Canto

  1     1|        his faithful host upon the plain.~ ~ VI~To make King Agramant,
  2     1|        silently uplifted from the plain,~Upon the croup bestowed
  3     1|        lightning wheeled upon the plain.~Woe to the king! but that
  4     2|           strong~Extends a little plain, two bow-shots long.~ ~
  5     2|          scarcely rising from the plain;~But when the flock is launched
  6     2|         upon her haunches, on the plain.~The Alfana that the Indian
  7     2|          town, with many miles of plain,~Which lie 'twixt Var and
  8     2|         with wonder on the tented plain~The prowess of that valiant
  9     3|           and thou shalt hear how plain~From its sepulchral case
 10     3|          the honours of Romagna's plain,~And open to the chivalry
 11     4|        such quality offends;~'Tis plain that this in many a situation~
 12     4|       slow,~Until she reached the plain beneath the tower.~Then
 13     6|           ground,~'Mid cultivated plain, delicious hill,~Moist meadow,
 14     6|     passage, whether over hill or plain;~That he might so eschew
 15     6|        way which dight~Across the plain, conducted to the gate;~
 16     6|          bottom which divides~The plain into two parts: A cruel
 17     7|          Unless 'tis palpable and plain to view:~Hence inexperience,
 18     7|         well transformed upon the plain,~For punishment of foul
 19     7|         and city, and by hill and plain;~But seeks her cherished
 20     8|           of venomous, on burning plain,~Creeps 'twixt the Red and
 21     8|           every sounding wood and plain repeats.~And while, "Oh
 22     9|            and comes where on the plain~Are camped the hosts of
 23     9|      other thundering pressed the plain:~For the first rose so ready
 24    10|          horsemen use to try~Upon plain ground, beneath her tutoring,~
 25    10|       Philomel for ever seemed to plain;~I' the middle was a meadow
 26    11|      strides the giant scours the plain,~Him with his eyes the knight
 27    11|         doubtful sky, when on the plain~A shower descends, and the
 28    11|           flower.~ ~ LXXXIII~From plain to hill, from champaign
 29    12|        nigh town or hamlet on the plain.~For since King Agramant
 30    12|     lightened courser scoured the plain,~Without a rider to direct
 31    12|          many foes has heaped the plain,~That he who thinks to count
 32    13|          robbing aye, by hill and plain,~Scower fruitful Languedoc
 33    14|       seeks the count by hill and plain:~Next joys himself with
 34    14|           and many others, on the plain.~-- "Sir," said the bearer
 35    14|       steed and galloped o'er the plain,~And swore upon the camp
 36    14|           is seated on a spacious plain,~I' the midst -- the heart
 37    14|           he neither city had nor plain~Behind, but what was his,
 38    15|           fitly won was then made plain;~For we were rescued, and
 39    15|           here, beneath the sandy plain,~In mode, that all the travellers
 40    15|           his walls Orrilo on the plain~Drops, -- and the strife
 41    15|   Distances by a mighty length of plain.~This while the wizard's
 42    16|           that side, observed the plain.~ ~ XLII~With such a faithful
 43    16|            that small expanse,~Of plain, between, was seen to disappear.~
 44    16|         distant, prostrate on the plain.~ ~ LVIII~When, harassed
 45    16|           that more inland on the plain~The warfare is less mortal
 46    16|           unhorses, dead upon the plain.~So Agricalt, so Bambirago
 47    17|          its fair site,~A fertile plain, abundant fruits supplies,~
 48    17|           he stretched him on the plain.~ ~  XCVI~Here two good
 49    18|        Matthew from St. Michael's plain,~With the eight of whom
 50    18|          a large circumference of plain,~Bade one another wait,
 51    18|          cross him on the crowded plain;~And Dardinello, who his
 52    18|         longer stay.~God, to make plain that he, even here, bestows~
 53    18|       here and there, by hill and plain, the land;~Hoping with errant
 54    18|        nearer, this appeared more plain,~When heaps of slaughtered
 55    18|           to me, my lord upon the plain~Should lie, unworthy food
 56    18|         in arms is better, on the plain,~Than afterwards of grief,
 57    18|     bodies there~Which heaped the plain where roved these comrades
 58    18|          that gleam, and hill and plain's extent.~With these Mount
 59    19|         the warrior dead upon the plain.~ ~ IX~Together, all the
