Canto

  1     1|        India, Median, and Tartarian land,~Westward with her had measured
  2     1|         shores her guide~In his own land, 'mid friends and kindred
  3     1|        addressed~Towards her native land and empery:~And feels, with
  4     2|         near,~For that she from the land of France might flee,~And
  5     2|          Not that the people or the land he blamed,~But that King
  6     3|         passed since I from distant land~My course did to this cemetery
  7     3|          home, in Almayn's northern land.~There he the house of Saxony
  8     3|             the first fair Umbria's land subdues,~And shall Spoleto'
  9     3|             joined to Modena's bold land.~And his redoubted valour
 10     3|          the wisest captains of the land~His worth shall class; such
 11     3|        night or day,~By water or by land, will shame the foe,~With
 12     3|        glories spread o'er seas and land shall be.~The first shall
 13     3|          sex and sect, and name and land,~And her quick eye oft glances
 14     4|      Rinaldo, disembarks on British land,~And saves Genevra, doomed
 15     4|             And throng from distant land, or country near,~French,
 16     5|       approach less near~Than other land, 'tis that he would eschew~
 17     5|              and castles, woods and land.~ ~ XVIII~"Dear to the monarch,
 18     5|             of the king, and of his land,~To please so well that
 19     6|            billows, and returned to land.~ ~ VI~And, now despising,
 20     6|             And hence, in Denmark's land, to live a nun,~Straight
 21     6|          Alcina owned the house and land.~We found her, where, without
 22     6|             the snare,~Too far from land my folly to repair.~ ~ XLII~"
 23     6|           part it from the Scottish land.~Yet will the sisters give
 24     6|         might find~A passage to the land of Logistil;~Firm in his
 25     6|           to you intent.~Silver and land to conquer, plate or mail~
 26     7|            Divided by such space of land and main:~Often she goes
 27     8|          foot and horse were by the land possessed.~The whole to
 28     8|            brink,~As night upon the land begins to sink.~ ~ XXXVIII~
 29     8|            and usage, to molest~The land (no sluggard in his anger)
 30     8|          For this came every day to land, should feed.~Though to
 31     8|           whose waters drenched the land,~That day had perished by
 32     9|             As (such his wont) from land to land he goes,~A river'
 33     9|         such his wont) from land to land he goes,~A river's side
 34     9|            let her shallop make the land.~ ~ X~Steered not to land;
 35     9|           land.~ ~ X~Steered not to land; as haply with suspicion~
 36     9|         thou on that other shore to land~Dost by my aid, Sir cavalier,
 37     9|                 XX~For hitherto, by land or sea conveyed,~No cavalier
 38     9|           sent the worthiest of his land,~Me of the count, my father,
 39     9|            case to all who seek the land,~Both lords and knights,
 40     9|             very day, they put from land~With a clear sky and prosperous
 41     9|             the king of Friesland's land,~Would try his fortune (
 42    10|            to sea.~ ~ XX~Behind the land was left; and there to pine~
 43    10|            the frigate to return to land.~ ~ XXVI~But the loud wind
 44    10|          and bay;~Or take me to the land where I was born,~If this
 45    10|            amity;~And quickly of my land thy troops possest,~To assure
 46    10|             the ruin of herself and land,~Or repossess the thing
 47    10|           night or day;~And thus by land and sea was battle, fell~
 48    10|            bore,~And seldom was the land beneath in sight.~But taught
 49    10|          reached Sarmatia's distant land; and, where~Europe and Asia'
 50    10|    Inhabiting that horrid, northern land;~And came at last to England'
 51    10|         delight~Prospects to him of land and ocean bring.~Arrived
 52    10|             to bear them to another land.~"The French beseiged, rejoice
 53    10|           the Irish, next the level land,~Into two squadrons ordered
 54    11|       Ireland, should not reach the land,~The he with greater ease
 55    11|          swims forth, and makes for land.~He leaves the anchor fastened
 56    11|             there.~Orlando draws to land, the billows sweeping,~That
 57    11|           whole old warfare vex the land;~ ~ XLVII~And that it better
 58    11|              through all the wasted land;~And, was it justice moved,
 59    11|             ruin spread,~Nor in the land is left a living head.~ ~
 60    11|            and in Friesland left no land~To the false duke, so rapid
 61    12|             forest, hill, and level land,~Field, valley, running
 62    12|          stream, or water pent,~The land and sea; and having searched
 63    12|           will,~He for Angelica had land and sea~Ransacked, and wood
 64    13|             he, approved by sea and land!~ ~ XII~"Unable in his person
 65    13|            array~Of valiant men, by land and sea renowned,~In the
 66    13|            I severed from my native land, ~Hoping in brief Zerbino
 67    13|           else repair, upon Italian land,~Illustrious houses with
 68    14|            flocked to fat Ravenna's land,~Or masterless, without
 69    14|           know;~As one who from one land to the other hied,~Kindling
 70    14|            cannot tell the name and land of all.~ ~ CXXVI~The crowd,
