IntraText Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
Alphabetical [« »] loudly 11 louis 1 lout 1 love 419 love-cases 1 love-chasing 1 love-sick 1 | Frequency [« »] 455 day 436 said 425 here 419 love 416 way 412 every 410 thy | Ludovico Ariosto Orlando enraged Concordances love |
Canto
1 Int| is filled with a burning love for Ranaldo, but Ranaldo 2 Int| of Ranaldo), who falls in love with a very noble heathen 3 Int| and Hector, also falls in love with Bradamante, but because 4 Int| sides it is felt that their love is hopeless. Nevertheless, 5 Int| heart) is in pursuit of her love, and is not too far away. 6 Int| Brandimarte, who falls in love with (and wins the heart 7 1| life, if I must cease to love."~ ~ XLV~If any ask who 8 1| oppressed with amorous cares.~Love is the source from which 9 1| deems none worthy of her love.~ ~ L~But her from harm 10 1| cavil acquiesced:~Since love, who sees without one guiding 11 1| fountain are untaught~Their love, and change for ice their 12 2| play;~Rinaldo goes where Love and Hope invite,~But is 13 2| grave.~ ~ ~ I~Injurious love, why still to mar accord~ 14 2| fleet.~Her I abandon who my love desires,~While she who hates, 15 2| she who hates, respect and love inspires.~ ~ II~Thou to 16 2| Disdained not on the Child her love to plant,~Though cruel Fortune, 17 2| Whose charms with fervid love had fired my breast.~When, 18 2| forlorn;~And took the way (love served me for a guide)~Where 19 2| art)~The felon keeps my love, oh! say my heart.~ ~ XLIV~" 20 2| XLVII~"Then how my love was ravished I make known,~ 21 2| sum my griefs, and say if love combine~Other distress or 22 3| from the first to bless thy love has wrought,~And destined 23 3| Pledge of Bertoldo's wedded love, and chase~Fierce Frederick 24 3| Virtue soars beyond her love and hate.~ ~ XXXVIII~"In 25 3| flourish (such his heavenly love!)~While the celestial spheres 26 3| brothers, leagued no less by love than blood;~Who shall be 27 3| with knowledge and with love, shall deal,~Astrea shall 28 3| not their guilt beyond thy love prevail;~Alas! the wretched 29 3| grave~To her Rogero's honest love commends;~Till from the 30 4| beck,~He who had followed Love's imperious lead,~Rinaldo, 31 4| XXVIII~"Kill me, for love of God!" (afflicted sore,~ 32 4| danger sore and death, by love was swayed;~Who, as the 33 4| was tutored by my care.~By love of fame and evil stars beguiled,~ 34 4| press~To that soft end of love (their goal the same)~Which 35 5| placed in court.~When cruel love, my fortune envying,~Willed 36 5| cherish me above~All mean; his love a love as ardent bred.~We 37 5| above~All mean; his love a love as ardent bred.~We hear, 38 5| still, and yielding to my love,~I ceased not till I took 39 5| amorous game;~Still grew by love, and such new vigour gained,~ 40 5| for me,~Or, after, of this love he made assay:~But judge, 41 5| assist him in his second love.~ ~ XIII~"Unlike what he 42 5| displayed;~But so pretending love, he hoped to speed,~And 43 5| And industry, Geneura's love to gain.~ ~ XVI~"With all 44 5| dispose.~For that another love had taken root~In her, whose 45 5| fill;~But knowledge of his love brought more delight.~Nor 46 5| the damsel learned,~For love of her young Ariodantes 47 5| well as word,~How ill his love was cherished by the dame.~ 48 5| warrior's flame,~But the fond love, which in his bosom burned~ 49 5| know~Mine and Geneura's love, and old accord;~And, in 50 5| have loved; -- was never love more true --~Are certain 51 5| happy in his daughter's love.'~ ~ XXXI~" `Of what a strange 52 5| striving for Geneura's love, would I~Seek surer sign 53 5| than this, your foolish love despises:~And this to me 54 5| yield, and seek another love.'~ ~ XXXIX~" `This will 55 5| illustrious fate.~'Twas well to love, before her fraud was shown,~ 56 5| you have heard,~I of my love assured the Scottish peer;~ 57 5| to earn,~However well she love, her love's return.~ ~ LXXIII~" 58 5| However well she love, her love's return.