Canto

  1     1|          red,~And if he rued his fall, it grieved him more~His
  2     1|      said, "sir monarch, for thy fall;~But let the blame upon
  3     2|          the warriors choose but fall, amazed~And blinded by the
  4     2|     where it fell,~It broked her fall, and saved the gentle maid.~
  5     3|        the damsel's death, whose fall he sees.~ ~ V~The wily traitor
  6     3|           dismayed~At her shrewd fall, and gazing through the
  7     5|       the projecting balcony let fall.~ ~ X~"For here my passion
  8     6|         myrtle shake and foliage fall,~But, struggling, could
  9     7|      apples grow,~Which rise and fall, as, to the margin pressed~
 10     8|         head does every mischief fall.~For this my brother Argalia
 11     8|       impatience to depart,~Till fall of eve his sally would delay.~
 12     9|         more.~ ~ LXXVII~To earth fall horse and rider: this the
 13     9|        and so light,~He from the fall seemed breath and force
 14    10|         s dry teeth are heard to fall;~But reaching once the foe,
 15    11|        mace upon his head~Should fall, with which the giant still
 16    12|          fly, some dip, and some fall flat to ground.~ ~ LXXXV~
 17    12|        lily, from her eyes~Tears fall so fast, she needs must
 18    13|       the lowest depth of misery fall.~ ~ LXIII~"Viscontis' serpents
 19    13|         the Insubri into slavery fall;~And men shall sovereign
 20    14|          were the ensuing day to fall.~ ~ LXIX~At the high church,
 21    14|        masses and whole bulwarks fall,~And top of tower, huge
 22    14|           that by me unmentioned fall,~Who cannot tell the name
 23    14|       files succeed to those who fall in fight,~Where, on the
 24    15|       who beholds his bulky prey~Fall bodily, drives thither at
 25    15|       desired to see the river's fall,~And how far Nile into the
 26    16|       sight the harlot's spirits fall,~Who fears that he will
 27    16|        but quit their ground and fall,~And break their order on
 28    16|       wound,~Olympio de la Serra fall to ground:~ ~ LXXII~A stripling
 29    16|        spacious compass wind,~To fall upon the paynim camp behind.~ ~
 30    17|        thy hunger, or more nobly fall.~ ~ LXXVIII~I to the German
 31    18|          another, in the gateway fall.~Gryphon, all thought of
 32    18|          made the various troops fall in below~Their banners,
 33    18|     steeds, and din of arms, and fall~Of darts, and push of spears. --
 34    18|     opposing dyke is broke away,~Fall, and with mighty noise the
 35    19|          sight~Of young Medoro's fall, springs forth to fight;~ ~
 36    19|       But if your chosen warrior fall or flee,~By his ten enemies
 37    19|     harmless on the breast-plate fall,~Whose steel was heated
 38    19|         been sheared.~Alike both fall; but voiding quick the seat,~
 39    19|        be unhorsed, appeared his fall.~ ~ XCVI~They scarcely touch
 40    22|           Who seemed as he would fall, now here, now there,~And,
 41    22|      coursers panting with their fall,~As if about to die, the
 42    23|          tears from every eyelid fall,~As if some cause of sorrow
 43    23|          Scarce conscious of his fall, Orlando lies,~With feet
 44    26|    infidels, upon their leader's fall:~On the other side, so charged
 45    26|      satrap, prince and peer, to fall;~And made most havoc in
 46    26|        city, they surround, from fall.~ ~ XLVII~"Imbued with every
 47    26|         his faulchion drawn,~Let fall his ready lance upon the
 48    26|           such project shall not fall,"~Rogero said, "so he restore
 49    26|         right,~-- As if about to fall -- head-foremost, swayed;~
 50    27|        it possible that what can fall~To one alone, should be
 51    29|  barricade,~To stay the horses's fall, who lost his feet.~He wills
 52    29|         draughts of water in his fall, parforce,~He would assoil
