Canto

  1     1|           conflict, on that fatal day,~With his good hand most
  2     1|    Fortune would rebel~That fatal day against the Christian creed:~
  3     1|      monster's fangs,~ ~ XXXV~One day and night, and half the
  4     1|            and half the following day,~The damsel wanders wide,
  5     1|     guiding gleam,~Spies in broad day but that which likes him
  6     2|        that wizard hoar:~And that day and the next, with flowing
  7     2|         Charles was sudden; nor a day~Would grant the valiant
  8     2|          with speed,~And the same day embarks himself and steed.~ ~
  9     2|         the fervors of the middle day.~As first the damsel thither
 10     2|      scours the country night and day,~And after harbours in this
 11     2|         as fortunate account this day.~Straight wend me to the
 12     3|        faithful crew, by night or day,~By water or by land, will
 13     3|           light again the lamp of day.~Then, with thy leave, '
 14     3| inaccessible to man:~And they all day toil on, without repose,~
 15     3|       soon appear;~Thee the third day shall to a hostel bring,~
 16     4|        heart,~His life; from that day cherished when she stood~
 17     4|        Rinaldo in his need.~ ~ LI~Day after day the good Rinaldo
 18     4|         his need.~ ~ LI~Day after day the good Rinaldo fares,~
 19     4|          the Bears;~For night and day the ceaseless tempest blew.~
 20     4|         assay:~And, ere the first day's circling sun is spent,~
 21     4|           times of old or present day,~Was undertaken by a cavalier.~
 22     5|          Nor any went that way by day or night.~ ~  XI~"So was
 23     5|        his rival on the appointed day,~And him to hide, the night
 24     5|       duke and knight, for many a day~Was there who knew what
 25     6|     willed, deeds hidden from the day.~ ~ II~The unhappy Polinesso
 26     6|    console me tries,~And all that day, and night which followed,
 27     6|          referred;~Nor, night nor day, to other spake a word.~ ~
 28     7|         raiment twice or thrice a day,~Now for this use, and now
 29     7|     Ravished from her, did many a day deplore;~Whom by unwonted
 30     7| questioned, upon every side,~Each day, no answer ever gives content.~
 31     7|   enchantress sage, who night and day~Thought of the damsel, watchful
 32     7|        are,~And lots for her each day, divining, tries; --~She
 33     7|          in India by the break of day."~ ~ XLVIII~And told to
 34     7|            that she espied~Upon a day (rare chance) the cavalier~
 35     7|            And said the following day the winged steed~'Twas her
 36     8|        made fly for pastime every day;~Now on the champaign, now
 37     8|       shield, enclosed for many a day;~Its beams, as proved a
 38     8|           near the sea he fixed a day.~ ~ XXIX~But here, sir,
 39     8|          the waves: surveyed,~One day alone, upon that shore in-isled,~
 40     8|          their watch by night and day.~The fields they have abandoned
 41     8|         of face,~To Proteus every day should one be led.~Till
 42     8|           who~For this came every day to land, should feed.~Though
 43     8|     Reduced to such extremity one day,~That it nigh fell into
 44     8|           drenched the land,~That day had perished by the Moorish
 45     8|           fire, which through the day~(Now kindled into flame)
 46     8|        what pain,~(When night and day I might have dwelt with
 47     8|          to revisit her that very day.~But that befel him after,
 48     9|         repair.~ ~ V~And when the day its shining light displayed,~
 49     9|      river's side he reaches on a day;~Which to the neighbouring
 50     9|      animal supplies;~Which every day to shore for this does speed,~
 51     9|           The wind upon the fifth day changed its tune,~So loud
 52     9|       father next, defending on a day~The only fortress which
 53     9|         me: he there arrived, the day~Ensuing, where the dreadful
 54     9|    Towards me, torment the father day and night;~But as lamenting
 55     9|          lent.~ ~ LV~"Not to this day have chanced upon a wight~
 56     9|          need.~Embarked that very day, they put from land~With
 57     9|         shut in behind.~The third day, from the harboured vessel'
 58     9|       parting wends~Upon the very day Bireno weighed;~But he to
 59    10|     fickle appetite!~Yet till the day prefixed to satisfy~His
 60    10|      rising? False Bireno! cursed day~That I was born! What here
 61    10|          fit for action, night or day;~And thus by land and sea
 62    10|         Child's loss by night and day complains;~And bent to end
 63    10|          at will~Create himself a day, in thy despite.~Nor only
 64    10|          anew.~ ~ LXV~When they a day or more their weariness~
 65    10|          their scattered fleet by day or night;~And every beauteous