~ ~ LXXIII~"For 59 5| cried.~Behold! what wages love's poor slaves content."~ 60 5| opposite.~But first, for love of God, the battle stay;~ 61 6| forfeited estate, and life, and love~Of friends at once, and 62 6| less enmity~Than was the love he lately bore the maid;~ 63 6| her Polinesso bears her love,~To her will manifestly 64 6| plant became;~Me, full of love, the kind Alcina fed~With 65 6| Others, in truth, the fairy's love did share:~I was her close 66 6| yielded all her soul to love more new.~ ~ L~"Late I discerned 67 6| plant and rude:~And for her love, for whom so sore he burned,~ 68 6| Where, it is my belief, that Love had birth;~Where life is 69 6| noisy cheer,~Tells his love sorrows in his comrade's 70 7| displayed more zeal and love,~Had Jove descended from 71 7| all his shafts, the little Love,~And seems to plunder hearts 72 7| the fairy saw such show of love.~With him the guilt and 73 7| dwell,~The image of her love, and self impressed.~So 74 7| well-accorded voice to sing~Of love, its passion and its ecstasy;~ 75 7| without let or fear,~Their love, unheard of any, to proclaim.~ 76 7| they~Alike are prisoners in Love's magic hall.~They change 77 7| rendered blind~By the great love she to the stripling bore,~ 78 7| Grieves that she danger to her love descries,~Save this some 79 7| who~Were well deserving love upon thy part;~To whom ( 80 7| you hear,~For since his love was forced by magic lore,~ 81 7| mind all further thought~Of love for false Alcina, found 82 8| though unknown!~Who for their love make man or woman glow,~ 83 8| XXXI~His heart with love of that rare beauty glowed,~ 84 8| Of the most radiant torch Love ever bore,~Threw from the 85 8| wound,~(So reverent was my love) thy feelings chaste,~I 86 8| that beauteous ivory,~Which Love's own hand had tinged with 87 8| transparency,~With which he in Love's toils his fancy fed:~Of 88 9| false and cruel traitor Love? since he~Can banish from 89 9| uncle, driven~By a vain love, he cares, and less for 90 9| bosom dwell,~Nor you to Love an utter rebel are,~Be you 91 9| manhood's May,~And force of love, unfelt by me before,~Made 92 9| though I had the power, would Love allow~Me so to play the 93 9| s cell! --~Her, full of love and loyal homage, sought~ 94 9| to whom in solid chain~Love with eternal knot had linked 95 10| CANTO 10~ ~ ARGUMENT~Another love assails Bireno's breast,~ 96 10| no tale is told~Of truer love, in present times or old.~ ~ 97 10| endear,~And they in mutual love deserve reward,~Bireno as 98 10| say, should kind Olympia love.~ ~ III~Not only should 99 10| had loved~Bireno, if her love he did repay~With faith 100 10| cruel proved~For such fair love and faith, I now will say;~ 101 10| treat them with austerity,~Love and revere you, and such 102 10| mourn to see the fickle love they owed,~From you diverted, 103 10| That you should cease to love; for you, without~A lover, 104 10| knight,~Olympia less to love than to adore~He seems, 105 10| shall appay.~In this her love from other differs; fear~ 106 10| thing she held so dear.~Love, no light cause, incites 107 10| to mind again.~Pity and love within his bosom rise~At 108 10| chain to wear,~With which Love's faithful servants fettered 109 11| as given him by his lady love.~ ~ XV~Afflicted beyond 110 11| beside the scorn~Which Love put on her, Fortune too 111 11| tears his pinions bright~Love bathes, rejoicing in the 112 11| memory.~ ~ LXXVI~To see that love so kindled by the dame,~ 113 11| his purposed end forbore:~Love, that in quest of his liege-lady 114 12| getting sight~Of his lost love, the County strives in fray~ 115 12| By whom he had been made Love's prisoner.~ ~ LXXIV~Alzirdo, 116 13| suffering:~The fault of Love, by whom I was beguiled;~ 117 13| manifest renown,~Or was it love which so deceived my sight)~ 118 13| chivalry,~I was surprised by Love, ere I descried~That freedom 119 13| descried~That freedom in my Love, so rash a guide,~I lay 120 13| and, I think, be bore me love,~And left no less an ardent 121 13| If thou know'st what is love, thou well may'st know~How 122 13| Upon the strand~To Eternal Love, To Goodness Infinite,~I 123 13| XX~"Here the fell tyrant Love, aye prompt to range,~And 124 13| my steps, pursued my way.