| AFTERWARD..........1 | |
| Bo3 m1 15 afterward the verray goodes schullen entren into | 2176 |
| AFTIR..............20 | |
| Bo1 p1 23 hir owene handes, as I knew wel aftir by hirselve | 54 |
| Bo1 m4 15 Hope aftir no thyng, ne drede nat; and so | 294 |
| Bo1 p4 167 comen aftir our dayes schullen knowen it, I have | 468 |
| Bo1 p6 103 remedies; so that, aftir that the derknesse of | 878 |
| Bo2 p1 1 Aftir this sche stynte a lytel; and after that | 902 |
| Bo2 p5 78 aftir the superfluyte of fortune. For [with] | 1536 |
| Bo2 p5 174 wikkidnesse the more gredy aftir othir folkes | 1632 |
| Bo3 m1 9 aftir that Lucifer, the day-sterre, hath | 2170 |
| Bo3 m7 4 aftir that the be hath sched hise agreable honyes, | 2748 |
| Bo3 m12 5 ryght greet sorwe for the deth of his wyf, aftir | 3852 |
| Bo4 m3 7 with enchauntementz. And aftir that hir hand, | 4452 |
| Bo4 p4 144 no torment to the soules aftir that the body is | 4636 |
| Bo4 p4 147 torment aftir the deeth of the body? " ) | 4638 |
| Bo4 p4 167 most unsely yif thei weren perdurable. And aftir | 4658 |
| Bo4 p6 264 aftir the qualite of hir corages, and remordith | 5158 |
| Bo5 m1 5 of hem that folwen hem. And sone aftir the | 5610 |
| Bo5 p2 34 possessioun of hir propre resoun. For aftir that | 5662 |
| Bo5 p4 138 comprehendid and knowen, nat aftir his | 6100 |
| Bo5 p4 139 strengthe and his nature, but aftir the | 6100 |
| Bo5 m5 4 aftir hem a traas or a furwe icontynued (that | 6350 |
| AFTIRWARD..........2 | |
| Bo1 p1 83 to abide what sche woolde doon aftirward. Tho | 114 |
| Bo3 p12 6 soule, and eftsones aftirward, whan Y lost it | 3646 |
| AGAMENON...........4 | |
| Bo4 m7 1 " The wrekere Attrides (that is to seyn, Agamenon), | 5438 |
| Bo4 m7 6 (That is to seyn, that he, Agamenon, wan ayein | 5442 |
| Bo4 m7 8 In the mene while that thilke Agamenon desirede | 5444 |
| Bo4 m7 14 (That is to seyn that Agamenon leet kutten the | 5450 |
| AGAST..............5 | |
| Bo2 p2 59 of whiche kyng Cirus was ful sore agast a | 1092 |
| Bo2 p4 159 agast lest he lese that he woot wel he may | 1416 |
| Bo3 p5 38 that he maketh agast thanne thei dreden hym, | 2610 |
| Bo3 p5 61 that though men han it, yit thei ben agast; | 2632 |
| Bo3 m12 12 hare was nat agast of the hound, whiche was | 3858 |
| AGASTEN............1 | |
| Bo3 m12 35 that tormenten and agasten the soules by anoy, | 3882 |
| AGASTETH...........1 | |
| Bo4 p6 291 somtyme agasteth othere to don felonyes, | 5186 |
| AGE................9 | |
| Bo1 m1 15 hath comandid his age to ben in me. Heeris hore | 14 |
| Bo1 p1 10 that sche was ful of so greet age that men | 42 |
| Bo1 p3 25 age of my Plato, ayens the foolhardynesse | 222 |
| Bo2 p4 43 of whiche, as of children of hir age, | 1300 |
| Bo2 m4 18 a cler age, scornynge the woodnesses and the | 1458 |
| Bo2 m5 1 " Blisful was the firste age of men. They | 1646 |
| Bo3 p5 4 certes the olde age of tyme passed, and ek the | 2576 |
| Bo3 m9 4 tymes to gon from syn that age hadde bygynnynge; | 3044 |
| Bo4 m5 33 comen seelde and sodeynly in our age; but yif | 4890 |
| AGEYN..............3 | |
| Bo3 m2 35 leet it goon ageyn, anoon the crop loketh upryght | 2338 |
| Bo3 p11 150 sone ageyn into the same thinges fro | 3512 |