 66    11|          Merlin's stair; and on a day~Orlando freed, with many
 67    11|   Angelica, within, that livelong day,~Unseen of prying eyes,
 68    11|     before, or in our grandsires' day,~Guided a necromancer where
 69    11|      seems withal~To extinguished day, and charged with deeper
 70    11|       yoke his dolphins, and that day~For distant Aethiopia posts
 71    11|      which her had born~That very day to the island of Ebude.~
 72    11|       through means of thee,~This day did not my woes concluded
 73    11|        bound,~Since thither every day in such came dressed,~Some
 74    11|         to declare.~The following day they from the haven steer,~
 75    11|       lies.~ ~ LXXVIII~Scarcely a day in Ireland's realm he spends:~
 76    11|           Who furrows , night and day, the billows green,~And
 77    12|          She, for whom, night and day, with ceaseless pain,~Inside
 78    12|       sing, was tied;~By night or day, since they into this rest~
 79    12|        They doffed not, night nor day, the corselet's shell,~Not
 80    12|   concealed, sometimes in face of day,~As seemed most opportune
 81    12|        pursues the quest,~Nor him day, night, or rain, or sun
 82    12|        the sky;~When passing on a day fair Paris near,~Orlando
 83    12|          King Agramant had many a day~Spent in attacking Paris'
 84    12|        might intend.~ ~ LXXXIX~By day it had been hidden evermore;~
 85    13|         he,~My gaoler, should one day my death decree?~ ~ IV~"
 86    13|         may'st know~How night and day I for the warrior yearned;~
 87    13|        was arrived the wished for day,~Then I of them was in my
 88    13|          note, they wended many a day;~And finally the twain a
 89    13|     harasses, nigh each returning day;~(What time they robbing
 90    13|        chances lived in fear.~One day, mid others that her woeful
 91    13|          her own glorious rays by day and night;~ ~ LX~"Where,
 92    13|        Lucretia Borgia? who, from day to day,~Shall wax in beauty,
 93    13|          Borgia? who, from day to day,~Shall wax in beauty, virtue,
 94    13|            Nor rests she night or day, so strong the lore~Of the
 95    14|           your train;~Who on that day deserved you should accord,~
 96    14|     heaven, when on the following day~Either should perish in
 97    14|  sumptuous feast.~ ~ XXXVIII~That day, and half the next, in search
 98    14|   afterwards was done at close of day~Between the damsel and the
 99    14|         limpid, that the cheerful day,~With nought to intercept
100    14|      emperor, on the vigil of the day~Of battle, within Paris,
101    14|          if they were the ensuing day to fall.~ ~ LXIX~At the
102    14| everywhere beside 'twas lightsome day;~Nor through the impeding
103    14|        underneath the walls; that day~To make upon the place his
104    14|            Which Charlemagne this day will have to meet,~In wooded
105    14|       foolish thoughts, upon this day~The holy consistory had
106    14|      known,~Even what he did that day, he would have done.~ ~
107    15|       Afric, open to the southern day,~When with good Doria linked
108    15|         the peer by night or open day;~Lion and dragon oft of
109    15|          toils so deftly set,~One day, in air he took her with
110    15|        noon in the happy islands, day~Had vanished in this clime,
111    15|        Had evermore bemoaned him, day or night:~Whatever pleasure
112    16|           I should have seen that day.~ ~ XI~"When I from Nicosia
113    16|           The ample city had that day been lost.~But he was hindered
114    16|        heavenly spouse,~Lest this day frustrate see their holy
115    16|           had deemed that all the day~He must so huge a burden
116    16|       scarce had quitted him that day,~When half destroyed he
117    16|        blood will form a lake ere day be done,~That I could count
118    17|          Italy was given in later day,~To Lombard, Goth, and Hun
119    17|         the city from the dawning day,~A mountain intercepts its
120    17|     solemn usage is, that on such day~The king from sovereign
121    17|         golden dwelling broke the day.~And now, his flock returning
122    17|         all the night and all the day;~Till, of the cruel orc
123    17|        news of her till the other day.~The other day, his father-in-law
124    17|          the other day.~The other day, his father-in-law made
125    17|             For four months and a day -- which is to-morrow;~When
126    17|       like the Christians of that day.~So that Damascus' crowded
127    17|          against all comers for a day;~At first with lance, and
128    17|  overmatched by Gryphon, and that day,~The worsted men had perished
129    17|         him the conqueror of that day:~And round about loud voices,
130    17|          him had hidden till that day;~And knew, to his great
