1-500 | 501-514
    Canto

  1   Int|     Argalia falls to the heathen knight Ferrau, Angelica flees --
  2   Int|      these is that of the female knight Bradamante (sister of Ranaldo),
  3   Int|        with a very noble heathen knight named Ruggiero ("Rogero"
  4   Int|  hot-headed heathen; and a young knight named Brandimarte, who falls
  5     1|          helmet on his head;~The knight more lightly through the
  6     1|         When she the approaching knight on foot discerns.~ ~ XII~
  7     1|       The apparition of an angry knight.~ ~ XXVI~Armed at all points
  8     1|       and sore.~Upon the Spanish knight he frowned, and said:~"Thou
  9     1|        brother of Angelica. That knight~Am I; -- thy word was plighted
 10     1|          er he hoped to find the knight.~A different lot befel Rinaldo;
 11     1|     senseless stone appeared the knight.~ ~ XL~Pensive, above an
 12     1|       guerdon, mewed her for the knight~Who should protect the lilies
 13     1|          said, apart, Circassa's knight.~"To quit such proffered
 14     1|      bold semblance of a valiant knight,~Behold a warrior threads
 15     1|         haughty crest:~The other knight, whose worth I rate as high,~
 16     1|      Upright upon his steed, the knight unknown,~Who at the encounter
 17     1|         last;~So rose the paynim knight with troubled face,~The
 18     1|        life esteems the youthful knight,~While she from him, like
 19     1|         approach of the detested knight,~But through the wood with
 20     2|   Bradamont, seeking her devoted knight,~The good Rogero, nigh becomes
 21     2|          give way,~And where one knight an inch of ground has granted,~
 22     2|       lightened of Mount Alban's knight;~Who then on foot an equal
 23     2|        gentle maid addressed~The knight, and sought the occasion
 24     2|  Prepared who saw her for nimble knight.~ ~ XXXVII~"Fair sir, a
 25     2|        of youthful vigour, was a knight,~Prized in the Moorish court,
 26     2|         with mine."~ ~ LVIII~The knight relapsed into his first
 27     2|          was clear,~Cried to the knight, "Repose upon my say.~To
 28     2|        play me fair."~ ~ LXI~The knight replied, "Then nought to
 29     3|       ring to take;~And thus the knight's and others' fetters break.~ ~ ~
 30     3|      fief shall win like valiant knight,~Which thirty years before
 31     3|         show~To where the wizard knight Rogero sties;~And built
 32     3|       contending with the wizard knight;~How would'st thou know,
 33     3|         not till she~Release her knight, holds on till even-tide:~'
 34     4|          rack,~Who bore an armed knight upon his back.~ ~ V~Broad
 35     4|   various hue;~Seated between, a knight the saddle pressed,~Clad
 36     4|          only to redeem a gentle knight~From danger sore and death,
 37     4|        wilt, I shall restore the knight~To liberty," replied the
 38     4|        peace or truce.~After the knight had vanished from her view,~
 39     4|       claim~Its shelter, warlike knight or wandering dame.~ ~ LV~
 40     4|          town and city, that the knight~Who shall deliver her from
 41     4|         But if within a month no knight appear,~Or coming, conquer
 42     4|      many leagues and miles, the knight~Pricked through the dismal
 43     4|  approaching, sues Mount Alban's knight,~To say what on her head
 44     4|        Again to know, the gentle knight essayed,~Who had prepared
 45     5|    beyond each Scottish lord and knight,~Albany's duke find favour
 46     5|          betrayed,~The faithless knight his base deceit bewrayed.~ ~
 47     5| affection flows~Towards a gentle knight of courteous lore,~Who sought
 48     5|         apparent to the Scottish knight,~Ariodantes such a flame
 49     5|         Geneura and her faithful knight~Such discord and ill will
 50     5|      heat.'~ ~ XXVI~"So said the knight; and I, who was distraught,~
 51     5|          weened, this while, the knight~Would him to seek that hidden
 52     5|       And not ten paces from the knight aloof,~Bestowed himself
 53     5|           Nor, save the duke and knight, for many a day~Was there
 54     5|          he were feared of every knight.~ ~"And evil Fate has willed
 55     5|        all other fortune, to the knight~Was welcome to have found
 56     5|          had repaired a stranger knight,~To combat in Geneura's
 57     5|          Lurcanio and a stranger knight;~Where, on a spacious meadow'
 58     5|        Geneura; while that other knight~As well maintains the quarrel
 59     5|         deemed~It marvel, if the knight such fraud had schemed.~ ~
 60     5|         well Rinaldo spurred the knight to meet,~And levelled at
 61     6|          engulphed, the wretched knight,~Repentant of his deed,
 62     6|    dreaded an encounter with the knight,~ ~ IX~And that who well
