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Volume
4006 IV| Transit ad æthera, virgo puerpera, virgula Jesse, Non sine
4007 I| above the height of all puissances unto where as God the Father
4008 II| he came to this anthem: Pulchra es et decora filia Jerusalem;
4009 I| her soul in cutting and pulling out the vices and the sins,
4010 II| he was come, he felt his pulse, and saw that he was nigh
4011 I| eorum et deficient et in pulverem, etc. Lord God as soon as
4012 III| will in all her works, and purchased by her prayers peace and
4013 I| sinneth he more that doth or purchaseth shame, villany or hurt to
4014 V| and burning in getting and purchasing souls, and thirdly, he was
4015 II| two hundred shields of the purest gold and set them in the
4016 III| Postquam impleti sunt dies purgationis Marie secundum legem Moisi,
4017 VII| perception of the mass. And this purgement or washing may signify the
4018 V| the heart. Secondly, in purging lips by confession, and
4019 IV| this day that which thou purposes" to do then. To whom Julian:
4020 III| all the worship that thou purposest to give me, for shortly,
4021 VI| by strength of arms, and purposeth with all his ships and army
4022 III| in the province of Anjou, purposing to have rested all night
4023 I| out also all coldness and pusillanimity of the hearts, whereof the
4024 I| morn, and then it began to putrify and be full of worms. And
4025 VI| of thy confession, thou puttedst under him worthily the cruelty
4026 IV| orphans. ~pelletre, n,, pyrethrum officinarum, or pellitory
4027 VII| retribuam domino pro omnibus quae retribuit mihi? Calicem
4028 VII| brought tofore him women quaintly arrayed, and he demanded
4029 IV| approached and came near, he quaked and trembled anon and durst
4030 III| sore afeard, and came all quaking to S. Austin and to his
4031 I| that he is formed of four qualities to the body. And to the
4032 V| tres concepisse Marias,~Quas genuere viri Joachim, Cleophas
4033 VII| Saracens at Assisi, vi 167.~---quelled by S Clare, vi. 167.~Satan
4034 IV| recordable, to light not quenchable, to day not evening, to
4035 V| et immaculate virginitas, quibus te laudibus referam nescio.
4036 VII| who by his own blood had quickened or raised from death the
4037 II| weight. prestly, adv., quickly. prise, n., capture ~quarfox,
4038 VII| blood of our Lord and saith: Quid retribuam domino pro omnibus
4039 I| Marci ultimo: Et Dominus quidem, Jesus, etc. Sith that our
4040 VII| world, for to serve God quietly with more devotion, and
4041 VI| Fourthly, how she had no quietness in her heart till she had
4042 VI| name.~Quintin is said of quin, that be five, and of teneo,
4043 VI| father, which was named Quindelor, when he saw that he could
4044 I| people, tribunes, centurions, quinquagenaries, and deans, which at all
4045 VI| and a good town called S. Quintins in Vermandos, where daily
4046 I| Gregory saith of him: Robustos quippe interficiet, et cetera;
4047 VI| years in the town of S. Quirito in the bishopric of Assisi,
4048 V| verses written at his table:~Quisquis amat dictis absentum rodere
4049 I| date, or printer, and until quite lately these particulars
4050 I| shine harness, thy bow and quiver with tackles, and go forth
4051 I| song of gladness, saying: Quomodo cantabimus canticum domini,
4052 VII| his breast saying: Nobis quoque peccatoribus, etc., and
4053 V| temptations without ceasing, for quotidian furnace is our tongue human.
4054 VII| petition is: Panem nostrum quotidianum da nobis hodie, and this
4055 I| Pharaoh two towns, Pithom and Raamses. How much more they oppressed
4056 VII| our Lord seven hundred, Rachortus, King of Frisia, should
4057 II| Solomon had forty thousand racks for the horses of his carts,
4058 VI| Then came a maid named Radegonde, which shone by the beauty
4059 VII| other herbs or beans, or of radish root savoured only with
4060 VII| He set apart all precious raiment, and much dear he held the
4061 I| token thereof I have set my rainbow in the clouds of heaven:
4062 IV| the devil, and when friar Rainer of Lausanne knew it he said
4063 IV| Lord Jesu Christ, which raisedst sometime my well-beloved
4064 VI| was spun for a pound and raked it in the fire, and a certain
4065 II| departed and came in to Ramah. And the spirit of our Lord
4066 II| they went home again in to Ramatha. After this our Lord remembered
4067 I| Egypt in the best soil of Rameses like as Pharaoh had commanded,
