Canto

  1     1|        bank he came.~ ~ XIV~Here stood the fierce Ferrau in grisly
  2     1|         fly,~When anvils had not stood the deafening blows.~It
  3     1|         once again where late he stood.~ ~ XXIV~Beside the water,
  4     1|         true the phantom's lore,~Stood speechless; such remorse
  5     1|       bright and unforeseen,~She stood like Venus or Diana fair,~
  6     1|        that dread night I singly stood for thee?~That night when
  7     2|         where the prompt Bayardo stood,~Leaps on his back, and
  8     2|          To tell to other what I stood and saw;~So strange it seems,
  9     2|      stony peak above the forest stood;~The daughter of Dodona'
 10     2|          upon the felon where he stood,~Fearing lest she might
 11     3|       The daughter of Duke Aymon stood aghast,~And silent listened
 12     4|      that day cherished when she stood~Uncasqued for him, and from
 13     4|         there~Approached, and he stood fast till she was nigh,~
 14     4|       soar so high a strain,~She stood long space amazed, ere she
 15     4|          valiant warrior who has stood~In her defence, be come
 16     5|          in effect,~If your hope stood more fair to gain its end?~
 17     5|        averred,~How with Geneura stood his suit, avows;~And how,
 18     5|       the tidings bore.'~Geneura stood amazed, her colour fled,~
 19     5|         was fullest in the hall,~Stood up before the Scottish king,
 20     5|        might avail;~But while he stood aloof, and dared but scent~
 21     5|       called, with troubled eye,~Stood forth, but daringly the
 22     5|        upon all that passed, and stood apart.~ ~ XCII~Him the good
 23     6|           upon the strand,~Where stood a mansion seated by the
 24     7|         Alpine place and savage, stood.~But that enchantress sage,
 25     8|          the breeze, the skipper stood,~Till where Thames' waters,
 26     8|       Bred fear in the beholder, stood the maid~Alone, as Phoebus,
 27     8|      stupid in her wretchedness,~Stood on the shifting sand, with
 28     8|         united were.~Astound she stood awhile; when grief found
 29     8|      maid,~When on the beach she stood in Proteus' sight,~Left
 30     9|          lady ceased, and silent stood:~Orlando, when her lips
 31    10|       poop behind.~ ~ LI~One who stood sentry on the citadel~Descried
 32    10|          while the lovely damsel stood;~Then loosed her tongue
 33    10|   monstrous whale repaired:~Firm stood Rogero, and the veil undone,~
 34    11|       discourteous deed~Accusing stood, wherewith she had repaid,~(
 35    11|          behold the cruel strife stood nigh.~Lo! a two-handed stroke
 36    11|        but, for the damsel naked stood,~Not only nought she to
 37    12|          only he, but others who stood high~For valour, and in
 38    13|        lords the Scottish prince stood high.~He showed me, and,
 39    13|     spacious table in mid cavern stood,~Two palms in thickness,
 40    13|          crowded close together, stood the crew.~ ~ XXXVIII~One
 41    13|       halted near the mead~Where stood the mansion of Atlantes
 42    14|       world descry the stair.~He stood not, he, to mark the bulwark'
 43    15|      most mighty realm that ever stood.~But Doria singly will of
 44    15|       the occasion of that fray,~Stood by to gaze upon the cruel
 45    15|          LOVE a willing offering stood,~And washed away our errors
 46    17|        the goats, king Norandino stood,~Which ruminating, chewed
 47    17|        in the square arrived and stood aside,~Nor of themselves
 48    17|      them should have contended,~Stood idle; for to answer them
 49    17|          lamenting for his folly stood,~That having heard the truths
 50    17|       hand a castle richly dight~Stood nigh the gate, to which
 51    18|         at his head took aim who stood most nigh;~Ughetto was the
 52    18|         more,~But that Grandonio stood, and Falsiron,~Tried oftentimes
 53    18|          warlike knight no order stood;~You might have seen the
 54    18|   offered to the king,~Suspended stood in doubt and wondering.~ ~
 55    18|       CXXIV~While he and Gryphon stood in colloquy,~Aquilant came,
 56    18|          the warriors where they stood:~And seeing them in conference,
 57    18|       seeing them in conference, stood clear,~Listening, in silence,
 58    18|    through the shrilling whistle stood,~And with the signal taught
 59    18|       than hell.~The wary Patron stood to sea outright,~Where he
 60    19|       bless,~And for brideswoman stood the shepherdess.~ ~ XXXIV~
 61    19|          cavalier this while had stood aside,~Who had the ten conducted
 62    20|       reign,~Of their assistance stood in any need;~For we have
 63    21|        prized.~ ~ LII~"Philander stood oppressed with grief and
 64    22|       southern breeze his vessel stood;~And, so the favouring wind
