Canto

  1     1|            features and the gentle air~Which long had held him
  2     1|           with a sigh disturbs the air.~The cavalier upon the bank
  3     1|           LXXIII~"Unless the misty air," the damsel cries,~"And
  4     2|         eyes, and sad and downcast air,~Speak him the broken victim
  5     2|            dream,~Until I heard in air the damsel's scream.~ ~
  6     2|            So, through the parting air, with whizzing sound,~With
  7     2|         spear,~He wounds the empty air, with fury vain.~This in
  8     3|            twin resigned the vital air~His fellow to redeem from
  9     4|         Rogero freed,~Who soars in air till he appears a speck,~
 10     4|         execute on earth or in mid air,~All shifts of manege, course
 11     4|             which flies so fast in air,~Nor meddle with my castle
 12     4|         the prisoned troop in open air;~From their gay lodgings,
 13     4|          his pinions to the liquid air,~And at short distance lit,
 14     4|         leaps on him who towers in air, and stings~And goads his
 15     4|            stripling, born through air,~As gentle as young Ganymede
 16     4|       descends;~And shoots through air, like well-greased bark
 17     5|            projected into the open air.~Here oft I made my lover
 18     6|         Since, if nought else, the air, the very dust~In which
 19     6|        stoop or bend,~He, tired of air, with sweeping wheel and
 20     6|           hurled~Through the whole air, Rogero had not found:~And,
 21     6|         lest he should remount the air:~And to a myrtle, nigh the
 22     6|          gestures, and a courteous air,~And said: 'So you my lodging
 23     6|         the steed, and through the air~To spur him to a new career
 24     7|            transported through~Mid air, the damsel saw, nor whither
 25     7|         sped,~He roams in earth or air; yet, hapless wight,~Him
 26     7|        enjoys the pure and morning air~Beside a brook, which trickled
 27     8|       pinions gay,~Which poised in air the bird no longer keep:~
 28     8|         mass~So fiercely, sand and air both boil with heat,~In
 29     8|          lost the dame~In that dim air, nor how he lost her, weets;~
 30     8|      shades, and cleared the humid air,~The king perceived Orlando
 31    10|   afterwards all winds disperse in air.~ ~ VI~The promises and
 32    10|            empty vows dispersed~In air, by winds all dissipated
 33    10|           eyes,~Things through the air, yet dim and hazy, view.~
 34    10|            more high than hawks in air;~And how some of the glory
 35    10|            tempers here the genial air,~But that, unneeding any
 36    10|        tutoring,~Rogero learned in air, and gained dominion~Over
 37    10|           great Quinsay beheld; in air~Above Imavus turned, and
 38    10|          spurred, through yielding air,~Whose briny waves the lesser
 39    10|            by the rowel, towers in air,~And gallops with Rogero
 40    11|        often he embraced the empty air,~Hoping in this to have
 41    11| griffin-courser cast,~In earth and air accustomed to career.~But,
 42    11|          Had towered and soared in air a freer course.~ ~ XIV~To
 43    11|        advancing with his sword in air,~To sudden battle him the
 44    11|     such-like bird, through liquid air.~Rogero runs with all the
 45    12|       sudden and a horrid cry,~And air on every side repeats the
 46    12|            lamentation fly~Through air, but shoulder, arm, and
 47    12|            As through the spacious air, with troubled wing,~The
 48    13|            Spaniard launch through air,~The heavy table Roland
 49    14|          gallows-tree had swung in air:~Already fastened was the
 50    14|          band,~Moved by his lordly air, and arms he wore,~Glittering
 51    14|          loud-sounding through the air,~Stricken with frequent
 52    15|       heartening corn,~Fed on pure air, and Rabican his name.~His
 53    15|           through fields of liquid air,~And from her gathered garment,
 54    15|            deftly set,~One day, in air he took her with the net.~ ~
 55    15|         takes, and whirled through air,~Whelms in the stream; but
 56    16|         high,~And seem to stamp in air a murky cloud.~By turns
 57    16|         flock a prey.~A fiend from air to-day has dropt, that none~
 58    17|       girded with a chain,~In open air, upon the summit tall.~The
 59    17|          and Origille, to take the air,~Entered this while a garden
 60    18|        deity~Breathed upon them an air, in her first port,~Which
 61    18|       thrusts he gored,~Who in the air had past large part of night~
 62    18|         closely in their bed,~That air between them could not penetrate.~
 63    19|       points, and haughty gait and air.~Out of a thousand coursers
 64    19|       joust declare.~Lo! earth and air and sea the noise rebound,~
 65    20|            was fruitful, and whose air was sane,~Throughout which
 66    20|            earth and sky,~As he in air discharged the horrid sound.~
 67    20|            him -- as she had -- an air~Of wrath the maid assumed
