or pellitory of Spain. ~
3526 V| read in libro de mitrali officio: The said Cosdroe, resident
3527 I| said to him, so shall thy offspringing and seed be. And Abram believed
3528 V| bishop, and accomplished the oflfice of a bishop twenty-two years
3529 V| eagerly with them, and much oftener would have done, but the
3530 VII| garnished her with the sign oi the cross and went thither,
3531 VII| and fled into the realm ol Cappadocia, and came into
3532 I| called ethereum; another olimpium; another igneum; another
3533 III| divinity; so that by this ombre or shadow may be known and
3534 I| all one in will, like in omnipotence, equal in glory, and in
3535 VII| Hermanus of Almaine made: Rex omnipotens, Sancti Spiritus assit nobis
3536 VI| in the same gospel, the one-and-twentieth chapter: Heaven and earth
3537 IV| and small, and put that one-half in one church, and that
3538 VII| low towards the earth, and onely, with all his heart and
3539 VI| saint, and greater than such ones as have been showed for
3540 V| womb, he worketh so that he openeth it after, more marvellously.
3541 I| Cujus adventus erit secundum operationem Sathanae in omnibus verbis
3542 VII| and constant in all good operations or works, and ever endoctrined
3543 IV| Laurence laid his hand opon her head, and anon she was
3544 I| vicesimo upon this text. Oportebat Christum pati, etc. The
3545 V| delices and blandishes, and oppresseth virtue by violence. Therefore
3546 VI| robbery with other great oppressions and importable charges among
3547 I| appetere, adversa devitare, opprobria fugere, gloriam sequi: They
3548 VI| the duke, and after many opprobrious words, at the last they
3549 I| manuscript or handed down by oral tradition. All persons living
3550 VII| and therefore it is called Oratio dominica, that is to say:
3551 V| pains and torments by her orations and prayers be overcome.
3552 II| reverence and honour in ordaining to hallow the feast of her
3553 V| to ordain the office and ordinal of the church. And then
3554 III| much to say as earth, and orge that is tilling. So George
3555 I| cry in the fifth anthem: O Oriens splendor lucis eterne, veni
3556 V| the manner of the church oriental. And therefore many bishops
3557 VII| from which this reprint was originally made, but is found in all
3558 VII| S. Rock, v. 12.~Caxton's originals for his compilation, i.
3559 I| Jerome saith: Spiritus oris nostri, etc.-thus as he
3560 VI| vesture royal of God by ornament of virtues, by which he
3561 VII| corona, et quasi sponsam ornavit me monilibus. That is to
3562 IV| chanter began: Jam lucis orto, master Conrad came suddenly,
3563 VII| pope which tofore was named Osporci, that is to say the mouth
3564 VI| remaineth. ~bobance, n., ostentatiom. ~brochets. n.. spikes.~
3565 I| his very body. Fifthly, by ostention of his wounds, by which
3566 III| lay thus, there came two otters which licked every place
3567 IV| said of a precious gem, or ouche, that is named a margaret.
3568 VI| take for her refection an ounce and a half of bread. She
3569 I| which lyfe is translated oute of latyn into Englysshe
3570 V| Raphael bound the devil in the outerest desert. And this binding
3571 V| love of God than to the outerward debonairty, and for the
3572 III| the loaves hot out of the oven secretly and gave it to
3573 III| professed and veiled, and she over-lived him forty years. All these
3574 III| christian, howbeit that he was over-young to speak but the Holy Ghost
3575 IV| whereas sin abounded, grace overabounded, and was more, etc. ~
3576 IV| conversion she was praised by overabundance of grace. For whereas sin
3577 VI| brethren, that if one were overcharged that other should help and
3578 II| one thing in which thou overcomest me, and Macarius said: What
3579 VII| there came a dark cloud and overcovered them, that a great part
3580 V| angels, the some unto the overeat, and some to the lowest,
3581 I| but the water came and overflowed them in the midst of the
3582 III| marble and of wood, and overgilt. Quintianus said: Choose
3583 V| abovehanging the waters, or son of overhanging the sea. He is said of bar,
3584 V| his duty, that he was not overhasting himself, but the courtesy
3585 I| sheep and oxen, which, if I overlaboured, should die all in a day,