131    17|          hour before the close of day.~ ~ CXVIII~On the left hand
132    18|         you judge another, many a day,~And month, and year, your
133    18|         to bear,~Through the long day, dogs, blows, and ceaseless
134    18|           part sustain.~What this day Fortune offers to our eyes,~
135    18|       which will be told in every day;~This, with a thrust, has
136    18|         their path throughout the day,~So that they met not, '
137    18|           s moiety,~And from this day thou its possessor art,~
138    18|          so right,~That the third day he Tyre's famed city sees,~
139    18|      Antioch left again that very day,~But not by sea again would
140    18|      addrest,~That fresh upon the day of joust the two~Might in
141    18|      command;~And ever, night and day, the armed dame~Scowered,
142    18|       clear,~Are lodged, upon the day before the show;~And, till
143    18|         conqueror's hand,~In that day's tourney, were a tuck and
144    18|       iron vest~And weapons for a day would have foregone.~She
145    18|         Remembering not, on other day, how dear~They paid for
146    18|           his wear,~Even from the day he charmed Orrilo slew,~
147    18|       these arms, which I, upon a day,~Left on the road which
148    18|      grown~Wilder, shows worse by day, -- if this be day,~Which
149    18|       worse by day, -- if this be day,~Which but by reckoning
150    18|         well nigh Rinaldo on that day.~These Leonetto's, those
151    18|     Should visit Heatheness, that day opprest:~But that the wise
152    18|        will no little praise that day deserve,~If he his person
153    18|         paynim crew,~Cut off that day by the destroying blade:~
154    18|        lilies given; because that day~The monarch had beheld the
155    18|     taking to the camp at dawn of day.~ ~ CLXXXIX~He has with
156    19|        now burnt, now froze:~From day to day in beauty waxed Medore:~
157    19|            now froze:~From day to day in beauty waxed Medore:~
158    19|         boy is with her night and day,~Does she untent herself,
159    19|          in their cabin, from the day~She there was lodged, with
160    19|  spitefully the wind on the third day~Blows, and the sea more
161    19|        harms,~Denied not but that day she felt alarms.~ ~ XLVIII~
162    19|       remains so large a space of day~'Twere very shame to spend
163    19|           the furious blows; when day~Was done, again the courteous
164    19|      prayer, that till the coming day~They would be pleased beneath
165    20|          wight! --~I reckon every day and every hour.~Guido the
166    20|          who had banished in that day~Idomeneus the tyrant of
167    20|  imprisoned and put by;~And every day one only from the store~
168    20|        such might,~They the first day would have usurped the reign.~
169    20|         with arms and steed,~Next day he was released from dungeon-den,~
170    20|        should dispatch the men by day,~At night should prove him
171    20|           rite; and rarely passes day~But stranger wight is slaughtered
172    20|       gone.~Would I with him that day had filled a grave,~Rather
173    20|      peers,~And cursed withal the day, in high disdain,~That he
174    20|   deferred but till the following day;~And he shall perish, if
175    20|        perpetual woes,~All in one day should by this weapon die,~
176    20|          my passage force in open day,~And shameful in my sight
177    20|         For France, and that same day his pinnace climb;~Thence
178    20|        pair;~And on the following day a castle see,~Within which
179    20|               CXVII~On the fourth day they met a cavalier,~Who
180    20|    unhorsed some thousands in his day:~Now shamed, he thought
181    20|        thou hast given to me this day?~Rather than make like ill
182    20|           the sun upon the middle day~Had turned his back, their
183    21|         keys, repaired nigh every day~To the close turret where
184    21|           ensigns, at the dawn of day,~Unseen of any, always went
185    21|           would return again.~All day he in the forest used to
186    21|       cursed her all the livelong day,~That in her cause that
187    22|        vale he came shut out from day,~Where he before him a dead
188    22|           And vainly searches all day the dome about,~Above, below,
189    22|         Rogero left his rein, the day~Galaphron's naked daughter
190    22|       proof.~ ~ XXVII~Him he that day in India proved, when sped~
191    22|        behind.~He waited all that day and till the new~Had dawned,
192    22|           and knew what till that day~He had seen not, by Atlantes
193    22|        condemned to die~This very day, within a town hard by.~ ~
194    22|        Nor think I that enough of day remains~To save the lover
195    22|          foul and crooked, that a day~To reach the city would
