| A..................98 | |
| Bo2 p1 1 Aftir this sche stynte a lytel; and after that | 0 |
| Bo2 p1 4 seyn thus: after thise thynges sche stynte a | 4 |
| Bo2 p1 33 ne bytideth noght withouten a manere | 32 |
| Bo2 p1 35 that thou art a litil departed fro the pees of thi | 34 |
| Bo2 p1 45 Musice, a damoysele of our hous, that syngeth | 44 |
| Bo2 p1 77 and whan sche goth awey that sche bryngeth a | 76 |
| Bo2 p1 79 withholden at a mannys wille, [and] sche | 78 |
| Bo2 p1 80 maketh hym a wrecche whan sche departeth | 80 |
| Bo2 p1 82 flyttynge Fortune but a maner schewynge of | 82 |
| Bo2 p1 85 byforn the eien of a man; but wisdom loketh and | 84 |
| Bo2 p1 95 undir the yok of hir. For yif thow wilt writen a | 94 |
| Bo2 m1 1 " Whan Fortune with a proud ryght hand hath | 114 |
| Bo2 m1 16 and scheweth a greet wonder to alle hir servauntz | 130 |
| Bo2 m1 17 yif that a wyght is seyn weleful and | 130 |
| Bo2 p2 1 " Certes I wolde pleten with the a fewe | 132 |
| Bo2 p2 59 of whiche kyng Cirus was ful sore agast a | 190 |
| Bo2 p2 62 ben brend; but that a rayn descendede down | 194 |
| Bo2 p2 71 is to seyn a dite of a prosperite for a | 202 |
| Bo2 p2 71 is to seyn a dite of a prosperite for a | 202 |
| Bo2 p2 71 is to seyn a dite of a prosperite for a | 202 |
| Bo2 p3 12 to wrecches is a deppere felyng of harm | 252 |
| Bo2 p3 21 they ben a maner norisschynges of thi | 262 |
| Bo2 p3 26 a wrecche, hastow foryeten the nowmbre | 266 |
| Bo2 p3 33 to ben leef and deere than for to been a | 274 |
| Bo2 p3 37 thow neere right weleful, with so gret a nobleye | 278 |
| Bo2 p3 67 delices. Thow bare awey of Fortune a yifte | 308 |
| Bo2 p3 70 leye a reknynge with Fortune? Sche hath | 310 |
| Bo2 p3 71 now twynkled first upon the with a wikkid | 312 |
| Bo2 p3 78 wene thiself a wrecche; for thynges that semen | 318 |
| Bo2 p3 80 first, a sodeyn gest, into the schadowe or | 320 |
| Bo2 p3 83 ofte a swyft hour dissolveth the same man (that | 324 |
| Bo2 p3 87 yet natheles the laste day of a mannes lif is | 328 |
| Bo2 p3 88 a maner deth to Fortune, and also to thilke | 328 |
| Bo2 p4 5 to me wonder swyftli and sone); but this is a | 360 |
| Bo2 p4 27 whiche that is a man maked al of sapience and | 382 |
| Bo2 p4 78 a wyght, or elles it ne last nat perpetuel. For | 432 |
| Bo2 p4 97 man hath a ful delicaat feelynge; so that, but | 452 |
| Bo2 p4 112 nis a wrecche but whanne he weneth hymself | 466 |
| Bo2 p4 113 a wrechche by reputacion of his corage.) And | 468 |
| Bo2 p4 114 ayenward, alle fortune is blisful to a man by | 468 |
| Bo2 p4 163 despised and forleten. Certes eek that is a | 518 |
| Bo2 p4 177 syn we knowe wel that many a man hath | 532 |
| Bo2 m4 2 fownden hym a perdurable seete, and ne wol | 540 |
| Bo2 m4 13 mynde certeynly to fycchen thin hous of a | 550 |
| Bo2 m4 14 myrie sete in a low stoon. For although the | 552 |
| Bo2 m4 18 a cler age, scornynge the woodnesses and the | 556 |
| Bo2 p5 3 were tyme to usen a litel strengere medicynes. | 560 |
| Bo2 p5 26 to be nedy as of that. And certes a voys al hool | 582 |
| Bo2 p5 46 body, that by right myghte semen a fair creature | 602 |
| Bo2 p5 47 to hym that hath a soule of resoun? For | 604 |
| Bo2 p5 48 al be it so that gemmes drawen to hemself a | 604 |
| Bo2 p5 57 that it is a [fayr] porcioun of the ryght fair | 614 |
| Bo2 p5 85 eek that it be a fair thyng to schyne with | 642 |
| Bo2 p5 90 wroughte hem. But also a long route of | 646 |
| Bo2 p5 91 meyne, maketh that a blisful man? The | 648 |
| Bo2 p5 93 it is a gret charge and a destruccioun | 650 |
