Canto

 1     4|     Cates, brave attire, game, sport, or mirthful measure.~My
 2     5|        be his follower and his sport;~And made, beyond each Scottish
 3     6|        wanton girls, in frolic sport;~Who haply yet would have
 4     6|    below,~In dance, or no mean sport the hours beguile.~While
 5     6|       shaggy fir-tree's spray,~Sport little loves, with desultory
 6     7|         Round these appears to sport in frolic flight,~Hence
 7     7| unwonted way:~And knew that he sport, dance, and banquet plied,~
 8     7|   beside the sea, the breeze's sport,~The whale of yore conducted
 9     8|       mortal man is pleased to sport.~ ~ LI~It here behoves me,
10     9|     him go, the naked archer's sport,~Sore smitten in the heart! --
11    10|      train.~And to make better sport, as him they eyed,~Rogero
12    17|       the city gates in frolic sport,~Many are seen to ply the
13    17|     play the shepherd more for sport than use.~ ~ XXXV~"The flesh
14    18|  mourning changed the expected sport,~Because all knew not what
15    20|      to sight.~ ~ CXXI~To have sport of him -- as she had --
16    29| wearing out the weary night in sport,~-- He and those followers
17    32|   moved by suppliant call,~Who sport, yea feed and live, in streams
18    43|        and Graces there should sport,~Nor more in Gnide and Cyprus
19    44|    their talk in earnest or in sport, ~Speak not, except some
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