Canto

  1   Int|            who is kidnaped by the evil witch Morgana and her sister
  2     1|       where Charles was tented~In evil hour, and soon the deed
  3     2|        that lone mountain; in his evil mind~Revolving, as he went,
  4     3|       bore,~To add another sin to evil deed,~Bore off with him
  5     3|      child of hell.~And work such evil, thinning with the sword~
  6     4|         care.~By love of fame and evil stars beguiled,~He follows
  7     4|      stars foreshow,~And cheat an evil influence of the skies~Rogero
  8     4|         say what on her head such evil drew;~And, to save time,
  9     5|          of all chambers, in that evil hour,~Marked I was in Geneura'
 10     5|           of every knight.~ ~"And evil Fate has willed her brother
 11     5|           safety bear,~And to the evil man its opposite.~But first,
 12     5|         meet,~And levelled at his evil foeman's breast,~Eager to
 13     6|         new.~ ~ ~ I~Wretched that evil man who lives in trust~His
 14     6|        journey, we~Came (such our evil doom) upon the strand,~Where
 15     6|        And full of every vice and evil art;~So she, who ever lives
 16     6|      Encounters soon the crowd of evil foes,~Who furiously the
 17     7|         And remedy for that grave evil shows.~Whence he, by her
 18     8|     Removed, would haply foul and evil be.~Well was it for Rogero
 19     8|        She said), "for brought to evil pass am I."~And told, still
 20     9|      emprize he swore,~As one who evil deed misliked to hear,~And
 21     9|        matched of few,~Such is in evil deeds his cunning sleight,~
 22     9|          who by them yet more,~As evil and rapacious, was abhorred.~
 23    10|           her, there are none~See evil in the deed, but rather
 24    10|        Destined to be a monster's evil prey:~ ~ XCIV~There but
 25    11|             LVI~Orlando asks what evil destiny~Her to that cruel
 26    12|    proudest were, the crown,~With evil countenance, to the other
 27    12|         will hide,~Fears not that evil accident can rise.~On her
 28    13|           tries what often has an evil end;~Lowers down the galley'
 29    13|           all that space,~Of many evil chances lived in fear.~One
 30    14|       tower~Or tree croaks future evil, did foreshow~To one or
 31    14|          used before~He passed to evil ones; began to stray,~Changing
 32    15|          Brought thither by their evil destiny.~ ~ LIII~When him
 33    15|         faithless, and of such an evil nature,~That thou mightst
 34    16|   Origille, his vain delight:~Yet evil use doth sovereign reason
 35    16|           possest,~And matched in evil customs were the two,~Like
 36    17|           serves, it cannot be~An evil use to make our worth appear:~
 37    17|          will our lot, in good or evil, share.~But go, for love
 38    17|      Brazen-faced boy and girl of evil fame,~Who, each in turn,
 39    17|        amid the crowd,~(Another's evil deed) proclaim aloud.~ ~
 40    18|         he, even here, bestows~On evil and on good their fitting
 41    18|            LXXIX~And through that evil woman's treachery,~Deemed
 42    18|         who all had gained,~(With evil profit, by the wretch untrue,~
 43    18|      brother nigh,~And, though of evil purpose, changed his mood.~
 44    18|         cried, "to overthrow~This evil plant, before it shoot and
 45    19|            he cries;~Then full of evil will in fury sprung~Upon
 46    19|        sentenced dead,~Thither by evil Chance or Error led.~ ~
 47    19|          upon theirs lay hand,~In evil case for sea, and worse
 48    20|         neither dim nor mean.~The evil influence will be transitory,~
 49    20|       years shall be;~And you, ye evil tongues which foully rage,~
 50    20|           all beside~Were of such evil kind, in me alone~Should
 51    20|         here, of yore~Was full of evil deeds and cruelty,~I can
 52    20|           had sworn to observe an evil use.~ ~ CVI~But I will first
 53    20|       away!~And thinkest thou the evil to repair~With her whom
 54    20|           hide,~Did she benign or evil lot endure.~The hard and
 55    21|         courteously,~Twas sign of evil and ungenerous will,~And
