Canto

 1     2|  unawares he issued from the track,~And found himself within
 2     4|     wound,~They to the wider track a path preferred;~When echoing
 3     8|    would soon have ceased to track her steed,~To the dark cave
 4     9|      other place;~Yet cannot track his lady, high or low.~If
 5    11|      men against the current track a boat.~This while Oberto
 6    11|   sends~The knight upon this track, permits no more.~Departing,
 7    15|      securest and the freest track.~ ~ XI~And thus by her a
 8    15|   there is along this rugged track,~And grass; all other needful
 9    18| solemnized by royal hest.~To track whom Aquilant was so intent,~
10    19|   the beach below,~By beaten track to Barcelona go.~ ~ XLII~
11    20|  alone and friendless, she a track~Uncouth pursues, and through
12    20|      bent to post~On her old track -- with her the hag will
13    22|    For, in the middle of the track, there lay~A well, within
14    23|      From thence, who on her track in haste had gone,~Ere thither
15    23|     holt; because the beaten track~Was lost in many others
16    26|  King Rodomont,~The mountain track was short, but trod with
17    26|      in my song,~That easier track across the level hold;~And
18    27|  valiant two~Follow upon her track, nor halt, till told~That
19    27|  done,~And made him lose the track of Ulien's heir:~A woman
20    29|   hindrance block the common track.~ ~ LIII~To this address
21    42|    dead.~ ~ LII~By gloomiest track and blindest path he still~
22    44|     desert, by the self-same track,~Through which he led them
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