4068 I| sheep two hundred, and rams twenty; forty kine and twenty
4069 III| Jaffa, by a town called Ramys, is a chapel of S. George
4070 V| been dead. And when they rang to matins at midnight at
4071 IV| abbot demanded whither he ranne, and he said: My wife is
4072 I| appeared with surprising rapidity. Probably no other book
4073 I| meaning whatever. It has rarely been attempted to clear
4074 VI| her clothes and drew and rased out her hair. And the holy
4075 IV| debonairly believe it, than rashly to explain it, and he proved
4076 III| never ate flesh, ne never rasor touched his head, ne he
4077 VII| full.~rassassied, ppl, (Fr. rassassier), satisfied.~releved, v.
4078 III| they ate their shoes and ratchets. There was a gentlewoman
4079 VI| should repair, praying him to ratify and confirm the same, which
4080 I| heaven material, a heaven rational, a heaven intellectual and
4081 I| reason assigneth Petrus Ravenensis: Jesu Christ would be three
4082 I| as they had not known the ravishment of their sister: We may
4083 IV| among them which was named Raymond. And he said to the ministers:
4084 V| he should leave off or raze away these verses, or go
4085 VI| the devil, he would have razed down that tree, and the
4086 VII| iron, environed with sharp razors, cutting so that she might
4087 IV| Shropshire, Staffordshire, Herefo rdshire, Nottinghamshire, Buckinghamshire,
4088 III| please God, ne I have no fear re dread of death, for we have
4089 III| out of the city the devil re-entered in him again. Then he demanded
4090 IV| read the gospel that thou readest or hearest. There he found
4091 III| Well may he apperceive that readeth his writings how oft he
4092 I| Caxton generally translates, reads 'car il estoit prince des
4093 I| to all those who care to realise to themselves the faith
4094 IV| by itself alone, and it reaped ten times more than any
4095 II| his fields, and mowers and reapers of his corn, and he shall
4096 III| renown. ~repeased, v., reassured.~sacred, v., consecrated. ~
4097 V| praise God.~Friar James of Reaten had passed a flood in a
4098 V| heretics, which namely were rebaptized Donatists and Manicheans;
4099 III| with despitous words and rebukes, whereto the blessed man
4100 V| that I am overcome and am rebutted, and I shall say how, for
4101 VII| the siege of Rheims was recant and void by many years,
4102 V| left the reckonings of his receipts imperfect, and joined him
4103 IV| mother undefouled, which receives the joy of the angels, enjoy
4104 I| Noti mei quasi alieni recesserunt a me: My neighbours that
4105 V| second time, and they were rechased again by the vision of the
4106 VI| medium.~pens, n., wings. ~rechauf, n. tr., kindle spiritually.~
4107 VI| that in praying they should rechaufe their bodies, and that they
4108 II| with the grace of God to recite some of them. Then let us
4109 I| lineage. Against them that reck nothing of this redemption
4110 IV| lap full of eggs, and a reckless fellow struggled and wrestled
4111 V| of the Lord, and left the reckonings of his receipts imperfect,
4112 VII| began for to weep and to reclaim S. Landry saying: O blessed
4113 III| holy body of our Lord and reclined in to her bed, and after
4114 II| world, and entered into a reclusage. And sith after, for the
4115 III| sent to her in which he recommendeth him to her prayers. When
4116 III| Amphiabel saw, and thanked God, recommending to him their souls. And
4117 VII| to the poor folk, as for recompensation of every day that he failed
4118 I| he overcame, a priest in reconciling the human lineage to God
4119 V| the blessed Remigius in recording of Jerome and other doctors
4120 VI| that the blessed Luke had recourse to her like as to the ark
4121 V| away from me treasure not recoverable. And then he bethought himself
4122 VI| and that the healths and recoverings that thou makest and dost,
4123 I| needily, but in delighting and recreating him, and that he should
4124 II| ladders, and then one of them recried and said: Wherefore enforce
4125 IV| to be holy, and was made rector. He was a magician and counselled
4126 I| gentlemen, as the story of the Recuyel of Troy, the Book of the
4127 VII| showeth himself worthy of redargution or rebuke, secondly, he
4128 VII| which thou madest, and redeemedst with thy proper blood. Then
4129 I| all to thee; because thou redeemest me, I owe myself all to
