Canto

 1     2|       him who dwells on yonder steep,~And by such strange and
 2     2|        hung down that entrance steep.~With her feet foremost,
 3     6|      those wilds, from tuft or steep~Dun deer or nimble goat,
 4    10|      Olympia, sorrowing on the steep.~Thrice, cruel to herself,
 5    17|         ere yet he climbed the steep,~He are alive, or rather
 6    17|     betook him to the mountain steep.~King Norandine his love
 7    24|      an ample water's tide,~Of steep and broken banks: a turret
 8    25|        Bristling with rocks, a steep and narrow way~Was to that
 9    25|        Agrismonte, crowned the steep,~Which Aldigier of Clermont
10    26|       touches, wall or rampire steep,~Goes to the ground' where'
11    29| reached a path upon the rugged steep,~Which overhung a valley
12    29|      Who so to gain the higher steep would strive;~Because he
13    31|  senses shall in Lethe's water steep.~ ~ L~His squadron in the
14    31|  weight, down hurtled from the steep,~Coursers and cavaliers,
15    37|         Scaling the mountain's steep and rugged side;~And such
16    39|      trees which grow~On their steep banks, and field and harvest
17    39|      blood the thirsty fallows steep.~The Franks few prisoners
18    39|       the strand~Should not be steep or rugged for descent:~There
19    41|      hard stones, against that steep ascent,~Towards the top
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