196    22|         without a peer:~Who, on a day, as with the count she went,~
197    22|           she shall never rest by day nor night,~Nor ever know
198    22|         knights arrived that very day~It happened, at a place
199    22|  concluded in an hour.~And if all day he wait our succour, I~Much
200    22|          thirsty herd, at noon of day,~Repaired, their paunches
201    22|          throughout that livelong day~They 'mid themselves but
202    23|            now awaits the dawn of day,~Now watching Saturn, Venus,
203    23|        and rode forth to meet the day.~ ~ IX~Nor far had rode,
204    23|          movements to behold;~The day that he bore off, with wonderous
205    23|        went.~ ~ XXXIII~At noon of day, descending from a mount,~
206    23|    Orlando, without pity, on that day~Lets none escape whom he
207    23|         and fell,~On that unhappy day, than tongue can tell.~ ~
208    23|      often in the hottest noon of day~The pair had rested, locked
209    23|           goes before approaching day.~In haste, Orlando takes
210    23|       found he peace by night and day:~He fled from town, in forest
211    23|   impelled by phrensy, the fourth day,~He from his limbs tore
212    24|       haply may awake at the last day.~The rest, who well awake
213    24|        who well awake at the last day.~The rest, who well advised
214    24|      courser ran who 'scaped that day.~ ~ VIII~Already might'st
215    24|        have been in peril on that day,~Had he been made of vulnerable
216    24|          and reached a bridge one day;~Beneath which ran an ample
217    24|      still I go, and through that day~I find no other sign of
218    24|           or at rest, by night or day,~Shalt never for an hour
219    24|       That hence they had not one day's journey wended,~When Odoric,
220    24|    Charles's camp, till the third day~Be ended, will not measure
221    24|       pleasure, thou live-out thy day;~Nor ever banish from thy
222    24|       Would Isabel have with her, day and night.~The hermit therefore
223    24|      placed,~And traversed many a day that woodland waste.~ ~
224    24|         in a cave, concealed from day,~His solitary cell hard
225    24|        parts, for many and many a day;~Because, the war extending
226    24|    conclude a truce, and till the day~The Moorish siege was raised,
227    25|               XXIV~"But since the day, that, wounded by a Moor~
228    25|           sorrow and lament,~That day, himself had sorrowed with
229    25|       opprest.~By this the waning day was growing short,~For the
230    25|      issueing from their bed when day is broken,~The wretched
231    25|         pricked, she reached that day~Mount Alban; we who for
232    25|       which she left them but the day before.~Flordespine comes
233    25|           torches, counterfeiting day;~`Marvel not, lady,' (her
234    25|         absent lord,~By night and day, kept faithful watch and
235    25|           and drear:~For he, that day, ill-tidings had received,~
236    25|          of Agramant, to him that day~Told by the messenger, he
237    25|          his sovereign, night and day,~And now that Fortune to
238    25|         golden dwelling broke the day:~ ~ XCIV~And when the greenwood
239    26|         the beginning even to our day,~Aye has that monster grown,
240    26|           long pursued the former day,~And now with prayer, now
241    26|          Him I to-day and all the day before~Have prayed, and
242    26|       this and throughout another day:~But Rodomont leaps in between
243    26|           wend, which distant one day's journey lies;~Because
244    26|          outdone by Rodomont that day,~In that the king subdued
245    26|        refused.~ ~ XCII~The first day this and last, that e'er
246    26|        question tried:~But I that day restrained the murderous
247    26|        with Rogero's through that day,~Comrade in arms) appeared
248    27|          and the Tartar the first day~That royal damsel a long
249    27|             XII~Within he takes a day or two's repose;~And, when
250    27|           glows,~-- Nor night nor day -- his weary steed does
251    27|           eyes on Charlemagne one day,~When he the good Rinaldo
252    27|           single hour, yet less a day;~But with loud instances
253    27|         gates, as usage goes.~The day on which to combat have
254    27|      Mandricardo, solely for that day,~Until the cruel fight was
255    27|      Before Albracca, on the very day~Angelica's rare ring, and
256    27|           remembering~How on that day her faulchion was surprised;~
257    27|          ever seen,~Even from the day when first that iron vest~
258    27|        his neck; because the very day~He stole this courser, he
259    27|          his lady on the selfsame day,~There will no more the
260    27|      Which him detained until the day was done,~And made him lose
261    27|         That haply on some future day, even I~Shall say, "That