 63     6|    Fearing in wrongful cause the knight to meet --~Ariodantes (long
 64     6|        already told) the unhappy knight,~Against his brother came,
 65     6|    Blinded by this, had sunk the knight before.~But haply he despised
 66     6|           had saved the youthful knight;~The wicked crew, that did
 67     7|   labyrinth, where~More than one knight is tied and prisoned, goes.~
 68     7|       such honour do,~And on the knight with such deep reverence
 69     7|          secret pleases best; to knight and dame~A fair occasion,
 70     7|          and care, her cherished knight,~Ravished from her, did
 71     7|        the wreck of such a noble knight~Would, from Hydaspes' distant
 72     7|         XLI~And thus such gentle knight ingloriously~Would have
 73     7|          watched, still kept the knight,~Designed to drag him, by
 74     7|          had reared the youthful knight.~With long-descending beard
 75     7|       courser was, that with the knight,~Who stands beside the sea,
 76     8|          Repaired to Logistilla, knight and dame.~ ~ XIX~Meantime,
 77     8|          threatened the departed knight,~By him so foul a fault
 78     9|         the stream; and she: "No knight~Passes this ferry, but upon
 79     9|    sacked and waste, as that the knight~I would not wrong, to whom
 80     9|        not loose Bireno, and the knight~Have not to thank me for
 81     9|         king refuse to loose the knight,~When I am offered, from
 82     9|         message, `that an errant knight~Oh him would prove himself,
 83     9|       his side agree,~If him the knight in combat overbore,~Forthwith
 84     9|   aggrieved, he hates,~If in the knight's disposal, and the say~
 85     9|          the say~Of that strange knight, the footman well relates.~
 86     9|         made his guard delay~The knight with words, till horse and
 87     9|         his back, and leaves the knight~Lord of the drawbridge and
 88     9|         hole, and fires upon the knight.~ ~ LXXV~Behind, the weapon
 89     9|        horse and rider: this the knight~Scarce touched; the other
 90    10|       desire, so feigns the wary knight,~Olympia less to love than
 91    10|    contented, with the faithless knight,~Supt, unsuspecting any
 92    10|         sea,~As viewing thus the knight proceed secure~Upon his
 93    10|       not gentle, nor art thou a knight;~And hast from other arms
 94    10|       fast her oars, pursues the knight~Along the sandy beach, still
 95    10|   afterwards how aid the English knight.~She wills the first shall,
 96    10|           For ever to the loving knight endeared,~And issued from
 97    10|         shall say~Of the English knight, who spent more time and
 98    10|       without the town,~And of a knight the occasion sought to know;~
 99    10|        amid the waves the latter knight.~The next of Dorset and
100    10|       the first of no avail,~The knight returns to deal a better
101    10|      ascend heaven-high;~And the knight knows not if he swim, or
102    10|      CXIV~'Twas here the wishful knight first checked the rein,~
103    11|       erst: and foolish were the knight,~If thinking of that damsel
104    11|         wishes leant towards the knight,~Whom he would fain see
105    11|       and by~The mighty blow the knight was overlaid:~The other,
106    11|     plain,~Him with his eyes the knight pursues with pain.~ ~ XXI~
107    11|          slow than eager was the knight:~The winds appear, which
108    11|    Orlando others cannot do,~The knight by others can; at half a
109    11|          amid the watery roar,~A knight a weighty anchor in his
110    11|        country knew the stranger knight~As he perused his face;
111    11|          before. So often he the knight~Had seen, and had with him
112    11|         his liege-lady sends~The knight upon this track, permits
113    11|        was bruited action of the knight,~Save when some faithful
114    12|          full of rage, pursues a knight~Who bears by force his lady-love
115    12|       and her car, the unwearied knight~Pursued the missing maid
116    12|         Backed by Orlando, angry knight and bold.~Entering, around
117    12|       charge of robbery lay:~One knight complains that he has stolen
118    12|      That food be wanting not to knight or dame,~He has supplied
119    12|     Count Orlando or Circassia's knight.~As of most powers, her
120    12|        Could recognise the other knight while there.~ ~ XXXII~Upon
121    12|         king,~In place of either knight sufficed the ring.~ ~  XXXVI~
122    12|         the casque, but give~The knight thine other arms to let
123    12|      alike from wound was either knight.~ ~ XLVIII~By you, fair
124    12|       Ferrau agreed,~That he the knight, who was with them before,~
125    12|   possest,~Long time the Spanish knight was vainly sought;~Nor Roland
