Canto

 1     1|   intent to seek Orlando, he~Roved wheresoe'er he hoped to
 2     1|      Orient's farthest reign~Roved thither, where the sun descends
 3     2|      he owed his birth),~And roved as safe as if in company~
 4     5|  face;~Since many months has roved the cavalier,~Proving his
 5    17|      LXXX~But whither have I roved! who evermore~So from one
 6    18| Which heaped the plain where roved these comrades sworn,~Might
 7    20|       who~Thither a stranger roved, my mother bore.~And 'tis
 8    21|       now on the other side,~Roved round his castle but to
 9    23| saved his head,~What time he roved the Saracens among.~But
10    23|   All night about the forest roved the count,~And, at the break
11    27|    way:~Two hundred miles he roved, 'twist hill and plain,~
12    31|      Brigliador as well, who roved, forsaken,~About those arms,
13    31|     in their wandering vein,~Roved, unescorted, many a weary
14    41|     sand.~Now thither Roland roved, who paced the shore;~As
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