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Iacobus de Voragine
The Golden Legend

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(Hapax - words occurring once)


000-aug | augme-cleav | cleft-discu | disee-fie | fierc-horri | horse-light | ligne-objec | obrut-publi | puerp-seque | sequi-thank | thara-whoos | whorn-zyphi

     Volume
4506 I| opprobria fugere, gloriam sequi: They of the world, in their 4507 IV| recountable songs of the seraphins. And the over great and 4508 IV| grace of Diocletian and of Serena his wife, he dwelled and 4509 VI| bruised. ~trental, n., a series of thirty masses for the 4510 V| Eminen. And of Eminen came S. Servatius, whose body lieth in Maestricht, 4511 IV| put to her two adders, two servents and two asps. The serpents 4512 III| popes that wrote: Servus servorum Dei, that is, servant of 4513 VI| first: Jam non dicam vos servos et cetera, I say you not 4514 III| Simeon said: Nunc dimittis servum tuum domine, etc. Sire, 4515 III| of the popes that wrote: Servus servorum Dei, that is, servant 4516 I| And with their hands they set-to their names in witness; 4517 I| which the author frankly sets down as 'apocriphum'; while 4518 IV| pitch. But the siege or settle melted like wax, and Christopher 4519 I| should be punished personally sevenfold more. This punition shall 4520 V| thou art wroth? This is the seventieth year. Thirdly, they show 4521 VI| our Lord two hundred and seventy-seven. And all the people were 4522 I| and seven. That is to say seventyseven souls that came of Lameth 4523 III| Genevieve, and her father Severe, and her mother Geronce, 4524 VI| crowned martyrs were Severus, Severianus, Carpoforus, and Victorinus, 4525 IV| rivers, and they be Thames, Severn, and Humber. This king Kenelm 4526 IV| which tofore was called Sextilis, the people entitled it 4527 III| precious blood avaled by the shaft of the spear upon his hands, 4528 VII| and began to tremble and shake for sorrow in the fevers 4529 V| the less, a great earth shaking, and also the greatest darkness 4530 I| from thence he went in to Shalem, the town of Shechem which 4531 III| a wild ox. ~bucale, n., shambles. ~burette, n., cruse or 4532 VII| lived among you that me shameth to live, neither me dreadeth 4533 VII| that the shirts of her own shaping and making should be borne 4534 IV| woodness of his flesh with a shard or shell, but he ran daily, 4535 IV| them, he took a stake and sharped it with his teeth, and therewith 4536 VII| new pain the heaviest and sharpest that they could for him 4537 VI| let to take his meat, he sharpeth it and whetteth it against 4538 III| as well to have the tenth sheaf as the ninth, and when S. 4539 IV| of S was entered into a sheepcote, and that there was delivered 4540 VI| that from the time on a shere thursday, the hour of the 4541 V| of the realm, as mayors, sheriffs, bailiffs, and such other 4542 II| obligation by me, which when thou shewest him, anon he shall pay thee. 4543 V| liest thou when thy speech sheweth thee to be a pilgrim? And 4544 III| of people, for many were shifted over the bridge into the 4545 I| their spurs; their harness shines more than the altars. And 4546 I| whom that one was called Shiphrah, and that other Puah, and 4547 VII| and when they were all shipped, suddenly this young man 4548 VII| abbot of Rome saved from shipwreck on condition that he hallowed 4549 III| was born in England in the shire of Gloucester, and he came 4550 I| years came, and sheaves and shocks of corn were brought in 4551 I| diverse texture. ~Lameth was a shooter, and used to shoot at wild 4552 II| thousand footmen, and horsemen shooters twelve thousand. And tofore 4553 VII| meat, and was strait and short-breathed, but for all that he spared 4554 VII| S. Justin abbreviated or shorted, and also composed many 4555 VI| or the stubble least and shortest. And S. Augustine saith: 4556 VI| them, ne lessing of it, ne shorting of time. For as Job saith: 4557 II| did, and shot two or three shots tofore him, and anon he 4558 II| crying with trumps and shouting after them, and slew and 4559 VII| her maiden or servant and shoved her suddenly within the 4560 III| thou? I take solace in the shrewdness of the people; I love homicide, 4561 VI| to eschew the company of shrews and evil men. Or it may 4562 VII| bread into flesh, vii. 239.~Shrift, too frequent, v. 218.