| Bo3 m12 52 comen ageyn unto us.' But what is he that may | 3898 |
| AGGREABLE..........2 | |
| Bo2 p5 87 beaute be aggreable to loken uppon, I wol | 1546 |
| Bo2 p6 22 thyng is ful zelde, what aggreable thynges is | 1708 |
| AGGREABLELY........1 | |
| Bo3 m1 7 sterres schynen more aggreablely whan the | 2168 |
| AGGREABLETE........1 | |
| Bo2 p4 115 the aggreablete or by the egalyte of hym that | 1372 |
| AGOON..............1 | |
| Bo3 p3 24 haboundances of rychesses nat longe agoon, I | 2372 |
| AGREABLE...........1 | |
| Bo3 m7 4 aftir that the be hath sched hise agreable honyes, | 2748 |
| AGREABLELY.........1 | |
| Bo2 p4 126 every fortune resceyven agreablely or egaly, ne | 1382 |
| AGREABLES..........1 | |
| Bo3 m2 28 agreables schadwes of the wodes, sche defouleth | 2330 |
| AGRISEN............1 | |
| Bo3 p1 16 scharpe, nat oonly that I ne am nat agrisen of | 2128 |
| AGRISEST...........1 | |
| Bo2 p1 64 yif thou agrisest hir false trecherie, despise and | 966 |
| AGRYSEN............1 | |
| Bo1 p3 20 blame and agrysen as though ther were | 218 |
| AGRYSETH...........1 | |
| Bo1 m6 10 chirkynge, agryseth of cold by the felnesse | 762 |
| AI.................1 | |
| Bo5 p6 86 the ai duellynge presence of God, it grauntith to | 6456 |
| AJUGID.............1 | |
| Bo1 p4 98 ajugid byforn ne schulde noght sodeynli henten | 398 |
| AJUSTE.............1 | |
| Bo2 p3 23 that tyme is, I schal moeve and ajuste swiche | 1166 |
| AKKORNES...........1 | |
| Bo4 m3 25 ichaunged hir mete of breed for to eten akkornes | 4470 |
| AKNOWE.............2 | |
| Bo1 p4 150 confesse and am aknowe; but the entente of | 450 |
| Bo4 p4 2 aknowe it, " quod I, " ne I ne se nat that men | 4496 |
| AL.................171 | |
| Bo1 p1 9 myghte nat ben emptid, al were it so | 40 |
| Bo1 p1 81 I wax al abayssched and astoned, and caste | 112 |
| Bo1 m2 14 hadde comprehendid al this by nombre (of | 134 |
| Bo1 p2 3 sche, entendynge to meward with al the lookynge | 154 |
| Bo1 p2 17 of tunge and al dowmbe, sche leyde hir hand | 168 |
| Bo1 p3 68 whiche schrewes al be the oost nevere so greet, | 266 |
| Bo1 p4 22 my maneris and the resoun of al my | 322 |
| Bo1 p4 29 that hadden studied al fully to wysdom | 330 |
| Bo1 p4 78 overcome it, knowynge al this the kyng hymselve. | 378 |
| Bo1 p4 87 schulde gretly tormenten and endamagen al the | 388 |
| Bo1 p4 115 al be it so that the justise regal hadde whilom | 416 |
| Bo1 p4 134 aschamed of this? Certes, al hadde noght | 434 |
| Bo1 p4 165 of wys folk. Of whiche thyng al the ordenaunce | 466 |
| Bo1 p4 201 thynges?' But al hadde it ben leveful that | 502 |
| Bo1 p4 203 the deeth of alle gode men and ek of al the senat, | 504 |
| Bo1 p4 206 and eek al the senat, yit hadde I nought | 506 |
| Bo1 p4 215 caste hym to transporten upon al the ordre of the | 516 |
| Bo1 p4 218 sykernesse of peril to me defended I al the senat! | 518 |
| Bo1 p5 9 certes, al be thow fer fro thy cuntre, thou | 682 |
| Bo1 p5 54 touched it for sothe ryghtfully and schortly, al | 728 |
| Bo1 p5 57 peple that knoweth al this. Thow hast eek | 730 |
| Bo1 p6 45 God is bygynnynge of al. | 820 |
| Bo1 p6 54 al arrace hym, ne aliene hym in al. But I wolde | 830 |
| Bo1 p6 54 al arrace hym, ne aliene hym in al. But I wolde | 830 |
