Canto

  1     1|         fight because yon rising sun~This raging heat has kindled
  2     1|         Roved thither, where the sun descends to rest;~For he
  3     1|        for pity stop the passing sun.~ ~ XLVIII~While Sacripant
  4     2|       rode, from morn to setting sun,~By horrid cliff, by bottom
  5     3|        from his car~The glorious sun illumes the subject earth~
  6     3|       LXIII~"Soon as to-morrow's sun shall gild the skies~With
  7     3|       through the sky the rising sun ascends,~By path, long space
  8     4|          hine;~As fearing of the sun to be descried.~ ~ VII~"
  9     4|          by treason.~ ~ XXX~"The sun beholds not 'twixt the poles,
 10     4|          wood;~Now guided by the sun, and now benighted,~Here
 11     4|         His course for where the sun, with sinking light,~When
 12     4|         the first day's circling sun is spent,~The peer is guested
 13     5|    believe, that if the circling sun~To these our Scottish shores
 14     7|        rest as far~As the bright sun outshines each lesser star.~ ~
 15     7|        have spread,~To where the sun descends with westering
 16     7|         human line,~Destined the sun in glory to outshine?~ ~
 17     8|       the thought:~As when, from sun or nightly planet shed,~
 18     8|      tresses streaming-free,~The sun from rich Tithonus' inn
 19     9|       nor yet the round~Of a new sun was buried in the sea,~Ere
 20     9|      youth am wed,~Who, when the sun sought his, would seek my
 21    10|        seen,~And with the vernal sun expands and grows.~To say
 22    10|          can, while overhead~The sun shall burn, or heaven preserve
 23    10|   foredoomed to be~Born with one sun, to live and to decline,~
 24    10|       world beneath him like the sun.~ ~ LXXI~Here the Catay,
 25    10|          daring eyes to keep the sun in view;~The Earl Lurcanio,
 26    10|          to give the sky another sun.~ ~ CX~He in the monster'
 27    11|       shrowds,~As disappears the sun, concealed in clouds.~ ~
 28    11|         the oppressive noon-tide sun;~Angelica, within, that
 29    11|     Aurora gay before~The rising sun her yellow hair extends~(
 30    11|    dimmed the light~Of the clear sun, so high the water flew.~
 31    11|         shower descends, and the sun, opening~His cloudy veil,
 32    11|          Which Phryxus bore, the sun illumed the sphere,~And
 33    12|          day, night, or rain, or sun arrest.~ ~ LXVIII~It was
 34    13|         scales, rejoicing in the sun.~ ~  XXXIX~I could not say
 35    14| cavaliers:~Whom, when the cloudy sun his rays withdrew~Beneath
 36    14|       And we, departing when the sun is low,~And the cicala hushed,
 37    14|       creatures hied,~Seeing the sun now low and half concealed,~
 38    14|      beech.~Thither the circling sun without avail~Conveys the
 39    14|    glimpse of light, and hid the sun:~A fearful crash, with a
 40    15|         seasons, favoured by the sun,~That there, for months
 41    15|         Named from the westering sun, of this our sphere,~Bark,
 42    15|       whence, on his return,~The sun moves hither, leaving Capricorn;~ ~
 43    15|       the manner of the circling sun,~To seek new lands and new
 44    15|       Yielding no passage to the sun and year;~And wills that
 45    15|         Aurora flies,~At rise of sun, through fields of liquid
 46    15|      battle to defer,~Till a new sun should in the horizon stir.~ ~
 47    17|         griding band,~Of, in the sun, stript naked on the sand.~ ~
 48    17|        without light of thee, my sun!~I trust to scape, as hither
 49    17|       morn.~ ~ CXXVIII~The early sun had scarce his golden hair~
 50    18|         when the clear and lucid sun again~Its shining glories
 51    18|         the beginning, while the sun was high,~And afterwards
 52    18|          them strain,~Nor suffer sun or star to cheer the view.~
 53    18|         amber light,~The radiant sun had traversed Indus' ford!~
 54    20|     distant, where~The wandering sun sheds light and colouring
 55    20|      earth's hard visage has the sun~Lifted her veil of dim and
 56    20|          is spoken.~But when the sun upon the middle day~Had
 57    21|       hide,~And, when he saw the sun beneath the main,~Came to
 58    22|        make their virtue dim the sun's fair light;~But turning
 59    23|          sent,~Until the western sun withdrew his light,~Abandoning
 60    23|      humid flower,~When the warm sun succeeds to drenching shower.~ ~
 61    23|          be to you the fostering sun~And moon, and may the choir
 62    23|    Brigliadoro's seat,~As on the sun's retreat his sister broke.~
 63    23|       his daily round~The golden sun had broken thrice, and sought~
 64    24|         shade and river from the sun,~His horse's reins and saddle
 65    25|         city, with the westering sun;~Which, in the midst of
 66    25|       warrior good and true.~The sun already in the western flood~
 67    25|       growing short,~For the low sun was crimsoning the west;~
 68    25|         ocean's tide~The western sun had hid his orbit sheen.~
 69    25|          at times have stopt the sun, and stirred~This earth