~Love lent to him (unless I am 125 13| lost in all the pains of love.~ ~ XLV~The beauteous lady 126 13| her she saw, without her love returned,~(Such time elapsed, 127 14| what were she?)~Is twisted Love's inextricable chain.~He 128 14| LVIII~"If a man merits love by loving, I~Yours by my 129 14| by loving, I~Yours by my love deserve; if it is won~By 130 14| many others on his part,~Love frames and dictates to the 131 14| The paynim thence, whom Love had smote before,~Not hopeful 132 14| ground.~ ~ LXXXI~Nor here he Love, nor here he Peace surveys,~ 133 15| purveyed,~And ever for her love to wear it prayed.~ ~ XIV~ 134 15| advance.~ ~ XXXIII~"The pious love he bears his native land~ 135 15| to salute, with no less love resort.~ ~ LXXVI~The ladies 136 15| salvage way;~Where HEAVENLY LOVE a willing offering stood,~ 137 15| is wont~To be of inward love the surest ground,~Them 138 15| How keenly tempered are Love's darts of might,~And, heavier 139 15| Gryphon, in his partial love, excuses,~For mostly self-conceit 140 16| exprest, I wiss.~ ~ ~ I~Love's penalties are manifold 141 16| his suit disdain;~Though Love deprive him of all praised 142 16| of himself and worthless love has shame.~ ~ IV~The youthful 143 16| the guerdon due to me,~For love and worship? that I should 144 16| cruel plight,~For whom he love and much esteem profest,~ 145 17| long endurance of AETERNAL LOVE.~ ~ VI~The Christian people 146 17| XVII~But let us, sir, for love of Heaven, forego~Of anger 147 17| sped~With which the rage of love a man supplies,~Until he 148 17| evil, share.~But go, for love of Heaven, my son, lest 149 17| steep.~King Norandine his love alone delayed;~Who would 150 17| evermore,~Signed that for love of Heaven he would not stay;~ 151 17| servitude he long was tried,~By Love and Pity bound: till Fortune 152 17| together spent,~Who deemed that Love and Pity's mickle force~ 153 17| gay;~One, with a painted Love on crest or shield,~If she 154 17| little, Gryphon guessed~What love from him had hidden till 155 17| And next, she, whom her love so fitly pairs;~Whom Norandino 156 17| CXXII~"-- But did not love for you my will restrain,~ 157 18| remedy,~Wait, friends, for love of Heaven, the advancing 158 18| pledge of faith and lasting love, to me,~In the meanwhile, 159 18| rejoicings to renew,~In love and peace they measured 160 18| view the laughing land of Love and Pleasure.~ ~ CXXXVIII~ 161 18| last hour be tolled,~That Love should warm their bosoms, 162 18| bullock, new~To stings of love, should in a meadow spy.~ 163 18| example rare~Of constant love, is worthy to be known:~ 164 18| should show~Such heart, such love, and such fair loyalty;~ 165 19| growls in mingled sound of love and rage,~To unsheath her 166 19| wrath the beast engage;~Love softens her, and bids from 167 19| supplicate, nor I~This for the love of life, believe me, say.~ 168 19| to kindness turned,~With love and pity he all over burned.~ ~ 169 19| dishonoured) grieved her sore.~Love, hearing this, such arrogance 170 19| the matter o'er.~Young Love was bridesman there the 171 19| witness to their secret love.~ ~ XXXVI~Amid such pleasures, 172 19| in witness and in sign~Of love to her by Count Orlando 173 19| whom I say.~ ~ XXXIX~No love which to the paladin she 174 20| oppress~As woman, when her love breeds weariness.~ ~ XXI~" 175 20| Should I be ready for your love to spill.~ ~ XLI~" `But 176 20| Touching their breasts with love and pity, wrought~That they 177 20| and aid beseech;~Whose love for me, by perfect friendship 178 21| Schemes how my brother's love may best be bought.~ ~ XVI~" 179 21| vein,~Lightly to change her love into disdain.~ ~ XXII~" ` 180 21| in hate as highly as in love.