1-500 | 501-1000 | 1001-1500 | 1501-1835
Volume
1 I| been deeply indebted to the man who thus embodied for their
2 I| labour of monks that, no man strong or mighty to labour
3 I| taken by the reason of the man that first was vanquished
4 I| Son of God in time when man was vanquished of ignorance
5 I| come tofore, peradventure man might say that by his own
6 I| peoples come and save the man that thou hast formed of
7 I| be then so dark that no man shall dare know him. The
8 I| potest universe vastabit; no man shall believe how he shall
9 I| esteemed and trowed a dead man, and shall blame themselves
10 I| your sake I made myself a man, f what good then we should
11 I| God, but from God may no man appeal, for he hath none
12 I| Emperor commanded that every man should go into the towns,
13 I| that God would not become man for that sin. In this time
14 I| Christ insomuch as he is a man taken of a person divine
15 I| distributing and rewarding every man. Of this second name we
16 I| saith thus: Every christian man ought to be c puissance
17 I| sacrifice, and then is the man verily circumcised, not
18 I| spring out of Jacob, and a man shall arise of the lineage
19 I| confessed this child very man, very King, and very God.
20 I| King, and very God. Very man when they said where is
21 I| ancient ordinance was that no man should come to God ne to
22 I| by ten is understood the man, which is the tenth penny
23 I| mysteries, by the which the man is redeemed by Jesu Christ,
24 I| sight given to the blind man which be contained in the
25 I| God. For without faith no man may please God, and the
26 I| into four times, and the man of four elements and four
27 I| fourth reason is because the man is composed of four elements
28 I| melancholy. The melancholious man naturally is cold, covetous
29 I| they said that he was a man sinner and deceiver in his
30 I| He saith thus: Thou art a man and hast a chaplet of flowers,
31 I| sharp ne more strong that a man may suffer by his proper
32 I| the honour of God. Ne no man may better give to God to
33 I| or that is to say God and man, he was himself that did
34 I| by a woman he was born a man, and the man delivered the
35 I| was born a man, and the man delivered the men. One mortal
36 I| wisdom hath smitten the proud man, and after, may ye not take
37 I| persuasion of some Christian man, caused the Emperor to despoil
38 I| this is by mystery. For man first overthrew in the day
39 I| ascension said to an holy man named Carpo, I am all ready
40 I| yet to suffer for to save man; by which it seemeth that
41 I| same epistle. This holy man, Carpo, told to S. Denis
42 I| paynim perverted a Christian man and brought him out of the
43 I| villained. And this holy man Carpo in beholding them
44 I| ready to suffer for to save man. This ensample reciteth
45 I| arose from death, for by man is death come to men, and
46 I| death come to men, and by man, that is Jesu Christ, the
47 I| Thirdly, because that every man should mortify in himself
48 I| And also S. John saith: No man ascendeth into heaven by
49 I| and might, but the Son of Man that is in heaven. And how
50 I| Enoch, was engendered of a man, and he was engendering.
51 I| born, not engendered of a man ne engendering. Secondly,
52 I| I go so openly that no man demanded of that they saw
53 I| seven hundred years if a man might live so long, and
54 I| right thou hast delivered man, and I have withholden of
55 I| heaven reasonable is the man just, which is said just
56 I| the soul of a righteous man. Like as Solomon saith:
57 I| The soul of a righteous man is the seat of sapience,
58 I| surety saith S. Bernard: O man, saith he, we have a sure
59 I| for to be worshipped of man, Apocalypsis xix. S. John
60 I| not to be worshipped of man, but after the Ascension,
61 I| the Ascension, when he saw man lift up above him. And of
62 I| Whereof saith the wise man, Sapientiæ xii.: O quam
63 I| light to be shed into a man, he is most swift of anything
64 I| might not breathe, anon the man should die. And thus should
65 I| The miracles maketh not a man holy, but show him holy,
66 I| him holy, nor also every man that doth miracles hath
67 I| fiends. The good christian man by justice public, the evil
68 I| public, the evil christian man by signs of justice. Secondly,
69 I| whereof saith the wise man; Lord God who shall know
70 I| be mastered and ruled by man, but the tongue may not
71 I| And thus the spirit of man giveth not life to the members
72 I| Hosea ii.: I shall lead man's soul into a solitary place
73 I| Ghost. Like as the wise man saith: I have prayed God