 60    19|       that scarce alive, upon the plain.~There for a mighty space
 61    19|     passing hither, on a pleasant plain,~What (whether dittany or
 62    19|        Medoro would not leave the plain~Till he in earth had seen
 63    19|       gate, from the mid-day, the plain~Marphisa entered, nor expected
 64    19|         lance she left him on the plain,~And at the others drove
 65    20|           arts; another tills the plain:~One serves in court, by
 66    20|      woods, and for the most part plain;~With creek and port, where
 67    20|           ten warriors matched in plain,~Who by his arm successively
 68    20|          to him by many a sign is plain~That this Sir Guido is,
 69    22|         from man to myrtle on the plain;~Had marked and noted how
 70    22|        which is both straight and plain,~That we in time might reach
 71    22|       well will sometimes have to plain,~And find that Fortune will
 72    23|          marvelled when above the plain~She saw the rising steed
 73    23|           came towards her on the plain,~Who, at her best, Astolpho'
 74    23|     Orlando sees beneath him on a plain~The youth to death conducted
 75    23|        from the cave. When on the plain~The damsel saw the motley
 76    23|           and hurried towards the plain.~He marked Zerbino, and
 77    23|      halted on the hill above the plain:~And, after she perceived
 78    23|        Orlando, when he prest the plain.~King Mandricardo's courser,
 79    23|           woodland, or by pathway plain,~Hither and tither, blinded
 80    23|          the thing more clear and plain;~And all the while, within
 81    23|          he dreads too clear, too plain~To make the thing, and this
 82    24|          I answer that I see mine plain enow,~In this my lucid interval
 83    24|           horse dismounted on the plain,~Full of compassion, in
 84    24|        damsel pricked by hill and plain,~She reached the passage
 85    24|     shrieks so lout that wood and plain resound~For many miles about;
 86    24|            and Mandricardo on the plain~No more astound, slides
 87    25|         and oftener two, upon the plain;~And four, at once, and
 88    25|        lay dead upon the cumbered plain,~And numberless were they
 89    25|          through the uncultivated plain,~And saw a knight arrive
 90    26|    succession three had prest the plain.~A mark well worthy fierce
 91    26|           to them, though figured plain~Upon the marble which that
 92    26|          nether hell; when on the plain,~Common before, men fixed
 93    26|       shall into the rich Lombard plain~Descend, with all the flower
 94    26|           And one branch cuts the plain, one climbs the mount,~And
 95    26|        longer far, but smooth and plain.~ ~ LXVII~Hippalca's ardour
 96    26|            CXIX~Rodomont o'er the plain pursues his man.~-- Another
 97    27|       Naked, in sun or shower, by plain or peak,~Wanders about the
 98    27|       Christian blood the thirsty plain.~ ~ XXIX~At once a formidable
 99    27| slaughtered bodies overspread the plain.~ ~ XXXV~Red blushed the
100    27|        questioned, I will make it plain,~And will, with sword in
101    27|         But I to thee repeat more plain and clear,~Thou ill wouldst
102    27|      recollecting, that on listed plain~At Mandricardo he must couch
103    27|         he roved, 'twist hill and plain,~Ere he came up with Rodomont
104    27|         could not come; about the plain,~Fat herds were feeding
105    28|         by many a hill and many a plain;~And find at last, well
106    29|       pursued the beaten road and plain;~Since for way-faring men,
107    29|          first arrived the titles plain~Are written, and their arms
108    29|       across that mountain to the plain;~And, seeking long a path,
109    30|          fortune shifts on listed plain,~She whom you hold not captive
110    30|          speed towards the listed plain,~Fixt for that fierce assay,
111    30|        others often on Thessalian plain.~The beamy lances, rested
112    30|      unguided courser scowers the plain;~That Brigliadoro, whom
113    31|        like them, extended on the plain.~ ~ XII~All to be foremost
114    31|   stranger peer; alighting on the plain,~Rinaldo to the valet, at
115    31|           combat darkling, on the plain;~But should their duel till
116    31|         countries and by hill and plain;~Whom they returning hold
117    31|          mountain, valley, and by plain,~Flying the fury of the
118    31|         arms had scattered on the plain;~And heard the quarrel which