 71    15|         round the rich and populous land~Of odoriferous Ind the vessels
 72    15|          sea, till they discern~The land of Thomas; here the pilot
 73    15|           as he coasts, the wealthy land at ease.~Ganges amid the
 74    15|           Britain, without touching land.~ ~ XIX~Andronica to England'
 75    15|            But, since the Aethiops' land before us lies,~Extending
 76    15|             course begun~By the mid land, extending wide before:~
 77    15|             limit of this length of land,~Which makes a single sea
 78    15|          But that of every farthest land should wear,~Which here
 79    15|          captains, where the way by land~Is free, he spreads the
 80    15|            love he bears his native land~Honours him more than any
 81    15|                Done to their native land -- their every praise.~ ~
 82    15|           Thus of the victories, by land and main,~Which, when long
 83    15|         Alcina's wrath,~The duke by land continued hence his path.~ ~
 84    15|         lost:~From whence he to the land of heroes crost.~ ~  XL~
 85    15|         seek honour in their native land.~ ~ XCII~Gryphon and Aquilant
 86    15|           his neck convey.~The Holy Land a mountain-summit showed,~
 87    15|        XCVII~As deputy, the sainted land he swayed,~Conferred on
 88    17|       explore;~Then, wet and weary, land 'mid verdant hills,~Between
 89    17|             past, arrived on Syrian land.~ ~ LXVI~"In Cyprus, and
 90    17|        overturned by Gryphon on the land.~One at the encounter left
 91    18|        Exactly as the felon swam to land.~ ~ XXXII~As soon as the
 92    18|          you united go, be sure the land~Is shut against you, wheresoe'
 93    18|             And many, from the Holy Land remote.~ ~ LXXI~One and
 94    18| proclamation~Throughout all Syria's land, with nimble wing,~Phoenicia
 95    18|             the lord who ruled that land in trust,~Resolved he would
 96    18|              the peer~Over the Holy Land as ruler set:~He with the
 97    18|              by hill and plain, the land;~Hoping with errant cavalier
 98    18|    favouring not the natives of the land~More than the foreigners,
 99    18|            than the king~Of Syria's land, offended Gryphon thought.~
100    18|       leisure,~To view the laughing land of Love and Pleasure.~ ~
101    18|        genial gale which blows from land.~ ~ CXXXIX~A fruitful rill,
102    18|              the fertile space.~The land of Venus truly may be said~
103    18|        those others small repose by land,~Those left in France, who
104    19|             savage, bondsman in the land,~Which impious women rule
105    19|          has made, and towards what land.~Thence all to speak their
106    19|            what is the neighbouring land,~Who will not to the port
107    19|            Condemned to delve their land or keep their beeves.~--
108    19|            them the patron who from land~Aye keeps aloof, explains
109    19|       warriors are impatient all to land:~But boldest is of these
110    19|          spread already through the land)~Than thitherward, with
111    19|       sovereign, and shall sway~The land, and you may homeward wend
112    20|       Idomeneus the tyrant of their land,~And their new state to
113    20|            go~For Puglia's pleasant land: there founded near~The
114    20|             She would not leave the land they were upon,~Whose soil
115    20|          fell law, the ruler of the land;~And of all barks into their
116    20|          human bosoms in this cruel land,~I shall not now request
117    20|        youth, replied:~`Though this land be more cruel and severe~
118    20|           star,~Upon this miserable land did light,~Should have his
119    20|           horn,~The people make the land and welkin roar;~Summoning
120    20|           now, far distant from the land,~Beholds the parting frigate
121    20|     Bradamant, who used to sway~The land, and had that city in her
122    20|            As being natives of that land) the rest;~-- Nay, with
123    21|       having compassed on the level land~Enough of ground, encounter
124    22|          Armenian road, and so that land forsook.~ ~ VI~He, after
125    22|            and disembarked upon her land.~He backed his horse, and
126    22|             ran; she took the happy land~At last nigh Rouen; and
127    22|              As much he coveted) of land and sea,~And in few days
128    22|           was the well, nor in what land it lay.~ ~ XCV~Upon Rogero'
129    23|             see the winged people's land,~Here upon earth I make
130    23|            courser, far or near,~In land of Christian or of Paynim
131    24|            to rove,~He, through the land, did man and beast pursue;~
132    24|        while that thou all France's land,~From city shalt to city,
133    24|        witnessed, when thy father's land~Thou quittedst for my sake;
134    24|         bear the storm abroad, o'er land and main,~By which the flocks
135    25|            not, nor yet aspire~O'er land or people to hold sovereign
136    26|          and who~To France was over land and ocean brought,~From
137    27|          Spain -- whate'er of level land~Was seen, extending on the
138    28|           so found small relief,~By land or water, for his secret
139    28|       aboard to stay,~But bade them land him, and by Lyons hied;~
140    28|           scheme of seeking Afric's land,~(So this fair spot seemed
141    29|         Towards the south, upon the land of Spain.~His way along