74 I| end that making himself man, he would make men as gods.
75 I| athirst, but thou christian man, when thou hast drunk of
76 I| conceive by the seed of man; but the Virgin Mary engendered
77 I| might not be seen of no man, whereof the people had
78 I| from the which he exiled man because he brake his commandments;
79 I| cursed with his fruit because man was deceived by fruit, and
80 I| Antiochus was the most proud man and the most covetous, and
81 I| The thought of an holy man should be confused in sorrow,
82 I| Faciamus hominem, etc. Make we man unto our similitude and
83 I| to our, in plural number. Man was made to the image of
84 I| and female. God gave to man the lordship and power upon
85 I| beasts. When God had made man it is not written: Et vidit
86 I| read: It is not good the man to be alone. Thus in six
87 I| desire and delices. And man was made in the field of
88 I| meet again. ~Then God took man from the place of his creation
89 I| commandment was given to the man, and by the man it went
90 I| given to the man, and by the man it went to the woman. For
91 I| God said: It is not good a man to be alone, make we to
92 I| causes, one was because man should give to each of them
93 I| much as to say as made of a man, and is a name taken of
94 I| and is a name taken of a man. And anon, the name giving,
95 I| is taken of the side of a man, therefore a man shall forsake
96 I| side of a man, therefore a man shall forsake and leave
97 I| heaven, had great envy to man that was bodily in Paradise,
98 I| be taken or espied of the man, he went to the woman, not
99 I| the serpent was erect as a man. Bede saith that he chose
100 I| them. Our Lord called the man and said: Adam, where art
101 I| than he, but more than the man, for she sinned in two things.
102 I| sinned in two things. The man sinned last and least, for
103 I| envy at the excellence of man, it was said to him: Thou
104 I| shalt be under the power of man, and he shall have lordship
105 I| Now is she subject to a man by condition and dread,
106 I| seldom, and also none without man's labour, and also sometime
107 I| made, he was made a perfect man as a man of thirty years
108 I| made a perfect man as a man of thirty years of age when
109 I| God. This Seth was a good man, and he gat Enos, and Enos
110 I| thousand, etc. ~Noah then was a man perfect and righteous and
111 I| his prescience to destroy man that he had made, and said:
112 I| made, and said: I shall put man away that I have made, and
113 I| spirit shall not abide in man for ever, for he is flesh.
114 I| said, I shall not punish man perpetually as I do the
115 I| perpetually as I do the devil, for man is frail, and yet ere I
116 I| corrupt, and that every man was corrupt by sin upon
117 I| was on the earth living, man, woman, and beast and birds.
118 I| not curse the earth for man, for he is prone and ready
119 I| I shall no more destroy man by such vengeance. And then
120 I| I command you to slay no man, nor to shed no man's blood.
121 I| slay no man, nor to shed no man's blood. I have made man
122 I| man's blood. I have made man after mine image. Whosomever
123 I| came, which was a wicked man and cursed in his works,
124 I| languages, in such wise that no man understood other. For tofore
125 I| This Nimrod was the first man that found mawmetry and
126 I| purveyed for her, that no man had power to use any lechery
127 I| and all his goods. And a man gat away from them and came
128 I| Ishmael. He shall be a fierce man, he shall be against all
129 I| destroy the just and righteous man with the wicked sinner.
130 I| virgins, which yet never knew man. I shall bring them out
131 I| is old, and there is no man left on the earth living
132 I| Lord, wilt thou slay a man ignorant and rightful? She
133 I| and became there a young man and an archer, and dwelled
134 I| spelunke. ~Abraham was an old man, and God blessed him in
135 I| beauteous and unknown to the man. She went down to the well
136 I| and lightly took t that man, she said: Yea, I shall
137 I| to thee than to a strange man; dwell and abide with me,
138 I| following, him thought a man wrestled with him all that
139 I| ne give our sister to a man uncircumcised. it is a thing
140 I| and grievous to the young man, and he always forsook and
141 I| let the king provide for a man that is wise and witty,
142 I| Where should we find such a, man as this is, which is fulfilled
143 I| thy commandment shall no man move hand nor foot in all
144 I| out the wheat, and every man found his money bounden
145 I| live. Judah answered: That man said to us, under swearing
