| A..................399 | |
| Bo1 p1 4 stondynge aboven the heghte of myn heved, a | 36 |
| Bo1 p1 7 comune myghte of men; with a lifly colour | 38 |
| Bo1 p1 13 of a doutous jugement, for somtyme sche constreyned | 44 |
| Bo1 p1 25 beaute [of] the whiche clothes a derknesse of a | 56 |
| Bo1 p1 25 beaute [of] the whiche clothes a derknesse of a | 56 |
| Bo1 p1 29 thise clothes, men redden ywoven in a | 60 |
| Bo1 p1 32 bordure, a Grekyssh T (that signifieth the lif | 64 |
| Bo1 p1 43 sche bar a ceptre. | 74 |
| Bo1 p1 46 to my wepynges, sche was a litil amoeved, and | 78 |
| Bo1 p1 49 comune strompettis of swich a place that | 80 |
| Bo1 p2 7 and comyn to corage of a parfit man? | 158 |
| Bo1 p2 19 no peril, " quod sche; " he is fallen into a | 170 |
| Bo1 p2 20 litargye, whiche that is a comune seknesse | 172 |
| Bo1 p2 21 to hertes that been desceyved. He hath a | 172 |
| Bo1 p2 25 doon, I will wipe a litil his eien that ben | 176 |
| Bo1 p2 28 garnement yplited in a frownce sche dryede | 180 |
| Bo1 m3 7 a swyft wynd that hyghte Chorus, and that | 188 |
| Bo1 p3 21 byfallen a newe thyng? For trowestow that | 218 |
| Bo1 p3 78 warnstoryd and enclosed in swiche a palys | 276 |
| Bo1 p4 15 chosen for a ryght certein sege to the in myn | 316 |
| Bo1 p4 33 the mouth of the same Plato that it was a | 334 |
| Bo1 p4 73 Theodoric, the kyng of Gothes, in a dere yeer, | 374 |
| Bo1 p4 76 his corn were soold, and that at a grevous dere | 376 |
| Bo1 p4 81 upon the peple by swich a | 382 |
| Bo1 p4 82 manere imposicioun, as whoso boughte a | 382 |
| Bo1 p4 92 ne took effect. Paulyn, a conseiller of Rome, the | 392 |
| Bo1 p4 99 ne punyssche wrongfully Albyn, a | 400 |
| Bo1 p4 152 For schal I clepe it thanne a felonye or a synne | 452 |
| Bo1 p4 152 For schal I clepe it thanne a felonye or a synne | 452 |
| Bo1 p4 156 as thoughe it were a synne and a felonye (that | 456 |
| Bo1 p4 156 as thoughe it were a synne and a felonye (that | 456 |
| Bo1 p4 179 thanne han answeryd by the wordys of a | 480 |
| Bo1 p4 182 that he was knowynge and consentynge of a | 482 |
| Bo1 p4 192 of our defaute; but it is lyk a monstre | 492 |
| Bo1 p4 193 and a merveyle how that, in the presente | 494 |
| Bo1 p4 247 convicte of swiche a blame as myn is. Of whiche | 548 |
| Bo1 p4 257 hadde no leve to han a place in me byforn | 558 |
| Bo1 p4 288 commendeth. (Glose. As thus: that yif a | 588 |
| Bo1 p4 289 wyght have prosperite, he is a good man | 590 |
| Bo1 p4 291 whoso hath adversite, he is a wikkid | 592 |
| Bo1 p4 300 this: that whan eny blame is leid upon a | 600 |
| Bo1 m5 3 chayer, and turnest the hevene with a | 618 |
| Bo1 m5 45 kembd with a false colour, ne anoieth nat to | 660 |
| Bo1 m5 52 wrecchide erthes. We men, that ben noght a foul | 668 |
| Bo1 m5 53 partie, but a fair partie of so greet a werk, we | 668 |
| Bo1 m5 53 partie, but a fair partie of so greet a werk, we | 668 |
| Bo1 p5 1 Whan I hadde with a contynuel sorwe | 674 |
| Bo1 p5 6 wiste anoon that thow were a wrecche and | 680 |
| Bo1 p5 24 it is a sovereyn fredom to ben governed by the | 698 |
| Bo1 p5 77 the strengthe of a more myghty and | 750 |
| Bo1 m6 13 with a glotonos hand to streyne and presse the | 764 |
| Bo1 p6 2 th' estaat of thi thought by a fewe demaundes, | 778 |
