Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
shines 1
shineth 6
shining 77
ship 123
shiphrah 1
shipman 2
shipmen 2
Frequency    [«  »]
123 monk
123 nevertheless
123 sepulchre
123 ship
123 virgins
122 bed
122 england
Iacobus de Voragine
The Golden Legend

IntraText - Concordances

ship

    Volume
1 I| has been altered to 'by ship' as being the obvious meaning. 2 I| was commanded to make the ship, for God should destroy 3 II| Galilee. He entered into the ship of Simon and of Andrew, 4 II| John, which were in another ship, and they followed him, 5 II| should enter into the first ship that he should find, and 6 II| Nice; and on a day,as a ship with mariners were in perishing 7 II| muyes of wheat of every ship. And they said: Father we 8 II| delivered so much out of every ship, they came into Alexandria 9 II| they saw anon after another ship with honest persons, among 10 II| And they went sailing in a ship toward the church of S. 11 II| other habiliments of the ship brake. And the masters and 12 II| masters and governors of the ship, and all they that were 13 II| they saw coming tofore the ship, upon the water, an honourable 14 II| called the said abbot in the ship, and said to him: Wilt thou 15 II| and so thrice he took his ship and might not pass. And 16 III| The provost entered into a ship with thirty-four men for 17 III| secretly and privily unto their ship. And as they took it out 18 III| merchants brought it to the ship, and after, hasted the mariners 19 III| there was one man in another ship that japed, and said: Ween 20 III| anon, after this word, the ship wherein the holy body was, 21 III| and so rudely boarded the ship of him that had said that 22 III| one of the sides of the ship, and would never leave it 23 III| body of S. Mark was in the ship, that done, she held her 24 III| hastily for to succour a ship which is in peril; then 25 III| whole. Anon after, this ship came unto the port of Venice, 26 III| on a time by the sea in a ship of Saracens towards Alexandria; 27 III| they hewed the cords of the ship, and anon the ship began 28 III| of the ship, and anon the ship began to break by the force 29 III| remitted him again into the ship, and anon the tempest ceased. 30 III| Dover Castle, they saw a ship laden with merchandise not 31 III| holy church within their ship to sell. But the merchants 32 III| land. And anon he found a ship ready and entered therein, 33 III| Seine for to go fetch by ship some victuals. When she 34 III| to perish, she made the ship to be drawn to the rivage 35 III| to prayer. Then, as the ship should have smitten upon 36 III| and never after perished ship there, thank be to God and 37 IV| and of sin. This ark or ship was not borne to one place, 38 IV| miscreants and put in a ship in the sea, without any 39 IV| journey. Then charged they a ship abundantly of all that was 40 IV| mountain not far from the ship. And then they said that 41 IV| that it was best to set the ship toward the land and to bury 42 IV| and then returned to the ship, and held forth his journey. 43 IV| Marseilles, he took his ship for to return again into 44 IV| and his child and went to ship. And soon after they came 45 IV| rested in peace. ~There was a ship charged with men and women 46 IV| chains, and set him in a ship with three clerks following 47 IV| Jews, and brought it into a ship, and committed unto the 48 IV| and went withal into the ship without sail or rudder. 49 IV| without any governaile of the ship and required of her place 50 IV| child Celsus, were put in a ship and brought into the middle 51 IV| cast in, and anon about the ship arose a great tempest, and 52 IV| they then that were in the ship were afraid to be perished, 53 IV| cheer and entered into the ship to them, and then, they 54 IV| others, were put into a ship without sail, oars, or rudder 55 IV| for to go to Milan, the ship tarried long on that other 56 IV| side of the river, but the ship came at his commandment 57 IV| when she was within the ship with the body, there were 58 IV| Felon prince, burn this ship, for Stephen our adversary 59 IV| five devils for to burn the ship, but the angel of our Lord 60 IV| On a time as he passed by ship towards the parts of Toulouse, 61 IV| things necessary in the ship, in to Babylon. And when 62 V| brought them with him in to a ship, and sailed with them to 63 V| they received into their ship gladly, and said they would 64 V| her, and entered into a ship with many christian men, 65 V| guise of a mariner in a ship of phantasm, and said to 66 V| Lausanne in such wise that the ship was in peril; he set the 67 V| instruments by which the ship is rowed and conducted, 68 V| because he was last, and the ship recoiled backward into the 69 VI| would have entered into the ship, suddenly his strength was 70 VI| herself all that night in a ship, but on the morn she suffered 71 VI| by water, but they had no ship ne boat ready, ne they couth 72 VI| approached the sea, and found a ship, and entered into it for 73 VI| pass, and the master of the ship saw the wife of Eustace 74 VI| so that the master of the ship commanded that the wife 75 VI| Then the master of the ship commanded his mariners to 76 VI| night, and entered into a ship for to go I wot not whither. 77 VI| when we went out of the ship our mother was left in the 78 VI| our mother was left in the ship, I wot not in what manner, 79 VI| strength, and was taken up of a ship that passed by. And that 80 VI| the elements. And when a ship should have perished in 81 VI| alone from Rome, and found a ship in which he sailed into 82 VI| into Greece, where he took ship and entered for to go into 83 VI| great wind which made the ship to arrive at the port of 84 VI| tempest and brought the ship to wrack and was all to-broken, 85 VI| hand and brought her to the ship where Clement was in. And 86 VI| And they said: When our ship was broken we were borne 87 VI| us and took us into their ship, and changed our names, 88 VI| provost delivered to him a ship and all things necessary 89 VI| but one sea in which the ship of our Lady saileth, and 90 VII| desire to seek about by ship in divers countries to find 91 VII| man brought them to their ship again, and said they might 92 VII| began to purvey for a good ship and a strong, and victualled 93 VII| ere they entered into the ship they fasted forty days and 94 VII| monks were entered in to the ship, there came other two of 95 VII| returned again to their ship, and sailed a long time 96 VII| Brandon abode still in the ship, and when the fire was right 97 VII| afeard, and fled anon to ship and left the fire and meat 98 VII| man, and returned again to ship. And then the bird of the 99 VII| strait that unnethe the ship might come in, and after 100 VII| returned with his monks to his ship, and sailed from thence 101 VII| fish which followed the ship long time, casting so much 102 VII| out of his mouth into the ship that they supposed to have 103 VII| awoke, and came about the ship so thick that unnethe they 104 VII| south wind and drove the ship northward, whereas they 105 VII| the water, following their ship fast, in such wise that 106 VII| ne grieve them ne their ship, wherefore the fiends began 107 VII| the fiends all about the ship, and them seemed then all 108 VII| might abide no longer in the ship, and anon he leapt out of 109 VII| anon he leapt out of the ship into the sea, and then he 110 VII| the north and drove the ship into the south, which sailed 111 VII| there thou shalt find a ship into which thou must enter, 112 VII| went forth and found the ship, in which I entered, and 113 VII| after. And then I left the ship and went to land, and there 114 VII| well, and to carry into his ship: For it is time that thou 115 VII| Brandon entered into his ship and sailed forty days even 116 VII| after this they took their ship and sailed east forty days.~ 117 VII| will that you lade your ship with the fruit of this land, 118 VII| their leave, and went to ship weeping sore because they 119 VII| And then they took their ship and came home into Ireland 120 VII| have escaped by the next ship nigh thence, always he yielded 121 VII| the rising of Aurora, the ship where the king was in, hurted 122 VII| other there weened that the ship should have broken and been 123 VII| great hurting of the said ship, found the holy king devoutly


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License