3586 I| house where he was in, and overlift up the four corners of the
3587 II| became an hermit. He had overmany temptations of the devil.
3588 III| shaving which is on the overmost part of the head signifieth
3589 II| Nephthali, which is in the overparts of Galilee upon Aser, after
3590 V| all earthly things, and overpass by thought all temporal
3591 I| leaping in the mountains and overpassing the hills. And who that
3592 I| that his anger and fury be overpast, and his indignation ceased,
3593 VII| tree of thy mercy, for the overplus is cut off, of him that
3594 II| was of Normandy, and went oversea, and was taken by the sowdan,
3595 II| nothing but command and oversee them that wrought. Solomon
3596 VII| monastery at Barking were overseen in taking the measure of
3597 II| at home, and Adonias was overseer and commander on them. Solomon
3598 IV| entend and await on her. The overshining order of the apostles honour
3599 III| anon the cloud came and overspread them like a pavilion that
3600 II| idly? If so were that thou overthrewest him, his house and all his
3601 I| and that it is she that overthroweth strong men into sin, quencheth
3602 III| there was a tree that went overthwart, on which the arms of our
3603 I| contained the Fables of Ovid, and the History of Godfrey
3604 III| that he had slain him that owned the garden. Then sent Pilate
3605 II| Lo ! all that which he owneth and hath in possession,
3606 VII| the wind, and these two ox-tongues rhat hang here above me
3607 VI| v., refused.~windowed, p.p., pierced or fretted.~wood,
3608 IV| a napkin. ~sumpters, n., pack-horses or mules. ~tatche, Fr. tache,
3609 III| went to the river named Pade, and the angel of our Lord
3610 VII| Francis, v. 222.~—inhabit pagan idols, iii. 71.~—invoked
3611 IV| esbatements, n. (Fr.), pageants. ~esprised, pp., Fr. epris,
3612 I| of reverent wonder, the pages of The Golden Legend will
3613 V| Areo is to say Mars, and pagus is a street, and where they
3614 VI| and blinded it cruelly, paining him by grievous torment.
3615 I| me oft from him, I did do paint his image, for to have alway
3616 II| more mighty than be thy painters, said Carisius to the king:
3617 V| because that she so busily painteth her for to please worldly
3618 III| that he had seen him in painture. Then the younglings said
3619 IV| S. Dominic had done. ~In Palatium in Sicily, there was a poor
3620 IV| after, when he was sent to Palentia for to learn, he tasted
3621 II| named Paul, and the sister Palladia. And there they found Austin
3622 VII| sea from that time till Palm-Sunday, and then they came to the
3623 V| nevertheless he wrote of himself to Palmatian: I bear virginity into heaven,
3624 IV| he found his staff like a palmier bearing flowers, leaves
3625 I| horrible that they were palpable, and it endured three days
3626 VII| creation, i. 170.~Damsel palsied for desecration of S. Edward'
3627 VI| sisters at S. Michael of Pambo, which were joined to God,
3628 IV| thither. And when they came to Pampelona his wife died, and his host
3629 IV| rich as of poor. There was Pandulphus, a legate of our holy father
3630 IV| and after looked in his panier, and there he found a much
3631 V| worshipped Pan, they named Panopage, and so of all other streets.
3632 VII| embraced black pots and pans, ii. 149.~Purgatory of S.
3633 IV| his book that is called Pantheonides, affirmeth that Gallianus
3634 V| is to say first, and of panthos, which is as much to say
3635 VI| pilgrimage, among whom was Pantulus, bishop of Basle, which
3636 II| Gallus, and I am Leo of the Papal See, Judge. To whom Hilary
3637 III| eschew the office of the papalty, but against that the gates
3638 III| the country.~It happed at Papia, in the convent of the friars
3639 V| that one which was named Papian went into a city of Sicily,
3640 V| lonicus. Ionica, as saith Papias, is one of the languages
3641 I| Holy Ghost which is said paraclitus, whom God the Father shall
3642 IV| interpreter of the parables ne paradigmes, ne their dictes. David
3643 VII| tibi: hodie mecum eris in paradiso, that is to say: I tell
3644 VII| contracts, or filled with paralysis, were by the same restored
3645 III| that had been nine years so paralytic that none might show the