| Bo1 p6 18 songe thow a litil herebyforn, and bywayledest | 794 |
| Bo1 p6 24 thow art put in so holsome a sentence. But lat | 800 |
| Bo1 p6 51 that they mai moeve a man from his place | 826 |
| Bo1 p6 56 that thow art a man? " | 832 |
| Bo1 p6 60 thanne, " quod sche, " what thyng is a man? " | 836 |
| Bo1 p6 62 that I [woot wel that I] be a resonable mortel | 838 |
| Bo1 m7 12 tye by the encountrynge of a stoon that is | 892 |
| Bo1 m7 15 lyght, and hoolden the weye with a ryght path, | 896 |
| Bo2 p1 1 Aftir this sche stynte a lytel; and after that | 902 |
| Bo2 p1 4 seyn thus: after thise thynges sche stynte a | 906 |
| Bo2 p1 33 ne bytideth noght withouten a manere | 934 |
| Bo2 p1 35 that thou art a litil departed fro the pees of thi | 936 |
| Bo2 p1 45 Musice, a damoysele of our hous, that syngeth | 946 |
| Bo2 p1 77 and whan sche goth awey that sche bryngeth a | 978 |
| Bo2 p1 79 withholden at a mannys wille, [and] sche | 980 |
| Bo2 p1 80 maketh hym a wrecche whan sche departeth | 982 |
| Bo2 p1 82 flyttynge Fortune but a maner schewynge of | 984 |
| Bo2 p1 85 byforn the eien of a man; but wisdom loketh and | 986 |
| Bo2 p1 95 undir the yok of hir. For yif thow wilt writen a | 996 |
| Bo2 m1 1 " Whan Fortune with a proud ryght hand hath | 1016 |
| Bo2 m1 16 and scheweth a greet wonder to alle hir servauntz | 1032 |
| Bo2 m1 17 yif that a wyght is seyn weleful and | 1032 |
| Bo2 p2 1 " Certes I wolde pleten with the a fewe | 1034 |
| Bo2 p2 59 of whiche kyng Cirus was ful sore agast a | 1092 |
| Bo2 p2 62 ben brend; but that a rayn descendede down | 1096 |
| Bo2 p2 71 is to seyn a dite of a prosperite for a | 1104 |
| Bo2 p2 71 is to seyn a dite of a prosperite for a | 1104 |
| Bo2 p2 71 is to seyn a dite of a prosperite for a | 1104 |
| Bo2 p3 12 to wrecches is a deppere felyng of harm | 1154 |
| Bo2 p3 21 they ben a maner norisschynges of thi | 1164 |
| Bo2 p3 26 a wrecche, hastow foryeten the nowmbre | 1168 |
| Bo2 p3 33 to ben leef and deere than for to been a | 1176 |
| Bo2 p3 37 thow neere right weleful, with so gret a nobleye | 1180 |
| Bo2 p3 67 delices. Thow bare awey of Fortune a yifte | 1210 |
| Bo2 p3 70 leye a reknynge with Fortune? Sche hath | 1212 |
| Bo2 p3 71 now twynkled first upon the with a wikkid | 1214 |
| Bo2 p3 78 wene thiself a wrecche; for thynges that semen | 1220 |
| Bo2 p3 80 first, a sodeyn gest, into the schadowe or | 1222 |
| Bo2 p3 83 ofte a swyft hour dissolveth the same man (that | 1226 |
| Bo2 p3 87 yet natheles the laste day of a mannes lif is | 1230 |
| Bo2 p3 88 a maner deth to Fortune, and also to thilke | 1230 |
| Bo2 p4 5 to me wonder swyftli and sone); but this is a | 1262 |
| Bo2 p4 27 whiche that is a man maked al of sapience and | 1284 |
| Bo2 p4 78 a wyght, or elles it ne last nat perpetuel. For | 1334 |
| Bo2 p4 97 man hath a ful delicaat feelynge; so that, but | 1354 |
| Bo2 p4 112 nis a wrecche but whanne he weneth hymself | 1368 |
| Bo2 p4 113 a wrechche by reputacion of his corage.) And | 1370 |
| Bo2 p4 114 ayenward, alle fortune is blisful to a man by | 1370 |
| Bo2 p4 163 despised and forleten. Certes eek that is a | 1420 |
| Bo2 p4 177 syn we knowe wel that many a man hath | 1434 |
