Canto

  1     1|        command;~And late Baiardo lost, his gallant steed,~Escaped
  2     1|     stream, and seeks the morion lost.~But the casque lies so
  3     1|       And sits so motionless, so lost in care,~(His visage propt
  4     2|      underneath the shade,~Seems lost, as in a melancholy dream;~
  5     2|    daring spoiler slain,~Give my lost lady to my arms again.'~ ~
  6     2|      pains,~Where every thing is lost I prize below.~But you would
  7     4|        dropt among the mountains lost to view.~And this was, as
  8     5|    overflows,~Than if he, having lost his kingly crown,~Then saw
  9     8|         what is worse, my honour lost deplore;~For if I sinned
 10     8|        is left to woman, who~Has lost her honour, in this earthly
 11     8|     journeyed to the west;~There lost: Of whom he had discerned
 12     8|     beautiful and young!~As some lost lamb, what time the daylight
 13     8|      Meanwhile the unhappy lover lost the dame~In that dim air,
 14     8|         that dim air, nor how he lost her, weets;~And, roving
 15     9|      city up and me,~Lest all be lost through my obduracy.~ ~
 16    10|         or sunk, remains~To have lost Rogero, sorrow more profound~
 17    11|        till her native realm was lost.~ ~ VI~Now that she this
 18    11|       grave and sore~Was to have lost the bird of rapid wing,~
 19    11|      more,~The thought of having lost the precious ring;~Not for
 20    11|    Through thee is martial glory lost, through thee~The trade
 21    11|          Bireno kin and geer~Had lost, and would in fine for him
 22    12|       where getting sight~Of his lost love, the County strives
 23    12|        the way~Was in the forest lost, with wood o'ergrown,~And
 24    13|         but verify.~'Tis true so lost I was not, nor that clan~
 25    13|          this grave.~All hope is lost of my Zerbino's aid:~For
 26    13|          left above,~Languid and lost in all the pains of love.~ ~
 27    13|         tokens wore,~She quickly lost the faith she nourished
 28    14|          princes and bold barons lost.~ ~ II~So bloody was the
 29    14|   captains to supply his leaders lost,~So the two kings who Spain
 30    14|         led,~Fair Bradamant, had lost the virtuous ring,~Had lived
 31    14|          tiding of the squadrons lost;~To wondering Agramant alike
 32    15|        Pharaoh and his host were lost:~From whence he to the land
 33    15|       well as eyes~The thief had lost, -- nor whitherward he knew:~
 34    16|     ample city had that day been lost.~But he was hindered by
 35    16|       camp had on that side been lost.~ ~ LXXI~But Ferrau, who
 36    17|          smote, whose paynim foe~Lost his left stirrup, staggered
 37    18|          the brand,~To Africa be lost our noble seed.~Save you
 38    18|      stopt and cried:~"Not to be lost are opportunities.~This
 39    19|    vessels lie.~Another: "We are lost on Sataly,~Whose coast makes
 40    20|          women had, for comforts lost,~And pangs of absence, learned
 41    20|           Many a one on scaffold lost his head.~Now these ten
 42    20|          he had suffered when he lost his queen.~The aged woman
 43    21|          my honour be not wholly lost,~ ~ XL~" `And, with my own,
 44    23|     because the beaten track~Was lost in many others in the wood;~
 45    23|              CXII~Then well-nigh lost all feeling; so a prey~Wholly
 46    24|       who, bound in trace~Of her lost lover's footsteps, sought
 47    24|          his might,~The stirrups lost; and in her sight, so well~
 48    26|       feats confound,~Not merely lost in wonder, but astoud.~ ~
 49    26|       Another stroke, and he has lost the horse!~But Richardetto
 50    26|           swayed;~And would have lost withal his trusty brand,~
 51    27|          and of pain, and people lost.~ ~ LVIII~"Some other faulchion
 52    27|       this the question shall be lost or gained;~And not by faithless
