Canto

  1     2|       dame,~For whom, as he had heard, he nursed a flame.~ ~ XXI~
  2     2|       appeared a dream,~Until I heard in air the damsel's scream.~ ~
  3     3|      did make:~Thou may'st have heard how that magician brave~
  4     3|      for his sire,~His dirge is heard: A stripling of thy race,~
  5     3|        as they passed."~Melissa heard the dame with signs of woe,~
  6     4|      When lo! a mighty noise is heard without!~"O mighty mother!
  7     4|      enchanter stayed,~After he heard the voice and bugle ring.~
  8     4| lamentations nigh the road were heard.~Towards a neighbouring
  9     5|        Polinesso many times had heard~From me (for such the Scottish
 10     5|    cavalier,~Or by the monarch, heard with tearless eye.~But,
 11     5|          sir stranger, you have heard,~I of my love assured the
 12     6|   rejoiced.~ ~  VII~At first he heard that, through excess of
 13     6|        against the fair Geneura heard~Lurcanio to her sire his
 14     6|   prisoned fury find a vent,~Is heard to hiss and bubble, sing
 15     7|        pain.~And, as for all he heard him late impart,~'Twas prompted
 16     7|          XXIV~At every movement heard on distant floor,~Hoping '
 17     7|      thinks he hears; but it is heard no more,~Then sighs at his
 18     8|      mean time, Alcina, who had heard~How he had forced the gate,
 19     8|        retreat,~Nor any note is heard in wood or grass,~Save the
 20     8|         ire, his lady's torment heard,~And, against law and usage,
 21     9|   frighted city other sound~Was heard to rise, and other crash
 22    10|         And when you shall have heard the impiety,~Which of such
 23    10|      noise which in the sea was heard.~ ~ C~Lo! and behold! the
 24    10|         the dog's dry teeth are heard to fall;~But reaching once
 25    11|     within,~Ere on his right he heard a mighty din.~ ~ XVI~He
 26    11|         a mighty din.~ ~ XVI~He heard a din, and fearful clashing
 27    11|        stone,~He knew not if he heard, or did not hear~A cry,
 28    11|        now the winding beach is heard to roar,~And wood and cave
 29    11|        What chanced, and may be heard in future lay.~ ~ ~
 30    12|         Stopt in his search and heard a voice complain,~Which
 31    12|        loud squeal and grunt is heard to pine)~Came driving at
 32    13|     without high disdain Corebo heard~(Who kind and courteous
 33    13|      Which might have well been heard a league around,~(Or, was
 34    14|      hushed, which now alone~Is heard, shall bring her where her
 35    14|    greater hurry ride;~Until he heard reed-pipe and whistle sound,~
 36    14|        when the blessed spirits heard,~They all together gazed,
 37    14|        their tramp~And noise be heard not in the hostile camp.~ ~
 38    14|         in reply;~"But oft have heard him mentioned, and for shrewd~
 39    14|     shrilling sound~Of horn was heard, without, or trumpet's bray.~
 40    14|         that nought was said~Or heard of this upon the paynim
 41    14|             CI~Lamenting may be heard the aged just,~In that they
 42    14|       lighting louder noise was heard~Than if he had worn felt
 43    14|     furious leader's blame,~Was heard, as in strange concord,
 44    15|      That I, though yet again I heard him roar,~If you were present,
 45    15|          That, wheresoe'er 'tis heard, all fly for fear;~Nor in
 46    15|      all whose goodly deeds are heard or read.~Astraea reinthroned
 47    15|       where wayfaring wight,~He heard, was prisoner made or slain
 48    15|      find his head;~But when he heard the charger in retreat,~
 49    15|       Gryphon, from the time he heard the news~Had evermore bemoaned
 50    16|        the dread of death, -- I heard report~That thou wast gone
 51    16|      Such was King Charles; who heard, and then descried~The new
