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.~ ~
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