4130 I| vanquished. And what did our Redemptor? He laid out his bait to
4131 VII| Maria, et antiphonam: Alma redemptoris mater et Simon Bariona.
4132 VI| appeared about her neck a redness round about, like to a red
4133 III| to S. Agatha. Quintianus redoubled the bruit of the people,
4134 III| on me, thou oughtest much redoubt and dread the judgment of
4135 VI| which after was found to redound in oil, and many fair miracles
4136 IV| gladness, and his grace redoundeth all in her and maketh all
4137 IV| Say to him that our Lord redresseth them that be hurt, and unbindeth
4138 I| shall be with you, and shall reduce and bring you again into
4139 I| have troubled himself to refer to. Again, in the life of
4140 V| virginitas, quibus te laudibus referam nescio. Quia quem celi capere
4141 V| former. ~refrigery, n., refreshment.~renoinee, n., renown.~rogneth,
4142 II| is to say he was cold and refrigate from all concupiscence of
4143 IV| He had within forth three refroidours or colds, and bare in his
4144 VII| thus to them: Ye see how he refuseth to enter within the ground
4145 VII| forsook the highness of regality and his noble lineage, and
4146 I| hole comen' (whole come), regardless of the fact that it has
4147 V| dread of God diligently, and regenerated her by holy baptism. The
4148 IV| science and in fame was regent in Toulouse in theology,
4149 II| emperor, it is written: Honor regis judicium diligit. The honour
4150 IV| Gregory rehearseth in his register that his predecessor coveted
4151 VII| creature shall mowe thank and regracie God by devout contemplation.
4152 V| and ten.~On a time when Regulus the holy bishop sang mass
4153 V| silence was made, he made rehearsal of his sermon saying that
4154 I| chants of Advent and the rejoicings of Christmas, the penitential
4155 VII| 95.~David's penance as related by Sir J. Capons, ii. 33.~
4156 I| him in the anecdotes he relates in 'The Circumcision of
4157 I| pain temporal is due, he releaseth part. Thirdly, the Holy
4158 IV| understand, giving threatening by relieving of injuries, giving gifts
4159 IV| is to say: Of nativity, religiosity, and of body mortality.
4160 II| called all the clergy, the religiouses, and the people, and warned
4161 III| for a great and a precious relique to King Harry the fifth.
4162 I| grew and augmented unto the remainder of all the lineage. Against
4163 IV| thou art made an orphan and remainest alone. Now he shall no more
4164 V| if it please you, let us remand unto the emperor such words:
4165 II| crucified. Then Constantine remanded to his mother that she should
4166 I| William Caxton.' ~It may be remarked as a curious bibliographical
4167 III| grievous to me that Pilate hath remarried me against my will. Then
4168 VI| Christ, for when any man remembreth the passion of Jesu Christ,
4169 II| name. ~Remigius is said of remi, that is to say feeding,
4170 V| Remigius.~Remigius is said of remige that is a boatman or a rower.
4171 V| rower. Or it is said of remis, which be instruments by
4172 II| the apostle of God that he remise and bring you again to your
4173 IV| The which granted yearly remissions and indulgences so great
4174 III| a virgin, her conscience remorsed her, and fell down to her
4175 V| thy goings and ways not removable, which makest the earth
4176 V| And the first is in to removing all letting to do well and
4177 VII| to be reproved of him. S. Remy writeth that by him was
4178 I| which the translator simply renders 'at name,' and this in later
4179 I| for he shall purge and renew the elements. And, like
4180 V| refrigery, n., refreshment.~renoinee, n., renown.~rogneth, v..
4181 I| exchange for, in place of. renommee. n.. renown. ~sieges, n.,
4182 IV| Lord Jesus said: who that renounceth not all that he hath may
4183 I| and of the reformation and renovation of the spirit of my heart.
4184 VII| with great revenues and rente, in which he many times
4185 VI| torn members vanquished the renting irons. The third difference
4186 V| fleeing the world by perfect renunciation. He was lift up by contemplation
4187 V| red with thy blood, which repairest in heaviness, shining in
4188 V| great pain, and was busy in repairing the church, and sold all
4189 I| formed to that he be the reparation of nine orders of angels,
4190 III| timorous and abashed, anon he repeaced her, saying: Mary, be nothing
4191 II| they should assent to your repeal, they should but a while