| Bo1 p6 86 nature hath nat al forleten the. I have gret | 862 |
| Bo2 p1 92 to suffren wyth evene wil in pacience al that is | 994 |
| Bo2 p2 21 envyrounde the with al the habundaunce | 1054 |
| Bo2 p2 80 what ek yif Y ne be nat al departed fro | 1114 |
| Bo2 m2 7 hevene on the sterry nyghtes; yit, for al that, | 1126 |
| Bo2 m2 9 pleyntes. And al be it so that God resceyveth | 1128 |
| Bo2 m2 14 alwey hir cruel ravyne, devourynge al that | 1134 |
| Bo2 p3 41 (that is to seyn, thy sones)? And over al this | 1184 |
| Bo2 p4 15 al be it so that the ydel name of aventuros | 1272 |
| Bo2 p4 20 precyous in al thy rychesse of fortune be | 1276 |
| Bo2 p4 27 whiche that is a man maked al of sapience and | 1284 |
| Bo2 p4 38 to the oonly hir goost, and is al maat and overcomen | 1294 |
| Bo2 p4 46 cure of al mortel folk is to saven hir owene | 1302 |
| Bo2 p4 52 yit nys nat every fortune al hateful to theward, | 1308 |
| Bo2 p4 66 forthynke nat of al thy fortune. (As who seith, | 1322 |
| Bo2 p4 68 tempeste the nat thus with al thy fortune, syn | 1324 |
| Bo2 p4 127 it deliteth nat in al to hem that ben angwyssous. | 1384 |
| Bo2 p4 174 deth may take awey blisfulnesse, that al the | 1430 |
| Bo2 p5 4 Now undirstand heere; al were it so that the | 1462 |
| Bo2 p5 23 of hym that hath yeven it. And also yif al the | 1482 |
| Bo2 p5 26 to be nedy as of that. And certes a voys al hool | 1484 |
| Bo2 p5 34 syn that many folk ne mai nat han it al, ne al | 1492 |
| Bo2 p5 34 syn that many folk ne mai nat han it al, ne al | 1492 |
| Bo2 p5 48 al be it so that gemmes drawen to hemself a | 1506 |
| Bo2 p5 106 the? For al so wel scholde they han ben fayre | 1564 |
| Bo2 p5 116 thynges, but certes it turneth to you al in the | 1574 |
| Bo2 p5 142 thynges. For yif that al the good of every | 1600 |
| Bo2 p6 111 nat digne, but it scheweth rather al opynly | 1796 |
| Bo2 p6 114 thynges with false names, that beren hem al in | 1800 |
| Bo2 m6 17 he governede al the peples by ceptre imperial | 1830 |
| Bo2 m6 27 al the peples in the south). But yit ne myghte | 1840 |
| Bo2 m6 28 nat al his heie power torne the woodnesse of | 1840 |
| Bo2 p7 25 that al the envyrounynge of the erthe | 1870 |
| Bo2 p7 30 wolde juggen in al that the erthe ne heelde | 1874 |
| Bo2 p7 88 of writeris put out of mynde and doon awey; al | 1932 |
| Bo2 p7 155 hevene, despiseth it nat thanne al erthly | 2000 |
| Bo2 m7 14 yit natheles deth despiseth al heye glorie of | 2018 |
| Bo2 m7 25 thanne stille, al outrely unknowable, ne fame | 2028 |
| Bo2 m8 13 coveren al the erthe) -- al this accordaunce | 2098 |
| Bo2 m8 13 coveren al the erthe) -- al this accordaunce | 2098 |
| Bo3 p2 49 thynges is torned al the entencioun of desyrynges | 2226 |
| Bo3 p2 75 al the purposede forme of the welefulnesse | 2252 |
| Bo3 p2 85 al be it so that it be with a dyrkyd memorie; | 2262 |
| Bo3 p2 99 worthy to ben despysed that wel neyghe al | 2276 |
| Bo3 m2 7 by a boond that may nat be unbownde. Al be | 2310 |
| Bo3 p3 4 by a maner thought, al be it nat clerly ne parfitely, | 2352 |
| Bo3 p3 48 " And thow, " quod sche, " in al the plente of | 2396 |
| Bo3 p3 90 nede ne mai nat al outrely be doon awey; | 2436 |