~ ~ XXVIII~" `In other mode 181 21| seeking what her wicked love may boot,~She her old vices, 182 21| Philander hoped and thought~That love to him the dame no longer 183 22| that are with one single love content;~Though, 'mid so 184 22| XXIX~Good cause he had to love that Rabicane,~For better 185 22| rose's dyes,~And his fair love's first blossoms, while 186 22| the last fruits he of her love would gain,~Nor find her 187 22| to be~A Christian for the love of her were fain,~As his 188 23| sighed,~That Anger over Love should have prevailed.~" 189 23| Anger has torn me from my love," (she cried,)~"Oh! had 190 23| need,~That there he for love would be baptised;~And next, 191 23| Orlando, who remarked the love exprest,~Needing no more 192 23| are so many goads,~Which Love has in his bleeding hear-core 193 23| exercised this pious care,~Love in her heart the lady wounded 194 23| Forced by too puissant love, had thought no scorn~To 195 23| blows,~That cruel hangman Love his hate had fed.~Orlando 196 23| less exhale~Its sorrow: Love, who with his pinions blows~ 197 23| heart, creates this gale.~Love, by what miracle does thou 198 23| to all such as thrust in love."~ ~ CXXIX~All night about 199 24| Nor lime his wings, whom Love has made a prize;~For love, 200 24| Love has made a prize;~For love, in fine, is nought but 201 24| oneself?~ ~ II~Various are love's effects; but from one 202 24| say;~He who grows old in love, besides all pain~Which 203 24| as I find his fault of Love was bred,~To give him life 204 24| own,~When on commanding Love the blame is thrown.~ ~ 205 24| thrown.~ ~ XXXIX~"Often has Love turned upside down a brain~ 206 24| XLVII~So mighty is the love Zerbino bore,~Nor less than 207 24| bore,~Nor less than his the love which Isabel~Nursed for 208 24| Doralice drew near,~And for the love of Heaven, the damsel wooed~ 209 24| heart," (Zerbino cried,)~"To love me yet, when I am dead and 210 24| I beg and pray,~By that love witnessed, when thy father' 211 24| memory,~That, well as man can love, have I loved thee.~ ~ LXXXIV~" 212 24| that she would her mighty love forbear,~For her dead lord, 213 24| you command,~By the large love you hear me, as I know,~ 214 24| could as ill consent:~But LOVE was there, more puissant 215 25| breast,~Impetuous force of love, and thirst of praise!~Nor 216 25| they furnish aid.~ ~ II~Yet love sways more; for, save that 217 25| expected succour, stay.~Then Love is not of evil nature still;~-- 218 25| ease the smart:~So deep had Love already driven his dart.~ ~ 219 25| accomplish my intent,~In other love, impure or pure, despair;~ 220 25| It 'twas thy pleasure, Love, to have me shent,~Because 221 25| written of a female bent~On love of female, mid mankind or 222 25| fancy's queen;~For hopeless love is but a dream and shade:~ 223 25| breaks forth anew.~ ~ L~"Love, with this hope, constructs 224 25| LII~"I rode all night -- Love served me as a guide --~ 225 25| heart the arrow goes,~Which Love directs, may well by you 226 25| alone to lay:~But these, by love for those two brethren swayed,~ 227 26| And free from chains, us Love and Pity sway."~He to that 228 26| to Rodomont convey;~As if Love trafficked in such contracts 229 27| to his lord, and more~In love than memory strong, who 230 27| shaken,~Against his liege and love, the Sarzan Moor~Forth from 231 27| scathe!~ ~ CXVIII~"Neither my love nor length of servitude,~ 232 27| importunate, and lorn~Of love, of faith, of counsel, rash 233 27| rage against his liege and love possest;~And on his way 234 28| more dear.~Here him new love inflames for Isabel;~But 235 28| prize,~Afford not, for the love of heaven, an ear~To this, 236 28| consort; who~Was by such love united to that fair,~No 237 28| heart's core.~-- `Alas! my love (Jocundo cried) let be~Thy 238 28| Not that a token needs his love to bind:~For neither time, 239 28| deem~I little her unbounded love esteem?