3646 I| dwelled also in the desert of Paran. And his mother took to
3647 I| he saith: Fortes sunt et parati, etc. The angels of God
3648 I| to come. The sins past in pardoning them; the present in withdrawing
3649 II| demanded a knife for to pare the apple, and one delivered
3650 VII| openly.~paddocks, n., toads.~parement, n., garment. ~piscine,
3651 IV| vanity and folly to serve parishes and to be idle, I have set
3652 VII| dilgently the confessions of his parishioners. He visited the sick folk
3653 V| Alpheus, Zebedeus.~Prima parit Christum, Jacobum secunda
3654 I| Scripture saith: Erant omnes pariter, they were all together,
3655 III| mount of Paris called Mount Parlouer, and is now called the Mount
3656 IV| he brought him into the parlour or locutory, and demanded
3657 VII| blessed servant, to make him partable of thy excellent joy, give
3658 II| such wise that ye shall be partakers of the glory perdurable.
3659 VII| creatures before said, Tres partes signant de Christi corpore
3660 VII| our Lord Jesu Christ and parteth it over the chalice, and
3661 IV| christian faith the Persians and Parthians, them of Media, the Indians,
3662 I| good of which they been participant, that is God. Secondly,
3663 VII| that is: Ex hac altaris participatione, etc., he kisseth the altar,
3664 I| until quite lately these particulars had baffled the researches
3665 I| Son of God would make us partners unto his divinity and godhead,
3666 II| man had given to S. John a partridge living, and he held it in
3667 V| right honourable figure and parure, and the hind Iying by him.
3668 I| as we read the eloquent passages devoted to those sacred
3669 VI| year of his bishopric he passe unto our Lord, to whom be
3670 IV| is called Sancta Maria ad passus, he met Jesu Christ coming
3671 IV| aspre, a stable for his pasturers and herdmen. And it happed
3672 V| eaten, they went to the pastures of the town to see if they
3673 VII| And then she fell down pat to the earth and lifted
3674 V| body of our Lord upon the paten, and bare it without the
3675 VI| that thou depart to him thy paternal treasures and riches in
3676 III| God, and make ye right the paths of our Lord. They said to
3677 I| text. Oportebat Christum pati, etc. The second for certain
3678 III| spontaneam, honorem deo dedit et patriæ liberationem fecit; which
3679 VI| Secondly, they be given to us, patrons for to aid and help us,
3680 IV| election. Or Paul is said of pause, that is rest, in Hebrew,
3681 II| streets thereof shall be paved with white stone and clean;
3682 I| Austin: Adscendente Christo paves, etc.: Jesu Christ ascending,
3683 II| Israel and Judah be in the pavilions, and my lord Joab and the
3684 II| of the psalter: Adhesit pavimento, etc. When S. Eutropia saw
3685 II| and the others with their paws and ongles, and disturned,
3686 III| S. Austin said: Son, why payest thou not thy tithes to God
3687 VI| suffereth and that other payeth for him, he is the sooner
3688 VII| into the hands of the evil paymms, to the end that he should
3689 IV| he had a joyous heart, a peacable visage of a man within forth,
3690 VII| the virtue of the passion peaceth the creatures to him. After,
3691 V| stealing of pears off a pear tree standing nigh his vineyard
3692 V| confessed him of stealing of pears off a pear tree standing
3693 I| Deus propitius esto mihi peccatori, he confessed the crime
3694 VII| breast saying: Nobis quoque peccatoribus, etc., and that signifieth
3695 II| then said David to Nathan: Peccavi! I have sinned against our
3696 II| Si dixerimus quoniam non peccavimus, etc.: If we say that we
3697 VI| whole. These piscines or pecines be fountains perpetual in
3698 III| on a time to S. Benet and pecked with his bill at his visage,
3699 VII| in the realm much money, pecunies or silver. He founded many
3700 III| but he durst not for his pedagogue or his governor which was
3701 V| John is greater than man, peer unto the angels, sovereign
3702 II| time after the wife, named Pelagia, was sacred with a veil,
3703 V| name.~Pelagienne is said of pelagus, which is as much to say
3704 III| they went to a place called Pella, because that the vengeance
3705 IV| pyrethrum officinarum, or pellitory of Spain. ~porret, n., a
3706 V| Pelagien, she might be said of pena, pain, and lego, legis,
