Canto

 1     3|           it with dove or raven's wing shall rise.~Yet lives the
 2     4|           him the horse is on the wing.~But his appearance well
 3     6|           warrior with such rapid wing,~He would have distanced,
 4     6| nightingales among those branches wing~Their flight, and safely
 5     8|       bird, who works so well his wing,~Rabican cannot distance
 6    10|          speed, or pause upon the wing.~And all that skilful horsemen
 7    10|        warrior is for ever on the wing.~Who lodges, housed in tavern
 8    11|       have lost the bird of rapid wing,~Which he no better than
 9    12|       spacious air, with troubled wing,~The starlings from the
10    14|           angel Michael turns his wing,~The clouds are scattered
11    14|          With sound of stridulous wing, through summer sky,~Or
12    14|          Rodomont, as if he had a wing~Upon his every member, from
13    15|           having tied~Beneath her wing a letter by a thread.~She
14    17|           of scent and sight:~And wing and plume were needed for
15    18|         Syria's land, with nimble wing,~Phoenicia and Palestine;
16    18|           to a south-easter every wing~Extends, and circles Cyprus
17    20|          s praise on outstretched wing,~Even to the skies; and
18    25|          fair,~Hanging his coward wing, when he should woo,~Shaping
19    26|        were espied,~Poised on the wing, as if about to smite,~He
20    27|        courser (which equipt with wing~Appeared when flying her)
21    33|           with the beat of savage wing.~Behold! the band of harpies
22    35|       cannot hang for ever on the wing.~I to the dame return, who
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