126    12|         Africans to be a perfect knight;~Alzirdo he by those who
127    12|         cheer;~And him esteems a knight of prowess high,~Which,
128    12|         swallow quick the single knight.~None is there who, in that
129    12|          to the grotto stole the knight;~Threading the shrubs; nor
130    13|          recounted to Anglantes' knight.~ ~ III~"Though I am sure,"
131    13|      different lands came many a knight;~Mid these (was it his manifest
132    13|         a perfect warrior by the knight,~Praised, when to Odoric
133    13|          impart in safety to the knight,~Who would prefer, neglected
134    13|        sage leader and a valiant knight.~ ~ XLVI~The time long past,
135    13|       giants overlaid,~She saw a knight, who like Rogero showed,~
136    13|       the same time, the worsted knight appears~To slack the bridle
137    14|         west, or whole Levant,~A knight, with heart or prowess gifted
138    14|     Moved by strange envy of the knight whose hand~Had strown the
139    14|       and dictates to the Tartar knight,~Which sweetly tend to cheer
140    15|          wayfaring man or errant knight~Would vainly hope with life
141    15|      enveloped in his snare;~And knight and damsel views with equal
142    15|         s life, upon his way the knight~Set forward, and to Damietta
143    15|      nourished one and the other knight,~Oliver's children; when
144    16|             and so puts upon~The knight, that he less credits Luke
145    16|           Unceasingly the lady's knight carest;~ ~ XV~And to Damascus,
146    16|       King Pulian only marks the knight's advance,~Knowing Rinaldo
147    16|        of his hand.~Smote by the knight, escaped the former two;~
148    16|       duke, and York's the other knight;~With them conjoined is
149    17|          affront,~Stole from the knight the arms in which he went;~
150    17|       whole at ease;~When them a knight arrested by the way,~And (
151    17|         his bride, and dame, and knight,~To wait upon her home,
152    17|        plate, and helm of belted knight.~ ~ LXXXI~The lovely ladies
153    17|       every one,~Who as a worthy knight the warrior grace,~And over
154    17|         cry,~Urged him against a knight upon the ground,~As at the
155    17|        with shame,~He thinks the knight's disgrace is all his own,~
156    17|    trenchant brand:~This valiant knight, was, in the common trust,~
157    17|          be borne off by foreign knight.~A lance he snatches, and
158    17|        field remained Seleucia's knight,~The best of all the other
159    17|         duel stay:~They part the knight, whom they asunder bear,~
160    17|          part had done~On a sole knight, -- their quarrel ill defended, --~
161    17|      side, with him shall go~The knight, when homeward he shall
162    17|          False Origille, -- with knight and page supplied.~But it
163    17|       Syria, king, and lord, and knight,~And lady, in a gentle group
164    17|      crest he wears,~In dame and knight moves laughter, through
165    17|          them, who is the coward knight,~That of his honour makes
166    17|         should cost the stranger knight his head:~Enough that he
167    17|   charioteer,~And all assail the knight with bitter blame.~The boys
168    18|         Gryphon bound and many a knight.~The field Medoro and Cloridano
169    18|          encountered yesterday~A knight, who seized and bore away
170    18|       troop encounters, whom the knight,~With Valour and with Fortune
171    18|          say,~Before the warlike knight no order stood;~You might
172    18|         might to me be said,~"Is knight whose sword can cleave or
173    18|    Norandine, girt with peer and knight,~Seeing on every side the
174    18|          while the ample mob the knight surround,~And more and more
175    18|       excuse.~What by the vilest knight I thought to do,~I to the
176    18|        bade them softly with the knight resort~Towards the town,
177    18|         In the inquiry where the knight may use;~But they encounter
178    18|      threats of that all furious knight,~By whom he so was taken
179    18|        horse and mail,~He to the knight had done no injury;~But
180    18|         the valour of a sleeping knight,~With his own shame and
181    18|          On having bid his men a knight misuse,~Whom all should
182    18|        such honour as to perfect knight~Could by a puissant monarch
183    18|      Sansonnetto and the English knight~She sees approaching her,
184    18|      destined for the conquering knight,~As well as one and the
185    18|   offended Gryphon thought.~Each knight, in haste, supplied himself
186    18|        price and prowess, many a knight.~To the outlet of the square
187    18|      Sansonnetto and the English knight,~So supplicate Marphisa,
