Canto

 1    10|   squadron lay;~Which, in the harbour, at a sound from bell, --~
 2    10|       vessels anchored in the harbour lay,~Waiting to bear them
 3    11| Formed in a mountain was that harbour rude;~Spacious, and for
 4    11| strikes his sails in the same harbour, where~They to the wind
 5    14|    him you oftentimes may see~Harbour in some obscure and close
 6    14|      At night he ever to that harbour goes."~ ~ XCI~Though Fraud
 7    18| watched his time, and for the harbour ran.~Aquilant, when his
 8    20|       bark or pinnace, in the harbour nigh,~Shall bid, while yet '
 9    29|      Lest haply thou shouldst harbour any dread~That mortal poison
10    33|  well-rigged galley from that harbour weighed.~Of these hereafter! --
11    37| hither, or he hears report~We harbour them, when hither they resort.~ ~
12    39|      one or two good days, in harbour lost.~ ~ XXXV~Of Charles,
13    39|      XL~When now she for that harbour would have weighed,~An eastern
14    40|    for its guide,~Entered the harbour, and approached the strand;~
15    40|     solitude; and where alone~Harbour wild stag and roebuck, deer
16    40|      mighty squadrons to that harbour brought,~With conquerors
17    46|     pier~Of the thick-crowded harbour, I descry.~All seem rejoiced
18    46|      Correggio's seed, on the harbour's furthest horn.~Veronica
19    46|     Or Turkish, from Venetian harbour went;~Scatters and overthrows
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