| Bo2 p5 93 it is a gret charge and a destruccioun | 650 |
| Bo2 p5 94 to the hous, and a gret enemy to the lord hymself; | 650 |
| Bo2 p5 113 desirestow of Fortune with so greet a noyse | 670 |
| Bo2 p5 128 turned up-so-doun, that a man, that is a devyne | 684 |
| Bo2 p5 128 turned up-so-doun, that a man, that is a devyne | 684 |
| Bo2 p5 137 undirstanden nat how greet a wrong ye don to | 694 |
| Bo2 p5 162 For yif a wyght schyneth with thynges that | 718 |
| Bo2 p5 164 schynen with whiche a man is aparayled), | 720 |
| Bo2 p5 180 of this lif a voyde weyfarynge man, thanne | 736 |
| Bo2 p5 182 who seith, a pore man that bereth no rychesse | 738 |
| Bo2 m5 13 of Syrien contre with the blood of a maner | 756 |
| Bo2 m5 38 firsst up dalf, he dalf up a precious peril; | 782 |
| Bo2 p6 32 thou saye a mows among othere mysz that chalanged | 816 |
| Bo2 p6 39 a wyght, what thyng schaltow fynde more | 822 |
| Bo2 p6 49 evere have any comaundement over a free | 832 |
| Bo2 p6 51 of his propre reste a thought that is | 834 |
| Bo2 p6 53 As whilom a tyraunt wende to confownde a fre | 836 |
| Bo2 p6 53 As whilom a tyraunt wende to confownde a fre | 836 |
| Bo2 p6 56 folk that wisten of a conjuracioun (which I clepe | 840 |
| Bo2 p6 57 a confederacye) that was cast ayens this tyraunt; | 840 |
| Bo2 p6 63 thing is it that a man may doon to an other man, | 846 |
| Bo2 p6 65 other folk in hymself? (Or thus: what may a | 848 |
| Bo2 p6 76 myghty that hath no power to doon a thyng that | 860 |
| Bo2 p6 106 maketh nat a man myghty over hymselve, | 890 |
| Bo2 p7 26 aboute ne halt but the resoun of a prykke at | 968 |
| Bo2 p7 41 sholde ther duellen a ryght streyte place to the | 984 |
| Bo2 p7 50 set this therto: that manye a nacioun, diverse | 992 |
| Bo2 p7 70 of a synguler Romeyn strecchen thider | 1012 |
| Bo2 p7 77 And therof comyth it that, though a | 1020 |
| Bo2 p7 86 " But how many a man, that was ful noble in | 1028 |
| Bo2 p7 93 yow a perdurablete, whan ye thynken that in | 1036 |
| Bo2 p7 99 comparysoun of the abydynge of a moment | 1042 |
| Bo2 p7 122 pryde and veyne glorye, how a man scornede | 1064 |
| Bo2 p7 124 was a man that hadde [assaillede] with stryvynge | 1066 |
| Bo2 p7 127 taken upon hym falsly the name of a philosophre. | 1070 |
| Bo2 p7 129 he wolde assaie where he, thilke, were a | 1072 |
| Bo2 p7 133 feynede philosophre took pacience a litel while; | 1076 |
| Bo2 p7 137 nat that I am a philosophre?' The | 1080 |
| Bo2 m7 21 is marked with a fewe lettres. But althoughe | 1122 |
| Bo2 p8 9 a wonder that I desire to telle, and forthi | 1144 |
| Bo2 p8 33 thanne that thow augghtest to leeten this a litel | 1168 |
| Bo2 m8 9 see, gredy to flowen, constreyneth with a | 1192 |
| ABATED.............1 | |
| Bo2 p7 35 And yif thow haddest withdrawen and abated | 978 |
| ABOUTE.............4 | |
| Bo2 m6 18 that the sonne goth aboute from est to west.) | 928 |
| Bo2 p7 26 aboute ne halt but the resoun of a prykke at | 968 |
| Bo2 p7 66 the othere folk enhabitynge aboute. Seestow | 1008 |
| Bo2 p7 68 thilke glorie that ye travailen aboute to schewe | 1010 |
| ABOUTEN............1 | |
| Bo2 p3 61 sprad abouten the with so large preysynge | 302 |
| ABYDYNGE...........2 | |
| Bo2 p3 59 place that highte Circo, fulfildest the abydynge | 300 |
| Bo2 p7 99 comparysoun of the abydynge of a moment | 1042 |
| ABYEST.............1 | |
| Bo2 p4 10 " But that thow, " quod sche, " abyest thus | 364 |
| ACCORDABLE.........2 | |
| Bo2 m8 2 accordable chaungynges; that the contrarious | 1184 |
| Bo2 m8 21 accordable feith by fayre moevynges. This | 1204 |