~Silence 4563 I| cry of the trump was so shrill that the people were sore 4564 III| bowels and sinews began to shrink and she fell down dead in 4565 VII| mouth, for which he never shrinked. And when this cruel emperor 4566 II| He is not converted that shriveth him to the priest of one 4567 IV| of Derbyshire, Cheshire, Shropshire, Staffordshire, Herefo rdshire, 4568 VI| ate but seldom flesh. From Shrovetide till Easter he would eat 4569 III| the sinews of his leg were shrunk that he might neither go 4570 II| Temanite, another Bildad the Shuhite, and the third, Zophar Naamathite. 4571 I| dwelled between Kadesh and Shur, and went a pilgrimage to 4572 I| locks, all the bars and shuttings been broken, and to-frushed. 4573 V| mensam indignam noverit esse sibi:~that is to say: Whosoever 4574 V| in many chronicles; also Siby saith thus of the tree of 4575 VII| round and to be slain, and Sibyl said thus, that the ilke 4576 IV| doubted strongly. And as Sicardus saith in his chronicle, 4577 I| another igneum; another siderum; another crystallinum; and 4578 VII| walls. He found then about Sidon many dead bodies of christian 4579 VII| and worshipped by all the siecle and siecles. Amen.~ 4580 VII| worshipped by all the siecle and siecles. Amen.~ 4581 II| consecrate. siffled, v., Fr. siffler, whistled. sikerness, n., 4582 I| almost and despair, she sigheth for sorrow in saying the 4583 VII| all our realm.~He had the signacle or figure of the holy cross 4584 VII| before said, Tres partes signant de Christi corpore sancto. 4585 VI| of purgatory, and this is signfied to us by the three to whom 4586 I| nor finish. And to this signifiance the first response of the 4587 I| this name Magus hath three significations. It is said illuser or deceiver, 4588 IV| and subdue them under thy signory, and I shall give to them 4589 I| have in battles tokens and signs-royal, as their trumpets and banners, 4590 II| name. ~Silvester is said of sile or sol which is light, and 4591 III| to a city which is said Silene. And by this city was a 4592 VI| chancellor at Paris named Silo, which had a scholar sick, 4593 VI| semblable to the fountain of Siloe in which he that was born 4594 III| the wall fell down upon Silvain, counsellor of Quintianus, 4595 IV| Januarius, Felix, Philip, Silvanus, Alexander, Vital, and Marcial. 4596 II| Or Silvester is said of silvas and of trahens, that is 4597 III| named Gordian and his mother Silvia. And when he had so much 4598 V| Joseph justum peperit cum Simone Judam,~Tertia majorem Jacobum 4599 VII| Apostle. October 28, vi. 72.~Simphorien. August 22, v. 30.~Simplicien. 4600 VI| tender infancy enforced in simpless, and began to use good customs 4601 I| navire,' which the translator simply renders 'at name,' and this 4602 VI| firmer.~simulachres, n., Fr. simulacare, images.~suffrance, n., 4603 VII| works, not by hypocrisy ne simuling, but by right jealousy of 4604 IV| noble woman and widow named Sincletia. And thus this blessed and 4605 IV| Lord chastely than live sinfully; and then Decius, being 4606 VII| Canterbury, iv. 59.~---- sings to S. Elizabeth, vi. 226.~ 4607 VII| symbols of, ii. 124.~---sinless from the womb, ii. 125.~--- 4608 IV| Leasing, in which thou oft sinnedst in Iying, and other in like 4609 III| father of light, and of sior, that is a little child 4610 IV| sistus is said of sisto, sistis, as it were steadfast and 4611 IV| state. Or sistus is said of sisto, sistis, as it were steadfast 4612 IV| to say as godly state. Or sistus is said of sisto, sistis, 4613 VII| yet again the altar, and sithen returneth him and saluteth 4614 VII| recovered the spirit of life and sithence lived long. With these miracles 4615 I| tasting, whereof he cried: Sitio! I am athirst! There was 4616 VI| Rochester, and this was six-and-thirty years after his burying 4617 V| times, at every time three sixes at each cast, and then he 4618 VII| Peter about the hour of sixte, the gates, that as then 4619 I| they were delivered in the sixtieth year, so were we in the 4620 I| Methuselah lived nine hundred and sixty-nine years. S. Jerome saith that 4621 V| the days of his life the sixty-third year of his age, in the 4622 I| be of three hundred and sixtyfive days, and the way of every 4623 III| christened in the city of Rome sixtysix thousand men. And when the 4624 V| strong. ~brede, n., the size,~canticis, n., the Song 4625 V| to him: I noot ne can no skill of such meats; and then 4626 VI| of them held other by the skirt. And all they devoutly prayed 4627 III| the cross that he bare and sklavin that he ware should be buried 4628 I| there beheaded, and many skulls of heads were there sparteled 4629 I| mistrusteth not, ne hope slacketh not, ne charity aminisheth 4630 IV| churches, and burning for slanders. Thou mayst see that he 4631 II| thee on the earth, thou slayer of thy husbands. Wilt thou 4632 IV| it, and hid it under his sleeve, and then said he: Now Simon 4633 VI| in wait how they might by sleight and deceit prevented, fall 4634 I| wilt thou slay me as thou slewest that other day an Egyptian? 