 53    29|       backwards in that struggle fall,~Embracing as he stood with
 54    30| vanquished knight no blame shall fall,~But we to Fortune will
 55    30|    lighter than that sword would fall.~ ~ LXII~If cleft his vizor
 56    30|        their enemies' defeat and fall;~And how Rogero and Marphisa
 57    31|         good arm he died;~And so fall on, and do as best ye may,~
 58    31| undertook to venge his courser's fall;~And, could he, without
 59    31|         scanty plank.~Hence both fall headlong, and the deafening
 60    32|        brent;~Then, unsustained, fall headlong from the sky;~Nor
 61    32|       again I soar;~To flame and fall, tormented evermore.~ ~
 62    32|    tragic poet dreamed,~But will fall short of thine, if thou
 63    32|       his nurse's lap beheld him fall,~Beyond Marocco; and for
 64    33|      steel will see their people fall,~Consumed by famine, or
 65    33|          battle rages high;~Fast fall the men at arms in either
 66    33|      Lodged in a township at the fall of night,~Duke Aymon's daughter,
 67    33|       without effect and languid fall.~This while nor dish nor
 68    34|       scheme of no less mischief fall:~Through me, all deemed
 69    34|      shake,~Aye, without fill or fall, the foliage light,~To the
 70    35|         King Rodomont he tried a fall.~ ~ XXXIV~She sought one
 71    35|         I believe and trust, you fall,~I will your horse and armour
 72    35|         hatest now.~ ~ XLVII~"To fall by me thou needest not disdain;~
 73    35|          the knight's suspicions fall.~ ~ LXV~To think 'twas Rodomont
 74    35|         this course have run,~My fall may furnish an excuse more
 75    35|       that gentle youth to try a fall."~ ~ LXXVII~She spoke the
 76    37|          who beheld his only son~Fall and expire, his outstretched
 77    37|       fell Marganor's disastrous fall,~Fit penance for his sins,
 78    38|          And should our Lord the fall of France ordain,~That kingdom
 79    39|    broken faith and forfeit word~Fall upon Rodomont! take thou
 80    39|       fury flow,~Which, in their fall, two separate channels wear,~
 81    39|        some vengeance dread~Will fall on Agramant's devoted head.~ ~
 82    39|       lies,~So battered with his fall, it seemed he wou'd~Bequeath
 83    39|           Fearing the costs will fall upon his Spain,~And that
 84    40|       protected by the ceaseless fall~Of stone and dart, in safety
 85    40|         ditch with headlong ruin fall.~ ~ XXV~Not therefore blenched
 86    40|       now giving way,~Before the fall of that descending bane.~
 87    41|        In this contention cannot fall to me --~Cannot be mine;
 88    41|          too foul a fault should fall~Meseems, my lord, if, while
 89    41|      seldom good Sobrino used to fall.~Was it his courser's or
 90    41|         to withstand~The furious fall of Falerina's brand.~ ~
 91    41|        to shun~Sharp Durindana's fall, now there now here.~Meanwhile
 92    42|         spread.~ ~ IV~Seeing thy fall caused thine such mighty
 93    43|          unloving, in a day~They fall some elder's, fall some
 94    43|          They fall some elder's, fall some monster's prey.~ ~
 95    43|    speaks,~Which furrow, as they fall, her woeful cheeks.~ ~ XLI~"
 96    44|        power o' the Bulgars many fall,~Stalin from the hill-top
 97    46|          his feet have stood,~To fall, albeit unpushed, to ground
 98    46|          maintain~From dawn till fall of day the furious fight;~
 99    46|        that valiant warrior, and fall down~Before his feet, and
100    46|        on him St. Peter's mantle fall,~What a blest aera! what
101    46|         both staggering coursers fall.~ ~ CXVIII~With bridle and
102    46|            CXXIII~As if about to fall, the youthful lord~Twice
103    46|        sore doubt her champion's fall had seen;~And well nigh
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