Volume
1 II| where he was laid in a rich shrine. And in some short time
2 III| in a fair and honourable shrine, where as yet daily our
3 III| a worshipful feretory or shrine, where our Lord showed daily
4 III| Canterbury in a worshipful shrine, whereas our Lord showeth
5 III| and laid in a full rich shrine, whereas our Lord showeth
6 III| laid it in a worshipful shrine, which the abbess and other
7 III| cottage, used also for a shrine or chapel. ~transumeth,
8 IV| translated and put in a shrine in the abbey of Winchester
9 IV| in a fair and much rich shrine. At whose holy translation
10 IV| Kenelm laid in an honourable shrine, whereas our Lord showeth
11 IV| And they said: Go to the shrine where the heads of the martyrs
12 V| and Apollinarius with the shrine, and came nigh unto the
13 V| translated into a feretre or shrine of silver. He flourished
14 V| place. ~chasse, n., box or shrine. ~clock, n., Fr, cloche,
15 VI| toward the making of his shrine.~How his holy body was found
16 VI| carried by water unto the shrine of S. Edward, and to pray
17 VI| matins they came to the shrine also and prayed for this
18 VI| which came that day unto the shrine and heard the same monk
19 VI| in his church in a fair shrine of silver, but when he had
20 VI| make hastily a precious shrine, but he could none have
21 VI| was the body put into a shrine much honourably, made of
22 VI| and laid in a worshipful shrine tofore the high altar in
23 VI| fluent. ~feretre, n., a shrine.~governail, n., Fr.gouvernail
24 VII| church was burnt, and his shrine, which was then but tree,
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