Canto

 1     7|       malice was the sufferer stung,~To blame and wound the
 2     8| retreat,~His sluggish courser stung with many a goad;~But with
 3     8| matter by my wanderings to be stung~For wantonness of every
 4     9|      d, the King of Friesland stung~His horse, and turned his
 5    11|    And miserable superstition stung,~Esteemed such holy deed
 6    17|      with anger and with fury stung;~Less thinking of his honours
 7    18|       And him so sorely anger stung and pride,~Thither he thought
 8    19|  Zerbino, with such wrath was stung,~"Not unavenged shalt thou
 9    23|     followed; so the fame~Had stung me, and in me such longing
10    26|      protest Rogero paid,~And stung by fury, griped his trenchant
11    29|    have your sex with slander stung.~ ~ III~But that in this
12    30|     envy at the conquest inly stung;~And -- were his destiny
13    36|    knows he what to do.~ ~ XV~Stung, at these tidings, by the
14    42|       desire was good Rinaldo stung~To ask that sorrow's cause,
15    43| steadier aim, no better care,~Stung by thy venom, than, in sordid
16    43|       woe and her from shame.~Stung by such blind and furious
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