3707 VI| mantlet; she used never pendants ne furs of skins, but dispensed
3708 III| his country in Wales named Pendyac, and entered into a fair
3709 I| of me he hath taken this penible coat with which he is clad.
3710 II| to go confess her to his penitencer, which had plain power of
3711 I| rejoicings of Christmas, the penitential pleadings of the Lenten
3712 VII| which lore he saith thus: Penitentiam agite, appropinquabit enim
3713 I| Magdalene, which is figure of penitents. And for five reasons he
3714 VI| within the earth, and meddled pennies with the earth, and did
3715 V| him that he sell to thee a pennyworth of his sweat. And when he
3716 V| that brother that was so pensive and so heavy, seemed more
3717 III| and he himself went to Pentapolin whereas he was two years,
3718 I| sung: Dum complerentur dies pentecostes, etc. The day of the pentecost
3719 VII| of God, and therefore the peop]e draweth toward the Evangel
3720 V| minorem,~Et Joseph justum peperit cum Simone Judam,~Tertia
3721 V| confection of honey and wine and pepper, and whatsomever he ate
3722 VII| ever looked humbly downward perceired it not. S. Morant followed
3723 VII| his perception is this, Perceptio corporis tui, etc., and
3724 VII| principal, and first the perceptions. And here is to wit that
3725 VII| Venite benedicti patris mei, percipite regnum, etc., that is to
3726 IV| The third by reason of perdurableness; and forasmuch as she chose
3727 V| feast that S. Amadour and S. Peregrine and other saints made, and
3728 I| Canticles: Veni auster et perfla hortum meum. Come wind of
3729 II| unguentaries, n., makers of perfumes. unnethe, adv., scarcely.
3730 V| Turin, and Alexander to Pergamos, Secundus unto Ventimiglia,
3731 III| Thou seest that the city perisheth: Then did the king do array
3732 I| Canaanites, Hittites, Amorites, Perizzites, Hivites and Jebusites.
3733 II| therefore thou shalt be blessed permanably. Judith viii. Ora pro nobis,
3734 III| Jesu Christ would no thing permit it lest they held that it
3735 V| the passions, rooting out pernicious thorns, cutting down trees
3736 VII| knowing the desolation and perplexity and perils of the holy land,
3737 VII| patron, i. 3.~Askepodot, persecutes S. Alban, iii. 243.~Ass
3738 VII| secreto proximo suo hunc persequebar; that is to say in English:
3739 IV| the order, and received it perseverantly. And he was right religious,
3740 VII| ancienty of days, by holy perseveration rendered his soul unto our
3741 VI| thou, and in wrong thou perseverest; knowest thou not how our
3742 II| there was a tree called Persidis, which is medicinal for
3743 VII| Ghost, one God in three persoos. And all these articles
3744 VII| ever ready to enhance it, persuaded and admonished ententively
3745 I| shalt be in such things as pertain to God. Take with thee this
3746 II| prophet David: In imagine pertransit homo, etc.: Vainly is the
3747 I| will appeal in vain. Its perusal will strike no responsive
3748 III| tofore them all: O thou Peter perverse, if thou art so holy as
3749 VII| fool and indigne hound that pervertest the might of God to enchantments
3750 III| might no more suffer the pestilences and the perils of this deceivable
3751 IV| the members broken with a pestilent sickness of another. The
3752 III| name.~Petronilla is said of petens, that is demanding, and
3753 VII| Evangile, that saith thus: Petite et dabitur vobis, etc.,
3754 V| psalm to be said: Gloria petri. And after, he ordained
3755 VII| is the tomb of the golden Petronelle my daughter. And as Sigebert
3756 II| place, that a lady called Petronia had been sick much grievously,
3757 III| unhosing, or Peter is said of petros, that is constant and firm,
3758 I| is called phagiphania, of phage, that is to say meat. And
3759 I| And therefore it is called phagiphania, of phage, that is to say
3760 V| of a mariner in a ship of phantasm, and said to them: From
3761 III| should have been trowed phantasms. In a time he was harboured
3762 VI| supposed to have seen was but a phantom and did no harm. Thirdly,
3763 II| Cananeum the king, Jebusee, Pheresee, Eneum, Etheum and Amoreum,
3764 II| and in every hole hung a phial, and he demanded him whither
3765 I| time said Abimelech, and Phicol the prince of his host,