188    18|         let some fairer gift the knight reward."~ ~ CXXXI~Gryphon,
189    19|       cry,~And, "By thy God, sir knight," exclaims, "I pray,~Be
190    19|         him inquires the English knight~What kept his mind suspended
191    19|         should suffer stain.~The knight retires apart, and sits
192    19|       repose I did not leave the knight.~I now from him defend myself
193    20|   Clermont, from whose loins the knight~Issued who killed Almontes
194    20|      demand)~But, whether a good knight or bad I be,~Ask but like
195    20|     grace with Orontea, that the knight~Was by the dame adopted
196    20|        ill wind hither blew,~The knight to his eternal rest is gone.~
197    20|     Disposed already to obey the knight.~She takes a ship and arms
198    20|       And at the portal part the knight oppose.~ ~ LXXXVI~Sir Guido
199    20|        she deems unfitting for a knight~To fare in like great fellowship;
200    20|        this would prove upon her knight~With pact that she might
201    21|        her and hers she knew~The knight they were encountering,
202    21|         nearer now, the stranger knight espied~That face, which
203    21|       desire to kill;~Yet if the knight persists, he will not flee --~
204    21|         sound, that he, a gentle knight and good,~Should wish to
205    21|         thinking in what way~The knight can best with vengeance
206    21|         to seek,~He overtook the knight in little space;~For my
207    21|       place a bier,~And with the knight half-lifeless homeward speed,~
208    21|        depart was wanting to the knight;~In all the rest, as one
209    21|      thou no hope,' (replied the knight,)~`That my true faith shall
210    21|          lord's absence; but the knight's repair~At the wide distance
211    21|       peer,~He grieved so good a knight to have offended;~But, as
212    21|      shent.~And having heard the knight her guilt display,~Who was
213    22|      their way to save an errant knight~Doomed to devouring fire:
214    22|   Gramercy! dear to many) of the knight~Of Scotland I was telling,
215    22|       Where he before him a dead knight espied.~Who I shall tell;
216    22|         As old Atlantes sees the knight intend~To bring to scorn
217    22|         of Rabicane detained the knight.~ ~ XXIX~Good cause he had
218    22|          ever stubborn, bade the knight,~Her of Duke Aymon through
219    22|          to understand, O gentle knight,~My visage is so bathed
220    22|         here are dispossest,~And knight his arms and dame her gown
221    22|         days since, you now, sir knight, shall hear;~And shall the
222    22|         I know not whither, by a knight was shent.~ ~ L~"This knight,
223    22|     knight was shent.~ ~ L~"This knight, as flouted by that bonnibel,~
224    22|      joust, but vails his crest.~Knight infinite have come, but
225    22|        band. If such each single knight,~Imagine the assembled warriors'
226    22|         mantled with a veil, the knight~Keeps it, unless some passing
227    22|        shew~What warrior had his knight in the career~Smith with
228    22|         should I band with other knight?"~(Guido the savage said) "
229    22|    return where she had left the knight,~But never could make out
230    23|          risque might shield the knight:~But he the lance abandons,
231    23|          at the abbey failed the knight,~Who must not to bad faith
232    23|      courser he should find, the knight~Had sworn a solemn oath
233    23|     change thy thought.~A better knight than thee the horse doth
234    23|      this at the pleasure of the knight!~That I am Rodomont, to
235    23|          high worth esteemed the knight,~ ~  LVI~And asked him why
236    23|          after he had loosed the knight,~Helped him to don his shining
237    23|     grieved, that she was with a knight~To whom he owed so much:
238    23|        steeds repair;~And, lo! a knight and maid arrive, ere well~
239    23|        of thy vest) thou art the knight:~And if such cognizance
240    23|       his opposite each puissant knight,~And pricks against the
241    23|          straining of the paynim knight,~The girts which hold his
242    23|          I trow, had wrought the knight:~But neither this, nor bill,
243    24|       Was Isabel relating to the knight;~How in the pinnace she
244    24|      more,~Not without strife by knight shall he be stayed,~Who
245    24|          soul and valour, either knight.~Already echoed are a thousand
246    24|         Tartar king excelled the knight.~ ~ LXVII~The fearful stroke
247    24|       sleeve beneath it, and the knight~Smote on his arm; and next
248    24|         last words of Scotland's knight~Were so exprest, that he
249    24|        ere he descried~An errant knight descend the mountain's side.~ ~
250    24|      knew; and showed him to her knight:~Saying: "Behold! the haughty