146 I| not we shall not go. The man said as we oft have said
147 I| And they answered: The man demanded of us by order
148 I| give ye and present to that man gifts, a little raisins,
149 I| prison; I shall be as a man barren therewhiles, without
150 I| wheat put it in to every man's sack, and take my cup
151 I| not ye that there is no man like to me in the science
152 I| lord: Our father is an old man and we have a brother a
153 I| come to the presence of the man; and he answered to us:
154 I| heard this he awoke as a man had been awaked suddenly
155 I| the land of Egypt, every man selling his possessions
156 I| live. ~After this was a man of the house of Levi went
157 I| affliction of them and a man of Egypt smiting one of
158 I| hither and thither and saw no man. He smote the Egyptian and
159 I| to do? They said that a man of Egypt hath delivered
160 I| said he, why left ye the man after you' go call him that
161 I| Who made the mouth of a man, or who hath made a man
162 I| man, or who hath made a man dumb or deaf, seeing or
163 I| all the people that every man borrow of his friend, and
164 I| God commandeth that every man should gather as much for
165 I| be tolben; whether it be man or beast, he shall not live.
166 I| the ten commandments every man is bounden to know. And
167 I| good cause and rightful a man may swear without sin, as
168 I| and by deliberation, but a man should swear truly and yet
169 I| This commandment may no man keep spiritually that is
170 I| that thou shalt slay no man. This commandment will that
171 I| commandment will that no man shall slay the other for
172 I| fleshly company with another man's wife. In this commandment
173 I| commandment is forbidden that no man shall lie wittingly, for
174 I| to him, and he bade each man take a sword on his side
175 I| taught them the law; how each man should behave him against
176 I| and commanded that every man should bring a rod into
177 I| humblest and the meekest man that was in all the world.
178 I| Beth-peor. And yet never man knew his sepulchre unto
179 II| with the stones than with man's hand. ~Joshua was a noble
180 II| hand. ~Joshua was a noble man and governed well Israel,
181 II| mention that there was a man named Elkanah which had
182 II| but was barren. The good man at such days as he was bounden,
183 II| there should not be an old man in his house and kindred,
184 II| should die ere they came to man's estate, and that God should
185 II| Hophni and Phineas. And a man of the tribe of Benjamin
186 II| tidings of the battle. This man, as soon as he entered into
187 II| they so sorrowed. Then the man hied and came and told to
188 II| there died. He was an old man and had judged Israel forty
189 II| cities, and smote every man with plague from the most
190 II| so he did, for he took a man of the tribe of Benjamin
191 II| whose name was Saul, a good man and chosen, and there was
192 II| should slay and destroy man, woman, and child, ox, cow,
193 II| Amalek and leave none alive, man ne beast; why hast thou
194 II| said they should choose a man to fight a singular battle
195 II| greatly. Then there was a rich man in the mount of Carmel that
196 II| David to his men: Let every man take his sword and gird
197 II| to Abner: Art thou not a man and there is none like thee
198 II| Lord shall reward to every man after his justice and faith.
199 II| David said to the young man that brought these tidings:
200 II| David said to the young man: Of whence art thou? And
201 II| that other poor. The rich man had sheep and oxen right
202 II| right many, but the poor man had but one little sheep,
203 II| pilgrim came to the rich man, he, sparing his own sheep
204 II| the only sheep of the poor man and made meat thereof to
205 II| By the living God, the man that hath so done is the
206 II| the child of death, the man that hath so done shall
207 II| David: Thou art the same man that hath done this thing.
208 II| Absalom was the fairest man that ever was, for from
209 II| thou not slain him? The man said: God forbid that I
210 II| after, one Sheba, a cursed man, rebelled and gathered people
211 II| This David was an holy man and made the holy psalter,
212 II| for him, for he had shed man's blood. But God said to
213 II| reign after him should be a man peaceable, and he should
214 II| in the beginning a good man and walked in the ways and
215 II| shall not be taken away a man of thy generation from the
216 II| be to all people; every man that shall go thereby shall
217 II| this evil: here may every man take ensample how perilous
