Canto

 1     9| entertained such high disdain,~He entered Holland, and the war began,~
 2    11|     emerged to light,~Whom he had entered bodily, he bore,~He for
 3    12|           they into this rest~Had entered, never doffed and laid aside:~
 4    12|          nor calling for a guide,~Entered the passage in the mountain'
 5    14|         made:~And where the river entered and went out,~Had thickest
 6    16|         with horsemen of Navarre,~Entered in that fierce fray he sees
 7    17|   unbarred the cote,~And the king entered, amid sheep and goat.~ ~
 8    17|        Origille, to take the air,~Entered this while a garden which
 9    17|         together bred,~Which ever entered into mortal head.~ ~ CX~
10    18|        blade,~To assail the newly entered British band,~Which Edward
11    19|          pieballed horse Marphisa entered, -- spread~Were circles
12    19|       mid-day, the plain~Marphisa entered, nor expected long,~Before
13    22|          a piercing cry.~ ~ IV~He entered, 'twixt two hills, a narrow
14    23|          with plate and chain.~He entered, for repose, the cool retreat,~
15    24|      thousand blows;~Nor yet well entered are the encountering foes.~ ~
16    34|          hand he ties)~The cavern entered next; but first he took~
17    39|       find~Foes in the port, here entered to unload;~Having left Argier
18    40|         Sansonetto for its guide,~Entered the harbour, and approached
19    41|          the faulchion keen.~When entered Brandimart sees Brava's
20    43|               CLVII~When they are entered, and she sees no show~Of
21    44|       sent that emperor; here~Now entered (for the entrance was not
22    45|           he would do.~ ~ XCII~He entered into that dark woodland,
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License