Canto

 1     9|    south wind, which had her canvas fanned,~Shifts to north-west,
 2     9|       The skipper veered his canvas to the wind:~This isle,
 3    11|      poop, so faintly in his canvas play,~His bark makes little
 4    15|     Bark, which with oars or canvas stemmed the tide,~On eastern
 5    17|      Unmoor and spread their canvas to the breeze.~ ~ XXXVII~"
 6    18|   the good ship, and all his canvas spread.~ ~ CXLI~To the north
 7    20|     seaward, under all their canvas, bore;~And having gained
 8    22|    so the favouring wind her canvas fanned,~That he, at little
 9    22|  issuing forth, with all his canvas spread,~For Calais he directs
10    41|  lower, or ease the bellying canvas aught~The sailors had no
11    41|   warriors to the wind their canvas rear,~When point device
12    42| shore;~And hoisting her bold canvas to the wind,~In Catalonian
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