| Bo2 m4 2 fownden hym a perdurable seete, and ne wol | 1442 |
| Bo2 m4 13 mynde certeynly to fycchen thin hous of a | 1452 |
| Bo2 m4 14 myrie sete in a low stoon. For although the | 1454 |
| Bo2 m4 18 a cler age, scornynge the woodnesses and the | 1458 |
| Bo2 p5 3 were tyme to usen a litel strengere medicynes. | 1462 |
| Bo2 p5 26 to be nedy as of that. And certes a voys al hool | 1484 |
| Bo2 p5 46 body, that by right myghte semen a fair creature | 1504 |
| Bo2 p5 47 to hym that hath a soule of resoun? For | 1506 |
| Bo2 p5 48 al be it so that gemmes drawen to hemself a | 1506 |
| Bo2 p5 57 that it is a [fayr] porcioun of the ryght fair | 1516 |
| Bo2 p5 85 eek that it be a fair thyng to schyne with | 1544 |
| Bo2 p5 90 wroughte hem. But also a long route of | 1548 |
| Bo2 p5 91 meyne, maketh that a blisful man? The | 1550 |
| Bo2 p5 93 it is a gret charge and a destruccioun | 1552 |
| Bo2 p5 93 it is a gret charge and a destruccioun | 1552 |
| Bo2 p5 94 to the hous, and a gret enemy to the lord hymself; | 1552 |
| Bo2 p5 113 desirestow of Fortune with so greet a noyse | 1572 |
| Bo2 p5 128 turned up-so-doun, that a man, that is a devyne | 1586 |
| Bo2 p5 128 turned up-so-doun, that a man, that is a devyne | 1586 |
| Bo2 p5 137 undirstanden nat how greet a wrong ye don to | 1596 |
| Bo2 p5 162 For yif a wyght schyneth with thynges that | 1620 |
| Bo2 p5 164 schynen with whiche a man is aparayled), | 1622 |
| Bo2 p5 180 of this lif a voyde weyfarynge man, thanne | 1638 |
| Bo2 p5 182 who seith, a pore man that bereth no rychesse | 1640 |
| Bo2 m5 13 of Syrien contre with the blood of a maner | 1658 |
| Bo2 m5 38 firsst up dalf, he dalf up a precious peril; | 1684 |
| Bo2 p6 32 thou saye a mows among othere mysz that chalanged | 1718 |
| Bo2 p6 39 a wyght, what thyng schaltow fynde more | 1724 |
| Bo2 p6 49 evere have any comaundement over a free | 1734 |
| Bo2 p6 51 of his propre reste a thought that is | 1736 |
| Bo2 p6 53 As whilom a tyraunt wende to confownde a fre | 1738 |
| Bo2 p6 53 As whilom a tyraunt wende to confownde a fre | 1738 |
| Bo2 p6 56 folk that wisten of a conjuracioun (which I clepe | 1742 |
| Bo2 p6 57 a confederacye) that was cast ayens this tyraunt; | 1742 |
| Bo2 p6 63 thing is it that a man may doon to an other man, | 1748 |
| Bo2 p6 65 other folk in hymself? (Or thus: what may a | 1750 |
| Bo2 p6 76 myghty that hath no power to doon a thyng that | 1762 |
| Bo2 p6 106 maketh nat a man myghty over hymselve, | 1792 |
| Bo2 p7 26 aboute ne halt but the resoun of a prykke at | 1870 |
| Bo2 p7 41 sholde ther duellen a ryght streyte place to the | 1886 |
| Bo2 p7 50 set this therto: that manye a nacioun, diverse | 1894 |
| Bo2 p7 70 of a synguler Romeyn strecchen thider | 1914 |
| Bo2 p7 77 And therof comyth it that, though a | 1922 |
| Bo2 p7 86 " But how many a man, that was ful noble in | 1930 |
| Bo2 p7 93 yow a perdurablete, whan ye thynken that in | 1938 |
| Bo2 p7 99 comparysoun of the abydynge of a moment | 1944 |
| Bo2 p7 122 pryde and veyne glorye, how a man scornede | 1966 |
| Bo2 p7 124 was a man that hadde [assaillede] with stryvynge | 1968 |
| Bo2 p7 127 taken upon hym falsly the name of a philosophre. | 1972 |
| Bo2 p7 129 he wolde assaie where he, thilke, were a | 1974 |
