Canto

 1     1|          XXXIII~Through dreary woods and dark the damsel fled,~
 2     1|       her from harm amid those woods to keep,~The damsel weened
 3     1|  before they hear~The sweeping woods which spread about them,
 4     2|         And chased the maid by woods, and floods, and strands,~
 5     3|        So long as through deep woods thy journey lies,~Till,
 6     4|        They answered, in those woods he might be sure~Many and
 7     4|        wandering through these woods in lowly guise.~Besides,
 8     5|         baronies, and castles, woods and land.~ ~ XVIII~"Dear
 9     8|      in, remains the wildering woods among,~And goes about lamenting
10    10|     Olympia, who yet slept the woods among;~Till from her gilded
11    12| fearful hare~Through traversed woods, and through uncertain way,~--
12    20|        rivers ran,~Shaded with woods, and for the most part plain;~
13    22|    Loud is the uproar, and the woods resound.~Nothing of this
14    23|       C~The course in pathless woods, which, without rein,~The
15    45|         Mid strange and gloomy woods himself espied;~And, for
16    45|       how~Thence into solitary woods and drear~That warrior had
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