4192 III| renomee, n., renown. ~repeased, v., reassured.~sacred,
4193 I| these Litanies we ought to repeat this song of angels: Sancte
4194 II| convenable that he that should repel this default, should be
4195 III| many letters by which thou repelled much folk from doing sacrifice
4196 I| upon this word: Factus est repente de cœlo sonus, etc. At the
4197 VI| that other day that thou repentedst of that thou hadst said
4198 VI| I feel them not, and me repenteth that I drowned not myself
4199 I| because at the prolation and repetition of this canticle, that tribulation
4200 V| doubt. And certainly this replenisher of the privy majesty shone
4201 VI| that all the church was replete thereof as though an odour
4202 I| apostles. As saith S. Luke: Repleti sunt omnes Spiritu Sancto.
4203 I| And they shall not mow reply, but shall then weep upon
4204 V| and without reproach or reprehension in the commandments of our
4205 I| of heaven which is to us represented. For in the fiftieth year
4206 I| fruit, the movings were repressed and closed as in young children.
4207 VII| Legend' from which this reprint was originally made, but
4208 I| book was more frequently reprinted between the years 1470 and
4209 V| the town, they began to reprise the sound like as they had
4210 IV| confessors. The third is in the reprising of the anthems, for he only
4211 III| was infamed, and oft he reprored him and exhorted him to
4212 VII| at once, and refuse and repudiate three times and take them
4213 II| sin to withstand and to repugn against his Lord like the
4214 IV| this reason Master Beleth repugneth the time of martyrdom of
4215 IV| despitously: Stephen, why reputest thou the deeds of my merits
4216 III| all this she despiseth and reputeth them at no value. When Quintianus
4217 VII| the mass finisheth with: Requiescant in pace, and that is at
4218 IV| am named Corone and thou requires" me to lose my coronet When
4219 III| borne Jesu Christ and she resaluted him again, in sign that
4220 II| days, and if God send us no rescue ne help us not in that time
4221 III| of our Lord, because he resembled much well our Lord in body,
4222 VII| destruction of his temple resented by the devil, iii. 86.~Apostles
4223 II| it but not all, I shall reserve to him one tribe for David'
4224 IV| over my flesh, but Christ reserveth my soul. The provost covered
4225 I| with, considering his long residence in French Flanders. Colour
4226 VI| that had consented to his resignation, they marvelled greatly
4227 II| to be cast on her pitch, resin, and boiling oil, and she
4228 V| agreeable whose merit in resisting is to be hoped reward of
4229 IV| earth. And by right, no resolution of rottenness may not follow
4230 IV| shall he reign ever and resolve all the royaumes of the
4231 V| honorem,~Dulcis amor Christi resonet ore pio.~That is to say:
4232 III| great multitude of people resorting to the said river, which
4233 III| and all my arteries should resound in human voice, yet I might
4234 I| a better stone, whereof resoundeth the sound of pity and boileth
4235 V| grew, from thence the life resourded, and the stench is turned
4236 IV| for to eat, better air to respire, and to see light. And when
4237 IV| with these words the woman respired, and took life, and said,
4238 I| Circumdederunt me, and after, in respiring and sighing had asked help
4239 VI| nevertheless to our Lord that he respited her from the death unto
4240 VII| Fiacre in his lifetime resplendished by miracles and virtues,
4241 V| divine company clear in the resplendishour of glory. And enjoy thee
4242 VI| nevertheless though she were resplendissant, well savorous, and right
4243 VII| whom there was one more resplendissent than the other, and when
4244 VII| others, this glorious saint resplendisseth of many miracles. ~On that
4245 I| Its perusal will strike no responsive chord in their hearts. But
4246 V| and right bitter death for restful life. And sith that he had
4247 III| into a place that is called Restis, and there founded he first
4248 I| commandment is bound to make restitution and yield again that he
4249 VI| death, but also thou, Lord, restoredst them again to their own
4250 III| required her of forgiveness and restoring of her sight. Genevieve,
4251 VII| Benet, iii. 88.~Tithes, result of refusing, iii. 199.~Tomb
4252 I| soul and I have power to resume it again. That is to say
4253 I| Johannis vi.: Christus resurgens, etc. ~And S. Denis in an