218 II| had given to him. Every man brought to him gifts, vessels
219 II| September. ~There was a man in the land of Uz named
220 II| of Uz named Job, and this man was simple, rightful and
221 II| and great. He was a great man and rich among all the men
222 II| unto him in the earth, a man simple, rightful, dreading
223 II| servant Job that there is no man like him in the earth, a
224 II| like him in the earth, a man simple, rightful, dreading
225 II| skin, and all that ever a man hath he shall give for his
226 II| and seven nights, and no man spake to him a word, seeing
227 II| generation, and died an old man, and full of days. ~
228 II| he came to age and was a man he took a wife named Anna,
229 II| Lord, that I never desired man, but I have kept clean my
230 II| and kept me for some other man. Thy counsel is not in man'
231 II| man. Thy counsel is not in man's power. This knoweth every
232 II| power. This knoweth every man that worshippeth thee, for
233 II| never thy face from any poor man, so do that God turn not
234 II| necessity, for alms delivereth a man from all sin and from death,
235 II| sepulture of a righteous man, but eat it not ne drink
236 II| demand counsel of a wise man. Always and in every time
237 II| seek for thee some true man, that for his hire shall
238 II| forth and found a fair young man girt up and ready for to
239 II| have we thee, good young man? And he answered: Of the
240 II| kind of devils, be it from man or from woman, in such wise
241 II| answered and said: Hereby is a man named Raguel, a man nigh
242 II| is a man named Raguel, a man nigh to thy kindred and
243 II| How like is this young man unto my cousin! And when
244 II| is father of this young man. And then went Raguel, and
245 II| son of a blessed and good man. And Anna his wife and Sara
246 II| might happen to this young man in like wise. And when he
247 II| give thy daughter to this man dreading God, for to him
248 II| supped, they led the young man to her. Tobias remembered
249 II| which he trowed had been a man, and said to him: Azarias,
250 II| thou art son of the best man and just, dreading God and
251 II| that Gabael be dead, and no man is there that shall give
252 II| son is safe enough, the man is true and faithful enough
253 II| that was done to him by the man that led him. Then came
254 II| may we give to this holy man that cometh with thee? Then
255 II| purgeth sins and maketh a man to find everlasting life.
256 II| for them, and there is no man may prevail against this
257 II| all and slain them as one man, then shalt thou die with
258 II| shall not threaten as a man, ne inflame in wrath as
259 II| inflame in wrath as a son of a man, therefore meek we our souls
260 II| them, in such wise as one man of his host shall not perish.
261 II| I never grieved ne noyed man that would serve Nebuchadnezzar.
262 II| great feast, and sent a man of his which was gelded,
263 II| at the sun rising every man in his arms issue out upon
264 II| on the walls, and every man took his arms and went out
265 II| he should awake, but no man was so hardy to knock or
266 II| left, so much that every man from the most to the least
267 II| chastity and knewest no man after the death of thy husband,
268 II| chastity, so that she knew no man all the days of her life
269 II| that Andrew is to say, a man highly converted, and in
270 II| It was so that a young man came and followed S. Andrew,
271 II| passed and ceased. ~An old man called Nicholas by name,
272 II| said: Go hence thou old man, for thou art an angel of
273 II| shall have pity of this old man. And when he had fasted
274 II| request is granted for the old man, for like as thou hast fasted
275 II| lost. ~A young christian man said to S. Andrew: My mother
276 II| and accompanied with this man, he would have done his
277 II| grieve ne do harm to any man; and anon they vanished
278 II| was brought out a young man dead. The apostle demanded
279 II| Forasmuch as the first man that deserved death was
280 II| convenable that the second man should put away that death,
281 II| Christ had not been dead, man had never been made immortal.
282 II| AEgeas, and said: The holy man and debonair ought not to
283 II| hour, in such wise that no man might see him. And when
284 II| and holy thought, make a man clean. And the doctors of
285 II| sustained. And when the holy man Nicholas knew hereof he
286 II| secretly into the house of the man a mass of gold wrapped in
287 II| in a cloth. And when the man arose in the morning, he
288 II| mass of gold, which the man found, and thanked God,
289 II| it into the house of this man. He awoke by the sound of
