Canto

 1     1|         which they dressed~Their bodies was of proof, and saved
 2     7|      made anew,~The guests their bodies reverently incline,~And
 3    14|        had been the slain, whose bodies fed~The ravening eagle,
 4    14|         wounds, and turned their bodies o'er;~Moved by strange envy
 5    14|      barbarous Tartar king those bodies by;~And grudged, lamenting,
 6    14|        between,~And with so many bodies strewed the ground,~That
 7    15|         prey,~For food, on human bodies; feeding on~Poor mariners
 8    17|         not shrink~To imbue your bodies with the loathsome stink.'~ ~
 9    17|              LIV~"We smeared our bodies with the fruitful grease~
10    17| intestines lay,~And cloathed our bodies with the shaggy fleece:~
11    17|    feeling wool or hair~Upon our bodies, let us go again.~By such
12    18|          my trust, that as their bodies, so~Their souls embracing
13    18|        The horrid mixture of the bodies there~Which heaped the plain
14    24|      breast.~ ~ LXXXII~"I of our bodies cherish hope not light,~
15    26|          Why thus in steel their bodies they array.~"So just is
16    27|         train,~Whose slaughtered bodies overspread the plain.~ ~
17    31|  inclines his courser, where~The bodies are most thickly strown
18    33|          host.~Choked with their bodies every road shall be;~So
19    40|         glad repast~Their wasted bodies were refreshed, begun~To
20    40|          XXXIII~Filled with dead bodies of the paynim horde,~Blood
21    44|         now at other made;~Cleft bodies, and made hearts from shoulders
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