Canto

 1     6|        her every deed,~A human myrtle hears, and treachery,~And
 2     6|      full of fruit and flower,~Myrtle and palm, with interwoven
 3     6|      remount the air:~And to a myrtle, nigh the rolling brine,~
 4     6|   Meanwhile the courser by the myrtle's side,~Whom he left stabled
 5     6|        in his heat~So made the myrtle shake where he was tied,~
 6     6|    about his feet;~He made the myrtle shake and foliage fall,~
 7     6|        seethe:~So the offended myrtle inly pined,~Groaned, murmured,
 8     6|      In answer to the groaning myrtle, cries;~"Pardon! and, whatsoe'
 9     6|   closed his suit,~That gentle myrtle shook from top to root.~ ~
10     6|       magic lore,~Changed to a myrtle on the pleasant shore.~ ~
11     6|          There was a way', the myrtle said again,~-- `But rough
12     6|      LVII~The courser from the myrtle he untied,~And by the bridle
13     7|   weigh,~Of which the offended myrtle told above.~Nor will he
14     8|    greensward, in the beech or myrtle's shade:~But scarcely did
15    18|         a pleasant hill;~Which myrtle, orange, cedar-tree, and
16    22|        Had changed from man to myrtle on the plain;~Had marked
17    24|     rove~Amid the mazes of the myrtle grove.~ ~ LXII~As the swift-footed
18    40|           XLV~With juniper and myrtle overgrown,~Of habitations
19    41| fruit-bearing palm-trees blow,~Myrtle, and lowly juniper, and
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