290 II| kissed his feet, but the holy man would not, but required
291 II| prove them now. And anon a man appeared in his likeness,
292 II| they knew him without any man to show him to them, and
293 II| failed. And then this holy man heard say that certain ships
294 II| Alexandria. And the holy man said to them: Do this that
295 II| Nicholas. Then this holy man distributed the wheat to
296 II| distributed the wheat to every man after that he had need,
297 II| to the time of this holy man, many of them had some customs
298 II| sacred tree; but this good man made them of all the country
299 II| would fain go to this holy man, but I may not, wherefore
300 II| Then they came to this holy man and said to him: Verily
301 II| saluted him: and this holy man having this salutation in
302 II| to them: know ye well a man named Nicholas? And when
303 II| the prayer of this holy man, and worship ye him; and
304 II| princes went unto the holy man, and fell down on their
305 II| him in his see succeeded a man of good and holy life, which
306 II| eightyseven. ~There was a man that had borrowed of a Jew
307 II| none other pledge. And this man held this money so long,
308 II| the way of Jesu Christ. A man, for the love of his son,
309 II| There was another rich man that by the merits of S.
310 II| God gave. And this rich man did do make a chapel of
311 II| and found there a good man that believed in God, but
312 II| ye would give me with a man, I pray you that ye will
313 II| a miscreant and heathen man. And it was because she
314 II| understand it. Then the holy man set him to prayer, and while
315 II| martyred, and saw that no man made her ready to be martyred,
316 II| Lord said to him: Young man, what wilt thou buy? and
317 II| teacheth, which saith: If any man smiteth thee on that one
318 II| in the hand of the young man that was married, a branch
319 II| said to his brother: This man that thou intendest to slay
320 II| The first example in a man is wisdom, and thereof cometh
321 II| things be in the head of a man, hearing, seeing, and tasting
322 II| things avail not to the sick man but if he take and receive
323 II| nothing to a languishing sick man, if he hear it not devoutly.
324 II| Syrians. And in this city no man might harbor Jew, ne paynim,
325 II| the habit and array of a man, in which abbey she Ied
326 II| same. It happed so that no man knew that she was a woman,
327 II| in the same book that a man that was master of a city,
328 II| law that was a right good man, came into the church of
329 II| country they went, ever each man beheld them. And it happed
330 II| master Jesu Christ said to a man that demanded of him how
331 II| homo, etc.: Vainly is the man distroubled which assembleth
332 II| into it. And to a meschant man it sufficeth not when he
333 II| brought tofore him a young man dead, which only had been
334 II| Cassiodorus saith that a man had given to S. John a partridge
335 II| recreation. And on a time a young man passed by with his fellowship
336 II| See how the yonder old man playeth with a bird like
337 II| said, and called the young man to him and demanded him
338 II| said S. John. And the young man said: We shoot birds and
339 II| what manner. Then the young man bent his bow and held it
340 II| brought again the soul a young man into his body, he drank
341 II| Gilbert was a good devout man, and took the cross upon
342 II| And thus departed each man. And S. Thomas went to Winchester,
343 II| Louis said that, though a man were banished and had committed
344 II| he was not so perfect a man as he had supposed, for
345 II| still, and said he knew no man more able than he was. And
346 II| mouldy and hoar, that no man might eat of it, and the
347 II| Certainly he was a good man; and coming down into the
348 II| he received a christian man into his house named Timothy,
349 II| house named Timothy, who no man would receive for the persecution
350 II| Silvester answered: False, evil man, thou shalt die this night,
351 II| the Jews, and worshipped a man crucified. Then Constantine
352 II| strength to slay a bull, for a man, or a lion, or a serpent
353 II| and fifty-six. This holy man, S. Paul, saw men for christian
354 II| solemn feasts. Thus this holy man S. Paul died in the year
355 II| all France, there was a man recluse, holy and virtuous,
356 II| come, he commanded that no man should arise against him,
357 II| when it was day this holy man S. Savin summoned the clergy
358 II| devil in the habit of a man, which was the clothing
359 II| his way the head of a dead man, and he demanded of it whose