251    24|        forehead smote the Tartar knight,~He made him see, revolving
252    24|     conveyed;~Who word to simple knight and captain bore,~To join
253    24|            the one and the other knight --~No longer to remain in
254    25|         the bosom here of either knight,~Honour, be sure, and duty
255    25|        with his band,~For either knight's expected succour, stay.~
256    25|          Rogero and the stranger knight,~Clear of the city-gates,
257    25|    humane, and courteous was the knight;~And on the fortress of
258    25|    delays: up leaps the restless knight,~And calls for pen and paper,
259    25|          the sheet, that amorous knight~His eyelids closed as well,
260    25|    uncultivated plain,~And saw a knight arrive upon the lair,~Who,
261    26|       beloved of such a valorous knight;~Who, what might be for
262    26|         false Maganza warmed the knight.~ ~ XIX~This cause made
263    26|          does maintain~Against a knight, who him so hard has prest,~
264    26|       the visage of the youthful knight~Showed with what rage his
265    26|         had to joust with either knight;~But Rodomont, who came
266    26|           Nor throws that paynim knight, nor even bends.~ ~ LXXIV~
267    26|       flowing rein, the stranger knight.~Against the tempered helm
268    26|        misdeed.~ ~  LXXVIII~When knight appeared not on the other
269    26|           And more than one good knight on earth have laid.~-- Give
270    26|        not only with that Tartar knight~She will abandon or defer
271    26|         followed fast the paynim knight,~Tracked o'er the level
272    26|   through that courser, knew the knight astride;~And on his lance
273    26|         believed he clutched the knight~Faster than nimble leopard
274    26|     bearing showed that youthful knight,~Because he drew his line
275    26|        bear me down,~Because his knight as well with me contends:~
276    26|    Rodomont complains the Tartar knight~Has violated twice the compact
277    26|       away;~For as she makes one knight from strife retire,~She
278    26|          morion of that youthful knight.~ ~ CXVII~Even to his courser'
279    26|      glow,~Enraged, that two one knight should overlay;~And, as
280    26|         s crest;~And, could that knight recover his own brand,~Which
281    27|          that sword with Brava's knight;~Who feigned himself of
282    27|       Gradasso has averred,~That knight should win the arms he would
283    27|          bring afield the Sarzan knight,~Marks narrowly the courser'
284    27|        first to last Circassia's knight~Rehearsed, and reddened
285    27|          whom, like the youthful knight,~No quarrels in the Moor'
286    27|          Poured forth the paynim knight, to fury stirred;~Now easing
287    27|      word escaped the melancholy knight.~ ~ CXXXII~Mine host, most
288    27|          must believe this noble knight,~Unless he would persuade
289    27|            made reply the paynim knight)~"Than sample, chosen from
290    28|     strange spectacle, the Roman knight~Cleared up his brow, his
291    28|         beside,~He and the Roman knight together ride.~ ~ XLVIII~"
292    28|          fashion, met the Sarzan knight;~To whom the dame her every
293    29|         top, who, whensoever any knight~Approached the bridge, was
294    29|     bridge approached Anglantes' knight.~ ~ XLI~Orlando running
295    29|        into that river pitch the knight.~She, conversant with Brava'
296    29|    espied,~She hoped to find the knight in other place.~But here
297    29|        had been traversed by the knight,~Urged by the furious rage
298    29|        Called to the approaching knight, and threatened sore;~Bidding
299    29|          next sprang the furious knight.~With better luck than wit,
300    29|        little less, would do the knight~By his own love, did not
301    30|       against himself the Tartar knight~Should wield the sword Orlando
302    30|         own!~Upon the vanquished knight no blame shall fall,~But
303    30|          fell blows which either knight~So well could plant, his
304    30|   deprived of sense the astonied knight;~And as his pride and fury
305    30|          in war --~That none the knight's return for ever bar?~ ~ `
306    30|       day, that day the youthful knight~Had fixt, who ill observed
307    31|      steed.~Quickly to venge the knight Alardo wends,~But falls
308    31|       one."~ ~ XIII~So spake the knight, yet spake not in a tone~
309    31|         my regret" (the stranger knight replied);~"But I, since
310    31|          deem thou art a valiant knight,~And lest thou umbrage take
311    31|          to the field defied the knight anew.~ ~ XX~And now each
312    31|         than to wound,~If either knight his footing would maintain;~
313    31|     weighed~Who was the stranger knight, so passing stout;~That
