Book

 1    II| perchance has pierced your ears ere now,~I come to try my wonted
 2    II|     doth rise,~May thither walk ere third hour of the day.~Oh,
 3    II|       the vineyard of thy Lord,~Ere prime thou hast the imposed
 4    II|   naught,~Thus parted they, and ere he wandered far~The friendly
 5   III|        would he wear~My thrall, ere fates him of this life deprive,~
 6   III|       he hoped small grace,~Yet ere he did to tell how much
 7   III|       When he cried, "Hold, and ere we prove our might,~First
 8    IV|        At hand was Satan, ready ere men need,~If once they think,
 9    IV|      was her last.~ ~ XLIV~"And ere five years were fully come
10    IV|      Should give me poison dire ere next I slept.~ ~ LIII~"And
11    IV|  disarrayed me,~My father died, ere he five years had known
12    IV|       To gather up this liquor, ere it fall,~And of each drop
13     V|       But mine was freely given ere 'twas sought,~Nor that it
14     V|     heard it told,~She thought, ere truth-revealing time or
15    VI|      fate shall this right hand ere long,~Return victorious:
16    VI|     turned his ready steed,~And ere his foe was wist or well
17   VII|      upon a threshold trad,~And ere he wist, he entered had
18   VII|   sliding hours spent,~And rose ere springing day began to peep;~
19  VIII|        his servants, trust,~Who ere they ask, grants all things
20    IX|        Juda's king.~ ~  VI~But, ere he open war proclaimed,
21    IX|      the forest's savage queen,~Ere on their crests their rugged
22    IX|       and his were up and armed ere long,~And marched forward
23    IX|    proud scorns thus answereth, ere he dies:~ ~ LXXX~"Not thou,
24    IX|      assaults unhurt sustained,~Ere fortune wholly from the
25     X|       chariot shall awry direct~Ere from this course I will
26     X|  upright walked at ease the men~Ere they had passed half that
27     X|         day they miss?~Or else, ere we expect, what if they
28     X|      once our guard defied,~And ere he left the fight to earth
29    XI|    fight relent,~I go, and will ere long again be here;~I go
30    XI|       Who scorned the challenge ere his lips it passed.~ ~ LXIV~
31    XI|    LXXXIII~The weak and wounded ere he left the field,~The godly
32    XI|     Thus Godfrey bids, and that ere springing-day,~The cracks
33   XII|         reposed,~She gave thee, ere thou couldest christened
34   XII|        The gulf, on such mishap ere I could dream,~Into his
35   XII|    XXXIX~"Last morn, from skies ere stars exiled were,~In deep
36   XIV|      crystal port there is,~And ere the sun his broad doors
37   XIV|       his,~Hence toward Godfrey ere he left his bed~A vision
38   XIV|             VIII~Hugo replied, "Ere many years shall run,~Amid
39   XIV|          So He commands, and me ere this foretold~Your coming
40    XV|        map.~"Arise," quoth he, "ere lately broken day,~In his
41   XVI|          nor tempest smart,~But ere the fruit drop off, the
42   XVI|        XLII~As cunning singers, ere they strain on high,~In
43  XVII|      Rewarded been, for service ere that hour;~Their arms were
44  XVII|      stay~Of our religion true, ere this I wrought:~Yourself
45  XVII|        There may we well arrive ere night doth end,~And through
46  XVII|       yet unborn, unknown,~That ere this light they view, their
47 XVIII|          and sad the night;~And ere the silver morn began to
48 XVIII|         that glides.~ ~ LXI~But ere the third day came the French
49   XIX|      Saracine,~And caught a rap ere he was reared upright.~But
50   XIX|         a hot brand flames most ere it forth go'th,~And dying
51   XIX|         of the eastern sky,~And ere bright Titan half his course
52   XIX|      thy woe,~Cast at your feet ere you expect the thing,~I
53   XIX|  forbear."~ ~  LXXXV~Forthwith, ere thence the camp remove,
54   XIX|     wound shall bring sad death ere long.~ ~ LXXXIX~"And for
55   XIX|         grief, my woe and pain,~Ere my weak soul from this frail
56   XIX|     might bear~His master home, ere night obscured the land,~
57   XIX|        easier make the way,~And ere I yield to Death's and Fortune'
58    XX|     VIII~He had not marched far ere he espied~Of his proud foes
59    XX|       haste~That dead they fell ere one could see them slain;~
60    XX|          CXXVIII~She turns and, ere she knows, her lord she
61    XX|        As who say, "Let me die, ere look on thee."~ ~ CXXX~And
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License