4254 II| the memory or mind, and retainest that thou shouldest forget.
4255 I| of holy church. For who retaineth wrongfully and without reason
4256 V| Cherubim, and in perpetual retention as touching the thrones.
4257 VI| this he revoked it in his retractions. And the same witnesseth
4258 II| Joab trumped and blew the retreat, and retained the people
4259 VII| our Lord and saith: Quid retribuam domino pro omnibus quae
4260 VII| to say but: What shall I retribue or yield to our Lord of
4261 VII| domino pro omnibus quae retribuit mihi? Calicem salutaris
4262 III| Nereus is said of ne and reus, which is to say no thing
4263 II| again that she would not reveal nor show the secrets of
4264 II| repentant of that, would revenge it, and anon unclothed him
4265 V| and departed wroth, and revenging myself, passed alone through
4266 VII| founded and endowed with great revenue and rents, is showed notorily
4267 VII| founded by him with great revenues and rente, in which he many
4268 VI| homicide, but also because he reverenced not the Sunday and dreaded
4269 VII| God to the people, ere he revesteth him with the chasuble, he
4270 VI| When he was secretly in the revestiary he had no chair, ne no man
4271 I| Sexagesima signifieth the time of revocation. The Quinquagesima signifieth
4272 I| exile is hallowed upon the revolution of seven days and of seven
4273 VII| assembled about the pillar and Rew like as they would have
4274 III| worship of our gods and rewardest it to other by evil interpretation,
4275 VI| a right great place. God rewardeth for one simple, a hundredfold.
4276 I| king in distributing and rewarding every man. Of this second
4277 VI| do well. And when Friar Reynald, which was debonair, came
4278 VII| and these two ox-tongues rhat hang here above me I gave
4279 V| that he was a marvellous rhetorician by eloquence, a sustainer
4280 VII| the great grammarians and rhetoricians that they should come hastily
4281 VII| philosophers, the second to rhetors and logicians, and the third
4282 II| temptation fleshly, and the ribauld also, and deserved to have
4283 V| covetise, that is when the richesse of the world is set tofore
4284 V| Arabia, and it is full of richesses, plenteous of fruit, delectable
4285 V| of the second, lest the rider take harm in his riding
4286 II| make them his carters and riders of his horse in his chariots
4287 II| Philistines went for to rifle and pillage them that were
4288 II| and also said: Thou art rightfuller than I am, thou hast done
4289 II| children, and was to them much rigorous. After he was known of the
4290 VI| bread. She took so great rigour on herself that she waxed
4291 II| sicknesses, for if the leaf or rind of that tree be bound to
4292 IV| Quendred demanded what all this ringing meant. And they told her
4293 II| is to say smiting, and of rio, that is to say master,
4294 V| clerk which was vain and riotous, but always he loved much
4295 III| reverence of dignity, for the ripeness of wisdom, and for the weight
4296 IV| When thou art dead and risest again, then we shall believe,
4297 III| an isle. And by all the rivages whereas they passed, it
4298 I| press of Peter Keyser, a rival of Anthony Vernard at Paris.
4299 V| be a saint, let a sword rive me through my body this
4300 III| Martin whereas she healed rnany demoniacs by prayers and
4301 VII| sea, and then he cried and roared full piteously, cursing
4302 III| smelled the savour of this roast, and brake up the door and
4303 I| S. Gregory saith of him: Robustos quippe interficiet, et cetera;
4304 I| the end of the life of S. Roch: 'which lyfe is translated
4305 V| in his baptism was named Rochus or Rocke.And this Rocke
4306 IV| she was so renewed, and rocked as a child in a cradle.
4307 V| pestilence. For whomsoever Rocketouched, anon the pestilence left
4308 V| Quisquis amat dictis absentum rodere vitam,~Hanc mensam indignam
4309 VI| scorn. And she would in rogation time follow the procession
4310 II| and ordained one master Roger, bishop of Winchester, and
4311 V| here. There was a man named Rogier, and was in Apulia tofore
4312 VII| mayst never withdraw me f'rom Jesu Christ. For like as
4313 IV| duce, luce, loco, dux Nero, Roma locus. That is to say, Paul
4314 VII| Anon one that was called Romancius took him by the hand and
4315 VII| walked through France unto Romania, going and coming by the
4316 VII| all Italy save Rome and Romaniole, which always was adherent