3766 VII| by open miracle like as Philibert rehearseth. For as the bishop
3767 I| hereof saith the apostle ad Philippenses; Humiliavit se ipsum. Thirdly,
3768 IV| was beaten with rods at Philippi, he was put in prison, and
3769 VII| deceived. He wrote to the Philippians a much fair epistle, and
3770 VII| article laid in the creed S. Phillip.~The sixth article is of
3771 III| hands. Or it is said of philos, that is as much to say
3772 VI| of Rome, a priest, named Philosophus, came to Tersona and demanded
3773 VI| and emprinted the very phisiognomy of his visage therein, and
3774 II| Fetch to me a woman having a phiton, otherwise called a phitoness
3775 I| for such is he that is phlegmatic. The sixth reason is for
3776 VI| And then Cornelius and Phoebus, disciples of S. Clement,
3777 III| was born of the country of Phrygia. When his father and mother
3778 VI| stood, he took a little pickaxe, and smote one stroke lightly
3779 VII| NOTE~THE pictorial frontispieces, and the thorncrown
3780 I| benefit and instruction a picture of the mental attitude of
3781 I| obscure. ~Lovers of the picturesque can scarcely fail to be
3782 III| and his flesh was torn piecemeal that it lay upon the pavement
3783 IV| vow. ~There was a man of Piedmont, swollen like a monster,
3784 I| with thorns. The fifth, in piercing his hands. The sixth, in
3785 I| saith S. Ambrose: Auctor pietatis in cruce, etc. He saith
3786 VII| parish of Liege a sow bare a pig having the visage of a man,
3787 I| dove for to nourish small pigeons in the holes of the wall,
3788 III| pierced his foot with the pike, which was sharp beneath.
3789 I| knew carnally a maid called Pilam, which was daughter of a
3790 I| to her son, and named him Pilatus. And when he was three years
3791 III| were sick, and laid the pillows aright and in point, and
3792 VII| scarcely.~whelk, n., a pimple. ~wood, adj., mad.~
3793 VII| out of his head with iron pincers. And after that they bound
3794 II| a place that was called Pincis. ~And this Felix had a brother
3795 III| the city a tree called a pineapple tree, on which were hanged
3796 V| amor Christi resonet ore pio.~That is to say: Sing we
3797 VI| woman of the bishopric of Pisa, came to one of the ladies
3798 VI| God was made whole. These piscines or pecines be fountains
3799 I| of Nebo into the top of Pisgah against Jericho, and there
3800 IV| Prato, between Florence and Pistoia, a young man deceived of
3801 I| builded to Pharaoh two towns, Pithom and Raamses. How much more
3802 V| bell, ~complained, v., pitied. ~con, v., be able to. ~
3803 VII| Easterday above his accustomed pittance he ate two eggs. He never
3804 VI| Lord, the which was in a pix much richly garnished and
3805 VII| orison that thus beginneth: Placeat tibi sanctaTrinitas. That
3806 VII| in a week for to hear the plaints which lightly he made to
3807 III| together, and make thereof a plaister and lay it thereto and it
3808 VII| heaven into the uppermost plan of heaven: there he standeth
3809 III| gladness, and within he was plane of humility, and thereby
3810 VII| they should make to be planed. O how great reverence he
3811 I| or every heaven of each planet, hath the thickness and
3812 III| and the juice of small plantain, and fair wheat flour, and
3813 I| governance in the desert, and the plantation of the vine in a land propice.
3814 V| word of the faith, and in planting the vines of our Lord and
3815 V| oft of these words: Qui plasmasti me, miserere mei, Lord that
3816 II| shoulders were covered with plates of brass. His glaive was
3817 IV| his horse, and fell down plats to his feet, and prayed
3818 I| they together fell down platte to the ground. To whom Joseph
3819 II| I never meddled me with players, ne never had part of them
3820 I| vesture. Thou dancest and playest with thy feet, and I with
3821 II| See how the yonder old man playeth with a bird like a child.
3822 V| victory. He also had a great plea and altercation with the
3823 VII| court of Trygvier, ever pleading without taking any salary
3824 VII| chastity may perish, that is in pleasance of riches, convenable opportunity,
3825 VI| purposed to forsake all worldly pleasancies and to serve Almighty God
3826 I| great delight, and took pleasaunce in their punition; in such
3827 IV| as simple, or without any pleat of falsehood. He was simple