~ ~ XIX~"He pondered 240 28| both of life bereave;~But love, which spite himself, he 241 28| vassal he obeyed~This ribald Love, who left him not the force~ 242 28| regained his horse.~Goaded by Love, he goads his steed again,~ 243 28| of horns, had gone.~That Love has caused the mischief 244 28| The pigmy for his little love reproved.~ ~ XXXVIII~"One 245 28| troubles of a heart,~Whereof Love's angry passions make their 246 28| damsel's side,~Had joyed her love: they, without change of 247 28| cheek such beauties meet,~Love and the Graces there might 248 28| cavalier~Believed his former love would be supplied,~And one 249 28| would be supplied,~And one love by another be effaced,~As 250 29| change;~ ~ IV~And, as new love the king did heat and goad,~ 251 29| her fair head, erewhile Love's place of rest,~He severed 252 29| earth the example of thy love!~ ~ XXVIII~His eyes from 253 29| about this chosen site,~For love or fear, he master-masons 254 29| that sees him chase his love who fled,~His courser spurs, 255 29| do the knight~By his own love, did not that damsel hide;~ 256 30| wrongs me, knows how well I love.~ ~ IV~No less beside myself 257 30| Against one champion moved for love of me,~If one as fierce 258 30| the spear.~You, more than love for me, to strife impels~ 259 30| swells.~ ~ XXXIV~"But if the love you force yourself to show,~ 260 30| thou no dread,~Alack! for love of Heaven! of thing so light:~ 261 30| night and day;~Him with such love he watches, with such care:~ 262 30| stay:~With tidings of her love to Alban's Mount,~To her 263 30| thou more than me could'st love~Any, and most thy mortal 264 30| spirit preyed,~Diseased with Love's disastrous fit: no more~ 265 31| Than evermore the chains of love to wear?~Were not the lover, ' 266 31| of this choicest sweet,~Love is augmented, to perfection 267 31| him long absent, to his love returned,~A longer absence 268 31| finally each pain~Of suffering love, his every martyrdom,~Through 269 31| they brethren were) with love opprest,~His tenderness 270 31| long I have beloved, and love, whose worth~I prize above 271 31| Each other with fraternal love carest,~Now putting all 272 31| loves as dear~As man can love a brother, friend, or son,~ 273 31| vow:~-- "Ah, Rodomont! for love of her, whom dead~Ye worship, 274 31| withal,~Have pity upon me who love this peer;~Let it suffice 275 32| port,~Furnished through love or fear, for sea prepares.~ 276 32| knows my worship and my love,~Nor me will have for lover 277 32| charmer hears.~ ~ XX~"Ah! Love, arrest this wight who runs 278 32| profess;~But cannot therefore love Rogero less.~ ~ XXV~"Both 279 32| had that notion of their love conceived~From signs of 280 32| take,~Who with dishonest love and treacherous lore~Did 281 32| virtue strong;~My every love and thought shall he possess;~ 282 32| Rogero had withdrawn his love~From her, and on the warlike 283 32| seize the stolen fruits of love,~When, after long delay, 284 32| sight,~Nor other dame to love or to caress,~The philtre, 285 32| Who would have thrown on Love his castle's use.~ ~ XCIII~" 286 32| castle's use.~ ~ XCIII~"For Love should make a churlish nature 287 33| thought from you.~When you I love not, then unloved by me~ 288 33| other wound than that of Love opprest."~With that he vanished 289 34| free will,~Fixed all his love on me that cavalier;~Weening 290 34| means designed,~Never to love him had I fixed my mind;~ ~ 291 34| father's hest,~And pious love for him had been my guide,~ 292 34| pretend~That I deservedly his love should bless,~If he his 293 34| time deserve my charms~By love and service, not by force 294 34| yoked securely, if his heart~Love has well touched with the 295 34| and threatens high,~By love or force the monarch shall 296 34| for the Thracian warrior love pretend:~But first declare 297 34| heathens' scorn.~Incestuous love for a fair paynim maid~Had 298 34| LXXXV~Some waste on love, some seeking honour, lose~ 299 35| should appear.