4635 I| other instances where a slight alteration made a passage 4636 I| fought together, and with the sling they played oft. And the 4637 II| to adventures, and is so slippery and fleeting, that when 4638 V| and some for promise of sllver, so that neighbour brought 4639 III| draw water, and his foot slode so that he fell into the 4640 VII| people should abide in the slough of error, and afterwards 4641 V| as he was at matins, he slumbered a little, and the lessons 4642 VI| scholars came, and fell in slumbering, sitting in his chair, and 4643 IV| went gladly with largo and smaragdo, with all things necessary 4644 VII| conceiveth by bitterness or smarting so great a coutrition that 4645 V| divers odours and sweet smells, and tofore and after her 4646 III| christian man: What doeth the smith’s son? He said that he made 4647 I| found first the craft of smithery and working of iron, and 4648 I| All the mount of Sinai smoked, for so much as our Lord 4649 I| rough and hairy and I am smooth? If my father take me to 4650 I| and take the rod that thou smotest with the flood in thy hand, 4651 III| they made therein a great smouldering of smoke for to disease 4652 VII| deep pit, that was full of snakes, adders, paddocks, and other 4653 IV| styed, v., ascended. ~sndary, n., a napkin. ~sumpters, 4654 I| custom. And also when he sneezeth or gapeth, he maketh tofore 4655 II| executioner. routed, v,, snored. ~sacre, v., Fr. sacrer, 4656 V| arose and began to weep and sob sorrowfully, so that his 4657 VI| brake out of his eyes, and sobbings from his heart, that he 4658 VII| and gave his courage to sobriety and good diet, to humility 4659 V| verses:~Cantemus domino, sociæ, cantemus honorem,~Dulcis 4660 III| chapter: Vir amabilis ad societatem. The second is to be honest 4661 III| another piece wherein the socket or mortice was made, wherein 4662 V| and the enseignments of Socrates, and shortly all that the 4663 I| this night that all the sodomites that did sin against nature 4664 III| of Chaldee and of Greek, sofarforth that he was compared to 4665 II| shells were turned into softness and sweetness of all manner 4666 I| possession in Egypt in the best soil of Rameses like as Pharaoh 4667 II| king wilt have no services soiled ne foul, but thou hast cleanly 4668 III| great feast, and anon the solar fell upon him and slew him 4669 VII| doth but joy and maketh solation for the resurrection of 4670 I| thrones. sithes, n., times. solder. n.. an upper chamber. sparteled, 4671 IV| they crucified, and Rome in solemnising, glorifieth them that it 4672 V| made these verses:~Anna soles dici tres concepisse Marias,~ 4673 I| Egypt said to them: Why solicit ye, Moses and Aaron, the 4674 I| so the Holy Ghost in the solier where the supper of Jesu 4675 III| accomplish commandments solitaries. After this S. Peter came 4676 V| martyrdom. And it is said that Solutor and Adventor and Octavius 4677 I| his saints: Non veni legem solvere sed adimplere; I came not, 4678 III| Trajan as a miscreant was somedeal taken away, but for all 4679 | somewhere 4680 I| Factus est repente de cœlo sonus, etc. At the coming of the 4681 I| by vinegar men die much soone. And with this also they 4682 I| and justly raiseth it, and soonest straineth and most vehemently 4683 IV| out of the way from the sooth. And then the good pilgrim 4684 VII| the Father, the ghost of soothfastness. And when he had ended that, 4685 V| went they to diviners and soothsayers and demanded them where 4686 VII| logicians, and the third to sophisters, and these three sciences 4687 VII| miracle of the, iii. 149.~—of sophistry, vi. 114.~Corone martyred 4688 VII| their hands, and special the sops of which he fain ate, made 4689 II| they cried: Take away this sorceress and witch that turned men' 4690 I| me? he shall be more and sorer punished that slayeth me, 4691 IV| a mare. ~Iapacium, n., sorrel. ~Iargo, n., treasure. ~ 4692 V| the distribution of the sorts should not be confounded. 