Canto

  1     1|      plate or brittle mail should fly,~When anvils had not stood
  2     1|           lovely dame,~Before she fly yet further on her way.~
  3     2|           little time was left to fly~If she would not be that
  4     2|     courser Paris-ward!~Though he fly fast, the champion's wishes
  5     2|         has not wings to rise and fly,~Runs round the rugged rock
  6     2|           quarry, duck or pigeon, fly:~So, through the parting
  7     6|           breezes freshen as they fly,~Secure the cony haunts,
  8     6|         thousand others could not fly."~ ~ LIV~The good Rogero,
  9     7|       shame forthwith resolves to fly.~ ~ ~ I~The traveller, he,
 10     8|        falcon bore,~Which he made fly for pastime every day;~Now
 11     8|           towards the shore might fly:~Who of the loathed Rinaldo
 12     8|           repossess, compelled to fly;~I, what is worse, my honour
 13     8|        oracle, demanding counsel, fly,~Which to the suppliant'
 14     8|      through the spacious mansion fly,~With reaching leap, right,
 15     9|       fear.~He, when he sees them fly on either hand,~Would fly
 16     9|         fly on either hand,~Would fly as well from that dread
 17     9|           and turned his rein, to fly the peer:~But fierce Orlando
 18     9|         LXXXII~In rout the people fly, who cannot guess~Who these
 19    10|           pray you to decline,~To fly the volatile, inconstant
 20    10|           Where, cruel, dost thou fly so swiftly? -- Me~Receive
 21    10|          I from hence may hope to fly.~Here shall I starve; nor
 22    10|      would he in circles make him fly,~Or swiftly speed, or pause
 23    10|          mastiff vext~By the bold fly in August's time of dust,~
 24    10|         time the spray so thickly fly,~He fears it so will bathe
 25    12|        only groan and lamentation fly~Through air, but shoulder,
 26    12|   squadron, scattered round,~Some fly, some dip, and some fall
 27    13|        through the gloomy wood to fly.~ ~ XXVI~"Sir Odoric in
 28    13|           least injured sought to fly.~'Tis so sometimes, with
 29    14|         and silent, and insensate fly.~ ~ XXXVI~Nor he long was
 30    14|           dead,~The rest began to fly in disarray.~As if with
 31    14|          the ready numbers of the fly;~As starlings to the vineyard'
 32    14|        the warrior's hands:~Heads fly and arms; and to the ditch
 33    14|       breast,~Who turned about to fly; and of the swarm~Some shoved
 34    15|       wheresoe'er 'tis heard, all fly for fear;~Nor in the world
 35    15|           so sound~That would not fly, should he the bugle hear.~
 36    16|         of lees.~The wretch would fly; but bears in him a dart,~
 37    16|           who had the strength to fly aloof,~Sought safety not
 38    16|  Elsewhere the paladin was making fly~A hundred banners: while
 39    17|          heartless panic would ye fly?~Will none his loss contemplate?