~Authors I love, and pay the debt I owe,~ 300 35| was it, so transfixed with Love's keen goad,~Who sighed 301 35| thus, opprest with woe,~For love of Heaven; or teach me where 302 35| beauteous hair,~All breathing love and grace, the victory~Will 303 35| that thou~Then stoop to love me, as thou hatest now.~ ~ 304 35| land returned.~Hence, as Love spurs and goads him evermore,~ 305 35| will pray you, for the love of me,~To find King Agramant' 306 36| in her heart~That mighty love, wherewith she burned whilere.~ 307 36| that it is she who joys her love:~ ~ XIX~Or rather she, that 308 36| lady thought,~Had joyed her love; and whom she hated so,~ 309 36| For this the stripling's love was fury, fire;~For that ' 310 36| another joys the stripling's love,~Thus speaks, as sovereign 311 36| shent,~Under the faith of love, in peaceful show;~Him, 312 36| go;~And it is well; since Love with burning dart,~Tilting 313 36| you I die.~Hear me, for love of heaven! -- what done 314 36| deemed the youth pursued in love; she thought~He but to end 315 36| persuade the damsel but that love~For young Rogero brings 316 36| jealous spleen,~That with the love of young Rogero glows;~And 317 36| either side,~Turned to firm love the hate they bore whilere.~ 318 36| Rogero sighed;~And for his love against her sire rebelled;~ 319 37| lift it to the skies)~The love, the faith, and mind, unconquered 320 37| is the dame,~Renowned for love of her Mausolus, yea~By 321 37| ladies, I am bent~Ye whom I love and honour, to content.~ ~ 322 37| that, beside his natural love of wrong,~He is endowed 323 37| that uncurbed desire, which Love we call;~By which they were 324 37| bitter close~The wicked love he to that lady bore.~The 325 37| that overblown~Is her first love, and turned to him alone.~ ~ 326 37| other death.~ ~ LXXVII~"Love, pity, sorrow, anger, and 327 38| lady's little wit or little love.~ ~ IV~For if his life, 328 38| fruit of fear;~But that true love and duty move my tongue.~ 329 39| bosom so~Burned with the love of Monodantes' son,~She, 330 39| manlier mind than e'er,~From love as well was freed the enamoured 331 39| appear.~What he through love had lost, to reacquire~Was 332 39| illusion lies,~That each will love and pity overflows;~And 333 40| Orlando most of all,~Who love and prize the gentle Brandimart,~ 334 40| shape.~ ~ XLIX~"I, for your love, will undertake the quest,~ 335 40| warriors more be shown,~The love wherewith I to the Child 336 40| his sovereign lord attend:~Love for his lady fits him with 337 40| wend his way:~Moved by his love for his liege-lady sore,~ 338 40| his hand,~Which him for love or force should thence convey.~ 339 41| damsel fair,~-- Who often love awakens, as she weeps --~ 340 41| all those others that I love.~ ~ XL~"In this consists 341 41| And how to think, from love those counsels flow~Which 342 41| To cheat, but bring his love to honest end.~A miracle 343 42| heart is bound~And linked by Love with solid bolt and chain,~ 344 42| prison freed, mid hymns of love,~Ascends into the blissful 345 42| whose lie~She in that sea of love herself immersed,~Upon whose 346 42| sinews are a prey~To burning love; Rinaldo I would say.~ ~ 347 42| all~The paladins, remained Love's captive thrall.~ ~ XXX~ 348 42| aid:~To him he told his love, with eyelids bent~On earth, 349 42| that draught was forced to love.~ ~ XXXVII~Him his ill star 350 42| Which in her bosom so all love allayed,~Henceforth she 351 42| He loved her, and such love was his, as late~Rinaldo 352 42| of that faithless lady's love~In him such passion bred, 353 42| Flinging their merit and their love apart --~The service of 354 42| There an oblivion of their love to drink.~ ~ LXI~My lord, 355 42| stream and clear~Extinguished love; Angelica of yore~Drinking 356 42| burning bosom thirst and love.~ ~ LXIV~Whenas Rinaldo, 357 42| thought~Of that so frantic love had put aside,~He reared 358 42| proved by Fortune in her love or rage.