Canto

  1     3|         stone, and give my lines a right direction;~And haply future
  2     3|         hand;~This in his mother's right he shall possess,~And with
  3     3|            years before was his of right.~ ~ XLVIII~"To him his grateful
  4     4|            ere she returned~To her right judgement, and sound wits
  5     4|           more for hatred than for right;~And vouches, to a gallery
  6     5|          tender years, against all right,~Those caitiffs would have
  7     5|           And with a brother, then right young, to stay~In our king'
  8     5|       hoped, although accused with right,~To furnish the afflicted
  9     5|      maintains the quarrel for her right.~ ~  LXXXI~Six knights on
 10     5|             This thinks that he is right, and is misled,~Vouches
 11     5|         here maintains be wrong or right,~Because he would preserve
 12     6|            comfort of my eye.~Her, right or wrong, I cannot choose
 13     6|          Orlando and Rinaldo. I by right~Looked to all England's
 14     6|         some little further to the right,~Would scale the Alpine
 15     6|           that safer road upon the right,~Strains now against the
 16     6|          the road had taken on his right,~Exclaimed, "Fair sir, your
 17     8|       honour of the empire and the right.~And that, within few days,
 18     8|            who was swimming to the right,~After a mighty sweep, the
 19     8|           fly,~With reaching leap, right, left, and low, and high.~ ~
 20     8|       perchance gainsaid my better right --~Of if he had gainsaid
 21     9|           of a city, seated on the right~Of that fair stream, descends
 22     9|            to be given with solemn right and due,~I promised him,
 23     9|            state to found a better right;~In wedlock wished to join
 24     9|          Arbantes slew, he, as his right,~Should have, that, at the
 25     9|         island's crown belonged of right.~ ~ LXXXV~She who had thither
 26    10|           could be thine by better right.~So be thy theft, if well
 27    10|           and Sericane~Left on the right; and thence did ever bear~
 28    10|            savage country first of right.~ ~ LXXXVI~"The Duke of
 29    11|          shades within,~Ere on his right he heard a mighty din.~ ~
 30    11|     whether blowing on the left or right,~Or poop, so faintly in
 31    11|             and for the crown, his right~Upon his father's death,
 32    12|         print or trace withal~Can, right or left, upon the turf be
 33    12|            single pathway, left or right;~Which they believed the
 34    12|         about he knew.~Does he the right or left-hand road assay,~
 35    12|           a natural fissure on the right.~ ~ XCI~In the mid cave,
 36    13|            Those ancient cavaliers right happy were,~Born in an age,
 37    15|          warlike two,~Turns to the right, resolved to worship, where~
 38    16|       belief, and deem my judgment right.~ ~ II~I say, I said, and,
 39    16|          the error which he cannot right;~He sees how vilely he his
 40    16|          quest,~Had nigh with this right hand transfixt my breast.~ ~
 41    16|        erturned and rolled,~In the right shoulder smit, on earth
 42    17|            they despoiled of their right?~Why seek you not Jerusalem
 43    17|         panic dread,~Turned to the right his courser's rein and head.~ ~
 44    18|           Gryphon's galley blew so right,~That the third day he Tyre'
 45    18|        give the warrior less, with right,~The armour, guerdon of
 46    18|             another sank,~Short of right arm or left, or pierced
 47    18|            Sir, I know not by what right~Thou wouldst this armour,
 48    18|          and circles Cyprus to the right,~Makes Paphos' island next,
 49    18|        wind, which blew upon their right,~Stretching to seaward,
 50    18|            left, and that upon the right.~ ~ CLXXXVI~The silvery
 51    19|        LXXXIX~He, signing with his right hand, made appear~That he
 52    19|            till to-morrow's light?~Right fortunate was I, as man
 53    19|        thou prolonged thy life: no right~Have I thy doom, sir warrior,
 54    20|           dames alone our laws the right concede~To sally, or set
 55    21|           hand shall perish, as is right.~If thou contendest for
 56    21|           happen that, against all right,~I should so hard a sentence
 57    22|         many and many, it is clear~Right few of you are of such constant
 58    22|    cresting brine.~ ~ X~Now to the right, now to the other hand,~
 59    22|           to maintain the castle's right.~ ~ XLIX~"Whence first arose
 60    22|            And shall the cause, if right or evil, scan,~Which moved
 61    22|           to him, might blame~With right that victory, worthy little
 62    23|         rested there ere, left and right,~They from the people heard
 63    23|          sore.~Against the churl's right cheek the weapon went:~It
 64    23|         from his hand, was neither right,~Nor yet perhaps would prove
 65    23|         mead's boundary or river's right,~Armed with two clubs, maintain
 66    23|     cavaliers withdrew,~One on the right, and one on the left hand.~
 67    24|         slain;~And this experiment right clearly showed~To stand
 68    24|          skin and hair.~ ~ XIV~Now right, now left, he wandered,
 69    24|            us for the duel, and my right,~And Destiny to boot (for
 70    24|         hadst them, rather than by right."~Without more parley spurred
 71    24|         wit, wheels quickly to the right;~But not withal so quickly,
 72    24|          the royal dame belongs of right.~And she, between whose
 73    25|    although unknown, had sought to right,~At risk of life, and prays
 74    26|            believe what they think right,~Says of Rogero wondrous
 75    26|         his shoulder; Aldigier~Now right now left upon his horse
 76    26|          or excuse,~Since such the right of war and common use."~ ~
 77    26|           Concluding I am thine by right of war,~If either were my
 78    26|           with nimble spring;~And, right and left, she made him,
 79    26|           Troyano's valiant son to right,~She will, together with
 80    26|          desire appeared to him so right,~In succour of his sovereign
 81    26|       Mandricardo knew not of this right,~Nor would endure -- and