 52    17|      him, present at the whole, heard more;~From Norandine, through
 53    17|      cries, at every turn,~Were heard from all that rubble widely
 54    17|        folly stood,~That having heard the truths the pilgrim said,~
 55    17|       nothing of his deeds have heard or seen,~Save what ill feats
 56    18|       of that Martano bent;~And heard that he to Antioch was addrest,~
 57    18|       and to Damascus came;~And heard Renown, throughout the city,
 58    18|         well he of his case has heard:~And after Aquilant his
 59    18|       venom fraught,~And having heard from many in the ring~The
 60    18|     knew Astolpho good,~Whom he heard speaking with his brother
 61    18|             CXL~'Twas here they heard the same which they before~
 62    18|         and of Lucina, erst had heard~In Syria; how she to return
 63    18|   Fortune had beheld, with glee~Heard that Marsilius had contrived
 64    18|      clear;~But, lest his being heard should bring to nought~The
 65    19|    Cloridan advanced before,~He heard the boy no longer in the
 66    19|       expected long,~Before she heard approaching trumpet-strain~
 67    20|      that there is none~But has heard mention of my race and strain.~
 68    20|         stay,~I oftentimes have heard relate the case;~And now (
 69    20|     part.~Where'er the sound is heard, the multitude,~In panic
 70    20|       Of that alarming horn was heard no more,~Unwonted shame
 71    21|        he had shent.~And having heard the knight her guilt display,~
 72    22|        telling, who hard-by~Had heard, as was rehearsed, a piercing
 73    22|     narrow way,~From whence was heard the cry; nor far had hied,~
 74    22|       wicked Count,~And, having heard him, and perused him near,~
 75    23|     right,~They from the people heard a mournful cry;~And saw
 76    23|          with raised hands, was heard to say,~He for his murdered
 77    23|        head,~And, having better heard the cavalier,~Rehearsed
 78    23|          LVII~And, after he had heard 'twas at the hest~Of Anselm,
 79    23|      warlike pair,~Had they not heard the covered paths resound,~
 80    23|        a roof he saw the smoke;~Heard noise of dog and kine, a
 81    24|        on the beach the surf is heard:~The crowd, increasing so,
 82    24|        return,~By her unseen or heard, she cannot know,~So as
 83    24|         fight.~Alphonso, having heard his guilt confessed,~Bade
 84    24|         the others of that band~Heard at a distance, thither her
 85    24|      crowned:~He in the thicket heard a courser neigh,~And, lifting
 86    24|     signs explored,~And she had heard the tidings of the swain,~
 87    25|        vain.~ ~ LXXIX~The other heard him not, or heard at most~
 88    25|         other heard him not, or heard at most~As we great talkers
 89    26|     false and impious Bertolagi heard,~As with the Moorish captain
 90    26|     remember to have viewed,~Or heard, -- what time the wasps
 91    26| Agrismont;~And, how I know not, heard upon her round,~He here
 92    26|       speed,~As soon as she had heard their monarch's need.~ ~
 93    27|        throughout their camp is heard:~But first is felt the Moorish
 94    27|         tent an angry strain~Is heard, and cries which multiply;
 95    27|         mighty tumult which has heard.~ ~ LIV~Sericane's monarch,
 96    27|       nought beside.~Ere he had heard him out, -- "Nor I forego~
 97    27|   Sacripant, another strife was heard.~Valiant King Sacripant (
 98    27|        was the tumult which was heard whilere~In the other tent,
 99    27|        the sons of King Troyane~Heard the two knights their jarring
100    27|     succour, cried,~So loud was heard, that of that ample rout~
101    27|         and Saone, and Garonne, heard the pest;~Scared mothers
102    27|         him from hollow rock is heard to mourn:~"O female mind!