3828 IV| holy martyrs shall be our pledges. And he required them to
3829 VI| words: Ave Maria gratia plena, which words were written
3830 VI| the castle of Bruane named Pleniere which had been long sick
3831 I| fourth chapter: At ubi venit plenitudo temporis, when the plentitude
3832 I| the region of Egypt. The plenteousness and fertility of the seven
3833 I| with a burning sword and pliant, to the end that none should
3834 V| our conning and doctrines plunge and sink into hell, and
3835 I| make we, and to our, in plural number. Man was made to
3836 III| Patricius atque Columba plus, which is for to say in
3837 VII| here it is to wit that the pnest saith three times Agnus
3838 VII| sequences psalms instead of pneuma of Alleluias, and Pope Nicholas
3839 II| had dispended two hundred pods of gold, by which he knew
3840 V| and shortly all that the poet sang and made, or the philosopher
3841 V| he had read the books of poetry and of paynims. And when
3842 V| transported in France in Poictou, and there by his merits
3843 II| and pricked with burning poinlers of iron. And when the blood
3844 II| greffe is properly called a pointel to write in tables of wax,
3845 II| witch. piscine, n., a pool. pois, n., weight. prestly, adv.,
3846 I| certain number, in certain poise and weight, and in certain
3847 VII| her keverchief, iv. 33.~Poisoned bread known by raven, iii.
3848 VII| fire of S. Anthony came to Poissy, thereas S. Louis was born,
3849 III| fagots, and beat him with poles villainously, and when they
3850 VI| noble man that was named Polimius. When the father saw that
3851 IV| upon Christ. Or of in and polis, that is a city. Or Hyppolitus
3852 VII| in ethic, economic, and politic. The first teacheth to inform
3853 IV| Appollinaris is said of pollens, that is, shining, and ares,
3854 IV| virtues. Or it is said of pollo, which is as much to say
3855 IV| A, that is, without, and polluo and ares, that is to say,
3856 II| and were all baptized by Polycarpus the priest unto the number
3857 VII| of the very cross. Item Pompey the Trogan, which was of
3858 V| Augustin which was named Poncian, and recounted to him the
3859 I| upon the floods, rivers, ponds, and upon all the lakes
3860 I| an isle of the sea named Ponthus, to them that will suffer
3861 III| Britain again. In that time S. Pontian sat in the see at Rome,
3862 III| three into an isle called Pontiana, and by this he supposed
3863 VII| grievous sickness, Iying at Pontoise, took the cross with great
3864 I| afford us an insight into he popular religious thought of the
3865 I| Jesu Christ when we sing: Popule meus, where Jesu Christ
3866 III| hath prophesied of him: Populus gentium qui ambulabat in
3867 VII| which was of the country of Porcien. S. Rigobert from the time
3868 VII| then flourished Gilbert Porretanus. Frederick, nephew of Conrad,
3869 VII| He used brown bread and porridge such as commonly use poor
3870 II| crook, saying: Attollite portas principes vestras, etc.,
3871 VI| suo pro tui nominis amore portavit: he bare in his body mortification
3872 V| Thebea centum jacet obruta portis; that is to say: The town
3873 VI| the church of our Lady of Portiuncula. And then the friars received
3874 VII| Bible and his breviary or portos, and so he, made and ordained
3875 VII| should from thence forthon portray ne depict the form or figure
3876 VII| and that the crosses so portrayed and figured, they should
3877 VII| presence of John Bishop of Portuence which as then was minister
3878 VII| living, would see him to be possessor of the dignity of the archbishop.
3879 V| so many tears may not by possibility perish.~And when he had
3880 V| doctrine, and blessed in glory. Possidonius, bishop of Calamente, compiled
3881 V| should go up thereto by a postern towards the east, and they
3882 IV| Vendome, rehearseth in his postils upon this word: Mercy and
3883 III| Purification of Our Lady.~Postquam impleti sunt dies purgationis
3884 II| that time sat tofore the posts of the house of our Lord.
3885 V| place of his pain, and the postume brake, and he received anon
3886 IV| Praxede was sister of S. Potentian which were the sisters of
3887 V| Quia quem celi capere non poterant, tuo gremio contulisti.
