Canto

 1     1|      of shadowy wood or murky lair.~And "Peace be with you,"
 2     4|      seemed the very nest and lair~Of animal, supplied with
 3     4|  enchantment from his distant lair,~The wizard thought but
 4    11|       left her on that desert lair.~That Ireland's king was
 5    12|     thicket, ditch, or narrow lair,~Escaping from the keen
 6    12|       junipers o'er shade her lair,~Or in the stubble of the
 7    15|   their bones upon the desert lair;~And round about his griesly
 8    17|       s wife alone was in the lair.~Seeing the king: `Fly! --
 9    17|    his hand before the opened lair,~Lest with the herd we issued
10    17|       German neighbour of thy lair~Say what I say to thee;
11    17|  heavily, no badgers in their lair,~Or dormice, overcome with
12    18|     And threatening seeks his lair with sluggish pace;~From
13    18|   ancient forest clothed that lair,~Of trees and underwood
14    20| pursues, and through a wooded lair.~Gryphon the white and Aquilant
15    25|      a knight arrive upon the lair,~Who, flourished o'er with
16    33|      shrowded in his caverned lair,~So sore moreover by his
17    34|       more descends into that lair,~So much he finds the smoke
18    44|      gall, but let him to his lair return.~Already had the
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