 70    26|      fountain,~Screened from the sun by an o'ershadowing mountain.~ ~
 71    26|        All lesser glories to the sun revealed.~ ~ XLIV~"In the
 72    26|      course can stop the passing sun;~The conjuration recollects
 73    27|        his wit bereft,~Naked, in sun or shower, by plain or peak,~
 74    27|      course, by light of moon or sun.~ ~ XIII~But the ancient
 75    27|        looks towards the western sun,~Is lodged the giant monarch
 76    27|          What time the tell-tale sun was under ground,~He, knowing
 77    27|  pasturage;~There ceases not, in sun or shade to moan;~Yet not
 78    28|          was through,~The rising sun 'gan chase the dusky rack.~
 79    29|   outright,~Where the descending sun his visage hides,~He reached
 80    29|          had gone naked forth in sun and shade.~Had he been born
 81    30|         his way~Ushering aye the sun -- no sooner stirred,~Than
 82    30|     warrior stood,~Who -- as the sun illumes the starry train --~
 83    31|        in battle; and the golden sun~Already was beneath the
 84    31|         as needed sore.~When the sun, garlanded with radiance
 85    31|     within his breast,~As in the sun dissolves the flake of snow;~
 86    31|   daylight through;~But when the sun, leaving this nether air~
 87    31|   heavenly sphere~Was hurled the sun's ill-fated charioteer.~ ~
 88    32|       day when Faith delayed~The sun, which on the righteous
 89    32|      look upon the visage of the sun.~ ~  XXIV~"Besides that
 90    32|        cold and darksome was the sun.~ ~ XL~"Cruel, what sin
 91    32|      wont to tell)~`And if, like sun amid the stars, one peer~
 92    32|        eyes at last, and saw the sun~Had turned his back on Bocchus'
 93    32|         as limpid and serene~The sun his visage, glorious to
 94    32|   reached the Hall,~When now the sun had Seville left behind.~
 95    32|      some marshy dale,~Which the sun's visage, late so bright
 96    32|         CVIII~As when hot summer sun the soil has rived,~And
 97    33|        watery flux and withering sun,~That, out of ten, unharmed
 98    33|          crimson by the new-born sun,~And in these signs, unlike
 99    33|        which lights the glorious sun,~That he might clear him
100    34|        day is worn:~But when the sun is sunk i' the salt sea
101    35|          and, with the following sun, those two~At the deep stream
102    36|        fought?~Ill upon thee the sun bestows his light.~Remorseless
103    36|        age, on whom did beam~The sun 'twixt pole and pole, 'twixt
104    37|    dimmed their own, as mist the sun.~ ~ IV~But hands or tongue
105    37|       not only, but where'er~The Sun unfolds his flowing locks,
106    37|        word such force, a second sun~Seems in our days its glorious
107    37|          now right:~Nor till the sun is hidden in the sea,~Upon
108    37|     scythe, when dried by summer sun.~There is no 'scape; for
109    37|       they should all before the sun recede,~They don the cuirass
110    40|        host befell;~But when the sun from his rich mansion breaks,~
111    41|          to the sky,~As the glad sun mid glittering orbs on high.~ ~
112    41|       contrary part.~But for the sun is sinking fast, forborne~
113    42|    suddenly descried,~He saw the sun's dimmed visage disappear,~
114    42|   towards eve already sloped the sun,~And the first star was
115    43|        solid earth, and made the sun stand still,~Illumined gloomy
116    43|       from his car dismounts the sun,~Runs to the shore, aboard
117    43|      that lady swore,~Sooner the sun bedimmed the world should
118    43|          simple say~The circling sun stands still, and dims its
119    43|        Through all the signs the sun had travelled, ere~The judge
120    43|          shame.~ ~ CXLV~When the sun climbed a steeper road,
121    43|          reached Urbino with the sun.~ ~ CXLVIII~Then Frederick
122    43|      done,~And now the westering sun's fair light was spent.~
123    44|           that brighter than the sun~Will shine, wherever that
124    44|      shine, wherever that bright sun may glow;~And which, when
125    44|         till beneath the sea~The sun was hid; nor lodging found;
126    44|     Frontino frees.~When the new sun his early radiance shows,~
127    45|        next beholds it, when the sun his light~Hath sloped toward
128    45|     slain.~ ~ XXXVI~"As when the sun withdraws his glittering
129    45|       when 'tis morn;~When me my sun doth of his rays deprive,~
130    45|         Fear.~ ~ XXXVIII~"If the sun turn from us and shorten
131    45|          gladsome ray,~O my fair sun, from me dost turn aside,~
132    45|       year.~ ~ XXXIX~"Return, my sun, return! and springtide
133    45|      straitly bound, and without sun to cheer,~Rogero lay, upon
134    45|         with the next succeeding sun:~He made his choice to combat
135    45|          lady, ere the westering sun descend,~Desires to bring
136    45|   accompanied,~And, when another sun illumed the sky,~Mid strange
137    46|       Laura, know:~Nor beams the sun upon a better pair~'Twixt
138    46|       defy;~And here, before the sun withdraws his light,~Will
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