Volume
1 I| to whose clothes angels bow, the stars give virtue,
2 I| the followers of wisdom bow their knees. O blessed tigury
3 I| more prone to slide and bow. And in the form of the
4 I| slain Cain, he with his bow slew the child, and thus
5 I| went thence as far as a bow shot and sat her down, and
6 I| take shine harness, thy bow and quiver with tackles,
7 I| sons of thy mother shall bow down and kneel to thee.
8 I| Amorite with my sword and my bow. Then Jacob called his sons
9 II| this people entered without bow or arrow, shield or sword,
10 II| his hand, and he said a bow. What dost thou withal?
11 II| Then the young man bent his bow and held it in his hand
12 II| more to him he unbent his bow again. Then said the apostle
13 II| Why hast thou unbent thy bow? And he said: Because if
14 II| passed by S. Anthony and his bow in his hand, and beheld
15 II| that he should bend his bow, and so he did, and shot
16 II| and anon he unbent his bow. Then demanded him S. Anthony
17 II| Anthony why he held not his bow bent. And he answered that
18 IV| two trees to incline and bow down, that one against that
19 V| the name of whom all knees bow, in the hands of whom thy
20 V| bring it down again, ne bow it in no manner. And then
21 VI| strait that unnethe he might bow his body.~And on a time
22 VII| Francis, v. 223.~Stratford le Bow, vii. 70.~Strood, no tailed
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