4693 V| dead. And another named Sosthenes went up on high, but anon 4694 VI| young he was full of many sottises and follies, but he could 4695 V| and said to him: Wherefore soughtest thou me yesterday with gold 4696 IV| king's head. And anon, his soule was borne up into heaven 4697 I| ne by the ears, for he soundeth not, ne by the nostrils, 4698 I| and there was heard great sounds and great clamours by night. 4699 V| sort, v., adapt or place. ~sourd, v., issue, spring.~terrien, 4700 III| the mountains of Mongus Sourgus one of their servants fell 4701 IV| S. Austin. First, in the sourness of his passion or bitterness; 4702 VI| Thus as she had always souvenance and mind of Jesu Christ 4703 V| be they that may take the sovereignties of the secrets celestial 4704 II| oversea, and was taken by the sowdan, which made him oft to be 4705 III| yesterday after one of my sows, I found a fournil of lime 4706 V| clear words many of the spaces of heaven, the bounds of 4707 VII| Trogan, which was of the Spanish nation, composed into forty-four 4708 IV| bounden in the heat of the sparcles, the force of the faith 4709 II| is strange in his living spareth his swine, and he put to 4710 II| the fire, that it should sparkle and spring in the wounds 4711 VI| his cheer clear, the eyes sparkling, his hair purple, holding 4712 I| saith in Genesis: I shall speake to my Lord as I were ashes 4713 VI| the most eloquent and fair speakers, the clearest wits and cunning, 4714 VII| cross Longinus thrust the spear-head into his precious side, 4715 I| of Canterbury is again a specimen of vigorous English clearly 4716 VI| yet stones besprinkled and speckled as it were with blood, which 4717 V| should be to the people a new spectacle. Then Rocke exhorted the 4718 IV| which three days he lay speechless, and his fellows abiding 4719 II| coming, but departed without speeding of their intents, and came 4720 VII| was so well occupied in spending his wit and thought in expounding 4721 II| holy psalm: In te domine speravi, unto, in manus tuas, and 4722 VI| temple was cast round by a sphere, that by this form the perdurability 4723 II| hast had horror to shed and spill the blood of innocents, 4724 V| home he beheld oftimes the spincoppes or spiders taking flies 4725 IV| saw without, a woman that spinned in the feast of so great 4726 VI| much for the pound that the spinners might not live thereby, 4727 I| iii.: Spiritus ubi vult spirat. The Holy Ghost where he 4728 I| for the Egyptians have spite unto herdmen of sheep. Then 4729 VII| judge, and with a fell and spiteful mood the judge said to him: 4730 VII| beaten upon his head, and spitting upon his blessed face, and 4731 III| he took a little clay and spittle and meddled them together 4732 III| after the note of Kyrie rex splendens, which was to him a full 4733 V| cross in this wise: O crux splendidior, et cetera. O cross more 4734 I| the fifth anthem: O Oriens splendor lucis eterne, veni et illumina 4735 II| be it done. Certainly the spoils of the Assyrians were unnethe 4736 V| steadfastness of the martyrs, and spoke to the judge, and said that 4737 VI| again.~Jacob, the son of Spoletine, had been two years blind, 4738 VI| hasted him and came first to Spoleto, and that night he saw the 4739 VII| sang this verse in heaven: Sponsus amat sponsam, salvator visitat 4740 III| scripture: Mentem sanctam, spontaneam, honorem deo dedit et patriæ 4741 VII| refuse to ring, v. 87.~— ring spontaneously, iii. 224.~—why rung for 4742 I| use in their delights and sports. And forasmuch as he heard 4743 V| much as they might. Joachim spoused Anne, which had a sister 4744 VI| was between them a loving spousehood without bodily knowing of 4745 VI| First, in that they be the spouses of the eternal king, and 4746 II| gracious in beholding, she spreadeth over all without Iying down, 4747 I| n., octave. ~veer, n., spring-tide. ~END OF VOL. I ~ 4748 I| sinned, they were opened like springs of water and began to move, 4749 I| the holy water stick or sprinkler. After, the incense is burnt 4750 VI| he took the yarn that was spun for a pound and raked it 4751 V| knights took S. Rocke as a spy, and delivered him to their 4752 I| spiritual stones that have four squares, that is to wit, faith, 4753 II| devotion to God, without squaring out of the way; right long 4754 I| come of thee, and shall stablish my covenant between me and 4755 V| and he took his sword and stack it through his belly and 4756 IV| Derbyshire, Cheshire, Shropshire, Staffordshire, Herefo rdshire, Nottinghamshire, 4757 V| labour.