119    32|        the hill descends into the plain:~She finds him not, and
120    32|           air, at distance on the plain.~The third (unhorsed by
121    32|     Because, he said, and made it plain appear,~Such as he found
122    33|           As if already done, are plain to view.~ ~ XII~"That king
123    33|          troubled mien, upon that plain,~Which even to where vext
124    33|           down, by mountain or by plain,~Nor, when the year was
125    33|        Arles, along the road most plain,~And in its haven found
126    33|          on sea-shore, nor inland plain,~Is unexplored throughout
127    33|            tomb behind him on the plain,~And Ammon's, now dilapidated,
128    34|          calm content.~In the mid plain arose a palace fair,~Which
129    34|        That so he meant to say we plain descry.~ ~ LIX~Translated
130    34|      other valley, other hill and plain,~With towns and cities of
131    35|          one craved battle on the plain.~Serpentine stood by chance
132    35|        mighty following, next the plain,~Marking the joust, much
133    36|       knight, that on the martial plain~The manage of the lance
134    36|          s daughter on the listed plain,~With palpitating heart,
135    36|           hard or soft the listed plain,~And be with such unwonted
136    36|         Marphisa started from the plain,~Intent fell mischief with
137    36|    Wherein embosomed was a little plain.~In the mid lawn a wood
138    36|          easily reversed upon the plain,~She hears in vain exclaim,
139    36|         this the mountain and the plain that lies~Beneath it, with
140    37|         pleasant isle, by hill or plain,~Of manly visage they beheld
141    37|         far and nigh.~Some fly to plain, or castle from the town,~
142    38|          made.~Scarce on the open plain embattled stands,~-- All
143    38|          Whence are discerned the plain, and distant brine,~He chooses
144    38|        Which rolling to the sandy plain below,~Next, neck and muzzle,
145    38|        leaps; and lighting on the plain,~Uplift the croup, like
146    38|         poured down, to waste the plain;~Who, for the country was
147    38|          often as ye issue on the plain,~Worsted so oft, or broken,
148    38|        old Arles, upon a spacious plain.~ ~ LXXVI~Watchful Aurora
149    38|          pause, was seen upon the plain~The paynim host in different
150    38|      remains large portion of the plain;~For he is doomed to death
151    39|       that hour upon the spacious plain,~Had watched so rich a prize
152    39|          than maimed, opprest the plain.~Above a hundred dead are
153    39|            and stretch across the plain;~When they perceive that
154    39|         city-gate which faced the plain;~ ~ LXXI~And bade on Rhone
155    39|        sleeps the lazy Rhone,~The plain with rising sepulchres is
156    40|       depend, though from Italian plain~Was driven the friend that
157    41|         When finally he knew, and plain descried~Rogero scrupled
158    41|        how beneath Carena, on the plain~Brunello on Rogero this
159    41|          next his length upon the plain:~Vainly to raise him strove
160    41|           Sobrino; but it was not plain withal~If 'twas the fault
161    41|         where more distant on the plain~He sees his leader, with
162    41|           his Brandimart upon the plain,~And in such act Gradasso
163    42|      crushed; so long between the plain,~And his stout courser jammed,
164    42|            A cliff o'erspread the plain with broken rock.~ ~ XXII~
165    42|           And did not yet by some plain token speak --~She, in her
166    42|           that scroll, in letters plain,~Rinaldo, by the help of
167    43|        heart so heavy weighed.~So plain is what was little known
168    44|          because be on the listed plain~Had proved the peer so strong
169    44|         high~I moves the shifting plain in many a wave,~And fills
170    45|        king of France.~ ~ IV~'Tis plain to sight, through instances
171    45|       flight from the ensanguined plain,~For, troop by troop, a
172    45|        his broad pavilions on the plain;~And his arrival by an embassy~
173    46|         is assured his victory is plain,~Dread sir, if he your edict
174    46|      falls o'ertaken on the dusty plain,~By his descending faulchion
175    46|         CVI~"Albeit thy felony be plain and clear,~Which thou, as
176    46|      Nathless to make it yet more plain appear,~This will I prove
177    46|        against them all in listed plain."~ ~ CVII~Rogero, with the
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