262    27|        little rest.~The following day or next, upon the Saone~
263    27|           river-side, at close of day,~In different homesteads
264    28|  questioned by that monarch, on a day,~If ever in his lifetime,
265    28|           or about him, night and day,~Aye weeping, to her lord
266    28|         months are o'er;~Nor by a day o'erpass the term prescribed,~
267    28|        not dead.~The grief which, day and night, her bosom rent,~
268    28|          yet it lacked an hour of day,~Mounted his nag, and on
269    28|            He rests not night nor day, in sorrow drowned;~His
270    28|          him in his palace, every day~And every hour, the stranger
271    28|          ever closed shut out the day)~Where one wall with another
272    28|          hour, upon the following day;~And, putting on the king
273    28|         reproved.~ ~ XXXVIII~"One day, amid the rest, the youth
274    28|          to Zattiva come upon the day~That from Valencia they
275    28|         thence departs at dawn of day,~Resolved by water to pursue
276    28|          cruel one, aye night and day,~Whom he might hope to find
277    28|     LXXXIX~Rodomont navigates the day and night~Ensuing, aye by
278    28|           side,~(Theirs, from the day they conquered the champaigne)~
279    28|           full of thought, upon a day,~(Such was his common wont)
280    29|          From travellers seized a day or two before.~ ~  XXII~
281    30|          patience many and many a day,~When against pain he can
282    30|         king's award,~What of the day remained the champions spent~
283    30|       From prison on the selfsame day set free.~ ~ XLI~"And even
284    30|       feat which I performed that day;~Greater than if the squadrons
285    30|         often clad in smiles that day:~She thanked her God, with
286    30|         one~That her, by night or day, may bravely stead.~Meanwhile
287    30|    evermore beside him, night and day;~Him with such love he watches,
288    30|           stirred again~Until the day, that day the youthful knight~
289    30|         again~Until the day, that day the youthful knight~Had
290    30|      sword.~ ~ LXXXVII~Him on the day prefixed the maid attended,~
291    30|          anxious there, until the day~Which was to bring her joy
292    30|       ennobled Aymon's blood,~One day at noon, with none beside
293    30|           doth cheer.~With them a day or more the warrior stayed,~
294    30|  Bradamant, waiting the appointed day,~Which she, in her desire,
295    31|     repair.~ ~ VIII~The following day they met a cavalier,~Towards
296    31|         was Guido, whom so many a day~They had impatiently desired
297    31|      their stand.~ ~ XXXVI~So one day and another prick the train,~
298    31|          son of Agrican that very day.~Thou mayst conceive what
299    31|     warfare to maintain above one day;~And having saved his person,
300    31|           not kept his ground and day,~Erewhile appointed for
301    31|          the paladin, by break of day;~And to the destined fount
302    32|      seemed.~Yet longer than that day when Faith delayed~The sun,
303    32|          was conceived,~She every day and every night believed.~ ~
304    32|         soul have shent.~She, one day that along the road she
305    32|           those paynims, from the day,~That fought nigh Paris
306    32|          alone; but often all the day~There passed that maid,
307    32|           same that she that very day, beside~The courier maid,
308    32|        Who wearied sore with that day's labour are.~With grief
309    33|          yet living or of earlier day,~Mantegna, Leonardo, Gian
310    33|            is extinguished in our day.~But to the troop, by whom
311    33|           night,~Nor this in open day had shown more bright.~ ~
312    33|            And named the week and day, as well as year,)~A noble
313    33|           the Frenchman till this day!~Who slays their host with
314    33|          heavy eyelids, night nor day!~For if such tedious sleep
315    33|           A better promise of the day begun:~When Bradamant upstarted
316    33|     within a grot, concealed from day.~When the winged beast has
317    34|       wretched ones expelled from day;~Into the central pit of
318    34|           the Lydian king, upon a day,~And craved me from the
319    34|     sovereign slew;~And made that day as well the Armenian bleed,~
320    34|    Feeding him aye with hope from day to day,~I for the Thracian
321    34|         aye with hope from day to day,~I for the Thracian warrior
322    34|         lively motion lends,~That Day's oppressive noon in nought
323    34|          this and that, until the day is worn:~But when the sun
324    35|       Courtesy closes on a stormy day;~Who meagre, pale, and worn
325    35|    hopeless suit,~Knock night and day, and ever without fruit.~ ~
326    35|          as reappears the dawning day,~Towards fair Provence,
