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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
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