314    31|      stain.~ ~ XXIV~The stranger knight, upon the other side,~As
315    31|      dear~By Pinnabel, the felon knight, delaid;~Seized by that
316    31|          famed above each famous knight,~Whom he had burned with
317    31|       father deemed the stranger knight.~ ~ XXXV~I will not tell
318    31|         more~Was now the valiant knight, and better seen~That at
319    31|       know as well Mount Alban's knight,~And give the warlike kinsmen
320    31|          and wide;~And I a pious knight and courteous viewed~Those
321    31|    bestirs himself like valorous knight,~Who follows Clermont's
322    31|        had spied,~In company the knight and lady made.~They daily
323    31|            Whoe'er thou art, sir knight, and whencesoe'er --~Brought
324    31|          the dust,~Crumbles each knight and charger in mid-course;~
325    31|          horse is uppermost, the knight below.~From the bridge looks
326    31|         sir, the death of such a knight.~ ~ LXXIV~"Ah! courteous
327    31|        stronger than her baffled knight,~With better fortune may
328    31|        one who bore~Semblance of knight, that might afford her aid,~
329    31|        first sleep awakened by a knight:~He that the king will be
330    31|        hears it is Mount Alban's knight~By whom assailed the paynim
331    31|        pitchy darkness seeks the knight,~O'erturning all who cross
332    31|        field,~He to reproach the knight was nothing slow,~And of
333    31|         that shame, which to the knight appears~Too foul to be endured,
334    32|         not from his bridge that knight of pride,~Who has so many
335    32|        hour to hour the youthful knight.~ ~ XXVII~For a month's
336    32|       Agramant, she met a Gascon knight,~A prisoner to those paynims,
337    32|         point she covets led the knight:~Asks of Rogero, on that
338    32|       might his tale the missing knight excuse.~ ~ XXX~But then
339    32|     healed shall be the youthful knight,~The marriage of those lovers
340    32|         he rehearsed, the Gascon knight believed,~Nor without cause
341    32|          should confer it on the knight, whose worth~Is, in his
342    32|        Of living men the bravest knight at arms.~ ~ LVII~" `To Charlemagne,
343    32|         room within, to stranger knight~The castellain gives kindly
344    32|          is occupied~By dame and knight already housed, who, met~
345    32|          time before that gentle knight had freed.~ ~ LXXXV~"Sir
346    32|  castellain refused to house the knight,~He said, `What supplication
347    32|         Who prays the conquering knight, with suppliant cry,~Not
348    32|       drunk erewhile, allows the knight;~Yet, for he would that
349    32|          woman chase;~Nor that a knight a woman should displace.~ ~
350    32|      said~On ending silences the knight; and he~Allows the justice
351    32|       any further news of errant knight~Them, seated at the festive
352    33|   through the world, the English knight~Arrives in Nubia's distant
353    33|         fortilage~From that good knight should spring, who, 'twould
354    33|      XLVIII~"This is that goodly knight, whose praise you heard~
355    33|     boasting vein,~No paladin or knight with lance in rest,~Against
356    33|      little pressed~Now was that knight to keep the promise made,~
357    34|       took~His horn, whereon the knight in all relies.~Not far has
358    34|          comprehends the English knight~What wavers so, above that
359    34|           There lived a Thracian knight, for warlike skill~And prowess,
360    34|          All things (so said the knight) he would subdue;~But claiming
361    34|         Us in this fortilage the knight attacked,~And shortly to
362    34|      When of my coming that good knight does know,~Me he encounters
363    34|       fit the state wherein that knight was found.~ ~ XXVI~"To curse
364    34|      land;~ ~  XXXIV~"And if the knight, when a vile woman sues,~
365    34|       conquered by himself, that knight is seen~-- Friendless, through
366    34|       desire to see it warms the knight,~That he aspires to heaven,
367    34|           paused the adventurous knight,~When to that shining palace
368    34|         maid~Had blinded so that knight, of grace forlorn,~That
369    34|          the sire;~Who, when the knight and he well seated are,~
370    35|        had gone nigh to slay her knight;~Not that more doughty were
371    35|         where to find~At least a knight who can resist the foe,~
372    35|          sea,~And render to that knight this goodly horse,~Whence
373    35|          of all~On Bradamant the knight's suspicions fall.~ ~ LXV~
374    35|          bid your monarch send~A knight that better can with me
375    35|       thou have done.~Some other knight, that equals me in force,~
