Canto

  1     1|      pressed,~Who saw with little fear the champion true.~Not only
  2     1|         forest green in ceaseless fear~Of the destroying beast,
  3     1|         comprehends,~(So hope and fear her doubting bosom tear)~
  4     1|         not, and knows not in her fear~What 'tis she does; Rinaldo
  5     2|        soothe the gentle damsel's fear.~And with the promise of
  6     2|       feathered monster breeds no fear;~Who to a distance shifts,
  7     2|     traitor's troubled fancy rack~Fear, doubt, and his own native,
  8     3|          troubled capital strikes fear),~And make the Umbri and
  9     3|           at his resless hand, in fear~That he might undetected
 10     4|     Watches his thievish hands in fear and doubt;~And follows every
 11     4|         Who, with small cause for fear, beheld him bring~Nor mace,
 12     4|       guiltless in my thought,~In fear to warrant what is false;
 13     4|          all dismayed,~And by the fear of death o'erspread with
 14     5|       this ground,~Nor I intruder fear, encroaching nigh;~Nor seek
 15     5|       surprise,~He need not be by fear of death dismay'd.~He had
 16     5|    advance the sad Dalinda was in fear,~Yet followed, trusting
 17     6|        his deed, was touched with fear;~And, matchless both for
 18     6|     thought; but doubted next, in fear to fare~Worse on the courser,
 19     7|          silly judgement I should fear,~Convinced you will not
 20     7|          occasion, without let or fear,~Their love, unheard of
 21     7|       heart long torn by Hope and Fear.~ ~ XXVII~When the successor
 22     7|           wrath, he whilom so did fear.~And sternly cries, "Is
 23     8|          loathed Rinaldo has such fear,~She dreads, unless she
 24     8|          which but to descry~Bred fear in the beholder, stood the
 25     8| Emboldened by degrees, her former fear:~Though still her visage
 26     8|        like images are vain,~When fear, or when desire disturbs
 27     9|     induced to think, and next to fear,~Angelica is captive on
 28     9|         gladly will lay down: one fear~Alone molests me; and it
 29     9|         will not cheat.~ ~ LII~"I fear, when I shall be in captive
 30     9|           his hold,~Since I shall fear not, in your convoy strong,~
 31     9|        issue from the city are in fear.~He, when he sees them fly
 32     9|           paladin had struck such fear,~He without let might scour
 33    10|        haven moored.~ ~ XVIII~The fear and late sea sorrow, which
 34    10|           but yet no better sped.~Fear banished sleep; she oped
 35    10|          love from other differs; fear~And hope in other on the
 36    10|          dead the lady is through fear endured,~Ill by that other'
 37    11|        down her eyes in shame and fear,~The virtuous ring upon
 38    11|          Roland could such mighty fear have done;~ ~  LXII~Knew
 39    12|         fell the combat rages,~Of fear and horror full, between
 40    13|        hair from off her head,~By fear impelled, through paths
 41    13|        many evil chances lived in fear.~One day, mid others that
 42    13|            when she discerned~Her fear, advanced with smiles the
 43    13|          tidings bore.~ ~ XLVIII~"Fear not for thy Rogero: he is
 44    14|          safety, and life held in fear,~We see assured us by this
 45    14|       sprite:~-- Yet, through the fear endured, they far and nigh,~
 46    14|     herself she feared.~ ~ LI~Her fear increased when she approaching
 47    14|           and followers, in their fear.~For over and above the
 48    14|   disturbed with fright.~By these fear first was laid, and next
 49    14|        greatest cause for present fear.~ ~ CVII~With eyes of Argus,
 50    14|        that away,~Does any one in fear refuse his post.~Into the
 51    14|       through valour, one through fear,~And all attempt perforce
 52    15|           were present, should my fear forego.~How fields are fitly
 53    15|            tis heard, all fly for fear;~Nor in the world is one
 54    15|  whitherward he knew:~Such is his fear, he kens not as he flies,~
 55    16|     quakes from head to foot with fear,~Her voice so strengthens,
 56    16|       clamours put the heavens in fear,~Which, from our part, and
 57    16|        Moorish files betray their fear;~And, trembling in their
 58    17|       hundreds more, that you now fear to face~One of that very
 59    17|    terrific face sustains!~But if fear shook him, pity moved him
 60    17|    mastered her, she screamed for fear,~-- Or that her hair escaped
 61    17|      owned thy sway.~ ~ LXXVII~If fear of famishing within thy
 62    17|         and silently retreat,~For fear, that if the populace should
 63    17|        punishment of his unworthy fear,~Had put him out of case
 64    17|       might be a cause of greater fear,~For, joined to mocks and
 65    18|        waggon laid.~ ~ IV~Whither fear drives, in rout, the others
 66    18|       city-wall by him is thrown,~Fear chills the townsmen's marrow,
 67    18|      overthrown,~Struck with more fear than ever men possest.~Thither