 53    27|       discomfit sore,~And how he lost his courser, how was taken,~
 54    27|        opposite to kindly faith!~Lost, wretched man, who trusts
 55    27|      Seeing that paynim mute and lost in thought.~ ~ CXXXIII~From
 56    28|       Flammetta, thou, alas! art lost to me,~Nor know I if I more
 57    29|         that its favour would be lost, believed,~Unless 'twere
 58    29|      stay the horses's fall, who lost his feet.~He wills that
 59    29|          the meed of strife,~Had lost their arms, and many arms
 60    29|     Roland, whose better wit was lost withal,~I know no where,
 61    29|       visage sweet,~Her stirrups lost; and, tumbling form the
 62    31|         ever blindman covets the lost light,~In rapture cries, "
 63    32|         upon an embassy~From THE LOST ISLE, which lies mid seas
 64    32|  northern pole.~ ~ LII~"Some THE LOST ISLE, some Iceland call
 65    32|       least distant lie from the LOST ISLE,~(Because few mariners
 66    32|         I related, sent from the LOST ISLE~To France's king, upon
 67    32|         s enamoured son,~That he lost sight no oftener of the
 68    33|          their wreck and labours lost deplore,~Whose fame will
 69    33|     these the city shall anew be lost.~ ~ XLV~"Lo! other French
 70    33|        When the winged beast has lost Baiardo's traces.~He soars
 71    33|    treasure,~Alas! had miserably lost his sight.~And yet was this
 72    34|        he steers;~Of some of his lost sense here repossest,~Orlando'
 73    34|         the kingdom by my father lost~Restored; and, to repair
 74    34|       are all things whatsoe'er,~Lost through time, chance, or
 75    34|       thou on earth beneath hast lost.~ ~ LXXVI~He, passing by
 76    34|         look again, which he had lost of yore;~But, save the interpreter
 77    35|        at strife,~Deeming Rogero lost, detested life.~ ~ XXXIX~"
 78    36|           if those fair lips are lost to me?~Ah! never other shall
 79    37|       with solemn train~From the LOST ISLE to royal Charlemagne;~ ~
 80    38|       has been gone;~Yet we have lost more fields than we have
 81    38|          heretofore our band has lost,~A heavier forfeit will
 82    38|        While aids like these are lost to our array,~While on our
 83    38|        that ever from the day~He lost his goodly steed afoot had
 84    39|          loss alone,~Than had he lost the rest in arms arrayed.~
 85    39|        two good days, in harbour lost.~ ~ XXXV~Of Charles, and
 86    39|         What he through love had lost, to reacquire~Was his whole
 87    39|      martial maid had her Rogero lost.~ ~ LXVIII~Marphisa by the
 88    40|         ever of his warlike lord lost sight --~To bold Rogero
 89    41|        well I wite;~How Falerina lost it to that lord,~When waste
 90    41|     through this, ye should your lost domain~Acquire anew, forsooth,
 91    41|           by haughty Mandricardo lost.~ ~ XCII~Great vantage has
 92    43| sovereign sway;~Who, following a lost falcon in its flight,~Entering
 93    43|         since a lot so blest,~Is lost, to lose as well the worthless
 94    43|         foot restored its vigour lost.~He moved more nimble than
 95    44|      planet, whither flit~Things lost on earth, of sound deprived
 96    44|          whose labour's fruit~Is lost for her, is hive with honey
 97    44|       Pirithous, as for her I've lost~My grief of heart shall
 98    44|          fled from them whilere.~Lost was all order in a thought,
 99    44|         all the country round is lost)~He from his lofty station
100    45|         lady is adjudged to have lost the stake;~Nor him for husband
101    45|        Laments himself at having lost is love;~ ~ XL~The unhappy
102    46|      they had not yet the memory lost~Of what that paynim had
103    46|          knight.~ ~ CXXXI~Rogero lost no time, and with fierce
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