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Alphabetical [« »] shoot 9 shoots 5 shops 1 shore 184 shored 1 shoreless 1 shores 8 | Frequency [« »] 186 light 185 marphisa 184 round 184 shore 183 paynim 182 save 180 beside | Ludovico Ariosto Orlando enraged Concordances shore |
Canto
1 1| voice, upleaping on the shore,~The Saracen her lovely 2 2| protect her straightened shore;~And how, through him, her 3 4| France and Spain, and either shore.~As from a peak of Apennine 4 5| Scotland from a distant shore:~ ~ XVII~"And with a brother, 5 5| standing, overright the Irish shore;~When, speaking thus on 6 6| a myrtle on the pleasant shore.~ ~ XXXIII~"A peer of France, 7 6| willed, at pleasure drew to shore.~ ~ XXXVI~"Thither swift 8 6| whoever rides~To the other shore, a giantess in frame;~Who 9 7| Provence, departing seeks the shore.~The enchantress to another 10 8| offered to a monster on the shore.~Orlando, warned in visions 11 8| champaign, now upon the shore~Of neighbouring pool, which 12 8| the unhabited and sunny shore,~Were to Rogero grievous 13 8| Enquired, how she towards the shore might fly:~Who of the loathed 14 8| sea which laves the Gascon shore,~Still keeping to the rippling 15 8| sweep, the lady bears~To shore, where rock and cavern shag 16 8| Angelica, arrived upon the shore,~Beneath the cliff, afflicted 17 8| her sleep: upon the sandy shore~Already the recumbent damsel 18 8| One day alone, upon that shore in-isled,~Her he compressed, 19 8| fair lady, slain upon the shore:~He, if he deems her an 20 8| Ill-fortune on that wretched shore has tost!~Who for the stranger 21 8| amid stubs upon the grassy shore,~Angelica, unhappy damsel, 22 8| with heavy sleep upon the shore,~The lovely virgin, ere 23 8| the Red and the Atlantic shore,~Could see the grisly sight, 24 9| gain footing on the adverse shore;~When, with a damsel in 25 9| that if thou on that other shore to land~Dost by my aid, 26 9| supplies;~Which every day to shore for this does speed,~And 27 9| Angelica is captive on that shore:~Since he so long the missing 28 9| vessel skims the Breton shore;~Then shapes her course 29 9| break like glass upon the shore.~The wind upon the fifth 30 9| stream, descends upon the shore,~As his gray hairs may warrant 31 9| errant, who had sought that shore:~ ~ XX~For hitherto, by 32 9| this stream from Ocean's shore,~Designing to bestow me 33 9| otherwise, upon the further shore~Of fosse or of canal, the 34 9| distant signs appear~Of either shore on this or the other side,~ 35 9| he set foot on Ireland's shore,~Some other chance may interrupt 36 10| one night Olympia on the shore.~To Logistilla's holy realm 37 10| hare~In heat and cold, on shore, or mountain-height;~Nor, 38 10| course more nigh the Scottish shore:~When they are overtaken 39 10| Discover any thing beside the shore;~Nor, save the shore, was 40 10| the shore;~Nor, save the shore, was any thing in sight.~ 41 10| rebound.~ ~ XXIII~On the far shore there rose a rock; below~ 42 10| rends.~ ~ XXXIV~She to the shore's extremest verge anew,~ 43 10| intensest glow,~Takes by the shore: the burning sunbeams play~ 44 10| his path along the sunny shore,~Were irksome and displeasing 45 10| espied~Put from the other shore with punctual aim,~As if 46 10| To bear him to a better shore rejoicing: he~Appeared as 47 10| and yet distant from the shore,~To the safe bank approached 48 10| noise and din o'er sea and shore,~By echo every where repeated, 49 10| her lover flying from her shore,~But out of ships, even 50 10| disembarked upon the safer shore.~He turned his back upon 51 10| expose~Upon the sea-beat shore, as bare to view~As nature 52 10| deserts his sure regale~On shore, to follow that deceitful 53 10| half the sea,~Now to the shore the monstrous whale repaired:~ 54 10| and raised her from the shore.