~And anon he pight his staflf in the earth and made his 4758 V| of rain. And in the last stage he made horses to draw chariots 4759 I| the Galilee at Durham, the stained glass at York, the East 4760 I| of corn standing on one stalk, full and fair of corns, 4761 VII| spirit, ware for a shirt a stamin or strainer's cloth, and 4762 II| spices of the world had been stamped together it should not have 4763 IV| he had always a custom to stanch his thirst at some well 4764 VI| bade him set him over from Stangate to Westminster, and he prayed 4765 VI| he went to the abbey of Stanley, and sojourned there till 4766 I| servant of his, named John Stanney which solicited me, in my 4767 VII| all burning in fire, and stared full ghastly on them with 4768 VII| ghastly on them with great staring eyes, of whom the monks 4769 IV| desire, suddenly she wax stark blind, and then she perceived 4770 VII| soon after there came one starting out all burning in fire, 4771 III| procul, that is, far, and of stasis, that is, set, that is to 4772 IV| death to life; he found the stater or piece of money in the 4773 VII| ordained two degrees or states to them that believe on 4774 VI| that is to say, good, and statics, that is, fortune, therefore 4775 IV| against the false idols and statues; and then were they drawn 4776 IV| sios, that is God; and of status, that is to say, state, 4777 II| hath dwelled all her life stedfastly in all works of virtue, 4778 I| aminisheth not. The sixth is the stedfastness and firmness of our faith, 4779 VII| where she lay in was so steep, thick, strait, and so dangerous, 4780 I| facta est sicut sanguis, et stellæ ceciderunt super terraim. 4781 I| Erunt signa in sole, luna et stellis, etc. There shall be great 4782 V| pursued of Constantius, his step-son, and finished his life by 4783 I| she is mother of lies and stepdame of virtues, and that it 4784 V| appeared to him, and looked sternly on him, and said to him 4785 I| besprent with the holy water stick or sprinkler. After, the 4786 VII| fire, and made a fire of sticks, and did seethe the fish 4787 V| came to him and joined his stigmatas to my wounds, and anointed 4788 III| to her an adversary, the stimulation fleshly, by which she held 4789 V| much to say as growing, and stin is a city, and ana is as 4790 I| well-armed in the battle; stinging in his death, fair in his 4791 IV| good, true men? Who shall stint thy voice that sounded so 4792 I| Studebant omnes superbi de eadem stirpe progeniti, prospera vitæ 4793 III| thy deceivable preaching, stirring them to forsake our true 4794 IV| by the feet fast set in stocks, he was stoned in Lystra. 4795 I| never set foot in those stone-written records of the past without 4796 IV| drawn in his shirt upon a stony way, he was neither hurt 4797 | stop 4798 I| Here follow the stories of the Bible. ~The Life 4799 VII| sailing in the sea in many storms and tempests, and as they 4800 III| Arastria, in a town named Strabor, he found a man that was 4801 I| After that Abel was slain, Strabus saith that Adam avowed no 4802 IV| priest. And then he lived a straighter living than he did before, 4803 VII| for a shirt a stamin or strainer's cloth, and for girdle 4804 I| raiseth it, and soonest straineth and most vehemently taketh 4805 V| great, his nostrils even and straipht, his beard long and hoar 4806 V| draweth to him festues and straws, how much more the creator 4807 V| was wroth because he had strayed alone from other beasts, 4808 V| First, in comforting and strengthening, Danielis decimo. For whereas 4809 I| them in great reproof. Thou stretchest out thine arms across in 4810 VII| burning coals, and did do strew salt on the body, and above 4811 VII| for I lie upon a bed well strewed with sweet roses, and I 4812 III| v., to refrain or keep strictly.