327    35|           the road most near.~The day before here taken was the
328    36|       warm tears might well.~That day you sent your family before,~
329    36|          seldom would you find by day or night).~Hearing Rogero
330    36|      those camps is sounded every day,~Bidding the unmounted mount,
331    36|           warlike damsel wins the day;~From her alone the Moorish
332    36|         together saw the light of day.~ ~ LX~"Galaciella's children
333    36|    Needing to quit my home upon a day,~And journey through the
334    36|         my spirit for this many a day~Waited thy coming in these
335    36|       quit the cheerful realms of day,~And seek the darksome cloisters
336    36|        LXXXII~And she, that every day had sought his bed,~Must
337    37|           pain,~Illustrious women day and night have wrought;~
338    37|           these and others of our day,~Who gave you once, or give
339    37|           ought beside would this day's canto shew;~And if on
340    37|           bring into the light of day;~But nine in ten remain
341    37|         broken, and the following day~Olindro from all sides was
342    37|          beverage for the nuptial day;~For now had ceased all
343    37|               LXVIII~"On the fixt day she seeks the temple, dight~
344    37|          grace obtain,~To be this day in paradise with thee,~If
345    37|         bids punish, on that very day,~An order for us all to
346    37|         he compel; for, night and day,~A thousand men the tyrant'
347    37|            That they (had it been day instead of night)~Would
348    37|          three, whom, through the day before,~Upon their croups
349    37|       told.~ ~ CXIII~For from the day that they were overthrown~
350    37|        damsel more,~Made him, one day, leap headlong from a tower,~
351    37|           that and the succeeding day,~Till the forenoon, proceed
352    38|         reverently,~And the first day was this (has Turpin shown)~
353    38|        the ground for the ensuing day;~And Charlemagne takes care
354    38|         XXIX~The night before the day, when on its road~The Nubian
355    38|     hundred and two footmen, in a day~To horsemen changes, who
356    38|         That rests not, night nor day, till to the shore~Of Provence
357    38|       that he will surely win the day;~Who would prevail (so certain
358    38|         end obtained;~And on that day interpreters were found,~
359    38|         were found,~And they that day to Charles their charge
360    38|   thinking upon this by night and day,~She oftentimes had purposed
361    38|       like one that ever from the day~He lost his goodly steed
362    38|          To give beginning to the day and hour~Prefixed and ordered
363    39|       rich a prize throughout the day;~And, as obliged by treaty
364    39|          To Arles, and deems that day some vengeance dread~Will
365    39|           LXIV~Upon the following day, for Provence steer~The
366    39|        twain),~Signs even to this day remain in sight:~For, hard
367    39|        and contrary,~On the third day, to sail he give command,~
368    40|         long show,~That night and day, wherein they crowded stood,~
369    40|         claws you tore,~From that day unto this I hear not said~
370    40|         That night was changed to day, as 'twould appear.~ ~ VII~
371    40|      should to its arms the third day stand;~For this, it was
372    40|           And that upon the third day, when they view~The signal,
373    40|           waters were cut off the day before,~So that in many
374    40|        sect he would forego.~That day no further feats of hardihood~
375    40|      swear.~ ~ LXVIII~He all that day and the ensuing night~Remains
376    40|       alone, and so the following day;~Forever sifting in his
377    40|        find Charlemagne that very day;~And of the Moorish spoil
378    41|         air,~And which for many a day its virtue keeps,~Well shows,
379    41|         Upon the darkening of the day, the wind~Displays its fickle
380    41|          were.~ ~ XXX~Against the day of fight, in goodly gear~
381    41|      Brandimart designed upon the day~Of battle, for his royal
382    41|          and mane:~But, from that day when she herself addrest~
383    41|        Agramant arrives that very day,~And tents him on the contrary
384    41|        Orlando see you here, this day.~I ween that, knowing you
385    41|          the neighbouring sea the day arose.~ ~ XLVI~When the
386    41|        church receives the rising day;~Commodious is the fane
387    41|           expounded were;~And the day following, in his fountain
388    41|       somedeal before the dawn of day;~And shall relate how him
389    42|          so~Inflamed thy host the day that weighty stone~Wounded
390    42|          damsel but for one short day.~ ~ XLV~The thought will
391    42|          creep.~Forth issued into day that figure dread~From devilish