 68    18|           And shows how small his fear by act and face.~ ~ LXII~
 69    18|           those arms, without the fear~Of Syria's king, pulled
 70    18|    changed their ire~Already into fear, he bids retire.~ ~ CXXVII~
 71    18|      light or ray.~Now, with more fear (his weaker hope o'erthrown).~
 72    18|        Upon all parts, a freezing fear goes through~The heart blood
 73    18|           that if Fortune foil so fear a feat,~The world, through
 74    18|        care:~Who, for they little fear the paynim race,~Slumber
 75    19|      aloof, explains the cause of fear,~And cries: "I liefer in
 76    19|          at strife with those who fear.~And they who are the strongest,
 77    19|          show~'Twas courtesy, not fear, had made him slow.~ ~ LXXXIX~
 78    20|           to child, and thence to fear~The women turned to teeming
 79    20|           content;~Though much, I fear, 'twill but augment thy
 80    20|         their powers to this sole fear addressed,~And be they sluggards,
 81    20|           you lose or win."~"-- I fear not, I," the martial maid
 82    20|           would have had worse to fear:~Sansonnet's horse was slain,
 83    20|       alone;~Where, never without fear, man journeys through~Wild
 84    20|        and tyger, roam alone,~Who fear no prowess greater than
 85    20|          beds, secure and void of fear.~Nor from the snare would
 86    20|           not her, though wont to fear,~(As being natives of that
 87    21|      enough of breath, although I fear~The contrary, is left me
 88    21|        men he in Argaeus' absence fear.~He at this time tries all
 89    21|          void is contract made in fear; alone~From his ill purpose
 90    21|          oppressed with grief and fear,~When his mistake to him
 91    21|        heart prevailing more,~His fear his resolution overbore.~ ~
 92    21|  resolution overbore.~ ~  LV~"The fear of shameful punishment's
 93    21|     poison to my brother. `Ill my fear,~(Exclaimed the dame) by
 94    22|        unfaithful people in their fear,~And has preserved himself
 95    22|        thither shall have sped,~I fear that we shall find the stripling
 96    22|          wait our succour, I~Much fear the stripling in the fire
 97    22|         little from the stroke to fear:~I of the buckler speak
 98    23|      Rogero's name would make him fear.~ ~ XXXII~Of many and many
 99    23|   surprise, and hung his head,~In fear lest he the assassin should
100    23|     defence provides,~There is no fear that he will die to-day;~
101    23|         into many have I stricken fear.~ ~ LXXVIII~"I have an oath
102    23|        and tither, blinded by his fear;~And bore with him the Tartar
103    23|           woman, almost dead with fear,~By hill and dale, by straight
104    24|       captain well might stand in fear;~Almonio sends, and many
105    24|           heart, conceive not any fear,~For I will follow thee
106    24|         from each churlish deed I fear;~As, when in the dark cavern
107    25|  numberless were they who fled in fear.~Meanwhile the damsel had
108    25|         of the wrong,~I sent; bur fear that he can ill resort~To
109    25|          monarch to relieve,~That Fear and Baseness had more largely
110    25|        now, -- and with a miser's fear~Guarded the treasure she
111    26|         Twould seem the world all fear aside has laid;~And, in
112    26|       Richardetto she was then in fear.~ ~ LXIV~She added how the
113    27|      paladins no longer are their fear;~The meanest Moor a hundred
114    27|     Discord by that angel, in her fear~Of suffering yet again such
115    27|       Discord laughed, no more in fear~That any truce or treaty
116    28|         to read.~So that, through fear, he further speech forbore,~
117    28|         by the peasants, in their fear,~As often by the soldier
118    29|         holds not God or saint in fear;~And to that king, regardless
119    29|          chosen site,~For love or fear, he master-masons found;~
120    29|          headlong downward in his fear:~Him a moist patch of brambles,
121    29|                LXV~Was it through fear, or was she, while she stript~
122    30|        For ever kept in agony and fear.~ ~ XXXII~"Alas! and what (
123    30|           to die excites in me no fear;~With you, prepared for
124    30|          sole, Rogero breeds such fear.~ ~ XXXIX~"And yet should
125    30|   blanched a thousand cheeks with fear.~Levelled those cavaliers
126    30|          who were little moved by fear,~For new encounter wheeled,
127    30|           fair visage; which such fear pourtrayed,~Despite and
128    30|         loving train,~Bradamant's fear and sorrow so allay,~That
129    31|       distrest~By that suspicious fear, that cruel care,~That martyrdom,
130    31|   Marsilius so, Sobrino so, their fear~Express; so, one and all,
131    31|     Rinaldo's friends were all in fear,~And dreaded much, before
132    32|         Furnished through love or fear, for sea prepares.~The Moor