~cellarer, n., steward. ~ 4813 V| Eusebius, born of the town Stridon, which is in the utter end 4814 V| right sweet sound of many strings, in like wise all the apostles 4815 IV| And when they had long strived together, S. James constrained 4816 III| sacrifice which so much had striven there against. Then was 4817 II| of his soul. And by your striving have you made all the bishops 4818 II| and he held it in his hand stroking and playing with it otherwhile 4819 VI| he should be closed in a stronghold, and put to him five maidens 4820 IV| eggs, and a reckless fellow struggled and wrestled with her, and 4821 VII| Calixtus, and Johannis Strumetensis, successively to the papacy, 4822 I| the profit of his coming: Studebant omnes superbi de eadem stirpe 4823 III| God that well liveth, well studieth, and well prayeth. And Paul, 4824 II| in this land? Art thou so sturdy and hard of heart? To whom 4825 VII| tentatur a concupiscentia sua, etc.: Every one is oft 4826 VII| Christi corpore sancto. Prima suam carnem. Sanctosque secunda 4827 VI| went into a city called Suamar, whereas were seventy bishops 4828 I| first manner shall be by suasion and false exposition of 4829 I| Sapientiæ xii.: O quam bonus et suavis, etc.: O Lord God, how much 4830 I| which hath all sweetness of suavity. By the gold which is most 4831 VII| non sum dignus ut intres sub tectum meum: sed tantum 4832 IV| people and was ordained sub-prior of the canons. And day and 4833 I| Austin: O infantia, cui astra subduntur, etc. O infancy or childhood, 4834 V| unworthiness was turned into sublimity and height. The cross, that 4835 I| acts of times past, I have submised myself to translate into 4836 VII| made, but is found in all subsequent issues till the final black-letter 4837 VII| he saith: Deus qui humanæ substantiæ, etc., in the which orison 4838 I| bread and wine be commixed substantially into the proper body of 4839 VII| and then with short and substantious words uttered that he would 4840 I| widow women' have been substituted in accordance with the Latin, 4841 IV| their martyrdom and laid it subtlely among the stones. And when 4842 III| his baptism he was named Sucate, and S. Germain called him 4843 VI| and by the force thereof succeeding. As to the third, it is 4844 VII| and Johannis Strumetensis, successively to the papacy, and were 4845 I| Seir. And Jacob came to Succoth and builded there an house, 4846 VII| deeds on the poor folk, succouring them profitably, so as he 4847 VI| mouth of children and young suckers, and for thine enemies thou 4848 VII| behoof as their own. He gave sudaries for to bury with the dead 4849 V| to life. In the city of Suessa, it happed that a house 4850 VI| and that which they had suffciently said he should leave. He 4851 V| on their knees received sufferably with a joyous heart the 4852 VII| gave yearly to other poor sufferers in divers places in the 4853 VII| our Lord: Beatus vir qui suffest tentationem, etc., Blessed 4854 IV| strength of the water, and anon suffocate and drowned, whose body 4855 III| had a daughter which was suffocated and murdered by the fiend, 4856 VI| Edmund, king of Norfolk and Suffolk, which took his birth of 4857 VI| Paschasius always by error suflered that other, and abode in 4858 IV| the faith, and also for to suflfer for the law of the gospel, 4859 IV| write here, but this shall suflfice. Then let us pray unto Almighty 4860 III| took my sustenance, and sufliced to me seventeen years, and 4861 IV| with that he ministered suflicient]y to them that had need, 4862 I| singeth holy Church: Et sui roris aspersione fecundet, 4863 VI| Follarius, bishop of Lucca, with Sulpitius, bishop of Ravenna, which 4864 I| advantage of the former. The summary is in truth done with a 4865 I| Whereof David saith: A summo cœlo egressio ejus, etc. 4866 VII| beginneth thus: Quod ore sumpsimus, domine, etc., that is to 4867 IV| this day the right holy and sumptuous ark which bare within her 4868 I| and offered right great sums of money to the Emperor 4869 V| of wicked spirits as the sunbeams be full of small motes, 4870 VI| imposture. ~undern, n., from sunrise to noon. ~unnethe, adj., 4871 VII| not long after that three suns were seen also. And then 4872 I| arrayed and ordained for to sup, whereas Jesu Christ commanded 4873 I| coming: Studebant omnes superbi de eadem stirpe progeniti, 4874 V| ad ima ruit magna de luce superbus,~Sic homo cum tumult, primus 4875 VI| great bellies for over great superfluity of water. For this sickness 4876 V| spirits be sent for us. The superiors be sent to the moyens, the 4877 VII| of, iii. 193.~Mariners, superstition of, iv. 79.