~ ~ CXII~Upon the beach 55 10| courser on the neighbouring shore~Where lesser Britain runs 56 11| Beholds. Orlando to the shore repairs,~Where the fell 57 11| with greater ease upon that shore~Might act what shortly you 58 11| that, crawling up the sandy shore,~The crooked crab from sea 59 11| pulls amain, and nears the shore,~With keen desire more certain 60 11| re-echoing round, the distant shore~And wood and hill rebound 61 11| with sling or bow, upon the shore,~And these supplied with 62 11| lady, having cleared the shore,~When other larum sounds, 63 11| so had dragged him to the shore,~As men against the current 64 11| from champaign flat to shore,~Oppressed with grief and 65 13| the sea,~Upon the pleasant shore; from whence the eye~Might 66 13| Driven landward, on the shore we safely light~Who in the 67 13| Suggested by that solitary shore;~Without more pause, in 68 13| was it they were wont the shore to seek,~When any vessel 69 13| Another matron on the Ausonian shore,~When she shall be released 70 13| attempt a sea without a shore."~ ~ LXXIV~When of the larger 71 14| recruit, was sent to the Afric shore~By Agramant, returned three 72 14| troop, and to what end, the shore?~To him replied the captain 73 14| has no sooner gained the shore,~Than on the wooden bartizan 74 15| where he guarded either shore~From Francolino to the mouth 75 15| desire to tread his native shore;~As hopes to him had given 76 15| chafes against its double shore;~Makes distant Cochin, and 77 15| her course for Europe's shore;~Nor navigates from Europe 78 15| far the negroes' burning shore, that they~Pass the far 79 15| know,~Fixed on the verdant shore; see some upon~The shattered 80 15| wandering barks, which stern to shore were dight.~Secure from 81 15| fen,~A path upon the sandy shore doth lie,~Barred by the 82 16| paladin rode on, along the shore,~When he had put the warriors 83 16| sea which ripples on the shore,~Still comes and goes, nor 84 17| from Ind and Erythraean shore.~ ~ XXII~Forward Sir Gryphon 85 17| sheet, at distance from the shore,~A storm assailed us, of 86 17| Approaching us along the shore, astound,~The orc, that 87 17| speeds outright~Along the shore, and seems a moving hill.~ 88 17| within a rock, upon the shore;~Of snowy marble was that 89 17| the orc had taken on the shore;~And of Lucina above all 90 17| asleep;~When one along the shore of ocean made,~And one betook 91 18| succours from the English shore,~Had lodged them in the 92 18| fair weather. From the shore~They loose, with sky serene, 93 18| wind now blowing from the shore)~His bark for sea the ready 94 19| find, extended on the outer shore;~Who is bedaubed like swine, 95 19| murderous women tenanted that shore,~Which, by their ancient 96 19| deemed that safer was the shore~Than sea, which raging round 97 20| uninhabited by human kind,~This shore received them wandering 98 20| lifeless statues on the shore.~But seeing lamentations 99 20| wilds, and on that desert shore,~To pine of want. Another 100 20| To that foul murderous shore by chance did fare,~After 101 20| Orontea lived, while of that shore~The other settlers all were 102 20| the power to leave this shore~To me seems shameful servitude 103 20| redoubted duke from England's shore.~Marphisa, Dudo, Sansonet, 104 20| and makes the well-known shore.~Here, offering passage 105 20| the croupe to the other shore.~Marphisa, who was come 106 20| told how she her native shore~Had left, and, launching 107 22| fly with noted scorn that shore.~Now following him, I say, 108 23| reefs; then, having left the shore behind,~Hoists every sail, 109 23| engraved, upon the woody shore,~What as the writing of 110 24| the wave upon the salt-sea shore,~Sportive at first, which 111 24| Thitherward; I arrive upon the shore,~The place where they were 112 26| Penthesilaea warred on Trojan shore.~ ~ LXXXII~Like brittle 113 27| put to sea from eastern shore;~And had Castille's rich 114 27| Arles, and Rouen's distant shore,~Rhine, Rhone, and Saone, 115 27| yet the vessel made the shore~Unploughed remained a mighty 116 27| from Paris to the pleasant shore~Of Acquamorta, all his rule 117 28| gathered upon many a distant shore;~Him did her sire in sickness 118 28| on Arbia's and on Arno's shore;~And, if a charm is left, ' 119 28| right, towards Acquamorta's shore,~And lighted on a stream 120 29| hills descended on that shore.~Within a yard or less approached 121 29| swift Orlando scours the shore.