Volume
1 I| brought with him, and for an ox. In that night our Blessed
2 I| speaketh Job: Shall the ox cry and roar when the racke
3 I| when the racke is full? The ox shall not low nor cry when
4 II| destroy man, woman, and child, ox, cow, camel and ass and
5 III| spikes. ~bubale, n., a wild ox. ~bucale, n., shambles. ~
6 IV| half fish, greater than an ox, longer than an horse, having
7 IV| the ass of simpleness, the ox of discretion, and Mary
8 VI| of a lion, the face of an ox and the face of an eagle,
9 VI| left side the face of the ox, and behind the face of
10 VI| Luke was figured in the ox, for he devised about the
11 VI| of the virgin, he was an ox in his passion, a lion in
12 VI| quartan. By the face of an ox it is showed how he was
13 VI| middle, and in the end. The ox is a moral beast and hath
14 VI| figured in the form of an ox, which hath the foot cloven,
15 VI| should have the face of an ox, wherefore the gospel of
16 VI| do make a fire under an ox of brass or copper, and
17 VI| Lord, and entered into the ox, and there yielded up their
18 VII| sheep was as great as an ox, and soon after came to
19 VII| and also there were two ox tongues and a great stone
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