392    42|          Basle upon the following day,~Whither the tidings had
393    43|        believe? -- unloving, in a day~They fall some elder's,
394    43|         Is never doomed its dying day to see;~But those as well
395    43|         gloomy night and darkened day:~Yet never could she work
396    43|       side, assails.~ ~ XXIV~"One day that me beyond my palace
397    43|           chance my dwelling on a day,~Beheld my wife, who pleased
398    43|        mickle glee~Even from that day, and makes of me a jest;~
399    43|         thy journey gain withal a day."~ ~ LII~Good seemed that
400    43|          the lot of envoy fell:~O day, that ever wept by him will
401    43|          he takes the time o' the day;~Figures the heavens as
402    43|           answer on the following day to claim.~ ~ LXXXVIII~"The
403    43|           sort.~For every seventh day we all must take~By certain
404    43|           well; how on that fatal day~Of change we are to countless
405    43|        thou hast to know upon the day~We sprang from earth with
406    43|           disguise;~For, save the day wherein she was a snake,~
407    43|         And makes her fix another day to see~That dog, when fewer
408    43|        sight;~Who haply lurked by day in greenwood-shade,~And
409    43|        long did, and do unto this day,~By dames and cavaliers
410    43|         preceding that ill-omened day~Flordelice dreamed the vest
411    43|           with smoke obscures the day.~The wind blows fair, and
412    43|      their hawser at the close of day:~In heaven above the silent
413    43|    torches reared,~And changed to day the sable night appeared.~ ~
414    43|        penance, praying night and day,~It was not long, ere by
415    43|        worse with each succeeding day he grew,~As soon as he that
416    43|              CXCV~Rogero from the day he swam ashore~Upon that
417    44|      Clermont's chief.~ ~ XV~That day and night, and of the following
418    44|       night, and of the following day~Great part, with that sage
419    44|  Marseilles he came; and came the day~Orlando, and Rinaldo, and
420    44|        XXXV~His son to Aymon on a day made known~His sister he
421    44|           of her bower-women, one day,~She to Rogero bade these
422    44|    casting all respect aside,~One day stood up before King Charlemagne;~
423    44|      conveyed;~Which on that very day withal were told~In the
424    44|           XCVI~When done was that day's fight, wherein (since
425    44|       Belgrade will enter on that day:~For first, ere farther
426    44|        Rogero sees;~And there all day determines to repose,~As
427    45|        into deepest dolour in one day~Hurled headlong from the
428    45|       died,~That on the following day have ruled the world.~Ventidius,
429    45|         not repair,~Here past the day and was to pass the night;~
430    45|           cruel Theodora; but one day~Of respite has the knight:
431    45|          the north, and shortened day,~Finds it a desert horrid
432    45|          turn from us and shorten day,~Earth all its beauties
433    45|           he by night and much by day;~-- Nor cares for ought,
434    45|           shent;~Which, night and day, and ever, doth molest,~
435    45|          arms, that were his own.~Day after day the squadron pricks;
436    45|           were his own.~Day after day the squadron pricks; nor
437    45|          embassy~Makes known that day to royal Charlemagne.~Well
438    45|           her side,~The following day upon the listed sward~Before
439    45|         past the night before the day~Wherein by him the battle
440    45|            When the first dawn of day the horizon cheered.~ ~
441    45|          is moved the rock,~Smote day and night by the tempestuous
442    45|        For if she took not in one day nor slew~Her claimant, she
443    45|         break, which through that day unbroken shows;~As he, that
444    45|           Which upon that unhappy day had closed.~But, when within
445    45|     fondly he relied,~Nor on that day nor on the following two~
446    46|        sell and rein,~Had on that day equipt a demon, borne~By
447    46|   courtesy;~ ~ XL~And says, "That day my host was overthrown,~
448    46|       XLVIII~Wherein what of that day was yet unworn~They past,
449    46|        the morrow, and succeeding day;~Until the warrior of the
450    46|   maintain~From dawn till fall of day the furious fight;~And since
451    46|         open lists till the ninth day~To whosoever would in arms
452    46|      conquers, jousting night and day;~And so, in wrestling, dance,
453    46|           meed.~ ~ CI~On the last day, when at their festive cheer~
454    46|      outworn~A year and month and day in lowly cell.~So to chastise
455    46|           past was the succeeding day,~With other courser, harness,
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