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| Alphabetical [« »] sighed 27 sighing 2 sighs 28 sight 68 sights 3 sigiere 3 sign 22 | Frequency [« »] 68 er 68 host 68 mighty 68 sight 68 tears 67 lies 67 soldiers | Torquato Tasso Jerusalem delivered Concordances sight |
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1 I| pure were subject to our sight,~Like to a man in show and 2 I| sun, yet scantly half in sight;~Godfrey e'en then his morn-devotions 3 I| mountain cast his curious sight~On every footman and on 4 I| fault was love, by unadvised sight,~Bred in the dangers of 5 I| his longing looks he set,~Sight, wonder; wonder, love; love 6 II| arms,~Ismeno gan tofore his sight appear,~Ismen dead bones 7 II| alter stands, far out of sight,~On which the image consecrated 8 II| Behold the faulter here in sight,~This hand committed that 9 III| Jerusalem, behold, appeared in sight,~Jerusalem they view, they 10 III| delight which their first sight did breed,~That pleased 11 III| from his father's care and sight,~Called Alicandro wounded 12 III| fears and flies~His dreadful sight, or trembling stayed at 13 III| poor doves at goshawks' sight aghast.~ ~ LIII~The herald 14 III| eyes~With thy Redeemer's sight, where crowned with bliss~ 15 IV| Her envious vesture greedy sight repelling;~So was the wanton 16 IV| fire~That kindled is by sight, blown by desire.~ ~ XXXIII~ 17 IV| spoils be in the Heaven's sight,~That from a tyrant's hateful 18 V| heaps like flames of fire in sight,~Hundreds, that knew not 19 V| scath,~And oft beguile his sight with nimble art,~That no 20 V| beheld a sad and rueful sight,~The signs of death upon 21 VI| with her skill, or with her sight.~ ~ LXVIII~Thus would she 22 VII| blows, now at his face and sight.~ ~ XXXIX~Against those 23 VIII| compassion of that woful sight;~He showed no change, but 24 VIII| the darkness to my feeble sight,~Appeared the twinkling 25 IX| stern eye's threatening sight,~An angry look will put 26 IX| throne bent down his gracious sight.~ ~ LVI~From whence with 27 X| chariot vanished out of sight,~Yet still the cloud environed 28 X| castle stands, to which by sight~But o'er a narrow bridge 29 XI| ope the depth thereof to sight,~He willed them open, search 30 XII| content,~He mewed her up from sight of mortal eye,~Nor day he 31 XII| from the king, thy father's sight,~Lest thy bright hue should 32 XII| from his heart had ta'en, sight from his eyes.~ ~ L~But 33 XII| and waxed proud with the sight,~Oh vanity of man's unstable 34 XII| woful knowledge, ah unhappy sight!~ ~ LXVIII~He died not, 35 XII| marble gray he fixed his sight,~Two streams of tears were 36 XIII| valleys deep grows out of sight,~Thick with old trees whose 37 XIII| scant the wood appeared in sight~When wonders new their fearful 38 XIII| trembling to retire,~The sight, the sound, the monsters 39 XIII| of that forest's dreadful sight,~Storms, earthquakes, thunders, 40 XIII| thick were set,~That oft his sight, and passage oft they let.~ ~ 41 XIV| kind hath hid from mortal sight,~And all the stars, their 42 XIV| dwell not buried still~From sight of Heaven. but often I resort~ 43 XIV| crime,~Then I perceived my sight was blindness still,~My 44 XIV| and thither turned his sight,~And tumbling in the troubled 45 XIV| his case,~That with the sight shame and disdain may move~ 46 XV| speedy course they frame,~In sight of Gaza till the bark arrived,~ 47 XV| to landward turned their sight,~And there saw pitched many 48 XV| and feigned her of their sight aghast.~ ~ LXI~And her fair 49 XVI| Twixt leaf and leaf their sight before they sent,~And after 50 XVI| shaded with boughs from sight:~ ~ XVIII~Her breasts were 51 XVI| that blessest with thy sight~Even blessed angels, turn 52 XVI| noble sprite awaked at that sight~His blood began to warm, 53 XVI| saw she plain,~Ah, woful sight! how from her gates the 54 XVI| shade, the sun appeared in sight,~Pale were his beams, the 55 XVI| country dear she fled the sight,~And guided to Asphaltes' 56 XVII| those portraits bent his sight.~ ~ LXVI~The cunning workman 57 XVIII| Of that strange desert's sight the first retired,~But not 58 XVIII| plants beside, even in his sight,~Childed an hundred nymphs, 59 XVIII| foes, beguiled with the sight,~Our greatest force and 60 XVIII| awe~Upon the walls in open sight he came,~Black, grisly, 61 XVIII| and smoke blind all men's sight,~Where stones and ruins 62 XVIII| threatening went,~And at his sight fled all the Soldan's train,~" 63 XIX| desire he hid and kept from sight,~His looks were ruled by 64 XIX| camp, far from resort and sight,~Vafrine began, "Gainst 65 XX| a strange and wondrous sight,~When front to front those 66 XX| Medusa's head were in his sight,~Stood like a man new turned 67 XX| on that fierce and cruel sight,~Some praised their strength, 68 XX| she fled, and with that sight~The prince had pity, courtesy