Canto

 1     4|       her lover blessed I little heed:~For this my praise the
 2     5|         as you can, with cunning heed,~Imitate her; then to the
 3     7|          had cried to him, "Take heed,~Thou know'st how ill that
 4    10|  expressed.~Hence shall he after heed no flattery,~Nor yet by
 5    11|     astounded, cursed his little heed.~And now the vanished lady,
 6    11|        Lithuanian led,~Little to heed the dogs in crowded fair,~
 7    15|       courser, not without great heed,~Lest he into the covert
 8    26|     again -- to his defence take heed.~I either here my parting
 9    26|      fitting, on my side."~Small heed to that protest Rogero paid,~
10    27|       view, observes with better heed,~The youthful king, beyond
11    27|       King Marsilius: "Take thou heed~That no worse evil mid these
12    28|           Since we, with all our heed, between us two,~Could not
13    28|        audience had with careful heed attended.~Rodomont listened,
14    29|      present still, gave curious heed;~ ~ XXI~Who, wearing out
15    29|    bridge was meant."~To this no heed insane Orlando paid,~But,
16    32|        with grief the cook takes heed,~How on the table cools
17    33|        aught beside the monsters heed.~ ~ CXXVI~After them spurs
18    34|        garlands, did the warrior heed,~Who heard, these signs
19    37| unsuspecting youth, who takes no heed~What nuptials, ordered in
20    44|     thing beside, nor they~Aught heed or aught esteem, ungraced
21    44|      this grave outrage cries?~I heed not that the deed is hard
22    45|        Christian was, I will not heed it, I;~For 'twixt a faithful
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