103    27|   sounds which were at distance heard,~In shame and in reproach
104    27|         I ween by every one~Who heard; and, Sir -- if pleased
105    28|      wherein he most delighted, heard.~ ~ VI~"Faustus Latinus,
106    28|      injured king that case had heard.~ ~ XLII~"The monarch, who
107    28|      confused;~Nor even to have heard a case surmise~Of two, that
108    29|   damsel fair;~And Rodomont who heard, again represt~His evil
109    29|     thence in accents clear~Was heard a voice which spake Zerbino'
110    29|       the tale so often, Turpin heard,~And handed down to us the
111    30|     loud sound is by the Tartar heard,~Which the proud warrior
112    30|         the trumpet's blast was heard in air,~Whose signal blanched
113    30|            LXXXVIII~For she had heard as well in that discourse,~
114    30|      voiced, Marphisa's praise;~Heard, how Rogero thither bends
115    30|        pair those evil news had heard.~His Malagigi and his Viviane,~
116    31|     they were by others seen or heard,~Into their midmost camp
117    31|        strange and evil tidings heard~From other lips, he scarce
118    31|       Flordelice (as shown)~Had heard how troubled was his cousin'
119    31|     scattered on the plain;~And heard the quarrel which from thence
120    32|    Bradamant the Gascon's story heard,~That lady suffered such
121    32|      grief, the former fear her heard did goad;~That young Rogero
122    33|        new,~Have ye of pictures heard or pictures viewed~Of things
123    33|      his from sire or grandsire heard recite;~So son from sire;
124    33|         even to that baron, who~Heard it related by the very wight,~
125    33|      castle on the rocky mount,~Heard him relate the things I
126    33|        I now recount.~ ~ XXVII~"Heard him relate, how in that
127    33|        knight, whose praise you heard~When rugged Ischia's island
128    33|      and hard their swords were heard to beat.~ ~ LXXX~None e'
129    33|        where,~Except in Turpin, heard that such has been.~Hence
130    33|     prey,~But his rare fortune, heard Baiardo neigh;~ ~ XCIII~
131    33|        the clouds, the king had heard recite,~Was seated the terrestrial
132    33|     Behold! a whizzing sound is heard in air,~Which echoes with
133    33|   rolled.~ ~ CXXI~The fowls are heard in air; then swoops amain~
134    33|   Descending, till that horn is heard no more.~ ~ CXXVIII~At that
135    34|         in that troubled cavern heard rebound,~Weeping and wailing,
136    34|       hill did stand,~Whence he heard cries and tumults, as he
137    34|       did the warrior heed,~Who heard, these signs of adulation
138    35|       on the road to Paris lay,~Heard tidings of Rinaldo's victory
139    36|         cavalier.~ ~ XII~Rogero heard the call in joyous vein,~
140    36|   Marphisa, at these words, was heard to groan,~As roars in some
141    36|     than one shrilling trump is heard to bray;~And as their rattling
142    36|     know.~I the fixed stars had heard of thee foretell,~That thou
143    36|        For of the tale, if ever heard before,~Little or nothing
144    36|       thou Atlantes may'st have heard proclaim.~Of our fair lineage
145    36| Marphisa, with a tranquil face,~Heard young Rogero thus his tale
146    36|      LXXXIV~When a complaint is heard from valley near:~All now
147    37|        the plaintive words they heard:~When in a valley they three
148    37|         whereso'er his name was heard:~Now one is come to bruise
149    38|  Rinaldo, when he of her coming heard,~Met her; nor young Richardo
150    38|    heart resolved (as thou hast heard)~To abate the grandeur of
151    38|        fury's wings; the having heard~Since I arrived in Christendom,
152    38|        in true~Assurance he was heard, he downward thrust~A heap
153    39|        news declare,~A noise is heard; which ever louder grew,~
154    39|       For he, upon his way, had heard it told,~How he in France
155    39|    retired Anglantes' peer,~And heard that lord the warfare's
156    40|    viewed.~What outcries may be heard, what sounds of woe,~How
157    40|   displeasure Sericana's knight~Heard by King Agramant his griefs
158    40|      which they are inisled, is heard to roar.~The paynim messenger
159    40|      From his companions had he heard whilere~That Durindane was
160    40|      king elsewhere,~Who, so he heard, had sailed from the French
161    41|        Then doleful shrieks are heard, 'mid sob and tear,~Calling
162    42|          As the soul parts, are heard on every side;~Which from
163    42|        that wherewith Amphrysus heard his swain;~ ~  LXXXIX~And
164    43|       me was ever of that woman heard."~ ~ XLVII~His tale the
165    43|      Nausicaa bore.~ ~ LVIII~He heard, it in fair mansions would
166    43|         not if of wife thou has heard tell~(For haply not with
167    43|        foreign countries have I heard:~So tell, if telling irks
168    43|       and slain,~When so Adonio heard the peasant say,~He scarce
169    43|      land.'~ ~ XCII~"Unless she heard he thither made repair,~
170    43|        as thou haply mayst have heard it famed)~Mantua from me
171    43|      when of Anselmo's shame he heard.~Rinaldo greatly praised
172    44|      good.~ ~  XXXVI~Duke Aymon heard his heir with some disdain;~
173    45|    Marphisa of exalted mind~Had heard Rogero's sad estate declare,~
174    45|     peer;~And equal Charlemagne heard either side,~But neither
175    46|     sprite,~Nor Leo nor Melissa heard the knight.~ ~ XXVIII~Nor
176    46|       him dispose.~When this is heard by that Greek emperor's
177    46|       and Agramant the Moor~Had heard the several fortunes while
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License