| Bo2 p7 133 feynede philosophre took pacience a litel while; | 1978 |
| Bo2 p7 137 nat that I am a philosophre?' The | 1982 |
| Bo2 m7 21 is marked with a fewe lettres. But althoughe | 2024 |
| Bo2 p8 9 a wonder that I desire to telle, and forthi | 2046 |
| Bo2 p8 33 thanne that thow augghtest to leeten this a litel | 2070 |
| Bo2 m8 9 see, gredy to flowen, constreyneth with a | 2094 |
| Bo3 p1 6 a litel herafter I seide thus: " O thow that art | 2118 |
| Bo3 p1 25 whiche that is a more verray thyng. And certes | 2136 |
| Bo3 p1 29 withynne a wyght, thanne ben thei swete. | 2140 |
| Bo3 m1 1 " Whoso wole sowe a feld plentevous, let hym | 2162 |
| Bo3 p2 1 Tho fastnede sche a litel the syghte of hir | 2178 |
| Bo3 p2 9 blisfulnesse is swiche a good, that whoso | 2186 |
| Bo3 p2 18 that blisfulnesse is a parfyt estat by the congregacioun | 2196 |
| Bo3 p2 52 yyveth to men, as it semeth hem, a maner | 2230 |
| Bo3 p2 57 vertu, for it is a ful hooly maner thyng; alle | 2234 |
| Bo3 p2 85 al be it so that it be with a dyrkyd memorie; | 2262 |
| Bo3 p2 86 but he not by whiche path, ryght as a dronke | 2264 |
| Bo3 m2 7 by a boond that may nat be unbownde. Al be | 2310 |
| Bo3 m2 23 seyn, in the wode), and after is enclosed in a | 2326 |
| Bo3 m2 32 The yerde of a tree, that is haled adoun by | 2334 |
| Bo3 m2 38 ayen eftsones his cart, by a pryve path, there | 2340 |
| Bo3 p3 3 it be with a thynne ymaginacioun; and | 2352 |
| Bo3 p3 4 by a maner thought, al be it nat clerly ne parfitely, | 2352 |
| Bo3 p3 10 whiche a man weneth to geten hym blisfulnesse, | 2358 |
| Bo3 p3 14 thynges, brynge to men swiche a thyng that no | 2362 |
| Bo3 p3 52 " Thanne mai nat richesses maken that a man | 2398 |
| Bo3 p3 69 " Than, " quod sche, " hath a man nede to | 2416 |
| Bo3 p3 80 maken a man rather have nede of foreyne | 2426 |
| Bo3 p3 93 thyng, yit duelleth thanne a nede that myghte be | 2440 |
| Bo3 m3 1 " Al weere it so that a riche coveytous man | 2448 |
| Bo3 m3 2 hadde a ryver or a goter fletynge al of gold, yit | 2448 |
| Bo3 m3 2 hadde a ryver or a goter fletynge al of gold, yit | 2448 |
| Bo3 p4 11 which thyng Catullus clepid a consul of | 2468 |
| Bo3 p4 13 (as who seith, he clepid hym a congregacioun | 2470 |
| Bo3 p4 14 of vices in his brest, as a postum is ful of corrupcioun), | 2470 |
| Bo3 p4 27 thow seye that he hadde wikkide corage of a | 2484 |
| Bo3 p4 32 Now yif thow seie a man that were fulfild of | 2488 |
| Bo3 p4 45 a wykkyd wyght be in so mochel the fowlere | 2502 |
| Bo3 p4 60 yif that a man hadde used and had manye | 2516 |
| Bo3 p4 65 that honour of peple were a natureel yifte to | 2522 |
| Bo3 p4 82 whilom a greet power; now nys it no thyng but | 2538 |
| Bo3 p4 83 an idel name, and the rente of the senatorie a | 2540 |
| Bo3 p4 84 greet charge; and yif a wyght whilom hadde the | 2540 |
| Bo3 p4 89 seyd a litel herebyforn, that thilke thyng | 2546 |
| Bo3 p5 2 thei maken a man to ben myghti? How elles, | 2574 |
| Bo3 p5 7 out of hir welefulnesse. O, a noble thyng and | 2578 |
| Bo3 p5 8 a cleer thyng is power, that is nat fownden | 2580 |
| Bo3 p5 23 than of welefulnesse. A tyraunt, that was kyng | 2594 |
| Bo3 p5 26 remes by gastnesse of a swerd that heng over | 2598 |
| Bo3 p5 35 done? And holdestow thanne hym a myghti | 2606 |