360 II| it was in no way for any man to pass, and also if it
361 II| if it had fallen from any man he should have heard it
362 II| himself that he had seen a man so great and so high that
363 II| reigneth over all. ~A young man passed by S. Anthony and
364 II| strong to serve God. ~A man demanded of S. Anthony what
365 II| hermits: Ye have a good wise man with you, and after he said
366 II| to heaven, and this great man retained and caught some,
367 II| mischance hastily. The unhappy man received this letter and
368 II| for to be pope. This holy man Fabian, after when he was
369 II| Sebastian. ~S. Sebastian was a man of great faith, a good christian
370 II| faith, a good christian man, and was born in Narbonne,
371 II| Tranquillinus said: Gentle man, if thou wilt justly adore
372 II| that adorest this cursed man, and sayest to the image
373 II| body and the soul make a man, like as the gold and the
374 II| much more precious is the man to Jesu Christ than the
375 II| humbled himself for to save man, may in no wise escape from
376 II| which was a noble young man, said plainly that so noble
377 II| than tofore, and an holy man named Fortunatus by his
378 II| it happed that the young man was ardently esprised in
379 II| of my God. When the young man had heard all this he was
380 II| clearness in such wise that no man might see her ne come to
381 II| be his wife. This simple man did so, and the image put
382 II| she left the desires of man's fellowship, and she found
383 II| exile, and Vincent as a man presumptuous and despitous
384 II| Vincent said to him: O unhappy man, how weenest thou to anger
385 II| me. Arise up thou unhappy man and cursed, and by thy wicked
386 II| day of Epiphany so noble a man, and when he saw him, he
387 II| was an honest worshipful man named Heradius which had
388 II| thy desire; and the young man said he would so do. And
389 II| send to thee this young man, esprised in the love of
390 II| schedule he said to the young man: Wilt thou believe in me
391 II| in the love of that young man. The which came to her and
392 II| in the love of that young man that she fell down to the
393 II| me in marriage the young man that I desire, and if ye
394 II| married her to the young man and gave to her all his
395 II| to the wife: This young man that thou hast taken is
396 II| And anon took the young man and made the sign of the
397 II| for him, and led the young man by the hand to the church.
398 II| fiends, without seeing of any man, took the young man and
399 II| any man, took the young man and pained them to take
400 II| S. Basil. And the young man began to cry; Holy saint
401 II| move in holding the young man. S. Basil said: Thou cursed
402 II| holding the hand of the young man, the schedule which he had
403 II| from me, woman, for I am a man, sinful as thou art, which
404 II| to her: Go unto the holy man that is named Effrem, and
405 II| when she came to the holy man Effrem, and had told to
406 II| from me, for I am a sinful man, but go again to S. Basil,
407 II| city, and was a much rich man, but he was not piteous,
408 II| anger. Thus would no poor man come to him for alms. Then
409 II| Then was there one poor man said to his fellows: What
410 II| alms. And when this rich man came and saw this poor man
411 II| man came and saw this poor man at his gate he was much
412 II| hear the cry of the poor man. And he took up the loaf
413 II| two days after, this rich man was sick, and like for to
414 II| good will. As this rich man went on a day clothed with
415 II| ware, and anon the poor man sold it; and when he knew
416 II| when he knew that the poor man had sold it, he was so sorry
417 II| not worthy that the poor man think upon me. And the night
418 II| he had given to the poor man, and he said to him: Why
419 II| sell me to some christian man, and take that money that
420 II| he was despised of every man of the servants. And some
421 II| how like is this young man to Peter the tollener, and
422 II| they should tell it to no man, yet one of them manifested
423 II| answered and said: Am I not a man as another is? I have a
424 II| common women met with a man that entered in for to do
425 II| buffet and said: Thou wicked man, why amendest thou not thy
426 II| fiend came in likeness of a man, and gave him a buffet,
427 II| taken. ~There was a poor man in the habit of a pilgrim
428 II| Father, at your request this man hath received twice alms
429 II| not heard it. And the poor man changed his clothing the
430 II| scourged and to suffer of every man beatings, chidings and wrongs,
