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 1     I|       herbs under the greenwood shade.~ ~ XLVII~A Pagan damsel
 2    II|     woods;~This is our summer's shade, our winter's sun:~This
 3   III|      souls down to the infernal shade,~From Amurath and Mahomet
 4   III|      trees to make the summer's shade,~To shield the parched land
 5   III|   complained; but now the sable shade~Ycleped night, had thick
 6     V|         the earth with silence, shade and sleep,~In secret sort
 7    VI|   Darkness, sent,~With friendly shade to overspread the ground,~
 8    VI|      the valleys of the Elysian shade,~And my mishap the knight
 9    VI|          that silence, and that shade.~ ~ CIV~Beholding then the
10    VI|        self, or else Clorinda's shade.~ ~ CXIII~Yet that it was,
11   VII|        underneath the greenwood shade~Her flocks lay hid from
12   VII|          Another day under your shade maybe~Will come to rest
13   VII|       witchcrafts and that ugly shade,~No further could the prince
14   VII|         airy mass,~And made the shade a body seem indeed;~Well
15  VIII|        glideth,~Clad with thick shade of boughs of broad-leaved
16  VIII|       soldiers from that forest shade,~Of whom one carried by
17     X|      when the night cast up her shade aloft~And all earth's colors
18     X|     good;~For there in thickest shade of myrtles fair~A crystal
19     X|        curtain of the greenwood shade,~Beside the brook upon the
20     X|   things men dream;~At last our shade it pleased her to restore,~
21    XI|    privy sleights with friendly shade,~The sun yet shines, your
22   XII|      was the world in sleep and shade,~I saw a champion clad in
23   XII|         here in silence, and in shade debate,~Where light of sun
24   XII|         whom night and darksome shade~To beasts, and me, far worse
25   XII|        knowledge was her lovely shade,~With looks of ruth her
26  XIII|     horrid arms display~An ugly shade, like everlasting night;~
27  XIII|     ease their faint in cooling shade,~Nor traveller nor pilgrim
28  XIII|       silence deaf and mirksome shade~His characters and circles
29  XIII|     town so sore,~We have sweet shade and waters cold by kind:~
30  XIII|      erspread was with a gloomy shade,~That like a dark mirksome
31   XIV|       though built in night and shade.~A Pagan was I born, but
32   XIV|         pleasure,~An echo is, a shade, a dream, a flower,~With
33    XV|    green~And underneath eternal shade did pass,~With murmur shrill,
34   XVI|      birds, hid under greenwood shade,~Sung merry notes on every
35   XVI|       silence deep and friendly shade~Recalled the lovers to their
36   XVI| Tisiphone the mad;~Vanished the shade, the sun appeared in sight,~
37  XVII|      Germany, and all under his shade.~ ~ LXXXI~This regal plant
38  XVII|         so through night's dark shade they fly,~The hermit thus
39 XVIII|         but sweet with pleasant shade:~ ~ XVIII~Forward he passed,
40 XVIII|        their moisture and their shade.~ ~ XXI~The knight some
41    XX|     hundred fight?~Our cry, our shade, will put them all to flight."~ ~
42    XX|        and safe he lay, as in a shade.~ ~ LXXXVII~Thus saved,
43    XX|         while found out an ugly shade,~Fit place for death, where
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