| Bo3 p5 69 is more myghty for to anoye a wyght | 2640 |
| Bo3 p5 70 than a famylier enemy? | 2642 |
| Bo3 p6 2 it ofte! For which thyng nat unskilfully a tragedien | 2654 |
| Bo3 p6 3 (that is to seyn, a makere of dytees that | 2656 |
| Bo3 p6 6 thousandes of folk but a greet swellere of eres!' | 2658 |
| Bo3 p6 17 sothfastnesse of conscience? And yif it seme a | 2670 |
| Bo3 p6 18 fair thyng a man to han encreced and sprad his | 2670 |
| Bo3 p6 20 ben a foul thyng yif it ne be yspradde and | 2672 |
| Bo3 p6 21 encreced. But, as I seide a litil herebyforn, | 2674 |
| Bo3 p6 34 how flyttynge a thyng it es? For yif the name | 2686 |
| Bo3 p6 36 of lynage, thanne is gentil name but a | 2688 |
| Bo3 p6 39 gentilesse be a maner preisynge that cometh | 2692 |
| Bo3 p6 48 this, that it semeth as that a maner necessite | 2700 |
| Bo3 p7 5 sorwes unsuffrable, ryght as a maner fruyt | 2722 |
| Bo3 p8 2 ne ben a maner mysledynges to blisfulnesse, ne | 2752 |
| Bo3 p8 41 eyghen of a beeste that highte lynx, so that | 2792 |
| Bo3 p8 54 by the heete of a fevere of thre dayes. | 2804 |
| Bo3 p8 56 this schortly in a somme: that thise worldly | 2806 |
| Bo3 m8 15 seyn, of a maner schellefyssche with whiche men | 2826 |
| Bo3 p9 13 ryght as thoughe it were thurw a litil clyfte, but | 2854 |
| Bo3 p9 27 if so be that ther is a thyng that in ony partie | 2868 |
| Bo3 p9 34 " And demestow, " quod sche, " that a thyng | 2874 |
| Bo3 p9 47 that a dirk thyng and nat noble that is suffisaunt, | 2888 |
| Bo3 p9 69 " This a consequence, " quod I. | 2910 |
| Bo3 p9 73 that is noble and honourable, nys nat that a | 2914 |
| Bo3 p9 74 myry thyng and a joyful? " | 2914 |
| Bo3 p9 90 partie of a thyng that ne hath no part, thei | 2930 |
| Bo3 p9 122 Boece. " What seystow thanne, yif that a | 2962 |
| Bo3 p9 145 theyghe it were to a blynd man; and that | 2984 |
| Bo3 p9 146 schewedestow me ful wel a litel herbyforn, | 2986 |
| Bo3 p9 150 blisfulnesse that parfitly maketh a man suffisaunt, | 2990 |
| Bo3 p9 174 elles it semeth that thei yeve to mortel folk a | 3014 |
| Bo3 m9 28 divyded [and] hath assembled a moevynge | 3068 |
| Bo3 m9 30 to hymself, and envyrouneth a ful deep | 3070 |
| Bo3 p10 9 a litel herebyforn (that is to seyn, sovereyn | 3098 |
| Bo3 p10 15 thilke good ne is, and that it nys ryght as a | 3104 |
| Bo3 p10 31 schewid a litel herebyforn that yif ther be | 3120 |
| Bo3 p10 32 a blisfulnesse that be freel and veyn and inparfyt, | 3120 |
| Bo3 p10 88 And eek at the laste se wel that a thing that is | 3176 |
| Bo3 p10 94 sovereyn good; but certes it were a felenous | 3182 |
| Bo3 p10 129 this, ne more ferme by resoun, ne a more | 3216 |
| Bo3 p10 137 the here as a corolarie or a meede of coroune. | 3224 |
| Bo3 p10 137 the here as a corolarie or a meede of coroune. | 3224 |
| Bo3 p10 151 " This ys, " quod I, " a fair thing and a | 3238 |
| Bo3 p10 151 " This ys, " quod I, " a fair thing and a | 3238 |
| Bo3 p10 161 maken or conjoynen as a maner body of | 3248 |
| Bo3 p10 196 membres, that diverse membris compounen a | 3282 |
| Bo3 p10 204 but that is a thing that mai not ben don. " | 3290 |
| Bo3 p10 231 that a wyght wolde ryden for cause of hele, | 3316 |
| Bo3 p11 11 thinges that I have concluded a litel herebyforn | 3374 |