4317 I| than the tales of the Gesta Romanorum or the everliving creations
4318 V| remedies of the passions, rooting out pernicious thorns, cutting
4319 IV| he mounted up by the bell rope into the steeple, and vanished
4320 I| singeth holy Church: Et sui roris aspersione fecundet, where
4321 III| country called the valley Rosine. To whom the angel of God
4322 VII| Et dimitte nobis debita rostra, sicut et nos dimittimus
4323 VI| now called Sancta Maria Rotunda, that is S. Mary the round.
4324 VII| that is to wit, whiteness, roundness, and savour, and not therefore
4325 VII| heaven. And when his brethren roused or stirred him he said:
4326 II| righter, n., executioner. routed, v,, snored. ~sacre, v.,
4327 IV| for that cause she made a row to visit S. Thomas upon
4328 V| instruments by which the ship is rowed and conducted, and of gyon,
4329 V| remige that is a boatman or a rower. Or it is said of remis,
4330 VII| own hands. In the abbey of Royalmont, which he founded and endowed
4331 IV| ever and resolve all the royaumes of the world? To whom Patroclus
4332 II| all still, and walk not ne royle not about in the country,
4333 V| your emperor, and let him rub his eye therewith, and he
4334 IV| thought. And he wailing so ruefully repented him, and they that
4335 III| and wept, and he answered Ruffn, thou knowest not my sorrows,
4336 IV| christian men, Theodorus and Rufinus, wrote their martyrdom and
4337 I| reading, as more or less rugged and obscure. ~Lovers of
4338 VII| catha, that is all, and ruina that is falling, for all
4339 VII| city. And as they came to a ruisel or channel and would have
4340 IV| Askeberd, which was chief ruler about the king, and promised
4341 VI| anybody, his thigh began rumble, and made so great a noise
4342 VI| to say, give. And of rus, ruris, that is, a field. And thus
4343 VI| is to say, give. And of rus, ruris, that is, a field.
4344 I| juncus acutus, the great sea rush. jument. n.. a mare ~kalked,
4345 I| him, took a little crib of rushes and wickers and pitched
4346 VII| the water came from high rushing, and he besought the holy
4347 VII| ate twice. His bread was rustical brown, made of barley or
4348 III| blessed martyrs S. Denis, S. Rustique, and S. Eleuthere which
4349 VII| Judas thanked S. Brandon so ruthfully, that it was pity to see,
4350 IV| of Flanders named Stephen Rysen, and mounted in so great
4351 I| his noblesse, whereof is sa persevered not; for he made
4352 VI| was born in the castle of Sabaria in the country of Pannonia,
4353 II| the days of her life save Sabbaths and of new moons, and the
4354 II| by them, and the men of Sabea ran on them, and smote thy
4355 VII| And when Gregory was dead Sabine succeeded after him, and
4356 I| factus est niger tanquam saccus cilicinus: et luna facta
4357 VII| spake not. And after took a sackful of gravel and bare it behind
4358 VII| sent from heaven, iii. 104.~Sacraros or Goat-man, ii. 206.~Saracens
4359 II| snored. ~sacre, v., Fr. sacrer, to consecrate. siffled,
4360 VI| understood, and it is a beast sacrificeable. And truly, how that Luke
4361 III| found there of her people sacrificing the idols, which prayed
4362 V| Misericordiam volo et non sacrificium, etcetera. And also they
4363 VI| him, he entered into the sacristy and did off his own coat,
4364 VI| I remember me that thou saddest to me: Thee behoveth to
4365 VI| surely, thou hast a good safeconduct. And when one of her sisters,
4366 VII| Dane, vi. 243.~Humility a safeguard againat the devil, ii. 218.~
4367 VII| hath done assemble so many sages, and from so far countries,
4368 VI| notwithstanding I will go to Sahsbury and take counsel of my fellows
4369 VI| which the ship of our Lady saileth, and our souls use the office
4370 III| him anon to strike their sails for they were nigh land,
4371 V| name.~Savien may be said of sale, which is as much to say
4372 V| to his house because of Sallustia his wife, which had lain
4373 V| genuere viri Joachim, Cleophas Salomeque.~Has duxere viri Joseph,
4374 II| way, and the remnant they salted, that it might suffice them
4375 III| arms were of azure with a saltire of gold, which arms afterward
4376 III| set it in his house named Saltus. And when the Queen of Sheba
4377 I| et legifer noster veni ad saluandum nos, domine deus noster,
4378 III| Scripture in no part such a saluing. And it was brought from
4379 VII| id est vita, ya, id est salus. Alleluya then, by the same