 68    23|         ARGUMENT~Astolpho soars in air. Upon account~Of Pinnabel
 69    23|            Bent, since a course in air was to be flown,~That he,
 70    23|           hippogryph and soared in air,~Frontino left (Frontino
 71    23|        harbouring,~And in the open air on hard earth lay.~He marvelled
 72    24|         one leg the heavy trunk in air~Upheaved, and made a mace
 73    24|        other hands could wound the air;~Hence dared not 'twixt
 74    25|           Tis only I, on earth, in air, or sea,~Who suffer at thy
 75    25|          freeze, and harden liquid air;~And I at times have stopt
 76    26|         swarms for mischief in mid air, --~The greedy swallow swoop
 77    26|         reigns o'er other fowls of air.~ ~  XCIX~He bore on azure
 78    26|          Seeing herself so high in air, loud cried,~(Yielding herself
 79    27|        above this dim and troubled air;~And to the blest archangel
 80    27|           from the gallows-tree in air,~By Agramant the crown of
 81    27|        goes,~He fills the kindling air with sighs that burn;~And
 82    27|         and gad-fly buzz in liquid air,~And the rich grain lies
 83    27|           of Argier (for the dusky air~Of night began upon the
 84    27|           broke, and with a milder air,~And visage somewhat less
 85    28|      Saying, that of his beauteous air and mien~Some secret cause
 86    29|         him once or twice about in air,~Dismist him form his hand
 87    29|            and cleared the ambient air,~And hushed beyond its wont
 88    29|           thought~It was a bird in air which they descried.~The
 89    30|         blew the brine before; the air~Breathed softly, and the
 90    30|       trumpet's blast was heard in air,~Whose signal blanched a
 91    30|          eagle flew,~Which Jove in air was wonted to sustain;~So
 92    31|           sun, leaving this nether air~In darkness, to his ancient
 93    32|            and nights, to swing in air,~Had sorely feared, from
 94    32|            and lights~With feet in air, at distance on the plain.~
 95    32|         head on earth and heels in air,~Retiring from the field,
 96    32|           welcome her with smiling air,~And to the fire conducts
 97    32|            the weary night in open air.~Accepting not that cavalier'
 98    33|          high her glorious head in air,~When that great Marquis
 99    33|          his strokes were spent in air;~Of, if he sometimes smote,
100    33|           it was a fiend, to upper air~Evoked from depths of nether
101    33|            he retires and soars in air:~He thence returning, prompt
102    33|          feared to issue into open air.~Thus of that horse himself
103    33|        best metal; lodges built in air~Which on all sides the wealthy
104    33|        horse, arriving through the air,~An armed cavalier should
105    33|         whizzing sound is heard in air,~Which echoes with the beat
106    33|        CXXI~The fowls are heard in air; then swoops amain~The covey
107    34|           what he knows not) he in air~Espies, that seems in motion,
108    34|          that unmoved she, hung in air, could see~A lover vest
109    34|      harpies shall no more revisit air.~ ~ XLVII~While in that
110    34|         nor earth esteems.~Through air so more and more the warrior
111    34|        foliage light,~To the quick air such lively motion lends,~
112    34|      garden, clear~Of earth's foul air, will joy eternity~Of spring,
113    34|           While through the parted air the pair ascends.~ ~ LXX~
114    35|         divine,~Now beat the buxom air with nimble plumes,~Till,
115    35|          about an image, raised in air~Upon a shaft, which in mid
116    35|          and divers other birds of air,~All from the turbid water
117    35|             met a maid of mournful air;~Who, though her cheeks
118    35|          from the saddle lifts, in air suspends,~Then headlong
119    35|            s shield,~With heels in air, he tumbles on the field.~ ~
120    37|          Child and damsels' placid air~And beauteous visage, whose
121    39|     passage whence the count might air receive.~ ~ LVII~Valiant
122    40|       beginning, and while dim the air,~Much injury the christened
123    40|             Brandimart,~And he, in air so daring heretofore,~Do
124    41|        forth and scent the ambient air,~And which for many a day
125    42|        wheresoever darkest was the air;~Thus hoping to have rid
126    42|            entablatures support in air;~Exotic marbles engraved
127    42|            That other lady, in mid air, sustain.~Their names were
128    43|           the water, as a bird the air.~ ~ LIII~As soon as he reclines
129    43|           is up, and dances to the air.~The dame, that hears the
130    46|           the pavilion through mid air~To Paris from Constantinople
131    46|           the costly tent, through air conveyed,~For young Rogero
132    46|            ground~Uplifted high in air the Moorish lord;~Then hurled
133    46|          high as he could raise in air~His dagger, buried it in
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