| Bo3 p11 21 power to bryngen a good that is ful and | 3384 |
| Bo3 p11 58 and dwellen togidre, it es cleped a beeste; and | 3422 |
| Bo3 p11 61 thanne scheweth it wel that it is a deed | 3424 |
| Bo3 p11 63 the body of a wyght, while it duelleth in oo | 3426 |
| Bo3 p11 65 seyn that it is a figure of mankynde; and yif | 3428 |
| Bo3 p11 90 herbes and of trees [and] I am in a doute | 3452 |
| Bo3 p11 120 hevene as a deffendour myghty to suffren | 3482 |
| Bo3 p11 125 woot wel that they ne ben ryght as a foundement | 3488 |
| Bo3 p11 126 and edifice for to duren, noght oonly for a tyme, | 3488 |
| Bo3 p11 165 dredeth. (That is to seyn as thus: that a man | 3528 |
| Bo3 p11 170 that the wil of a wyght distourbeth and | 3532 |
| Bo3 p11 180 hym this, that is a ful grete cause to lyven | 3542 |
| Bo3 p11 222 seydest that thow wistest not a litel herbyforn. " | 3584 |
| Bo3 m11 1 " Whoso that seketh sooth by a deep thought, | 3594 |
| Bo3 m11 5 let hym gaderyn ayein, enclynynge into a compas, | 3598 |
| Bo3 m11 39 of any thing that were axid, yif ther nere a | 3632 |
| Bo3 p12 22 " Thou ne wendest nat, " quod sche, " a litel | 3662 |
| Bo3 p12 47 `God,' that is a word that is used to alle folk. " | 3686 |
| Bo3 p12 73 alle thinges by hymself; and he is as a keye and | 3712 |
| Bo3 p12 74 a styere, by whiche that the edifice of this world | 3714 |
| Bo3 p12 77 aperceyvede a litil herebyforn that thow woldest | 3716 |
| Bo3 p12 78 seyn thus, al be it so that it were by a | 3718 |
| Bo3 p12 98 ne schulde nat seme blisful yif ther were a yok | 3738 |
| Bo3 p12 161 of wordes a manere wondirful sercle | 3800 |
| Bo3 p12 163 For certes a litel herebyforne, whanne thou bygunne | 3802 |
| Bo3 p12 168 for whiche thou yave me as a covenable | 3808 |
| Bo3 m12 49 a lawe in this and covenaunt in the yifte; | 3896 |
| Bo3 m12 53 yeven a lawe to loverys? Love is a grettere lawe | 3900 |
| Bo3 m12 53 yeven a lawe to loverys? Love is a grettere lawe | 3900 |
| Bo3 m12 54 and a strengere to hymself thanne any lawe that | 3900 |
| Bo4 p1 18 namely a ryght gret cause of my sorwe: that so | 3934 |
| Bo4 p1 38 " that were a greet merveille and an abaysschinge | 3954 |
| Bo4 p1 42 hous of so mochel a fadir and an ordeynour of | 3958 |
| Bo4 p1 47 I have concluded a litel herebyforn ben kept | 3962 |
| Bo4 m1 13 and he, imaked a knyght of the clere | 3998 |
| Bo4 p2 31 yif thou see a wyght that wolde geten that | 4060 |
| Bo4 p2 36 " And yif thou se a wyght, " quod sche, " that | 4066 |
| Bo4 p2 42 who seith, in so moche as a man is myghty to | 4072 |
| Bo4 p2 43 doon a thing, in so mochel men halt hym | 4072 |
| Bo4 p2 65 " This is a verray consequence, " quod I. | 4094 |
| Bo4 p2 105 " Thanne, " quod sche, " yif that a wight be | 4132 |
| Bo4 p2 189 a merveile to seien, that schrewes, whiche | 4216 |
| Bo4 p2 196 myghtest seyn of the careyne of a man, that it | 4224 |
| Bo4 p2 197 were a deed man, but thou ne myghtest nat | 4224 |
| Bo4 p2 198 symply callen it a man; so graunte I wel forsothe | 4226 |
| Bo4 p2 216 and proevid a litil herebyforn that evel is | 4244 |
| Bo4 p2 223 I have diffinysched a litil herbyforn that no thing | 4250 |
| Bo4 p2 250 desired ben referred to good, ryght as to a | 4278 |