142    30|       scowered large portion of the land of Spain,~Dragging that
143    30|            Here, loosening from the land, a boat he sees~Filled with
144    30|           female train,~Who for the land of France had left their
145    31|        warrior good by water and by land,~That with the Saracen will
146    32|             and light,~Or his loved land, desired and gladsome sight!~ ~
147    32|         throughout the neighbouring land.~But not to all men is the
148    33|         success obtain,~Because her land they came not to offend.~
149    33|            in few months, by sea or land,~One living head, his slaughtered
150    33|         mulberry,~And in Viscontis' land the lilies sown:~"Treading
151    33|              The Gaul expelled -- a land which was his own.~France
152    33|        Another wars upon his native land.~ ~ LV~"In every part you
153    33|         golden shield,~Had sought a land so distant from their own,~
154    33|            less free.~O'er the wide land of Gaul the warrior flew~
155    33|              Which France's fertile land from Spain divide.~ ~ XCVII~
156    33|             viewed,~And into Asia's land the Nile pursued.~ ~ C~'
157    33|             where, ranged on either land,~Moslems and Christians
158    33|        soldan, king of the Egyptian land,~Pays tribute to this sovereign,
159    33|            desire if peopled be the land~To bring its nations under
160    33|             in panic terror fly the land.~He takes the reins, his
161    34|           as he possessed a palm of land;~ ~  XXXIV~"And if the knight,
162    34|           Earth's circling seas and land;~In that, by reason of the
163    34|          old crowns of the Assyrian land~And Lydian -- as that paladin
164    35|         nimbleness,~By water and by land, a cavalier~So fierce, that
165    35|          She was towards her native land returned.~Hence, as Love
166    35|        glorious name is spread o'er land and sea,~And render to that
167    36|        treacherous foe~In Christian land; and still their influence
168    37|             these confines from his land, which lies~But two leagues
169    37|             for us all to leave his land;~Placed such his pleasures
170    38|             is supplied:~Agramant's land he with his troop offends;~
171    38|             to be below,~That, from land, beneath such distant sky,~
172    38|           who reigns in so remote a land,~Followed by such a mighty
173    38|        taken courage to assail your land.~ ~ XLVII~"Now take your
174    39|          drained.~Few people in the land were left, and they~A feeble
175    39|          And whatsoe'er pertains to land or sea,~Bestirs him to accomplish,
176    39|             s government, by sea or land~A leader sage, the navy
177    39|             Who, for the deemed the land unsafe, aboard~Their barks
178    39|             make return to Africk's land.~ ~ LXXIV~Royal Marsilius,
179    39|          Biserta's port his host to land~Was the sage king of Africa'
180    40|             he more trouble in your land has bread.~ ~ IV~But Trotto,
181    40|         good a warrior he by sea as land)~Which a mile off the port,
182    40|            Orlando, both by sea and land:~The fleet, with Sansonetto
183    40|          Africk wide;~When from the land a wicked wind 'gan blow,~
184    40|              And makes the larboard land, from peril free;~Which,
185    40|           by tempest tost upon that land,~Which had conveyed the
186    40|           easy task -- to free your land.~ ~  L~"I will make other
187    40|           reavers shall not in your land remain."~ ~ LI~Gradasso'
188    40|            Ogier's son had made the land,~With the barbarians' fleet,
189    40|           had issued forth upon dry land,~Bent to find Charlemagne
190    41|          the quarter facing Egypt's land;~And, as the sea went down
191    41|            he cried,~And, should he land, and scape that mortal scaith,~
192    41|       stripling fight)~Of that fair land dominion shall obtain,~And
193    42|           There is not (through the land) a level space~(He says)
194    42|  unconquered lord,~Through whom thy land, reposing, casts away~All
195    43|        LXXVII~"He leaves his native land with this intent,~Nor letteth
196    43|          wears,~Far from his native land, seven weary years.~ ~ LXXXI~"
197    43|        squander both) are house and land.'~ ~ XCII~"Unless she heard
198    43|       heirdst erewhile thy father's land:~Now will I that henceforth
199    43|          our country and of foreign land,~With paces, graces, fashions
200    43|             in person goes; nor any land~Leaves unexamined by himself
201    43|        distant from them, lies that land.~ ~ CLXVI~With a fresh wind,
202    43|             Orlando and the rest on land;~Blesses the company in
203    44|          main places in the Moorish land,~Made the hippogryph anew
204    44|             Far from the sheltering land to seaward blew.~ ~  LXVIII~
205    46|      methinks -- yea, now I see the land;~I see the friendly port
206    46|             who to spy~My boat near land shows pleasure and surprise.~
207    46|             Whom throughout all the land he sought to find,~And seeking
208    46|             Which from the Bulgars' land a message bore.~ ~ XLIX~
209    46|         share,~Wherewith to Egypt's land he made resort;~There left
210    46|           whensoever against Argive land,~Or Turkish, from Venetian
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