Canto

 1     1|     aught~Angelica of fighting fields be taught."~ ~ LXVIII~While
 2     3|   Verona's town,~With its fair fields; and two great chiefs this
 3     3|       as the flower of martial fields.~ ~ XLIII~"By him rebellious
 4     3|        the slain,~'Mid crowded fields, which scarce a grace supply,~
 5     8|         XV~Thence, through the fields, fast hurrying from that
 6     8|    watch by night and day.~The fields they have abandoned all
 7    13|      elope with me.~Amid green fields, our wealthy town beside,~
 8    15|     should my fear forego.~How fields are fitly won was then made
 9    15|        whose hearts in martial fields~Had found no shelter from
10    15|        At rise of sun, through fields of liquid air,~And from
11    16|    XXIII~What by weak herd, in fields of Hircany,~The tiger does,
12    17| subject Agiline,~Fattening his fields with blood. To pests like
13    17|     far and near,~The spacious fields and different roads about.~
14    24|   rustic crew~Abandoned in the fields pick, scythe, and plough,~
15    28|       as well as lying wide~Of fields, from whence he tidings
16    32| champaign browsed,~Leaving the fields, a shepherd she espied.~
17    33|       warfare storied, but its fields unfought.~Who limned the
18    33|        to shoot~In the Italian fields its withered root.~ ~ XI~"
19    33|      the fierce Germans on the fields below.~It seems each Frenchman
20    38|        Hence reek they ravaged fields with Christian blood;~And
21    38|    gone;~Yet we have lost more fields than we have won.~ ~ LVI~"
22    39|        end will burst upon his fields and grain,~Makes for Valentia;
23    43|   banners borne in rear,~Whose fields with diverse ensignry is
24    46|        better hand,~Across the fields an armed cavalier,~Of semblance
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