3888 I| chapter: Supra quod credi potest universe vastabit; no man
3889 VI| wept much tenderly. The potestate and the provost of the city
3890 IV| both, S. James desired a potful of water of him that should
3891 I| named Asenath, daughter of Poti-phera, priest of Eliopoleos. ~
3892 III| night at a place called Pounte, say a mile from the city
3893 IV| Lord appeared to him at Pountney in France, saying: Thomas,
3894 I| and raised it for witness, pouring oil thereon, and called
3895 II| Peter and S. Paul were pourtrayed, and demanded of him if
3896 VII| Fr.), full.~rassassied, ppl, (Fr. rassassier), satisfied.~
3897 VII| vii. 68.~Bathing never practiced by S. James, iii. 159.~Beams
3898 I| progeniti, prospera vitæ præsentis appetere, adversa devitare,
3899 VII| life perdurable. Quod ipse præstare dignetur qui cum patre et
3900 VII| Domine, ab omnibus malis, praeteritis, praesentibus et futurist.
3901 VII| Domine ab omnibus malis, praeteritris, praesentibus, et futuris,
3902 VII| of thy spouse that thou praisest so much, and she granted
3903 IV| them made a sermon unto the praisirg and laud of Jesu Christ
3904 IV| thirtyeight in a castle named Prato, between Florence and Pistoia,
3905 V| xii. chapter. When thou prayedest with tears and buryedest
3906 I| because that there louings and prayings be given to God, and this
3907 IV| thine old age constantly preachedst our Lord Jesu Christ redeemer
3908 VI| was at Calne, which was a prebend of his, and was solitary
3909 VII| escried and said: The women precede us to the crown of glory,
3910 VII| glory like unto me, but he precedeth me in the order of virginity,
3911 V| as the emperor Augustus precelled all other kings, right so
3912 VI| of that church or of the precinct of the same, should be accursed
3913 VI| locusts, following the holy precursor of our Lord, S. John Baptist.~
3914 VII| Paris, both of the friars predicators and minors, said sometime
3915 IV| a leek. ~prelation, n., preference. ~prest, adj., prepared. ~
3916 I| accordance with the hagiological preferences of the different nationalities.
3917 V| the Apocalypse: Factum est prelium magnum, Apocalypsis duodecimo.
3918 VII| vobiscum, in saying that we prepare or make us ready so that
3919 IV| preference. ~prest, adj., prepared. ~radour, adj., violence. ~
3920 I| reason assigneth Master Prepositivus in the sum of the office
3921 IV| by this be understood six prerogatives which Paul had before the
3922 IV| attacked injured. ~louings, n., pres. part., thanksgivings. ~
3923 I| displeased and determined in his prescience to destroy man that he had
3924 V| which is as much to say as presentation. For he was of the first
3925 I| pray the Father for us, he presenteth them, to the end that the
3926 VI| gainsaying freely, and came presenting to him their chains or irons.
3927 VI| to poor men. The medicine preservative is that which preserveth
3928 VII| merciful they be unto thee, and preserve thee, therefore have pity
3929 VI| treble medicine, curing, preserving, and amending. And this
3930 VII| councillors, he went and presided among them at the least
3931 V| sempiternally with them, quod ipse prestatur, ~qui sine fine vivit et
3932 III| doing the office of the pretoria of the provost of Rome,
3933 VII| should come hastily to his pretorium to Alexandria, and he should
3934 I| he there grew and waxed a pretty child. And as Josephus,
3935 I| manner was semblable to the prevarication by like and contrary. For
3936 IV| Stephen, ought to hold the primacy. Not only for that he suffered
3937 I| Septuagint, and writes ' princeps cocorum.' ~palpation, n.,
3938 IV| dominanations made melody, the principalities harmonised, the potestates
3939 I| themselves, the second were the principals to Jesu Christ that ascended,
3940 II| saying: Attollite portas principes vestras, etc., and anon
3941 I| obscurities by any alteration, on principle; but in this instance, for
3942 IV| Fortunatus: ~It happed at Prioras, a castle in Italy, that
3943 VI| buried, and one of them was prioress of the place ere she died,
3944 I| excellence in divinity, in priority, in situation and circumference.
3945 III| multitude of bishops, abbots, priors and of the clergy, and took
3946 I| of a great cathedral or priory or abbey church, or even