 65    22|         pass that way.~ ~ XXX~He stood upon the watch if he could
 66    22|          he saw, as he expecting stood,~A cavalier approaching
 67    22|         path in vain,~The damsel stood suspended and in pain.~ ~
 68    23|        friends and of assistance stood in need.~At a hill's foot,
 69    23|         the summit of a mountain stood,~And to the lady like Mount
 70    23|          stirrups self-collected stood~Roland, and watched his
 71    23|          the block,~At length he stood, not differing from the
 72    24| Astounded for a while the prince stood by;~Wondering, that he who
 73    24|       Isabel, in grief profound,~Stood looking on, nor what to
 74    24|          before, as on a rock he stood,~Had seen the wretch's fury;
 75    24|          of Marseilles a borough stood,~Which had a sumptuous monastery;
 76    24|           while fast the footman stood.~ ~ CVII~The African, who
 77    25|   liberty and life.~ ~ VI~Rogero stood awhile in pensive case,~
 78    25|          and round the palisade,~Stood many men, and piles of arms
 79    25|          it discourtesy to obey,~Stood out against his prayer,
 80    26|        slew.~ ~ XXXVII~In wonder stood long time that warlike train,~
 81    26|          his eyes,~Who listening stood this while, yet spake he
 82    26|    obeyed:~Then in her waistcoat stood, of flowing weed~Despoiled,
 83    27|     shield, and, full of choler, stood~Against Gradasso and Rogero
 84    27|            LXXXVI~The others who stood round her, wont to hear~
 85    28|           As in a dream, Jocundo stood, beside~Himself, awhile
 86    28|         so loud a laugh, the dew~Stood in their eyes, and each
 87    28|         one of those so many has stood fast.~If tried, all women
 88    29|         bridge, scarce finished, stood:~Here -- save his casque
 89    29|         s son~Steeled cap-a-pee, stood ready armed for fight,~When
 90    29|     hight)~Grappling with Roland stood the Sarzan peer,~And would
 91    29|   struggle fall,~Embracing as he stood with Ulien's son.~Together
 92    30|         at this say~Of Agramant, stood silent, and agreed,~That
 93    30|   desired his sovereign to obey,~Stood out against the Moorish
 94    30|      LVII~Poised in his stirrups stood the Tartar lord,~And aiming
 95    30|         birth before the warrior stood,~Who -- as the sun illumes
 96    31|          with the friendly troop stood fast,~And looked to see
 97    31|          more than half another, stood~The knights in battle; and
 98    32|       shepherd where~That castle stood; and he with signs replied~
 99    33| Thousands of years ago in honour stood,~Things which had been with
100    33|       with chattering teeth, had stood:~But (what well-nigh engendered
101    35|         on the plain.~Serpentine stood by chance before the two,~
102    35|          on the rampart's height~Stood, with a mighty following,
103    35|          for that fell encounter stood,~Such favour had his suit
104    36|      with beating heart, intent,~Stood by, the issue of the just
105    36|          duel of those champions stood apart.~The god of war, descended
106    37|        said, in act to go Rogero stood;~And, having taken leave,
107    40|        day, wherein they crowded stood,~As in a theatre, and hemmed
108    40|         were~The city walls, two stood on the dry shore,~Of a construction
109    40|    Agramant convinced of perjury stood --~Him and his evil sect
110    40|          had yielded to the foe,~Stood mute and weeping, overwhelmed
111    40|       the strand,~And round them stood their Nubian victors gay;~
112    40|     Manilardo, and Rimedont;~Who stood with weeping eyes and drooping
113    41|    toward the Dane those virtues stood confest,~With whom (as I
114    41|          fickle wind, to seaward stood.~At first on her due course
115    41|          down and the wind died,~Stood bedded in that weary waste
116    41|          upon the barren rock he stood,~A new alarm the stripling
117    41|      side,~Meanwhile the warfare stood as it began:~When broken
118    42|              XX~Here as my story stood not on good ground,~Frederick
119    42|        that only without comrade stood,~I know not why, her statue
120    43|      thou, thyself, hadst better stood the touch."~ ~ L~Here ends
121    43|        more nigh,~And speechless stood awhile, his friends to view,~
122    44|          had been shown.~Charles stood with jocund fate and gladsome
123    44|       all respect aside,~One day stood up before King Charlemagne;~
124    46|      Gaul returning home,~Julius stood fearing on the river-shore,~
125    46|     could but upon his feet have stood,~To fall, albeit unpushed,
126    46|       Astound and full of wonder stood the crowd,~Such license
127    46|  mournful face and beating heart~Stood by to view that pair to
128    46|        fell the Moorish lord,~He stood his match, I rather ought
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