| Bo3 p3 97 that rychesse ne mai nat al doon awey nede, but | 2444 |
| 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 p4 15 al were this Nonyus set in chayere | 2472 |
| Bo3 m4 1 " Al be it so that the proude Nero, with al his | 2560 |
| Bo3 m4 1 " Al be it so that the proude Nero, with al his | 2560 |
| Bo3 m4 5 (this is to seyn that, al was he byhated of alle | 2564 |
| Bo3 p5 13 in wrecchidnesse? But yit, al be it so that | 2584 |
| Bo3 m5 4 al be it so that thi lordschipe strecche so fer | 2646 |
| Bo3 p6 47 ony good in gentilesse, I trowe it be al only | 2700 |
| Bo3 p7 15 ben clepid blisful, of whiche beestis al the entencioun | 2732 |
| Bo3 p9 16 " Certes, " quod sche, " the resoun is al redy. | 2856 |
| Bo3 p9 43 demen that thise thre thynges be al o thyng. " | 2884 |
| Bo3 p9 61 al redy of his suffysaunce.) | 2902 |
| Bo3 p9 92 noon, ne the thyng al hool that thei ne desire | 2932 |
| Bo3 p9 118 othere thynges ben (that is to seyn, al oon | 2958 |
| Bo3 p9 134 yeven but o thyng sengly of al that men | 2974 |
| Bo3 p10 200 al o thyng. " | 3286 |
| Bo3 p10 203 were conjoyned al of o membre allone; | 3290 |
| Bo3 p10 216 good the somme and the cause of al that | 3302 |
| Bo3 p10 242 is al on and the same substaunce. " | 3328 |
| Bo3 p10 246 blisfulnesse is al o thing. " | 3332 |
| Bo3 m10 20 Al that liketh yow here, and exciteth | 3356 |
| Bo3 p11 35 and whanne thei bygynnen to ben al o thing, | 3398 |
| Bo3 p11 116 that it is alwey hyd in the seete al withinne, and | 3478 |
| Bo3 m11 8 and hid in his tresors al that he compasseth or | 3600 |
| Bo3 m11 22 kyndeliche yhud withynne itself, al the trouthe | 3614 |
| Bo3 m11 24 withoute. And thanne al the derknesse of his | 3616 |
| Bo3 m11 30 thought al the cleernesse of your knowyng; | 3622 |
| Bo3 m11 45 al that every wyght leerneth, he ne doth no | 3638 |
| Bo3 p12 18 wel that I ne wyste it nat. But al be it so | 3658 |
| Bo3 p12 78 seyn thus, al be it so that it were by a | 3718 |
| Bo3 p12 110 " Certes, " quod I, " al outrely it ne | 3750 |
| Bo3 p12 174 that is required and desired of al the kynde of | 3814 |
| Bo3 m12 22 and song in wepynge al that evere he hadde | 3868 |
| Bo3 m12 33 al abasschid of the newe song. And the thre | 3880 |
| Bo3 m12 66 his thoughtes in erthly thinges, al that evere he | 3912 |
| Bo4 p1 4 wordes, I, thanne, that ne hadde nat al outrely | 3920 |
| Bo4 p1 14 toldest me, al be it so that I hadde whilom foryeten | 3930 |
| Bo4 p1 17 al outrely unknowen to me. But this same is | 3932 |
| Bo4 p1 27 and floureth ful of richesses, and vertu nis nat al | 3942 |
| Bo4 p2 15 al opynly; and yif thow knowe clerly the freelnesse | 4044 |
| Bo4 p2 48 gaderid and ischewid by forseide resouns that al | 4078 |
| Bo4 p2 132 to the maladye. But for I se the now al redy to | 4160 |
| Bo4 p2 184 ben myghti, but thei forleten al outrely in any | 4212 |
| Bo4 p2 218 schrewednesses, this conclusion is al cler, that | 4246 |
| Bo4 p3 22 For al be it so that schrewes waxen as wode | 4342 |
| Bo4 p3 83 it semeth wel that al that is and hath beynge | 4402 |
| Bo4 p3 85 beinge and unite and goodnesse is al oon.) | 4404 |
| Bo4 m3 16 the hows as a tigre of Inde. But al be it so | 4462 |
| Bo4 m3 37 For al be it so that thei mai chaungen the | 4482 |