133    32|      above~That grief, the former fear her heard did goad;~That
134    32|      opprest.~For that suspicious fear, that doubt unjust,~Which
135    34|          strife and poverty,~With fear and trouble, is she still
136    34|      around survey.~"Why should I fear, that on my horn depend~
137    35|        ebbing further -- I should fear to be~Such as Orlando is
138    36|        bones a chill, produced by fear;~Fear, that new wrath had
139    36|          chill, produced by fear;~Fear, that new wrath had stifled
140    36|        But his companions, in the fear to view~Victory with King
141    37|         in your high emprise,~For fear of not receiving honour
142    37|           has spread such passing fear among~The people, death
143    37|        the surest refuge in their fear,~Cast themselves down from
144    37|       doomed to die,~Mid trouble, fear, and lengthened agony.~ ~
145    38|            If there was ground to fear the Nubian sack.~ ~ XXXIX~"
146    38|          in even balance hope and fear,~O'errated still; and which
147    38|        heart, nor is the fruit of fear;~But that true love and
148    38|         baffled Saracens' eternal fear;~ ~ LV~"And the other Mars (
149    38|       than we have won.~ ~ LVI~"I fear, if heretofore our band
150    38|        these I more respect, more fear I bear,~Than any warlike
151    39|       upon Rodomont! take thou no fear!~Let each now show the metal
152    39|        him privily; but, for they fear~His fury, in his presence
153    39|      which the refuge sought,~The fear of drowning hurries back
154    40|   assurance fraught,~For none can fear beneath so good a guide:~
155    40|         and magnified the tale of fear:~For upon many quarters
156    40|           evermore have cause for fear.~For well the foeman knows,
157    40|       taxed with baseness or with fear.~If many deem it well he
158    40|            with lament and mighty fear;~Quickly for courser, shield,
159    41|            confused and pale with fear;~Vainly he calls aloud to
160    41|          who the tempest will not fear,~Springs upward to the surface
161    41|              XXXIII~The heartfelt fear, the torment evermore~Of
162    41|      blood;~And this new sense of fear increased her trouble,~And
163    41|       pricked at heart with cruel fear,~Filling the heavens with
164    41|          a king, through shameful fear.~If death must be my certain
165    42|        inmost veins such freezing fear,~As haply never fell on
166    42|        that is still in doubt and fear.~Full many husbands live
167    43|           Dead-white with jealous fear his cheek is dyed,~Through
168    43|         Anselmo's early doubt and fear~Are joined the threatnings
169    43|         thou break!~Ah! wherefore fear I, since a lot so blest,~
170    43|       henceforward from alarm and fear!~Alas! how strengthened
171    43|         and all that company with fear.~While they discoursed thereon,
172    43|         by evil wound.~All dismal fear relieved that eremite,~And
173    43|        first kept silence; for in fear~Of some mistake the monarch'
174    44|       sire should be?~But 'tis my fear that thou would'st rather
175    44|       ditch nor build a tower,~In fear lest any rob thee of that
176    44|        cause, amid thy griefs, to fear~My heart should ever bear
177    44|        Laying his filial love and fear aside:~But little him Rinaldo'
178    44|          the troop, that in their fear~Fly to the mountain and
179    44|           all bewildered by their fear.~Thus suddenly the battle
180    44|         it forth in anger, in its fear~Neither to sire nor sister
181    44|      rival seek.~ ~ XCIV~Leo, for fear his bands be wholly spent,~
182    45|        broken Grecians worse than fear endure;~Deeming the rest
183    45|           no alarms;~Nor would he fear the banded world in arms.~ ~
184    45|          And would have flung the fear of death behind:~Nor had
185    45|        other terrors, weighed~The fear, that to forget her he was
186    45|         hoarded treasure still in fear,~Cannot live gladly from
187    45|         puissant far than Hope, O Fear! thou art;~To thee, though
188    45|           Oh! how true Hope false Fear shall from on high~Depose
189    45|            And comfort Hope, whom Fear hath almost slain.~ ~ XXXVI~"
190    45|           Rogero, lest~My hope by fear should wholly be opprest.~ ~
191    45|         deprive,~Against me felon Fear uplifts his horn:~But they
192    45|           me that foul, consuming Fear.~ ~ XXXVIII~"If the sun
193    45|            yet was it not through fear~Of that which Argalia whilom
194    46|          bark there is no further fear.~There I my kinsman Malaguzzo
195    46|           Ferrara and her duke in fear,~Who by strange proofs doth
196    46|      timid troop, they for Rogero fear,~Ill matched they deem with
197    46|         upon those that love such fear sits well.~ ~ CXIV~Oh! in
198    46|          well.~ ~ CXIV~Oh! in her fear for him, how willingly~She
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