| Bo4 p3 9 mede of that; as thus, yif a man renneth in | 4328 |
| Bo4 p3 16 right as a comune mede, which mede ne | 4336 |
| Bo4 p3 44 yaf the a litel herebyforn, and gadre it togidre | 4364 |
| Bo4 p3 80 lerned a litil herebyforn that alle thing that | 4400 |
| Bo4 p3 102 betidith it that, yif thou seest a wyght that be | 4422 |
| Bo4 p3 104 that he be a man. For if he be ardaunt in avaryce, | 4424 |
| Bo4 p3 105 and that he be a ravynour by violence of foreyne | 4424 |
| Bo4 p3 109 likne hym to the hownd; and if he be a | 4428 |
| Bo4 p3 114 bereth the corage of a lyoun; and yif he be | 4434 |
| Bo4 p3 124 bounte and prowesse, he forletith to ben a man; | 4444 |
| Bo4 p3 126 God, he is torned into a beeste. | 4446 |
| Bo4 m3 10 hem is coverid his face with forme of a | 4456 |
| Bo4 m3 11 boor; the tother is chaungid into a lyoun | 4456 |
| Bo4 m3 14 chaunged into a wolf, and howleth whan he | 4460 |
| Bo4 m3 16 the hows as a tigre of Inde. But al be it so | 4462 |
| Bo4 m3 43 todrawen a man to hem more myghtely than | 4488 |
| Bo4 p4 16 a gret partie of the peyne to schrewes scholde | 4510 |
| Bo4 p4 42 this lif, that is long to abyde, nameliche to a corage | 4536 |
| Bo4 p4 45 is ofte destroyed by a sodeyn ende, or | 4538 |
| Bo4 p4 50 lengest is a schrewe. The whiche wikkide | 4544 |
| Bo4 p4 64 an hard thing to accorde hym to a conclusioun, | 4558 |
| Bo4 p4 68 nis nat spedful to a necessarie conclusioun; | 4562 |
| Bo4 p4 110 he is a wrecche, that ther be yit another | 4602 |
| Bo4 p4 142 concluded a lytel herebyforn. But I preye the | 4634 |
| Bo4 p4 152 ben excercised by a purgynge mekenesse; but | 4644 |
| Bo4 p4 212 wyltow seyn of this: yif that a man hadde al | 4704 |
| Bo4 p4 234 " Yif thou were thanne iset a juge or a | 4726 |
| Bo4 p4 234 " Yif thou were thanne iset a juge or a | 4726 |
| Bo4 p4 262 schrewes it were a more covenable thing that the | 4754 |
| Bo4 p4 290 overmochel a fool, and for to haten | 4782 |
| Bo4 m4 16 ryghtful. Wiltow thanne yelden a covenable | 4808 |
| Bo4 p5 27 of this so wrongful a confusioun; for I wolde | 4836 |
| Bo4 p5 44 ne knowe nat the cause of so gret a disposicioun, | 4854 |
| Bo4 m5 18 strokes. (That is to seyn, that ther is a maner | 4876 |
| Bo4 p6 9 And thanne sche, a litelwhat smylinge, | 4904 |
| Bo4 p6 21 manere ne noon ende, but if that a wyght | 4916 |
| Bo4 p6 22 constreynede tho doutes by a ryght lifly and | 4916 |
| Bo4 p6 32 as the knowynge of thise thinges is a maner | 4926 |
| Bo4 p6 37 deliteth the, thou most suffren and forberen a | 4932 |
| Bo4 p6 83 ryght as a werkman that aperceyveth in his | 4978 |
| Bo4 p6 117 tornen aboute a same centre or aboute a poynt, | 5012 |
| Bo4 p6 117 tornen aboute a same centre or aboute a poynt, | 5012 |
| Bo4 p6 120 and is, as it were, a centre or a poynt to the | 5014 |
| Bo4 p6 120 and is, as it were, a centre or a poynt to the | 5014 |
| Bo4 p6 122 and thilke that is utterest, compased by a largere | 5016 |
| Bo4 p6 155 men by a bond of causes nat able to ben | 5050 |
| Bo4 p6 179 a worse confusioun than that gode men | 5074 |
| Bo4 p6 196 seith, may a man speken and determinen of | 5090 |
| Bo4 p6 201 (as who seith, but it is lik a mervayle or | 5096 |
| Bo4 p6 225 to comprehende and to telle) a fewe thingis of | 5120 |