 82    26|          Tis thou usurpest what by right is mine."~ ~ CV~-- "Say
 83    26|          him, if you survive, your right~Shall to the shield maintain
 84    26|            and expected crop,~Dams right and left; yet him the stream
 85    26|         times or four, to left and right,~-- As if about to fall --
 86    27|            instances maintains her right~With Mandricardo first to
 87    27|      Denied on any ground Rogero's right~The bearer of the white-winged
 88    27|         the palisades, to left and right,~Facing each entrance, are
 89    27|          field,~Or shall to me his right of battle yield.~ ~ LXI~"
 90    27|         bade Sacripant explain his right,~And how that horse was
 91    27|            thine eyes,~I have done right, and who gainsays me, lies.~ ~
 92    27|       every thief beside."~ ~ XCIX~Right willingly King Agramant
 93    27|           be preferred in wrong or right,~Although the world against
 94    28|           which claimed her as his right;~This, point by point, to
 95    28|          place in vain,~Whether he right or left himself bestows,~
 96    28|           the cavalier~Kept to the right, towards Acquamorta's shore,~
 97    29|         and now without,~Locks his right foot or left, in skilful
 98    30|     Mandricardo, proud that in his right~His lady had adjudged the
 99    30|           casting lots decide your right:~Premising, he whose lot
100    30|       Child besought~That they the right, conferred by him, would
101    30|           I was proud, with little right,~So good a king, so stout
102    30|          Mandricardo smites in the right side.~Here little boots
103    30|          his hand,~And grasps with right and left his trenchant brand.~ ~
104    30|      before;~Nor can you more your right in it maintain."~So saying,
105    30|           not in age, for twain~In right of birth before the warrior
106    32|         mine, that thou defied~All right, and took away thy gift
107    32|            keeps what is another's right.~ ~ XLIII~"Thou hast left
108    32|      contest is unfair.~So that by right, no less than courtesy,~
109    32|         will,~To prove my judgment right, his judgment ill!"~ ~ CVII~
110    33|            the fair city keeps, in right~Of Francis, from the furious
111    33|          restless body throws,~Now right, now left, but vainly seeks
112    33|          his left, Biscay upon his right:~Traversed Castile, Gallicia,
113    34|           one, by whom he had most right~To think that he should
114    34|          every other loss to save;~Right sure he otherwise should
115    34|           defender of his Church's right.~As he elected Sampson,
116    35|            not, although he may of right,"~He cries i' the hearing
117    36|           as his Marphisa counsels right;~And bids him seek the camp
118    37|          me unknown.~I what I know right willingly display;~As well,
119    37|             now wheeling left, now right:~Nor till the sun is hidden
120    37|         they were seduced from the right way~Into foul Error's crooked
121    37|           the dame than chaste and right,~And well deserving every
122    37|                XCIV~But first 'tis right that woman to unchain,~She
123    38|         mighty champion's brain to right.~A herb of sovereign virtue
124    38|          his own to gain another's right.~ ~ LIII~"If there be gain,
125    38|         prevail (so certain is our right)~Though Mars himself should
126    41|            made that island on the right;~The field appointed for
127    41|          courser stagger, left and right,~And measure next his length
128    41|             and traversed left and right.~ ~ LXXX~Better than good
129    41|            made the blood from his right should flow.~ ~ XCIII~Him
130    42|            all times, as a debt of right,~His life should be for
131    42|            Amalthaea's horn in the right hand~Had quaintly sculptured
132    43|              XXII~"Not because she right gentle was and bright,~Nor
133    43|             and after made reply:~"Right ill advice to thee Melissa
134    43|        river's bed,~Sermide to the right; they in their rear~Next
135    43|           pilot left, and took the right;~Then the Bodeno past. Already
136    43|           wisdom and their love of right,~Shall with perpetual peace,
137    43|           right-hand branch of the right horn~Rinaldo takes; and
138    43|           well assured the seer is right)~To that old nurse; and,
139    43|          sight~Retired, and on the right that marish wide.~Argenta
140    43|          that seems to fly,~To the right shore the boatmen drive
141    43|         Apennine, no longer on his right,~Umbri and Tuscans; and
142    43|        with thee in calm and ease?~Right sore must be my trespass,
143    44|       Since, wholly careless as to right or wrong,~But to their profit
144    44|        enchanted sword with better right~Would have been worn by
145    44|        will what she wills not, by right~More sovereign mistress
146    44|          will not; but with better right~Shall Leo die, who so disturbs
147    44|           shall demand is just and right."~"Thy valour, damsel dear,
148    44|            into Hungary;~Along the right bank of the Danube made,~
149    44| Constantine's liegeman, and to him right dear;~Who, since upon the
150    45|          cruel aunt should have no right~To grieve or say he did
151    45|           Child will die.~ ~ LVIII~Right sure he is to die; if he
152    45|          martial maid is of a vein~Right different from the gentle
153    45|            is not, in my judgment, right;~Nor I to Charles's sentence
154    45|        intent~Young Leo's purpose, right or wrong, to break,~Than
155    46|     Fidelity, and yield to him his right;~And he from them the crown
156    46|        foes~That would in arms his right in her oppose."~ ~ LVI~King
157    46|     forfeit so without dispute his right,~On his behalf I undertake
158    46|          the paynim was the better right.~Yet cannot she her some
159    46|        pair to fight addrest.~From right and left the peer and paynim
160    46|      courser round;~While with his right he at his rider struck,~
161    46|          Rogero, who should win of right,~Seizing his arm, the king
162    46|      better arm anew;~And with the right hand, which his poniard
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