| Bo4 p4 5 soules, al be it so that thei kepin yit the forme | 4498 |
| Bo4 p4 17 ben alegged and releved. For al be it so that | 4510 |
| Bo4 p4 90 whan thei ne ben nat punyssched, al | 4582 |
| Bo4 p4 109 and yit over al his wikkidnesse, for which | 4602 |
| Bo4 p4 138 al that is ryght nis good, and also the contrarie, | 4630 |
| Bo4 p4 139 that al that is wrong is wikke? " | 4630 |
| Bo4 p4 212 wyltow seyn of this: yif that a man hadde al | 4704 |
| Bo4 p4 255 sche, " thise oratours or advocattes don al the | 4746 |
| Bo4 p4 270 cesen in al, or elles, yif the office of | 4762 |
| Bo4 p6 33 porcioun of the medycyne to the, al be it so | 4928 |
| Bo4 p6 44 of muable nature, and al that moeveth | 4938 |
| Bo4 p6 79 " And al be it so that thise thinges ben | 4974 |
| Bo4 p6 221 of the ordre destynal, whan God, that al | 5116 |
| Bo4 p6 230 devyne purveaunce, that al woot. And | 5124 |
| Bo4 p6 323 of hemself by hir vices, the whiche vices al | 5218 |
| Bo4 p7 4 " Certes, " quod sche, " al outrely that alle fortune | 5334 |
| Bo4 p7 7 " Now undirstand, " quod sche. " So as al fortune, | 5338 |
| Bo4 p7 74 " That is soth, " quod I, " al be it so that no | 5404 |
| Bo4 p7 97 strengthes; for al that evere is undir the | 5428 |
| Bo4 p7 98 mene, or elles al that overpasseth the mene, | 5428 |
| Bo5 p1 16 al be it so that the thingis whiche that thou axest | 5524 |
| Bo5 p1 36 and I deme al outrely that hap nis but an idel | 5544 |
| Bo5 p1 45 noon of thise oolde folk ne withseide nevere; al | 5554 |
| Bo5 p1 59 awght, al be it so that it is hidd fro the | 5568 |
| Bo5 m3 36 he fynde hem? What wyght that is al unkunnynge | 5942 |
| Bo5 m3 45 it ne hath nat al foryeten itself, but it withholdeth | 5950 |
| Bo5 m3 49 not nat al, ne he ne hath nat al foryeten; | 5954 |
| Bo5 m3 49 not nat al, ne he ne hath nat al foryeten; | 5954 |
| Bo5 p4 54 that thilke selve fredom of wil schal duellen al | 6016 |
| Bo5 p4 56 seyn that, al be it so that prescience nis nat cause | 6018 |
| Bo5 p4 96 were al the effect of craft, yif that alle thingis | 6058 |
| Bo5 p4 134 thei wenen that tho thingis ben iknowe al only by the | 6096 |
| Bo5 p4 136 ben iwyst or iknowe. And it is al the contrarye; | 6098 |
| Bo5 p4 137 for al that evere is iknowe, it is rather | 6098 |
| Bo5 p4 147 al the body togidre, withoute moevynge of | 6108 |
| Bo5 p5 34 fleen or to desiren any thing. But resoun is al | 6272 |
| Bo5 p5 40 seith, it ne knoweth nat al oonly that apertenith | 6278 |
| Bo5 m5 13 walken undir the wodes. And al be it so that | 6358 |
| Bo5 p6 14 thanne, is parfit possessioun and al togidre | 6384 |
| Bo5 p6 22 al the space of his lif. For certis yit ne | 6392 |
| Bo5 p6 36 enbraseth it nat the space of the lif al togidre; for | 6406 |
| Bo5 p6 41 togidre al the plente of the lif interminable, | 6412 |
| Bo5 p6 48 present to hymselve and so myghty that al be | 6418 |
| Bo5 p6 49 right at his plesaunce), and that he have al | 6420 |
| Bo5 p6 62 togidre al the presence of the lif intermynable, | 6432 |
| Bo5 p6 77 mai nat han togidre al the plente of the lif, | 6448 |
| Bo5 p6 191 goth by his propre wil, al be it so that whan | 6562 |
| Bo5 p6 209 of fre arbitrie or of fre wil, that, al be it so | 6580 |