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
5506 VI| like crows or ravens, among whorn was one which was all to-rent
5507 III| is to wit, the wax, the wick, and the fire, right so
5508 I| little crib of rushes and wickers and pitched it with glue
5509 III| virgin, was brought from the wicket of death, and came all whole
5510 IV| archbishop of Canterbury, named Wilfrid, and bade him, with his
5511 III| clergy, by the counsel of S. Wilfrida and S. Edith, sisters of
5512 V| doubtest to suffer, thou wiliest not to die, what shall I
5513 V| would be more subject, ne so willingly command as obey. And therefore
5514 III| of S. Edward and nuns at Wilton, the holy body was took
5515 VI| that fellowship that hight Wilwin, when he should rise, he
5516 VII| Wild bulls tamed, iv. 103.~Winchcomb, S. Kenelm's burying at,
5517 VII| breeches. ~sudary, n., a winding-sheet.~tachc (Fr.), a stain. ~
5518 III| college in the castle of Windsor by kings of England, in
5519 III| a vessel for to purge or winnow wheat; but the vessel fell
5520 V| burnt them into powder and winnowed them in the fields. And
5521 VII| the other. Then the priest wipeth first these three fingers
5522 I| thou that we might find any wiser than thou or like to thee ?
5523 V| supernal contemplation, wish only to be in the desire
5524 IV| things, and bound behind him wisps of straw in great despite.
5525 V| went hastily towards their withdraught and secret places, they
5526 IV| King, bound tofore me, why withdrawest thou my knights and drawest
5527 II| low, right so when mankind withdraweth him a little from contemplation,
5528 I| pardoning them; the present in withdrawing men from them; them to come
5529 VI| they shall never fade, ne wither, ne lose their savour, ne
5530 VII| stretched him with strong withes bound to horses about his
5531 IV| saw her weep he could not withhold his tears. And for the love
5532 III| known him, for he was a withholder of his tithes, and in all
5533 III| tithes to God, and yet he withholdeth them, and therefore I have
5534 I| him acceptable, he offered withies and thorns. And as some
5535 VI| the villains and paynims withsaid him so that one of them
5536 IV| appertaineth not to me to withsay thy request, I shall give
5537 VII| which S. Demetrius thus ever witnessing the name of Jesu, consummated
5538 I| for a man that is wise and witty, that may command and ordain
5539 I| thy brother. Then was Esau woe-begone, and hated Jacob for supplanting
5540 I| chambers, beds, that they were woebegone, and these frogs entered
5541 VII| of thy discomforted and woeful mother, but I leave both
5542 VI| eleventh chapter, where many woes be put. Sixthly, the gospel
5543 III| then he issued out anon wold he, nold he, by the flux
5544 IV| told to his nurse named Wolweline. And when he had told to
5545 VII| is made with man's hands? Wonderest thou on the precious ornaments
5546 I| for a while in a veritable wonderland. The lives of S. Jerome,
5547 I| has for one who loves the wondrous records of old days. ~Though
5548 II| Thomas came to the king to Woodstock for to pray him to be better
5549 V| thou art a man, for thou workest virtuously. And the condition
5550 I| not worldly things more worldlily, but spiritually. S. Bernard
5551 V| used always pottage and wortes for sick folk, and oftimes
5552 II| nothing with him, and he wotteth not who shall dispend it,
5553 II| and precious stones within woven, and when she had seen his
5554 VI| and brought the ship to wrack and was all to-broken, and
5555 I| and took the grapes and wrang out of them wine into the
5556 II| bishop gave to thee for to wrap in my body. Then S. Anthony
5557 V| a foul ordure stinking, wraped in gay array. And then she
5558 VII| burned all them that so wrathfully would have punished him,
5559 I| disposition, suffer me that I may wreak my wrath on them, and I
5560 IV| this holy man was a great wreaker and avenger on himself,
5561 V| and kept it from peril of wreck, and brought it to the port
5562 II| thankings for thou hast heard my wretchedness praying thy goodness that
5563 VII| refectory.~frounced, adj., wrinkled.~grabat, n., a gridiron.~
5564 III| his hand dried unto the wrist, and she handled his joints
5565 V| Anastasius in Latin, which was a writer of the Bible of the church
5566 I| version of the Septuagint, and writes ' princeps cocorum.' ~palpation,
5567 V| by wrath of God for the wrongful exiling and condemning of
5568 VII| led him, Herod came, which wwas provost of the country,
5569 VI| to the monastery called Wytheriachus, in which were both men
5570 I| in the gospel, Johannis xiii.: Jesu Christ saith: My
5571 I| transfiguration, Matthew xvii.: Lo! he yet speaking a
5572 I| corners is said in Genesis the xxviii. chapter: Thou shalt stretch
5573 V| which thing is in Genesis xxxii. chap.: there where he saith
5574 V| and hereof saith Job the xxxiii. chapter. If there were
5575 I| the end of the member or yard, and that is signified and
5576 VI| Edmund, and he took the yarn that was spun for a pound
5577 V| to say as without, and of ydros, that is water. For after
5578 II| this piteous crying and yelling, they went all to their
5579 III| ruddy of visage, and fair yellow hair which were for to sell.
5580 V| that other thy varlet or yeoman; haste thee and clothe them,
5581 V| saint, for he gave it to me yester even, but this piece of
5582 VII| his son governed him so youngly that he took again the rite
5583 III| much to say as love, and of yper, that is to say sovereign,
5584 III| that is detrenched out, and ys, that is a councillor. He
5585 I| saying: Agios, O Theos, Yskyros, etc., in honouring him
5586 V| sloth and that is signified Zachariæ quarto: The angel of the
5587 III| our law be destroyed. For Zacheus, mine old father, said to
5588 III| Rome. The which had a great zeal and love unto England, as
5589 V| duxere viri Joseph, Alpheus, Zebedeus.~Prima parit Christum, Jacobum
5590 VI| eighty-seven, whoose body S. Zelus, the priest buried, and
5591 II| named Crato, and that other Zenophilus, which were proved wise
5592 III| to Rome in the time when Zephyrus was pope of Rome, which
5593 II| Chemosh and Moloch, idols of Zidonia, of Moabites, and Ammonites,
5594 II| Shuhite, and the third, Zophar Naamathite. And when they
5595 III| flom Jordan against thee. Zozimus went to his abbey, and,
5596 II| him. And the people called Zyphites told to Saul that David
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