Canto

 1     1|         Flushed with his youthful rage and furious heat,~Who on
 2     1|     burned all over, flushed with rage and shame.~ ~ XXX~Nor having
 3     2|     arteries time had stilled the rage~Of blood, and spake him
 4     2|           at the demon's tale for rage and shame;~And curse themselves
 5     3|          laugh to scorn the civil rage~Of the rebellious Tideus
 6     3|          win and slay,~With cruel rage, her hapless Castellain,~
 7     5|          twixt man and wife, with rage possessed,~Injurious words
 8     5|      bosom burned~Into despiteful rage and hatred turned.~ ~ XXII~"
 9     5|        Lurcanio feigns,~As if the rage were spent which fired his
10     6|           gay,~Lately with brutal rage assaulted you,~Many her
11     8|           will hide its smothered rage:~Then blazes with devouring
12     8|     uptore and rent.~Not with the rage with which this whirlwind
13    11|           justice moved, or cruel rage,~Slaughter without regard
14    12|         ARGUMENT~Orlando, full of rage, pursues a knight~Who bears
15    12|        here and there in restless rage repairs,~Till he has seen
16    15|          the two baffled warriors rage for spite.~Let him who falling
17    16|        his valour more than cruel rage,~Heedless alike of order,
18    16|           destructive frays~Hate, Rage, and Fury, all offend by
19    17|           Moor:~But the unsparing rage of Rodomont~Proves worse
20    17|     swiftness sped~With which the rage of love a man supplies,~
21    18|        good,~When by rude Boreas' rage or Eurus' strown,~Uptorn
22    18|           see him cresting in his rage,~And round the den loud-bellowing,
23    18| river-side~Approach, who made him rage and hate forego;~Strait
24    18|           of his dame,~He all his rage extinguished, cleared his
25    18|        young are gone;~To ire, to rage like hers his wrath extends:~
26    18|       knew not what had moved the rage~Of the infuriate people
27    19|         mingled sound of love and rage,~To unsheath her claws,
28    19|      proud and arrogant,~Waxes in rage and threat the tempest fell.~
29    20|         evil tongues which foully rage,~Be tied to your eternal
30    20|       practice, they~All in their rage promiscuously slay.~ ~
31    20|       face, though he was full of rage;~For too ill-sorted seemed
32    20|            as angered sore,~While rage and wrath her kindled eyes
33    20|           beldam, hearing what in rage and grief~Zerbino vents,
34    20|               CXXXIX~As the dog's rage is quickly overblown,~Who
35    21|    quickly turned~Into despiteous rage and hatred sore;~Nor with
36    23|      chanced to hear,~Who past in rage the tyger or the bear;~And
37    23|        Now, as a pair of hinds in rage contend~For the mead's boundary
38    23|        and few blows resist;~Both rage with mightier fury, here
39    23|          to restrain.~Brimfull of rage and choler, at his side,~
40    23|        turned to hatred, phrensy, rage, and spite;~Nor paused he
41    23|              CXXXIV~So fierce his rage, so fierce his fury grew,~
42    24|           is nought but phrensied rage,~By universal suffrage of
43    24|         hence the maniac's horrid rage they view;~Who, dealing
44    24|           Foregone, she weeps for rage, and smite her front:~She
45    24|             LXXXVII~She with such rage, such fury, was possest,~
46    25|      suspending all their hostile rage,~One and the other paynim
47    26|    castle-keep,~Nor city from her rage its wealth defends.~Honours
48    26|          army suffered from their rage,~Who poured from beast-cote,
49    26|           knight~Showed with what rage his heart was in a flame,~
50    26|       while the Tartar and Rogero rage,~And Rodomont, in hurly-burly
51    27|          with surprise,~Anger and rage, is viewed by Charlemagne.~
52    27|           disgrace;~And with more rage and pain his bosom beats,~
53    27|          that exhales his amorous rage:~So parts, constrained his
54    27|            CXXV~The Saracen, whom rage no less profound~Against
55    27|        pours forth his moan,~With rage against his liege and love
56    29|           would calm, his amorous rage.~ ~ II~That which he rashly
57    29|      knight,~Urged by the furious rage which him misguides:~At
58    29|           For, from the time that rage possest his sprite,~He had
59    29|         mad Orlando's rear;~Whose rage and fury nevermore subside,~
60    30|          make head,~Yields to his rage, and curses; pain give way,~
61    30|        And he is left his willful rage to rue,~But cannot that
62    30|         strife impels~The natural rage, wherewith your bosom swells.~ ~
63    30|      azure ground,~He hurls, with rage transported, from his hand,~
64    31|  suffering sprite,~That phrensied rage, which jealousy is hight.~ ~
65    31|       world, possest with frantic rage.~ ~ XLIII~"Whence woe, so
66    31|          Assorting with his moody rage, 'gan say:~" -- Whoe'er
67    33|          he scorns the fires that rage,~Even to the Pharo, flaming
68    33|          And cast them, strung by rage and fury sore,~Into the
69    33|          ground,~O'erwhelmed with rage and shame, the warriors
70    35|          his courser, filled with rage and shame;~Wheeling as well,
71    36|     Atreus', Tantalus', Thyestes' rage!~ ~ IX~Barbarian! thou madest
72    36|           sense was drowned~(Such rage confused that damsel) in
73    36|         Thus speaks, as sovereign rage and fury move.~ ~ XXXII~"
74    36|          blow,~The lady spent her rage in other part,~And mighty
75    36|           the pair with spite and rage,~That they with desperate
76    37|          jealous authors' envious rage,~Unchronicled by fame, each
77    37|        Cylander felt such amorous rage,~He deemed, save he enjoyed
78    37|           end;~And, goaded by his rage and hatred hot,~Seeks to
79    37|        wight,~And gnaws it in his rage, nor will be gone~Until
80    37|     brought her, that his impious rage~That cruel man might on
81    37|           CVI~The rabble, full of rage and enmity,~Now seeks the
82    37|  nullified~The power to harm; but rage must have its vent.,~Him
83    38|         and hauberk in its greedy rage,~One and the other warrior
84    39|       their pent choler and their rage expose:~Yet Agramant beneath
85    40|             assail,~And, in their rage and fury, fain would fill;~
86    40|               XXXI~Even with that rage wherewith the stream that
87    40|              XXXII~Even with that rage rushed in the impetuous
88    41|        they rear;~For, swoln with rage and scorn, the waters rise,~
89    41|        harm Maganza in his mighty rage.~ ~  LXVII~On Azos, Alberts,
90    41|          he that armour wore; new rage and pain~Thereat the warrior
91    42|          To end; I say that other rage is none~Which can be weighed
92    42|         by Fortune in her love or rage.~ ~ LXXXVIII~Inscribed in
93    43|           it multiplies,~And into rage and cruel hate is run,~To
94    43|    resolved to die, so burned~His rage, but first would kill the
95    45|     appear.~He first with hatred, rage, and venom burned;~With
96    46|        that oftentimes before the rage~Of Roland and Rinaldo on
97    46|         with more fury, with more rage o'erflows,~Than in mid winter
98    46|    Rodomont filled with spite and rage, his foe~Takes by the neck
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