Volume
1 I| deceived, that is to wit in the tree, not in this on which Jesus
2 I| suffered death, but in another tree. Thirdly, he was right convenable
3 I| naked. The death came by the tree, the life by the cross.
4 I| she put her hand to the tree against the defence of God.
5 I| without beauty; sick in the tree, strong in his despoil;
6 I| set two trees, that is the tree of life, and that other
7 I| life, and that other the tree of knowing good and evil.
8 I| he should not eat of the tree of the knowledge of good
9 I| that when ye eat of this tree ye shall be as gods knowing
10 I| The woman saw that the tree was fair to look on, and
11 I| that thou hast eaten of the tree for bidden? He then not
12 I| fellow, gave to me of the tree, and I ate thereof. And
13 I| his hand and take of the tree of life and live ever, as
14 I| lest he take and eat of the tree of life. And so he was cast
15 I| enter there ne come to the tree of life. ~After then that
16 I| grains of the fruit of the tree of mercy by an angel. And
17 I| Make to thee an ark of tree, hewn, polished, and squared.
18 I| bearing a branch of an olive tree, burgeoning, in her mouth.
19 I| them to tarry under the tree, and he would bring bread
20 I| she left the child under a tree that was there and went
21 I| Lord which showed to him a tree which he took and put into
22 I| fruit, and was of an almond tree. That rod fell to Aaron. ~
23 I| house. tourbe, n., a crowd. tree treen, n., wood. trewage,
24 II| flew about a bough of the tree and held so fast that Absalom
25 II| Absalom as he hung on the tree by his hair, and yet after
26 II| each under his vine and fig tree from Dan unto Beersheba.
27 II| aside and bound Achior to a tree hands and feet with cords,
28 II| death was because of the tree, in breaking the commandment
29 II| suffering the same on the tree. The second was that, he
30 II| to Diana under a sacred tree; but this good man made
31 II| commanded to cut off the tree. Then the devil was angry
32 II| Hermopolin of Thebaid there was a tree called Persidis, which is
33 II| the leaf or rind of that tree be bound to the neck of
34 II| fled with her son, that tree bowed down and worshipped
35 II| of raisins hanging on a tree, which he laid on his shoulders
36 II| god, and to the stock of tree: Help me. The provost said:
37 III| drawn and stretched on a tree and tormented, and said
38 III| death and passion in the tree of the cross, then believed
39 III| took an old rotten stake or tree, and pight it in the earth
40 III| that he gave to him of the tree that Adam ate of, and said
41 III| father dead and planted this tree upon his grave, and it endured
42 III| Solomon, she worshipped this tree, because she said the Saviour
43 III| sacrifice, and there found this tree, and this piscine had such
44 III| passion of our Lord, this tree arose out of the water,
45 III| we be saved came of the tree by which we were damned,
46 III| of the angel but of the tree. With this tree, whereof
47 III| but of the tree. With this tree, whereof the cross was made,
48 III| cross was made, there was a tree that went overthwart, on
49 III| the middle of the city a tree called a pineapple tree,
50 III| tree called a pineapple tree, on which were hanged on
51 III| on the branches of this tree, for the marvel of chase
52 III| warned them to hew down this tree, they would not consent
53 III| bishop did do hew down this tree, and did do burn it. And
54 III| queen a dish of wood or of tree and a barley loaf, the which
55 III| wood under the root of a tree that the wind had thrown
56 III| commanded to cut down a tree that was in the water, and
57 III| should have smitten upon the tree it fell down, and two wild
58 IV| him seemed that he saw a tree stand by his bedside, and
59 IV| on every branch of this tree were tapers of wax burning
60 IV| that he climbed upon this tree and Askeberd his governor
61 IV| beneath and hewed down this tree that he stood on. And when
62 IV| stood on. And when this tree was fallen down, this holy
63 IV| that he smiteth down the tree that stood by thy bedside.
64 IV| it waxed to a great ash tree, the which standeth there
65 IV| and he laid him under a tree, and dreamed that S. James
66 IV| the midst of the city a tree, which was a pine, on which
67 IV| they should hew down that tree to the end that none ill
68 IV| bishop did do cut down this tree and made it to be burnt.
69 IV| sent to the queen a dish of tree and a barley loaf, the which
70 IV| beheld on a day by him a tree, and saw upon the branches
71 IV| upon the branches of this tree an owl which sat thereon,
72 IV| Roman provost. This is that tree of such virtue that the
73 IV| like as one grafteth in a tree. And he felt so much pain
74 IV| his hand, and take of the tree of life, and live perdurably,