~ ~ LXVII~Doubt not that 122 30| which are wide~Of that dry shore; while from his level eye~ 123 30| water drew near Ceuta's shore,~Upon that beach, and of 124 31| conveyed the warrior from the shore.~ ~ CIX~Let others nourish 125 32| Seated upon a river, nigh the shore,~With Spain in front and 126 32| Because few mariners its shore descry,~As little known, 127 32| tresses which the hermit shore,~These, gathered in a knot, 128 33| the brine,~And on Rialto's shore his battle post.~Then fly 129 33| Atlas' shaggy ridges and the shore,~He viewed each regions 130 33| and farther than Cocytus' shore~Descending, till that horn 131 34| Aetolia, Africa, by Tyber's shore,~By Ebro's sunny bank, or 132 35| that ancient man upon the shore,~Who names, engraved on 133 35| these return securely to the shore.~ ~ XV~Thus, counter to 134 36| with prey, to your paternal shore;~ ~ III~All the inhuman 135 36| Your mother to that lonely shore did steer,~Which overright 136 36| sea-wandering, gained~Sicily's shore, and in Messina reigned.~ ~ 137 37| dull Lethe, and the river's shore,~Which nine times hems the 138 37| very year, from foreign shore,~A baron and his wife their 139 37| came from her so distant shore.~I know not, I, if it was 140 38| night nor day, till to the shore~Of Provence she her doleful 141 38| for from hence to Bactrian shore,~Ill would you hope to find 142 39| Him under Monaco, upon the shore,~In his first passage, Sarza' 143 39| cedar tree,~Approached the shore, and cast them on the waves.~ 144 39| who brought them to that shore~Should for his pains be 145 39| casque, that Dudon prest the shore:~With that, Sir Sansonet 146 39| by their example put from shore.~ ~ LXVII~Yet royal Agramant 147 39| Who had sure news that shore by Nubia's band~Was held, 148 40| walls, two stood on the dry shore,~Of a construction excellent 149 40| the ditch in haste from shore to shore,~And forms a level 150 40| ditch in haste from shore to shore,~And forms a level to the 151 40| furthest inland from the shore:~Each leads a portion of 152 40| it were well to make that shore~Till overblown the tempest' 153 40| his foes, on Lampedosa's shore;~Where on all quarters that 154 40| had sailed from the French shore.~A nearer place is offered 155 40| with his companions on the shore,~He walks, discoursing on 156 40| bound:~The vessel neared the shore, with sails full-blown,~ 157 40| fails,~Along the sea-beat shore toward Marseilles.~ ~ LXX~ 158 41| force thereof to win the shore;~Breast boldly the importunate 159 41| Roland roved, who paced the shore;~As I in other strain rehearsed 160 41| on the waters, from the shore,~And to the palace drew, 161 41| had passed from Africk's shore.~ ~ XXXVIII~After salutes, 162 41| So gains the Child that shore with labour slow;~And where 163 41| furious stroke, he pressed the shore,~And it was long ere he 164 41| scowered about the powdery shore,~Showing how good his speed 165 42| cavalier~Extended on the shore Gradasso's viewed,~(What 166 42| searching Barbary's every shore and sound~Erewhile on board 167 42| abandoned Europe's every shore;~And hoisting her bold canvas 168 42| crost from the Sicilian shore,~And thither had, in haste, 169 43| Whose jurisdiction to the shore extends,~Where the sea's 170 43| form Ind, or Erithraean shore.~ ~ XXXVI~"I enter safely, 171 43| dismounts the sun,~Runs to the shore, aboard her pinnace wends,~ 172 43| vesture dight,~Along the shore, a damsel he espies.~Though 173 43| seems to fly,~To the right shore the boatmen drive amain:~ 174 43| to Girgenti went,~-- The shore with torches blazing up 175 43| hither wafted from the Africk shore.~ ~ CLXXXIII~She, seeing 176 44| rich Provence's pleasant shore:~Where to the hyppogryph 177 44| commanding point upon the shore.~Resolved to send her eastward, 178 45| camp, from Save's green shore had gone:~With this in Beleticche 179 45| may mourn upon the Stygian shore.~Give me, my lord, I pray, 180 45| greenwood murmurs; and as on the shore,~When Aeolus with the god 181 46| behold the neighbouring shore;~So hope withal to pay my 182 46| them what cavaliers the shore adorn!~What friends! to 183 46| return rejoicing, crowd the shore.~Then, since the wind blows 184 46| disport was tented on that shore.~ ~ LXXVIII~She with young