~ ~ LXXXVIII~Inscribed 359 42| touchstone for a woman's love,~Which needs to wedded man 360 43| sight,~Until impelled by love, the senior late~By dint 361 43| lady, who~E'er on unlawful love the barrier shut,~Made limn 362 43| very stones to move,~Such love, such sweetness did the 363 43| all his pinions overspread~Love of the dame, whose praises 364 43| A noble townswoman with love of me~Was smit; more sorely 365 43| Nor because I believed her love so true,~Nor for large gift, 366 43| her fair image graved by Love will ne'er~Be razed from 367 43| as she knew, to her my love was shown;~And that my loving 368 43| entertain~The hope she'd love me or be mine again.~ ~ 369 43| hail the gentle blood,~The love, the courtesy thy lords 370 43| princes' wisdom and their love of right,~Shall with perpetual 371 43| perpetual peace, perpetual love~Preserve thee in abundance 372 43| graceful shows,~She seems all love and beauty; and much more~ 373 43| its restless round,~Ceased Love, so wont to rein the cavalier,~ 374 43| hast known the accidents of love;~And worse than every woe, 375 43| know, art tangled, which by Love was tied,~The mode and order, 376 43| prey.~ ~ CXVI~The fruits of love long culled that cavalier~ 377 43| escort -- would she show~Her love -- she with his man must 378 43| they at home restore,~And love each other dearly evermore."~ ~ 379 43| Brandimart was slain.~Such love, such faith endeared the 380 43| fruits he fed,~Even do for love, what others did, among~ 381 44| faster noose,~And in true love more firmly them unite,~ 382 44| lies:~Nor could they better love, if from one womb~And from 383 44| welcome wide their wedded love.~ ~ XII~So spake together 384 44| her worth inspired,~With love of her unseen was Leo fired.~ ~ 385 44| kinsmen, friends,~Fair love to Roland and the others 386 44| great or small, is mighty Love.~ ~ XL~Deny she dared not, 387 44| I then to thee~By filial love be forced to be untrue,~ 388 44| me~To a new hope, a new love, and a new~Desire; or rather 389 44| I of myself dispose, for Love;~Nor think how to dispose; 390 44| Beatrice's child, the slave~Of Love am I; ah! miserable me!~ 391 44| fault I be:~But, if I anger Love, whose prayer shall save~ 392 44| still 'tis so~To have the love, not hatred, of that fair;~ 393 44| Nor sooner she a foe to Love be made,~Than she no longer 394 44| if I can be more:~Deals Love in kindness or in scorn 395 44| fickle Fortune sped,~Or Love's keen anger, break my constant 396 44| not of wax is proved; for Love whilere~Smote it a hundred 397 44| trenchant edge to flake:~Love this may wholly splinter, 398 44| comfort rife,~And full of love and faith, she said beside;~ 399 44| brand,~Laying his filial love and fear aside:~But little 400 44| left alive, by force or love the maid,~Resolved within 401 44| is the admiring prince's love.~ ~ XCIII~But if young Leo 402 45| Departs, and finding not her love, to her view~His noble court 403 45| toils wherein he by her love was noosed;~ ~ XXIX~And 404 45| dame, that may his former love efface;~Even, as the proverb 405 45| cause of worse.~ ~ XXXII~"Love is the cause; that in my 406 45| wellaway! if in my thought Love so~Thy thought, as thy fair 407 45| himself at having lost is love;~ ~ XL~The unhappy Bradamant 408 45| burned;~With pity and with love then wholly yearned.~ ~ 409 45| thou wilt ne'er~Weary my love: at any call I lend~To thee 410 46| sage as fair,~Temple of Love and Truth and Chastity:~ 411 46| superhuman genius, tied~By love and blood, lo! Pico and 412 46| Then come, sir, for the love of Heaven, and try~If any 413 46| he had done~To his lady love -- how ingrate, how untrue~ 414 46| the sorrows which torment~Love is the cause; but yet from 415 46| Greets with a brother's love, and stooping low,~His neck 416 46| plied,~And with the warmest love that he could show,~"Let 417 46| thee; in that Duke Aymon's love~And favour was engaged upon 418 46| chased,~And with my present love have straight replaced.~ ~ 419 46| quell.~But upon those that love such fear sits well.~ ~