75 V| of silver, and tables of tree enclosed about it, and bare
76 V| japes tnat say that the fig tree weepeth when his figs or
77 V| stealing of pears off a pear tree standing nigh his vineyard
78 V| was brought, after, to the tree of sacrifice, for to sacrifice
79 V| prayed, and blew against the tree, and in continent the tree
80 V| tree, and in continent the tree turned the root upward and
81 V| them in the pit where the tree fell. And after, the paynims
82 V| our Lord Jesu Christ, the tree of the cross was a tree
83 V| tree of the cross was a tree of filth, for the crosses
84 V| without any beauty. It was the tree of death, for men were put
85 V| to death, It was also the tree of stench, for it was planted
86 V| shall ascend up into palm tree, et cetera. His ignobility
87 V| throne as a father, set the tree of the cross on his right
88 V| manner thou hast honoured the tree of the cross, if thou wilt
89 V| ransom of the world, sweet tree, sweet nails, sweet iron,
90 V| And thus was the precious tree of the cross re-established
91 V| patriarch, and bare away the tree of the cross. And as Eraclius
92 V| Eraclius, the patriarch, the tree of the cross, and all the
93 V| into Jerusalem the precious tree of the cross, and thus it
94 V| also Siby saith thus of the tree of the cross: That the blessed
95 V| cross: That the blessed tree of the cross was three times
96 V| Tripartite: O thrice blessed tree on which God was stretched.
97 V| snares. ~holm, n., elm tree.~japes, n., gibes. ~juments,
98 VI| in these words: A green tree cut from his stock shall
99 VI| expounded as here followeth. The tree signifieth the realm of
100 VI| Edward, by succession. The tree is cut down from the stock
101 VI| The coming again of the tree to the stock without man'
102 VI| of Normandy, and by the tree flourished, whom Maud the
103 VI| the altar in a chest of tree. And in a night as the abbot
104 VI| stretched and bounden unto a tree, and were commanded to be
105 VI| enclosed, and within coffers of tree be laid gold rings and precious
106 VI| shone in great wealth like a tree, but now I am naked of all
107 VI| shall do make a chest of tree upon the mouth of the pit,
108 VI| Then he was hanged on a tree by commandment of the emperor,
109 VI| old trees. And there was a tree of a pine, which was dedicated
110 VI| would have razed down that tree, and the villains and paynims
111 VI| we shall hew down this tree, and thou shalt receive
112 VI| granted it, and then the tree was hewn and bounden for
113 VI| eat the fruit of a fair tree, that is to say that she
114 VI| courteous, stood upon a tree and took to her his foot
115 VI| upon a little bough of a tree which hung over the river,
116 VI| they led him forth unto a tree which was thereby. To which
117 VI| which was thereby. To which tree his adversaries bound him,
118 VII| goeth up on high on the tree and letteth it fall, and
119 VII| receive the branch of the tree of thy mercy, for the overplus
120 VII| full of flowers, and every tree full of fruit, so that it
121 VII| and thereby stood a fair tree full of boughs, and on every
122 VII| they sat so thick on the tree that unnethe any leaf of
123 VII| unnethe any leaf of the tree might be seen. The number
124 VII| the birds fled from the tree to S. Brandon, and he with
125 VII| they sat so thick on the tree and sang so merrily ; and
126 VII| here to serve him on this tree in the best manner we can.
127 VII| fellows that sat on the tree, and then all the birds
128 VII| And then the bird of the tree came again to S. Brandon
129 VII| to the island whereas the tree of birds was, and then the
130 VII| fellowship, and went again to the tree and sang full merrily, and
131 VII| the birds sitting on the tree. And then the bird told
132 VII| And then the bird of the tree of the island where they
133 VII| done tofore, whereas the tree of birds is, and from thence
134 VII| shrine, which was then but tree, was saved through his bodily
135 VII| horseback which bare a long tree athwart, and would enter
136 VII| he might not because the tree lay athwart. Then he expounded
137 VII| said: He that beareth the tree is like the burden of justice
138 VII| he caught a branch of a tree with his hands and set his
139 VII| ceasing gnawed the root of the tree, and had almost gnawed it
140 VII| full of wickedness. The tree is the life of every man,
141 VII| honey in the boughs of the tree is the false deceivable
142 VII| mercy, and laid him upon a tree that he should not be devoured
143 VII| aback under the shadow of a tree, and they saw a hart pass
144 VII| was by her hairs to a high tree, and under her they made
145 VII| spilt for us on the rood tree. And here it is to wit that
146 VII| S. Fabian, ii. 231~Pine tree of Auxerre, iii. 204.~Placida
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