~Marriage scorned 4878 I| Virgin Mary Spiritus sanctus superveniet in te, etc.: The Holy Ghost 4879 I| another time tofore this he supplanted me of my patrimony, and 4880 I| vows and the prayers of the suppliants. For in the mirror perpetual, 4881 VII| orison that thus beginneth: Supplices te rogamus, in the which 4882 I| Crux latronum qui erat supplicium, etc. The cross which was 4883 VI| been a help to me, and a supporter in time of need, if he had 4884 VI| and Faustinian, whom thou supposedst had been perished in the 4885 II| heaven speak, the which thou supposest to be dead by the consent 4886 I| saith in his eighth chapter: Supra quod credi potest universe 4887 I| the sea into the desert of Sur, and walked with them three 4888 II| and that ye may have the sureness of your flesh, the which 4889 II| and his people went in to surer places. Anon after this 4890 VI| be fulfilled that saith: Surget gens contra gentem, that 4891 II| demanded £30,000 that he had surmised on him to have stolen, he 4892 IV| our Lord. And he had three surnames. He was said Simon Johanna, 4893 IV| for tofore the friars used surplices. And the third day the mother 4894 I| sacrament, how be it the surplus of the service of the same 4895 VII| of the world should not surprise him. For the science that 4896 I| after edition appeared with surprising rapidity. Probably no other 4897 I| S. Paul, Si Christus non surrexerit vane est fides nostra: If 4898 VII| apostoli, ya, id est, jam surrexit. lt is as much for to say: 4899 VII| priest inciting us saith: Sursum corda, that is to say that 4900 IV| the devil he had his wife suspected of a knight, and he made 4901 V| peradventure engendereth not good suspection to my right poor brethren, 4902 IV| and assoil thee of his suspending and thine inhibiting, and 4903 V| Hebrew. And the first three suspendings that he had, ought to be 4904 II| for this thing might be suspicious unto many things. Whether 4905 VI| which was within seemed not sustainable to be voided, and that the 4906 V| rhetorician by eloquence, a sustainer and a bearer up of the church 4907 I| of them from Egypt, the sustentation and governance in the desert, 4908 III| baptized, in the river named Swale, ten thousand men without 4909 IV| all whole and sound. ~This swallowing and breaking of the belly 4910 VII| the fish began to move and swam forth fast into the sea, 4911 I| whom thou promisedst and swaredst by thyself saying: I shall 4912 III| prætorium, that there came a swarm of bees which fell on his 4913 VII| ordained and made for the swearers and blasphemers, at the 4914 VII| unto the ninth they had sweated in cutting his members. 4915 IV| and that he should oft sweep his sepulture and keep it 4916 V| suddenly made to me to lack the sweetnesses of truffes and japes, which 4917 I| and blains and wounds, and swellings in their bladders, in such 4918 III| like unto a floor clean swept, for there was no sparing 4919 VI| water but dead, and anon the swimmer lost all his strength and 4920 III| And anon came by them two swineherds speaking together, of which 4921 VII| departing she fell in a swoon so that she lay still a 4922 VI| himself again, and when his swooning was gone, he heard of them 4923 VII| recovered by S. Blase, iii. 28.~Sybil prophesied of Christ, i. 4924 II| in Jerusalem as stones or sycamores that grow in the field, 4925 II| not suffer that one only syllable of the divine science be 4926 V| versifying which hath two syllables short and twain long. By 4927 V| overpassed the arguments and syllogisms of the philosophers by study 4928 V| a doctor of rhetoric of Symmachus the prefect of Rome, that 4929 IV| which is not entered without syot, ne hath done no righteousness? 4930 V| doctrine. And it is a name of Syriac and not of Hebrew. And the 4931 II| thither at the request of the Syrians. And in this city no man 4932 IV| kindred. Her father was named Syro and her mother Encharia. 4933 V| named Medasan, and when Syrois, his oldest son, heard hereof 4934 II| understanding; secondly, to a syrup or a purgation, for the 4935 IV| Domine, quis habitabit in tabernaculo tuo? Lord, who shall dwell 4936 IV| of the palsy; he raised Tabitha ; he baptized Cornelia; 4937 IV| reverence, and set it in a tablet of gold, and put it to the 4938 VII| sudary, n., a winding-sheet.~tachc (Fr.), a stain. ~unnethe, 4939 IV| in the sea, without any tackle or rudder, for to be drowned. 4940 I| thy bow and quiver with tackles, and go forth an hunting, 4941 II| six hundred and sixty-six talents of gold, except that that 4942 VII| Nicholas, ii. 113.~Wild bulls tamed, iv. 103.