431 II| and anon he sent for that man and made him free of all
432 II| cometh. ~There was a rich man which saw S. John, having
433 II| people. And when the rich man saw it he bought it again
434 II| people. And when the rich man wist it, yet he bought it
435 II| bought and sold, the rich man seeing well that he might
436 II| given his mantle to a poor man and after met with another
437 II| anon he saw another poor man, and then he sold the book
438 II| a time he gave to a poor man five besants, and the poor
439 II| five besants, and the poor man had disdain thereof and
440 II| one blame or vice of this man? And he commanded that a
441 II| brought tofore this poor man, that he should take as
442 II| Another time there was a young man had ravished a nun, and
443 II| clerks reproved the young man thereof tofore S. John,
444 II| thereof ne show it to no man. S. John bade her write
445 II| delivered it to some other man, and she came to his tomb,
446 II| their sepulture. This holy man S. John flourished in the
447 II| for he learned it never of man ne by man, as he himself
448 II| learned it never of man ne by man, as he himself witnesseth,
449 III| whom were there the holy man Paulinus, the patriarch
450 III| kissed them, there can no man rehearse. All the city of
451 III| and so noble, that every man coveted to do to her honour
452 III| death of her husband with no man, how good that he was; she
453 III| was accustomed to please man and the world, I desire
454 III| she passed so that no poor man complained of her. And this
455 III| worthy to be with God. A man, that seemed to be her friend,
456 III| Another miracle happed of a man of a village that on a Sunday
457 III| which was a very christian man, and they prayed him that
458 III| for they carried a dead man. S. Julian said to them:
459 III| mother by ignorance. And this man was noble and young, and
460 III| went privily away that no man knew thereof, and found
461 III| weened that it had been a man that had lain with his wife,
462 III| was no saint but a cursed man, and was called Julianus
463 III| whom she reputed a holy man, but she said not to him
464 III| him, said to a christian man: What doeth the smith’s
465 III| saying: Thou hast vanquished man of Galilee ! thou hast overcome!
466 III| letter.~S. Ignatius was a man right well learned, and
467 III| from his realm, and became man mortal, semblable to us.
468 III| to be very God and very man, and took him between his
469 III| without company of any man, by the virtue of the Holy
470 III| not speaking, that made man and speech. O who should
471 III| given her mantle unto a poor man for the love of our Lady.
472 III| and at the last came this man to this lady aforesaid and
473 III| Then said S. Blase: O mad man, weenest thou by thy torments
474 III| Blase answered: Right cruel man I have no dread of thy menaces,
475 III| saith, three things make a man holy, which three were perfectly
476 III| marvel much that so wise a man is become such a fool, that
477 III| there came an ancient noble man, and tofore him a child
478 III| in his hand. This noble man said that he was a surgeon,
479 III| receive no medicine of no man. And this nobleman said:
480 III| may heal me. And the good man smiling said: And he hath
481 III| corpse, anon came a young man clad in silk, and well an
482 III| never after also. This young man, whom followed the fair
483 III| within the tomb, this young man set, at the head of the
484 III| set at her head, the young man and all his company departed
485 III| supposed that this young man was her good angel. This
486 III| three things that make a man amiable. The first is to
487 III| baptized the child, and no man answered, the child with
488 III| of which water a blind man had his sight again. It
489 III| wisely and reasonably this man speaketh? Anon the provost
490 III| be vanquished of a good man we dare not return, and
491 III| come to a good christian man and we find him ready to
492 III| and to help me. Mechant man, knowest thou not that the
493 III| provost in figure of a young man, and said: Spare not good
494 III| Ye that see me a mortal man as ye be, ween ne suppose
495 III| the affliction by which a man is made humble; the second
496 III| apocrypha, that there was a man in Jerusalem named Reuben,
497 III| because for to be a christian man it is nothing criminal but
498 III| Rome, for to give to each man duly reason after the nght
499 III| should yet give to this poor man an alms. And the provost
500 III| to die, wherefore every man amend his life while he
1-500 | 501-1000 | 1001-1500 | 1501-1835 |