Canto

 1    10|          with pious lore;~And on dry ground now landed, made
 2    10|        thrust:~And oft the dog's dry teeth are heard to fall;~
 3    15|      their brains and life-blood dry,~Casts forth their bones
 4    19|          made of willow thin and dry,~Rather than stout and stubborn
 5    26|        helms and shields,~As the dry wood to fire in forest yields.~ ~
 6    26|        with long famine lean and dry,~And lion's claws; a fox
 7    26|           CIII~"As fire, whereon dry, heated wood is strown,~
 8    29|      shun the noontide ray,~With dry and powdery sea-sand covered
 9    29|      Spare in his visage, and as dry as bone:~Dishevelled is
10    30|           which are wide~Of that dry shore; while from his level
11    30|         s end.~For heaven's sake dry your tears, nor by such
12    33|       for thorny thicket, wet or dry,~Tree, rock, or river, with
13    33| Emaciated with hunger, lean, and dry;~Fouler than death; the
14    37|           who drained the goblet dry.~ ~ LXX~"The cup returned --
15    40|          walls, two stood on the dry shore,~Of a construction
16    40|      Dudon had issued forth upon dry land,~Bent to find Charlemagne
17    41|     mighty strokes unstained and dry,~Thinking head, breast,
18    42|         round,~The floor whereof dry stalks of coral pave;~Most
19    43|         flat no less than upland dry --~Extending twenty miles
20    43|         I warrant not your bosom dry,~Should you repeat the proof;
21    43|        Past on its road, were no dry eyes discerned:~All sexes,
22    46|         amid those martial many, dry.~ ~ LXIV~So efficaciously
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