376    35|       would deem Orlando was the knight,~But that they knew his
377    35|          saluted her and she the knight.~"If 'tis allowed to ask," (
378    35|      stripling know the stranger knight,~Without the walls, defied
379    35|        sallied, what befell~That knight, in other canto will I tell.~ ~
380    36|        had replaced each baffled knight.~I told moreover how the
381    36|          moved anew;~Who was the knight, that on the martial plain~
382    36|      youthful brother seemed the knight.~But since his doughty valour
383    36|     another wide --~Seeing their knight such mighty prowess show;~
384    36|       mighty prowess show;~Their knight, but whom no otherwise they
385    36|        wished well that youthful knight;~For both were loved, but
386    36|      Victory with King Charles's knight abide,~Esteeming him the
387    36|       Rogero, after that strange knight to speed;~Nor deemed the
388    36|      shall vanquished both." The knight~Sought fierce Marphisa's
389    36|         for a while the youthful knight~Against that damsel put
390    36|           Such proof thereof the knight erewhile had made.~Where'
391    37|    moaning crew.~Upon that felon knight, for his foul scorn,~A fierce
392    37|        your defence is none;~Nor knight, in this wide world, more
393    37|      Marganor~(So name the felon knight) than whom more fell~Nero
394    37|      their father's fortilage,~A knight of the Greek emperor's court
395    37|          s seat,~Where must pass knight and lady, took his stand.~
396    37|         that, when he beheld the knight advance,~He issued, to assail
397    37|       the career;~But that Greek knight, in warlike strife well-taught,~
398    37|         s tomb, befitting such a knight,~Built by her order, two
399    37|       venge himself; 'tis so the knight,~Than any mastiff, any serpent,
400    37|          with escort of an armed knight~Any wend thither, they are
401    37|        daughter and the youthful knight,~For answer, spurred against
402    38|      shows, and with it bids the knight~The Nubian's eyeballs touch,
403    38|        remembered how the gentle knight~Had from the loathsome harpies
404    38|       whatsoever other Christian knight.~But would ye kindle warfare
405    38|       warriors spend,~He -- by a knight of yours to be withstood --~
406    38|        slew in strife the Tartar knight.~ ~ LXVIII~Rogero, though
407    38|      that the heart~Of that good knight unworthy fears molest;~Not
408    38|          sister of the Christian knight~(He knows) is she, his consort
409    38|          lay,~The Roman empire's knight by Charles declared;~And
410    38|           all armed, Montalban's knight,~Armed, save his helmet,
411    38|         be the Moorish monarch's knight.~ ~ LXXXVIII~When ended
412    39|         injure least Montalban's knight.~ ~ III~To most of them
413    39|           Brandimart, the Danish knight,~Hastening towards that
414    39|     Which thither had an ancient knight conveyed:~Of Monodantes'
415    39|          had thither brought the knight,~With her had made him loosen
416    39|      arms, and would embrace the knight;~And -- wherefore he was
417    39|         of those others, who the knight behold,~The courteous baron
418    39|     shook himself, and England's knight,~Ten paces off, reversed
419    39|     Astolpho makes them wash the knight;~And seven times plunged
420    39|           But let good England's knight the honour wear~Of every
421    40|          now was anchored by the knight.~ ~  XI~Orlando and the
422    40|         hand and foot the daring knight,~Sprang on the embattled
423    40|    shreds and shears the valiant knight.~Now springs on these, now
424    40|      much displeasure Sericana's knight~Heard by King Agramant his
425    40|      Against Orlando and another knight."~ ~ LIII~"So not left out,
426    40|        and good armour seeks the knight~And goodly swords and lances,
427    40|         compact with Montalban's knight -- that so~His Agramant
428    40|         for Agramant decides the knight;~To him in Africk will he
429    40|     Marseilles by the victorious knight~Seven of those kings, that
430    40|       their head, he charged the knight,~Impelled by huge desire
431    41|        slay him had the youthful knight,~Who spared him now, when
432    41|         them, Anglantes' valiant knight~So highly rated not the
433    41|        as a friend, the faithful knight~Pressed on the leader of
434    41|           but, on his side,~That knight, with angry voice and haughty
435    41|       will second ill Anglantes' knight."~Agramant ended so his
436    41|       Brandimart,~With that good knight, the Marquis Olivier,~Against
437    41|      raise him strove Anglantes' knight,~Thrice, nay four times,
438    41|          faulchion of Anglantes' knight:~'Twas on its flat, but