 56    21|         is left me to expound~Her evil actions, I shall make appear~
 57    21|         hard) than to content her evil will,~Of her foul wishes
 58    21|        soul, which is with secret evil dyed,~Does with such penitence
 59    21|       thou couldst deal me for my evil deeds;~ ~ XXIII~" `If evil
 60    21|        evil deeds;~ ~ XXIII~" `If evil be the deed, when done parforce.~
 61    21|         having overrun~A thousand evil thoughts, resolved on one.~ ~
 62    21|          an occasion wrought,~(To evil deed propitious evermore)~
 63    21|        ill,~To her irrational and evil will.~ ~ XXXVI~"The husband
 64    21|           not been fermented~With evil drug and poisonous, will
 65    21|         Who was instructed in her evil bent,~He -- if before he
 66    22|        bring to scorn his art and evil ways,~Suspicious of the
 67    22|      shall the cause, if right or evil, scan,~Which moved the banded
 68    22|   faithless Pinnabel, a wight~All evil prompt to further and fulfil,~
 69    22|       whose hest maintained, that evil rite,~Reminds the warriors
 70    22|       used to lap~His shield, the evil cause of that mishap.~ ~
 71    22|       four good champions of that evil law,~Made by the castle'
 72    23|         from whom was sprung this evil seed:~Who, to escape from
 73    23|       steer.~But Fortune, good or evil, had decreed~The maid, before
 74    24|         side,~Their heavy sins or evil planets guide.~ ~  V~Viewing
 75    24|        distinguishes the well~And evil doer; this, at every stir~
 76    24|        alike be paid;~She for her evil actions done before,~And
 77    24|         damsel wooed~To stop that evil and disastrous feud.~ ~
 78    24|       Opposed him to the damsel's evil will.~ ~ LXXXVIII~The reverend
 79    24| destructive store,~Inflicts worse evil than itself sustained;~So
 80    25|         stay.~Then Love is not of evil nature still;~-- He can
 81    25|           Reaching the square, of evil company~He finds it full,
 82    25|      Sought to avenge him of that evil crew;~And gave such signal
 83    25|         wise,~Bereft of life that evil fisherman.~She in an instant
 84    25|   exclaims, instead~Of greeting: "Evil news are hither blown.~By
 85    25|          Imprisoned in a dark and evil cell;~Till the discourteous
 86    25|         Their cries, who for that evil bargain threat."~He said;
 87    26|     disastrous fate~O'erwhelm all evil doers, soon or late!~ ~
 88    26|         unto thee protest,~If any evil shall our king betide,~Thine
 89    26|        generous heart,~In good or evil fortune, everywhere.~Him
 90    27|   Christian host their foes:~That evil sprite he might as well
 91    27|           thou heed~That no worse evil mid these knights betide,~
 92    27|          who perceives himself in evil hands,~Aye weeps, and mercy
 93    27|          one or two perchance are evil found.~ ~ CXXIII~Though
 94    27|           hundreds, one or two of evil way,~My fortune wills that
 95    28|            ARGUMENT~To whatsoever evil tongue can tell~Of womankind
 96    28|          XXVI~"He for his sore an evil salve had found,~And, where
 97    28|       sore;~-- Because he had his evil wife espied~In the embraces
 98    28|           may tell,~For one whose evil deeds for censure call.~
 99    28|          to array;~But, born with evil taste, that paynim rude~
100    28|      Admonished by that ancient's evil end.~ ~ ~
101    29|           And savage, open to his evil aim,~And like a mouse, beneath
102    29|          heard, again represt~His evil will: for so he longed to
103    29|          with praise or shame: in evil trim,~The pagan, by his
104    30|           or leave.~ ~ XXXV~"Much evil may ensue and little gain~
105    30|         by her hair,~You cause an evil with such mischief fraught,~
106    30|      tears, nor by such woe~-- An evil omen for my arms -- offend;~
107    30|       vain)~He of that pair those evil news had heard.~His Malagigi
108    31|           Had he such strange and evil tidings heard~From other
109    31|       Sore wounded, and as yet in evil case.~Him, with what care
110    32|     ercome that maid,~But that an evil law she disobeyed.~ ~ ~
