Canto

 1     6|         hunter's dart or snare,~Feed at their ease, or ruminating
 2     6|          XXVII~As in a stick to feed the chimney rent,~Where
 3     8|       every day to land, should feed.~Though to be woman is a
 4     9|         wife or maid whereon to feed:~ ~ XIII~"For of these merchant
 5    10| infinite and grace enjoy,~Which feed and nourish hearts they
 6    11|        Where she was placed, to feed the monster brought.~He
 7    11|     came dressed,~Some dame, to feed the beast, from countries
 8    12|         its trunk, her mare may feed.~ ~ LVIII~The Spanish cavalier
 9    14|       Boreas blows the fires to feed;~What time they take, and
10    16|        low,~Destined no more to feed on hay or grain;~For at
11    17|       parts have wherewithal~To feed thy hunger, or more nobly
12    18|             Left it to Fraud to feed, till her return,~The war,
13    18|         your hopes were wont to feed,~And suffer not that, scattered
14    19|      XII~"And if you needs must feed the beast and bird,~Like
15    19|  disencumber~Of merchandize, to feed the greedy tide.~Water to
16    25|        head.~ ~ XII~As while at feed, in full security,~A troop
17    32|         vulture and the crow to feed.~Rogero, that erewhile had
18    32|  suppliant call,~Who sport, yea feed and live, in streams that
19    32|        this empty hope my fancy feed,~Me in perpetual bondage
20    32|     Seated about the fire, they feed the ear;~And in this way
21    34|      the widow's scanty food --~Feed for a single feast that
22    34|        they with fruits of Eden feed,~So rich, that in his judgment '
23    34|         of savage fury full,~To feed on grass and hay, like slavering
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