3947 V| enemy is vanquished, and Priscus, her adversary and judge,
3948 VII| many miracles worthy to be prised, befell in divers parts
3949 VII| him to God in all things privable and without confusion in
3950 VII| servants things that he had in privity. On the Ascension-day the
3951 I| bibliographers; but latterly Mr. R. Proctor of the British Museum has
3952 III| Prothase may be said of procul, that is, far, and of stasis,
3953 III| thee to be thy defender and procurer of that which thou wouldst
3954 IV| be his hostess, and his procuress on his journey, and he ofttimes
3955 VII| with the daughter of the procurour. ~In that time the king
3956 I| Sathanae in omnibus verbis et prodigiis mendacibus. Of Antichrist
3957 IV| the miracle and see the prodigy, my brother Timothy, of
3958 I| minds of their makers as to produce the Music Gallery at Exeter,
3959 II| drink of that one, I shall proffer him another, and so the
3960 VII| in manner of a cross, and proffering the last words: I commend
3961 VI| the churchyard he said De profundis for all christian souls.
3962 I| superbi de eadem stirpe progeniti, prospera vitæ præsentis
3963 I| advance them tofore the divine progression. And for this first, they
3964 I| closed, and the rains were prohibited, and forbidden to rain no
3965 IV| Judas the traitor. And S. Projecte, whom the said Stephen had
3966 I| Secondly, because at the prolation and repetition of this canticle,
3967 III| Heu me quia incolatus meus prolongatus est; for when she beginneth
3968 III| all the riches that thou promisest me, and more precious than
3969 VII| charitable that doubtless his promotion was cause of the salvation
3970 VII| friend S. Landry he healed so promptly the foresaid patient.~Upon
3971 V| seen to be the shower and pronouncer of the gospel and of calling
3972 V| among the others. If the proofs of the lineages were failed,
3973 I| given to miscreants, and prophecies to them that believe well
3974 I| Miriam the sister of Aaron, a prophetess, took a timpane in her hand,
3975 III| apostle had four daughters prophetesses, but it is herein more to
3976 VI| collect: Desideratam nobis tuæ propitiationis abundantiam multiplicatis
3977 I| And when he said: Deus propitius esto mihi peccatori, he
3978 VI| sufficient. The fourth thing is proportion, that is to wit, that the
3979 VI| that the lesser pain be proportioned in to greater, for the proper
3980 V| and with voice on high propounced it, whereof Rome marvelled,
3981 II| year he ministered unto proselytes and strangers all the tithe.
3982 VII| beginning, that peace and prospenty might ensue in her realm.
3983 I| eadem stirpe progeniti, prospera vitæ præsentis appetere,
3984 VI| the battle, and shall be protected and kept by the sign of
3985 I| saith: Esto mihi in Deum protectorem. Or she demandeth four things,
3986 VII| that she be our special protectress against all perils of fire,
3987 VII| themselves under his special protecttion, in the hope of avoiding
3988 VII| Prothase. June 19, iii. 228.~Prothurs. September 11, v. 120.~Purification
3989 VII| mayest bring forth a more provable sentence of them that we
3990 VI| the hands of the minister provincial, the very body of our Lord,
3991 VII| people withal, for of all provisions or store I ne have but a
3992 VII| The bishop then by the provocation of the said woman's words
3993 VI| expounded thus: As despising, provoking, or seignioring. He despised
3994 III| be virtuous in faith of prowesse, as it is said in the book
3995 I| mouth of David: Amici mei et proximi, etc.: My friends and my
3996 II| Saul bade him do wisely and prudently. And when he returned from
3997 I| lessons. And thereof saith the Psalmist Sing ye to him in deporting
3998 VI| well the jubilation, the psalmody, and the great melody of
3999 VII| much solemnly in singing, psalmonising and glorifying God, and
4000 I| touching of fingers, as in the psaltery and semblable instruments:
4001 V| he is said unto this day Pterigiontuvrani, that is to say, the wing
4002 I| Shiphrah, and that other Puah, and commanded: When so
4003 I| that common women and the publicans should go before them to
4004 I| certainty, the second to the publication, the third to the reason
4005 VII| called a philosopher which publicly affirmeth and attesteth
|