111    32|        horse and foot, of good or evil sort,~Marsilius throughout
112    32|         move~Him his perverse and evil will to wave;~Shunning me
113    32|           my resolve have good or evil game,~Hence I infer, unequal
114    33|         spread,~Conducted on that evil enterprise~By Armagnac,
115    33|         Leaving his foe behind in evil plight;~-- Never more malcontent
116    34|        purpose shift, let him the evil bear:~He will not, for the
117    36|         vein,~Where'er it be, its evil kind will shew.~Nature inclines
118    36|         seen with us; while we~Of evil ways, on all sides, see
119    36|        practised by that foul and evil band~Of soldiers, who their
120    37|           remote -- replied --~An evil race, by pity never swayed,~
121    37|       shame all females, that, in evil hour,~Their fortune has
122    37|          She, lest he any how, in evil hour,~Should break his bonds
123    38|       Risa was my father, whom~An evil brother traitorously laid
124    38|       from memory.~Nay, these for evil Agramant reserved,~And for
125    38|       what may chance, of good or evil sort;~Weighing in even balance
126    38|     Traversing sands, to which in evil hour~Cambyses trusted his
127    38|           has neither sprung~From evil heart, nor is the fruit
128    38|            Though it prolongs our evil destiny.~Behold Rinaldo!
129    39|        more uprear their head.~To evil pass was brought the broken
130    40|      brand,~That people, which to evil pass were brought.~Murder
131    40|        away;~Rapes and a thousand evil things were done.~Of much,
132    40|          thee to aid:~By him with evil eye King Pepin's son,~So
133    40|       knows he to what pass, what evil mart~That lord is brought;
134    40|        His will by me, in good or evil wise."~" -- Follow my mode;
135    40|          And was occasion of such evil, they~Study to learn of
136    40|      perjury stood --~Him and his evil sect he would forego.~That
137    41|  outwardly appear;~For where that evil people dealt the blow,~They
138    42|      strife was o'er,~Was nothing evil; ever prompt to spare.~He
139    42|           She cursed her hard and evil destiny;~Then loosening
140    42|  blindness to afford.~But good or evil angel -- whatsoe'er~He was
141    42|           Than one, whose wife is evil known to be,~Or husband
142    43|        From this small good, much evil I foresee:~For tempting
143    43|      blight;~And, goading me with evil jealousies,~The faith I
144    43|         incline the matron to his evil bent.~ ~ XXXIV~"So often
145    43|           And next those goads to evil deed apply;~Show emerald,
146    43|         of me a jest;~And of that evil which I brought on me~I
147    43|        bettered be:~But small the evil would not prove, if I~Saw
148    43|        when he sees, he would the evil know,~Argia will break faith
149    43|         From falling into such an evil deed.~For man, alas, will
150    43|        none;~And we that wear its evil form, alarm,~Outrage, and
151    43|      pilgrim brought,~As Anselm's evil destiny had wrought:~ ~
152    43|           CXV~"The harlot nurse's evil oratory,~The prayer and
153    43|           and crave,~If shame and evil to his wife be done;~Of
154    43|           he wots, that since his evil vein~He to his wife, unhappy
155    43|          wrought on him to do her evil will.~ ~ CXL~"The wife Argia,
156    43|         She from that dream draws evil augury;~And thither on that
157    43|          pain~Like woman, smit by evil demon, shrieks,~Or, as Bacchante
158    43|      perilous pass was brought by evil wound.~All dismal fear relieved
159    44|  Bertolagi of Maganza's hand,~His evil followers, and the paynim
160    45|        aside,~A thousand, and all evil, dreads, make drear~Winter
161    45|      Smote, where he deemed least evil would betide.~The lady,
162    45|    Believed, and took his line in evil sort.~ ~ CXVI~This shortly
163    46|         none~Condemned some other evil death to die,~About whose
164    46|         Heaven, together with his evil train,~Bade demons the pavilion
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