 40    17|          trail.~We who behold him fly (a helpless rout),~Wherever
 41    17|           lair.~Seeing the king: `Fly! -- Woe to thee!' (she cried)~`
 42    17|       began to think how he might fly:~But him from flight the
 43    17|          flowing rein his courser fly,~And next, somedeal advanced,
 44    18|          eyes behind them as they fly:~While, through the ample
 45    18|          and the lightning's fire~Fly coupled, such his vengeance
 46    18|           others many strokes let fly~At him, himself; which all
 47    18|     ceaseless shower, the weapons fly.~ ~ XVI~Of cavaliers and
 48    18|           Altheus vainly seeks to fly,~Whom as his heart Lurcanio
 49    18|          on every side the people fly,~Rides to the gates, with
 50    18|         his hest the portals open fly.~Meanwhile Sir Gryphon,
 51    18|           thou no hope to make me fly, or yield~To thee my quarters,
 52    18|            CLV~Letting the flyers fly, of those who stand~Firm
 53    18|        away the load we bear, and fly:~For 'twere a foolish thought (
 54    19|        can keep the open sea, nor fly.~ ~ LV~They cannot fly,
 55    19|        nor fly.~ ~ LV~They cannot fly, nor yet can keep the sea;~
 56    19| splintered even to the rest, they fly:~While with such force the
 57    20|     hoping but by death, alas! to fly~So vile a service, I desire
 58    20|          mob invade,~Whether they fly or for defence prepare;~
 59    20|        any one should ever see me fly,~Or guess by other sign
 60    20|         truly deem he is about to fly.~All in a thought betake
 61    20|           the dames, that bent to fly,~When in their ears the
 62    20|          confusion and attempt to fly.~At once, above a thousand
 63    20|  ring-doves flutter and as coneys fly,~Who hear some mighty noise
 64    20|   frighted mariners and merchants fly;~And 'twixt the forts, in
 65    20|         emptied every street.~All fly before the deafening sound,
 66    20|          hundred islands from him fly,~And Malea's fearful headland;
 67    22|      comrades rear~Then sail, and fly with noted scorn that shore.~
 68    23|         ice, the shattered lances fly,~Broke in a thousand pieces,
 69    23|          her horse, and makes him fly.~ ~ XCV~He flies and hurries
 70    24|          withal so quickly, as to fly~The trenchant sword, which
 71    24|       towards her from a distance fly,~Raises her head, and shows
 72    24|        thousands and by thousands fly.~ ~ CI~Without once gathering
 73    26|      Parforce will every standard fly before~That conquering faulchion,
 74    26|           Vivian, at their onset, fly like grass;~And, tumbling
 75    26|       thought to make his buckler fly,~Cursed heaven as loudly
 76    27|       legs and feet,~Wherewith to fly from that calamity;~And
 77    27|       scape one peril, into other fly,~And pay the penalty of
 78    27|          John and Denys call,~And fly for shelter to his Paris
 79    27|        wolf the forest vex;~Wasp, fly, and gad-fly buzz in liquid
 80    29|          the real pitch of honour fly.~That to their glory the
 81    29|         and o'er the bridge would fly,~But sullen Rodomont, with
 82    31|          hosts of Spain and Afric fly,~Nor time in loading baggage
 83    31|         would not from a thousand fly;~And, better than some famous
 84    31|         my vengeance thou couldst fly,~We should not meet in this
 85    32|          that strives to hide and fly?~Esteem a man that has me
 86    33|       shore his battle post.~Then fly and leave his drowning bands
 87    33|           nor yet the solid metal fly.~ ~ LXXXI~With mickle industry,
 88    33|       next, from hellish caverns, fly~These horrid harpies and
 89    33|           May not in panic terror fly the land.~He takes the reins,
 90    33|         far and near.~The harpies fly toward the torrid zone;~
 91    35|        there is no need for me to fly~To the moon's circle, or
 92    35|          that river and around it fly~Vile crows and ravening
 93    36|          alone the Moorish people fly.~To her Rogero, circling,
 94    37|    encounters, far and nigh.~Some fly to plain, or castle from
 95    40|           CANTO 40~ ~ ARGUMENT~To fly the royal Agramant is fain,~
 96    41|         the death from which they fly.~ ~ XXIII~Alas! for man'
 97    42|         Aurora's beauteous visage fly,~A cavalier approaching
 98    43|         and cruel hate is run,~To fly from me forthwith does she
 99    43|         their bark, that seems to fly,~To the right shore the
100    44|          lest the dusty whirlwind fly;~And bids them, when arrived
101    44|       faith, and from her promise fly?~Nor sooner she a foe to
102    44|         troop, that in their fear~Fly to the mountain and desert
103    44|        made hearts from shoulders fly.~At throat, at breast and
104    44|      height,~Seeing his followers fly, hath taken post;~Where
105    45|        thousands and by thousands fly~Faster than on the sounding
106    46|           ice, as they in shivers fly.~The fragments birds, that
107    46|       first assault its splinters fly,~And bits and fragments
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