Book,  Verse

 1     II,   199|        But not the butchered corse.~ ~ ~ "Why now renew~ ~
 2    III,   727|  pours the sea and drags the corse below.~ ~
 3     VI,   360|                 360 A nobler corse than her Egyptian kings:~ ~
 4     VI,   693| spoils from Magnus' tombless corse~ ~
 5     VI,   862|        Scourges the moveless corse; and on the dead~ ~
 6    VII,   726|                 To spoil the corse, till severed from the neck~ ~
 7   VIII,   814|   troubled thee to guard the corse~ ~
 8   VIII,   858|                His mutilated corse may reach the flame.~ ~
 9   VIII,   926|       rather than permit his corse~ ~
10     IX,    20|      insults heaped upon his corse.~ ~
11     IX,    67|     might float the headless corse;~ ~
12     IX,   172|                Have torn his corse asunder, or a fire~ ~
13     IX,   943| feast, his comrades left the corse~ ~
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2010. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License