~Winchcomb, S. 4943 III| they came to the river of Tanaro, S. Seconde saw the angel 4944 I| chapter. Sol factus est niger tanquam saccus cilicinus: et luna 4945 VII| intres sub tectum meum: sed tantum dic verbo, et sanabitur 4946 V| her name.~Thais is said of taphos, that is to say death, for 4947 IV| and suddenly both came to Tarascona, and singing the office 4948 VII| thus: Veni domine et noli tardere, that is for to say: We 4949 I| divine dispensation for the tardy creance of holy fathers 4950 VII| the church of our Lady of Tarentino, the brethren prayed much 4951 II| was so that the prefect Tarquinius supposed that Timothy had 4952 VII| emperor. As this is a very tarrier of time, and he mocketh 4953 II| Trowest thou wherefore my son tarrieth and why he is holden there? 4954 V| in their God? Wherefore tarryest thou? Cast thyself on him 4955 II| in three years once into Tarsis and brought them thence 4956 II| Tobias said: I pray thee tary here a while till I have 4957 III| in waking, in prayers, in tastings and orisons. Thither came 4958 I| after this he opened the tavern of heaven and poured out 4959 I| in lechery, in going to taverns in the service time, in 4960 II| toller, tollener, n., tax-farmer. ~unguentaries, n., makers 4961 VI| mother had heard all this tbing, she considered long in 4962 I| Holy Ghost enseigned and teached the hearts of the disciples 4963 IV| for to have comfort of the teats of his mother, and made 4964 VII| sum dignus ut intres sub tectum meum: sed tantum dic verbo, 4965 II| one was named Eliphas the Temanite, another Bildad the Shuhite, 4966 VI| And then they went to a temp]e nigh to the city, and 4967 I| and to quench luxury or to temper it. In summer we ought to 4968 VII| never night, and the land temperate, ne too hot ne too cold. 4969 I| Lausanne. The which also was tempested as the other. And it was 4970 I| abominationem et desolationem templi, etc. Antichrist and his 4971 VII| which he governed both temporally and spiritually by the space 4972 IV| Non sine corpore, sed sine tempore, tendit adesse. The virgin 4973 I| At ubi venit plenitudo temporis, when the plentitude or 4974 VII| the Scripture: Sathanas temptavit cor tuum, etc., Satan hath 4975 VII| the lettuce, v. 135. ~---tempts a bishop in the form of 4976 VI| people.~And on a time a poor tenant of his died, and the bailiff 4977 I| fourth cause is for the tenderness of his body. Whereof David 4978 I| none utas. For the nativity tendeth to the death. And the decease 4979 IV| corpore, sed sine tempore, tendit adesse. The virgin that 4980 VII| thou shalt die here in tenebres or darkness if thou sacrifice 4981 II| much to say as high, and tenens that is holding, which is 4982 VI| quin, that be five, and of teneo, tenes, that is to hold, 4983 VI| that be five, and of teneo, tenes, that is to hold, and is 4984 VII| it containing, for in the tenour of it S. John maketh mention 4985 VII| saith: Unusquisque vero tentatur a concupiscentia sua, etc.: 4986 VI| on a sack full of straw. Tenthly, how she hath despised the 4987 VI| of a worshipful man named Tenythe, the which was the son of 4988 VII| this holy bishop was good. Tercio: as he that by vigour or 4989 I| n., bringing together. ~terebinth, n., turpentine. tigurye, 4990 I| it is said Quinquagesima termineth and endeth at Easter, because 4991 I| stellæ ceciderunt super terraim. Then shall be the time 4992 III| Eucherius and his mother Terrigia. What time his mother was 4993 II| not bear the clamours, the terrors, and the lapidiments that 4994 VII| thereas he sat on, and for testification and proof of this miracle, 4995 VII| thing to the bishop Pharon, testifying and insuring that the holy 4996 I| first the craft of diverse texture. ~Lameth was a shooter, 4997 III| agath, that is service, and thaas, sovereign, which is as 4998 VI| prince; or Thadee is said of Thadea, that is a vesture, and 4999 VI| say as taking a prince; or Thadee is said of Thadea, that 5000 V| delights, or she is said of thalamo, that is will or affection 5001 V| in sin. Or she is said of thalos, that is to say delight, 5002 III| and arrived in the isle of Thanet in East Kent, and king Ethelbert 5003 VII| so poor and always thou thankest God like as thou hadst received 5004 VI| his eyes, giving laud and thanksgiving to Almighty God, and to 5005 IV| louings, n., pres. part., thanksgivings. ~more, adj., bigger. mow,


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