439    41|      felt himself ill-armed) the knight~Often gave ground, and traversed
440    41|        clearly shows by whom the knight was slain.~If he most raged
441    42|          fury grasped Anglantes' knight,~And wreaked on Agramant
442    42|          as the strongest living knight~That stroke, by which a
443    42|         eyes;~Yet so the wounded knight his spirits manned,~That
444    42|          he heaven opened to the knight described;~Through human
445    42|         lady true,~That sees her knight content to wend so wide;~
446    42|          he himself, to move the knight or yore,~In her behalf,
447    42|      hope consoled Mount Alban's knight,~He should be able of the
448    42|            he would dissuade the knight~From loving more that Indian
449    42|          Rinaldo, here befel the knight;~Who, when he sees the horrid
450    42|         other side,~Leapt at the knight; at her Rinaldo strake~Ever
451    42|       then needs the approaching knight~Must make him way, wherever '
452    42|     snakes in volumed spire.~The knight no more assails her with
453    42|     ceaseless well)~Followed the knight, to guide his wandering
454    42|      returned beheld Montalban's knight,~That countless thanks were
455    42|    Raising his head the stranger knight espied,~And saw that he,
456    42|   wonderment; and the astonished knight,~"Where is he?" gazing round
457    42|     Added, "I pray that you, sir knight, within~My mansion will
458    43|         youthful, and a handsome knight~Bridles this city with his
459    43|         In memory chances on the knight to dwell,~That him at supper
460    43|   bethinks therewith of what the knight~Related; how of all that
461    43|      nothing take."~ ~ LXVII~The knight of Clermont buried in this
462    43|        by the churl the offended knight so said,~And did withal,
463    43|      pilgrim's habit clothed the knight,~Such as from door to door
464    43|    transmewed,~The fairy and the knight their way pursued;~ ~ CVII~"
465    43|      climbed a steeper road, the knight~Ordered the board with food
466    43|       small supply,~Then was the knight so well bested, he made~
467    43|        to Ostia goes Montalban's knight:~Thence to the city sails;
468    43|       the corse of either paynim knight,~And would on either, lifeless
469    43|    honoured weight were earl and knight.~The pall was purple silk,
470    43|       was stretched the lifeless knight in view,~Arrayed in vest
471    43|       even had Rinaldo known the knight~For him whose prowess he
472    43|         face:~All press upon the knight; one grasps his hand;~Another
473    44|    courteous and humane~Than any knight that e'er laid lance in
474    44|      room, begirt with dames and knight,~The mighty emperor, mid
475    44|  constrained to pair~With a poor knight, she is resolved to die;~
476    44|         stander-by o'erheard the knight complain,~And more than
477    44|         To drive, comfort on the knight bestow,~The trustiest of
478    44|      Albeit a thousand times the knight had died:~But, when most
479    44|       the river rode the Grecian knight;~And fiercely charged his
480    44|       his lofty station eyes the knight,~Who with his single arm
481    44|          that evening a Romanian knight;~Present what time the Child
482    44|          in mind,~And deemed the knight of the unicorn behind.~ ~
483    45|          and his royal sire, the knight~Who won that battle to such
484    45|        would by favours make the knight his own,~And hopes to rank
485    45|       one day~Of respite has the knight: to have him torn~In quarters,
486    45|      that so oft repeated by the knight,~As for grave sin, remorse
487    45|         his wit;~And the strange knight with his own ensignry,~Whose
488    45|       and daring pit;~And if the knight to that emprize agree,~Vanquished
489    45|       well.~What only makes that knight the joust forego~Is that
490    45|         circled, now retired the knight,~And oft his hand his foot
491    45|     offending her, how well~That knight defends himself, now change
492    45|         held as taken, since the knight~I had not force to take
493    45|         Aymon's, give her to the knight.~ ~ CVIII~For if such words
494    45|         were before the youthful knight~A Christian was, I will
495    45|        knew,~Unsafe, unless that knight was on his side:~So sent,
496    46|         came into Leo's mind~The knight of whom she parlayed was
497    46|       broken down; with pain~The knight could but upon his feet
498    46|        Leo nor Melissa heard the knight.~ ~ XXVIII~Nor therefore
499    46|        through me, should such a knight oppress.~To me is thy distrust
500    46|         be used in answer by the knight:~Who said, at last, "I yield,


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