4380 IV| Decius, in the palace of Salustine, and said: These here be
4381 I| Nunc viderunt oculi mei salutare tuum: I have now seen with
4382 VII| saith: Oremus. Praecepti salutaribus moniti, etc., and here he
4383 VII| retribuit mihi? Calicem salutaris accipiam et nomen domini
4384 VII| vobiscum, and these two last salutes may represent and signify
4385 I| O Rex gentium, veni et salva hominem quem de limo formasti,
4386 VII| heaven: Sponsus amat sponsam, salvator visitat illam, with so great
4387 VII| Bishop of Compostella made Salve Regina, and as Sigebert
4388 VII| thus: Alleluia, id est, salvum me fac domine, Sir, save
4389 IV| our Lord in the Jewry and Samaria, and after, he was sent
4390 VI| it is the water that the Samaritan required of our Lord to
4391 IV| avenge our Lord, for when the Samaritans would not receive Jesu Christ,
4392 VII| sed tantum dic verbo, et sanabitur anima mea. It is as much
4393 III| written this scripture: Mentem sanctam, spontaneam, honorem deo
4394 VII| beginneth: Placeat tibi sanctaTrinitas. That is as much for to
4395 VII| vestra servire justitiae in sanctificationem, that is to say: As ye have
4396 II| There be three manners of sanctifications, the first is common, and
4397 VII| the chalice, saying: Veni sanctificator, etc., that is at much to
4398 VII| noster qui es in coelis, sanctificetur nomen tuum, that is as much
4399 I| he saith Holy, because he sanctifieth and maketh clean, and it
4400 VII| sancto. Prima suam carnem. Sanctosque secunda sepultos. Tertia
4401 IV| dialogues that a priest named Sanctulus repaired a church of S.
4402 III| water spring up in the hot sandy ground, and so high on the
4403 IV| he said to Ananias and Saphira their death before; he healed
4404 I| Whereof saith the wise man, Sapientiæ xii.: O quam bonus et suavis,
4405 II| Jerusalem shall be edified of sapphire and emerald, and all the
4406 V| Augustin and brought it into Sardinia. And after that, two hundred
4407 IV| the Ethiopians, and the Saromates and the Saracens, and moreover
4408 IV| he found it whole in his satchel. ~Also the same Calixtus
4409 I| erit secundum operationem Sathanae in omnibus verbis et prodigiis
4410 VI| may not be fulfilled ne satiate with them that they devour.
4411 IV| And a little while after Satirus the bishop died in our Lord,
4412 VI| proper pain of the sinner satisfieth more to God than of a stranger,
4413 VII| name.~Saturnine is said of saturare, that is to be filled, and
4414 II| how mechantly they died. Saturnus whom ye worship for god
4415 VII| and said: Why doubt you to saute and befight your enemy so
4416 II| of divers beasts wild and savage, of whom that one howled,
4417 VII| three children that thou savedst from the chimney of fire,
4418 VII| August 16. v. 1.~Sabina. See Savine.~Saturnine. November 29,
4419 VII| Saul, ii. 2.~Savien, or Savinien. August 29, v. 79.~Savina.
4420 V| sister were children of Savininus, a right noble paynim. and
4421 VI| were resplendissant, well savorous, and right full of great
4422 III| her in humility without savouring anything of pride for the
4423 III| never salt to make his meat savoury. And two times in the year
4424 IV| devils and departed and sawn asunder, and that one part
4425 V| the detractors and evil sayers, and said that, ne strange
4426 IV| or senex as old, as who says he was old in wit. ~
4427 VII| joys of heaven. And in a sbort time after he being full
4428 VI| beclipped with his foul and scabby hands and arms, and so,
4429 III| church, and went up on a scaffold, and made the people to
4430 IV| he commanded to cast hot scalding water in his fresh wounds,
4431 II| habergeon, n., coat of scale armour. hallows, n., saints
4432 II| spiders. squames, n., scales. stagne, n., Fr. etang,
4433 II| thine habit so that thou scandal not others. He feigning
4434 VII| the north from the isle of Scandinavia, and environed many countries
4435 VI| effusion of blood, that is scarceness in plenty, which David had,
4436 III| into the temple for to do scarifice to the idols; and when he
4437 III| name was he called Judas Scariotes. Now it happed that the
4438 III| arrive in an island named Scarioth, and of this name was he
4439 VII| relief. Also he would not use scarlet, ne gowns of rich cloth,
4440 VI| them out without hurt or scathe, which thing when Rictius
4441 II| ignis, Dæmonis aspectus, scelerum confusio, luctus. ~that
