Canto

 1     2|     fountain-rill,~By ancient trees o'ershaded, glides away;~
 2     8|       And wasted flowers, and trees uptore and rent.~Not with
 3    14|       might count as well~The trees upon its back, or waves
 4    16|       their mantle strips the trees.~ ~ LXXVI~Agramant from
 5    18|  forest clothed that lair,~Of trees and underwood a tangled
 6    19|      him as he can: among the trees,~Behind oak, elm, beech,
 7    21|   fluttering foliage from the trees,~Which, blown about, before
 8    23|       o'er with fair and many trees.~ ~ CI~The mid-day fervour
 9    23|        Like these, old sturdy trees and stems of oak.~ ~ CXXXVI~
10    24| faulchion bright,~And up-torn trees, and made the forest hoar~
11    24|  Zerbino fares.~Last to those trees, upon whose bark was read~
12    34|      crave,~Picks stones, and trees lays level with his brand,~
13    34|  those pleasant bowers!~Whose trees are ever filled with fruit
14    37|    Already have the greenwood trees laid low~Their leafy honours
15    37|    there~Will be, and ere the trees their foliage lose;~And,
16    39| Uproot hard rocks, and mighty trees which grow~On their steep
17    42|    the stream be stopt,~Whose trees erewhile the liquid amber
18    43|    Tiberius held so dear;~And trees that in Hesperian gardens
19    45|   woodland, where~He thickest trees and most entangled spied:~
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