| Bo4 p6 237 opynioun it is a confusioun. But I suppose that | 5132 |
| Bo4 p6 251 wolde deme that it were a felonie that he | 5146 |
| Bo4 p6 253 nat suffre that swich a man be moeved with any | 5148 |
| Bo4 p6 254 bodily maladye. But so as seyde a philosophre, | 5148 |
| Bo4 p6 294 schrewes scheweth a gret argument to good | 5188 |
| Bo4 p7 15 " Forsothe this is a ful verray resoun, " quod | 5346 |
| Bo4 p7 17 destyne that thou taughtest me a litel herebyforn | 5348 |
| Bo4 p7 21 whiche thow seydest a litel herebyforn that | 5352 |
| Bo4 p7 30 a litil to the wordis of the peple, | 5360 |
| Bo4 p7 93 plawntest a ful egre bataile in thy corage ayeins | 5424 |
| Bo4 m7 48 torned hym into a bole, and Hercules brak of | 5484 |
| Bo4 m7 71 erthly lust is overcomyn, a man is makid | 5508 |
| Bo5 p1 48 but thei casten as a maner foundement of subject | 5556 |
| Bo5 p1 55 I have diffynysschid a litil herebyforn. " | 5564 |
| Bo5 p1 70 Ryght as a man dalf the erthe bycause of | 5578 |
| Bo5 p1 71 tylyinge of the feld, and founde ther a | 5580 |
| Bo5 p3 2 a more hard doute than I was. " | 5694 |
| Bo5 p3 63 soth. But therfore ne sitteth nat a wyght for that | 5754 |
| Bo5 p3 65 opinioun is rather soth for that a wyght sitteth | 5756 |
| Bo5 p3 93 that I woot that a thing is, it byhoveth by | 5784 |
| Bo5 p3 100 wyght wene a thing to ben oothir weyes | 5792 |
| Bo5 p3 108 seith, that yif I woot a thing, it ne mai nat | 5800 |
| Bo5 p3 125 to speke it with mouthe, it is a felonous synne. | 5816 |
| Bo5 p3 212 as thou songe a litil herebyforn, be departed and | 5904 |
| Bo5 p4 39 hast confessed it and byknowen a litel | 6000 |
| Bo5 p4 58 comen, algatis yit it is a signe that the thingis ben | 6020 |
| Bo5 p4 130 man scholde deme a thing to ben otherwyse | 6092 |
| Bo5 p4 142 that this schal mowen schewen by a schort | 6104 |
| Bo5 p4 143 ensaumple, the same rowndnesse of a body, | 6104 |
| Bo5 p4 196 universel of here conceyte ryght thus: man is a | 6158 |
| Bo5 p4 199 ne wot wel that a man is a thing ymaginable | 6160 |
| Bo5 p4 199 ne wot wel that a man is a thing ymaginable | 6160 |
| Bo5 m4 1 " The porche (that is to seyn, a gate of the | 6180 |
| Bo5 m4 12 had ben nakid of itself, as a mirour or a clene | 6190 |
| Bo5 m4 12 had ben nakid of itself, as a mirour or a clene | 6190 |
| Bo5 m4 16 ryght as we ben wont somtyme by a swift | 6194 |
| Bo5 m4 27 vein in the manere of a mirour, whennes | 6206 |
| Bo5 m5 4 aftir hem a traas or a furwe icontynued (that | 6350 |
| Bo5 m5 4 aftir hem a traas or a furwe icontynued (that | 6350 |
| Bo5 m1 1 " Therfore thanne, as I have schewed a litel | 6372 |
| Bo5 p6 58 togidre eterne, and that is a wrongful wenynge.) | 6428 |
| Bo5 p6 85 for that it bereth a maner ymage or liknesse of | 6456 |
| Bo5 p6 144 Ryght so as whan ye seen togidre a man walke | 6514 |
| Bo5 p6 155 this nis noon opynioun, but rathir a stidfast | 6526 |
| Bo5 p6 168 byknowen a thing of ful sad trouthe. But | 6538 |
| Bo5 p6 181 condicionel, as thus: yif thow wost that a | 6552 |
| Bo5 p6 190 ne constreyneth a man to gon that | 6560 |
| Bo5 p6 221 the a litil herbyforn -- that is to seyn, | 6592 |
| Bo5 p6 278 that thou puttest a litel herebyforn; that is to | 6648 |