4442 VI| And on a time there were schedules laid on the altar, and in
4443 VII| See, and this discord and schism endured eighteen years,
4444 II| And some say that he was a schoolmaster and taught children, and
4445 I| esset bonum, quia in proximo sciebat eum lapsurum. For yet he
4446 VI| Greek as measure, and of scio, scis, that is, to know.
4447 VI| as measure, and of scio, scis, that is, to know. And thus
4448 IV| which afterward went into Sclavonia, and there preached the
4449 I| groin. ~jape, n., jest or scoff. jonkes of the sea, n,,
4450 II| beseech. ~japes, n., jests or scoffs. ~kele, v., cool. ~maleurte,
4451 VII| Floriacence and the body of S. Scolastica his sister was brought to
4452 VII| Fiacre, of the nation of Scots, being in his country, and
4453 V| the same saith Johannes Scotus in an epistle to Charles,
4454 III| God and have need of the scourging of God; and then S. Lupus
4455 VI| and then she arose and scraped her vesture and laughed. ~
4456 II| with her nails began to scratch her face, and beat her breast
4457 VI| her hair in great sorrow, scratching her paps with her nails,
4458 VI| martyrs knew all the craft of sculpture or of carving, and Diocletian
4459 I| made things for war, and sculptures and gravings in metal to
4460 I| in the tongue and ears is scurrility, in the natural members,
4461 VI| botches of his face, and of scurvies, there ran great plenty
4462 II| devil came with a great scythe on his neck, and would have
4463 IV| Media, the Indians, the Scythians, the Ethiopians, and the
4464 I| Philippenses; Humiliavit se ipsum. Thirdly, Jesus was
4465 VII| probably for this reason that seafarers placed themselves under
4466 VII| names of, i. 31.~Christ's seamless coat, marvellous effect
4467 VII| in, ii. 144.~Inquisition searches out heretics, iii. 150.~
4468 III| Cappadocia of the city of Sebaste chose him to be a bishop.
4469 II| and with death life. Or Sebastianus is said of basto, for by
4470 IV| much to say as good, and sebe, that is, eloquence or station.
4471 V| he went over the river of Secana he prayed our Lord that
4472 VII| that sang the mass, and the secretary of the emperor, said that
4473 VI| to her and discovered her secretness to her and will, and said
4474 VII| prophet, saying: Detrahentem secreto proximo suo hunc persequebar;
4475 II| specially strange women of other sects; as king Pharaoh's daughters
4476 VI| laud, and glory in secula secuIorum. Amen.~
4477 V| and Alexander to Pergamos, Secundus unto Ventimiglia, and Victor,
4478 I| eterne, veni et illumina sedentes in tenebris et umbra mortis,
4479 I| Isaiah saith: Cœlum mihi sedes est. Our Lord saith that
4480 V| which is clarte, and of sedio sedis to sit, for he sitteth
4481 V| is clarte, and of sedio sedis to sit, for he sitteth in
4482 V| spread more ardently the seeds of the Word of God, and
4483 | seeming
4484 II| And on a time when the sees of London and of Winchester
4485 VII| man to be put into a pan seething with rosin, pitch, brimstone
4486 VI| despising, provoking, or seignioring. He despised the devil his
4487 II| despoiled all his manors and seized them into the king's hand.
4488 IV| Paul. And Ethea my wife and Selimus my son, which would not
4489 VII| worshipping of idols, count selled her father, her mother,
4490 II| said: Thou wert like and semblest well thy father. Alas! to
4491 III| nourishing, and reason of semence or seed. Germain is said
4492 VII| as lilies before God, in sempiterna secula, where we all may
4493 V| there to dwell and ~abide sempiternally with them, quod ipse prestatur, ~
4494 VII| last Agnus Dona eis requiem sempiternam. ~After this the priest
4495 II| the habit of a brother of Sempringham, and so chevissed that he
4496 I| in three manners to the sender. First, as he that giveth
4497 IV| some. He slew his master Seneca because he was afraid of
4498 IV| is Sennen as in wit, or senex as old, as who says he was
4499 VII| top of his head unto the sengles or girths of the horse.
4500 IV| martyrdom. Sennen is said of senos in Greek, which is as much
4501 II| his left side the city of Sepheth, was taken in the days of
4502 VII| carnem. Sanctosque secunda sepultos. Tertia viventes, haec est
4503 VII| Abbot of S. Gall, made the sequences psalms instead of pneuma
4504 II| name. ~Sebastian is said of sequens and beatitudo, and astim
4505 VII| place of God and saith: Sequentia sancti evangelii, et cetera,
|