Canto

 1     1|    casque, which in the river's bed~Ferrau sought vainly, toiling
 2     1|         moss and herbage form a bed;~And to delay and rest the
 3     1|        by rowel from his grassy bed.~That of the paynim king,
 4     4|        who takes a man into her bed,~Except her husband, for
 5     5|      taken by the damsel to her bed;~And her before the king
 6     5|     tears still wash the genial bed;~Not only watered by the
 7     5|       not till I took him to my bed;~Nor, of all chambers, in
 8     5|      varying season changed her bed,~To shun the burning heat
 9     5|       me is sought,~When in her bed Geneura slumbers, seize~
10     6|        possessor of the fairy's bed,~May be for thee transformed
11     7|         night away.~To seek his bed the paladin ascended,~Girt
12     7|      his mistake: ofttimes from bed~He issued, and undid his
13     7|         outright.~He leaps from bed and folds her to his breast,~
14     8|       long counsel of his weary bed,~Vexed with a ceaseless
15     8|  odorous flowers, upon a grassy bed,~Were gazing on that beauteous
16     8|         thundering, leaped from bed, and with what chain~And
17     9|       sought his, would seek my bed.~ ~ XLI~"Behind the curtains,
18     9|       Yet waited not till he in bed was laid:~But raised a hatchet,
19    10|    place, repaired, and went to bed.~The others of their train
20    10|    treason lies,~Stole from his bed in silence, when he knew~
21    10|         she no more her widowed bed~Would keep, but from the
22    10|          XXVII~Stretched on the bed, upon her face she lay,~
23    12|        hour that our of Ocean's bed~Dan Phoebus drew his dripping
24    12|         and underwood a bristly bed,~To hide the grotto's inmates,
25    13|      till she, beside a river's bed,~Encounters with a warrior:
26    14|    limbs in chrystal Guadiana's bed,~Came thither, under Matalista
27    15|        to surprise that pair in bed.~ ~ LVII~Mercury from the
28    15|        outlet there, beside his bed,~A sturdy thief was sheltered
29    16|      above, he o'er the river's bed~Had cast a bridge; from
30    17|        door-post and the genial bed,~Too soon to be by stranger
31    17|        in, undrest, and went to bed.~ ~ CIX~No sooner he his
32    18|          where Gryphon from his bed~Has not as yet, since he
33    18|        each so closely in their bed,~That air between them could
34    19|          the following night~In bed should with ten damsels
35    19|         by him selected for his bed.~ ~ LIX~So strange a custom
36    19|      play the husband's part in bed,~He shall remain our sovereign,
37    19|          And shall in lists and bed allow them bold.~The lashings
38    20|   ladies are the partners of my bed:~Selected at my choice,
39    20|       might not freeze alone in bed,~Chosen young lovers in
40    20|  evinced themselves and bold in bed.~And in few days to them
41    20|     partakers of their rule and bed;~First swearing at the sovereign
42    20|    issue of his kinsman Aymon's bed.~ ~ LXVI~Then cried: "The
43    20|      town to fire, and on their bed~Of earth to wolf and vulture
44    21|  sickened and betook himself to bed.~ ~ LVIII~"Now in the harlot,
45    21|        reversed upon his grassy bed.~Meanwhile two squires,
46    22|        he had not wetted in its bed~Before a youthful rustic,
47    22|         to surprise the pair in bed,~And in the citadel the
48    22|      night the warriors bold~In bed, nor loosed, till he had
49    23|      full of sorrow, sought his bed.~ ~ CXVII~The more the wretched
50    23|         and fro~About his weary bed, in search of rest;~And
51    23|         with her leman, on that bed:~Nor less he loathed the
52    23|        deadly hatred breed~That bed, that house, that swain,
53    23|    shall never furnish shade or bed.~And that sweet fountain,
54    24|        required, and, more than bed~And succour of the leech,
55    25|         ladies share one common bed that night,~Their bed the
56    25|    common bed that night,~Their bed the same, but different
57    25|          On issueing from their bed when day is broken,~The
58    25|         prays me to partake her bed.~ ~ LVIII~"Damsels and dames
59    25|       One and the other, in our bed undrest,~With kindled torches,
60    25|        peer~Issues as well from bed, when him they hear.~ ~
61    28|    afflicted spouse returned to bed.~ ~ XVIII~"Jocundo was not
62    28|     home he lighted, sought his bed, and found~The consort he
63    28|      the stripling taken to her bed,~To deem the dame less culpable
64    28|          both, exhausted on the bed.~ ~ LXXII~"When they had
65    28|      rose:~Then lays him on his bed, till from the skies~The
66    29|        burst upon a rock's rude bed,~And lay one shapeless jelly,
67    30|       will he hear a word:~From bed upspringing, "Arms," the
68    30|          with such care:~To his bed the Tartar's arms and buckler
69    30| parforce he overpast:~On a sick bed, long time, he, sorely pained,~
70    31|         floundering in its oozy bed,~Well in the soundings of
71    31|     them in the river's deepest bed;~The horse is uppermost,
72    32|    month the stripling kept his bed:~And had the stranger here
73    32|       her face, her body on the bed,~Armed as she is, th4e grieving
74    32|    cried;~And starting from her bed, by passion warmed,~To her
75    33|         were sleeping, when her bed~At last Duke Aymon's beauteous
76    33|    Bradamant upstarted from her bed,~And armed her for the journey
77    33|       Good harbourage withal of bed and board,~She in her hostel
78    33|      divert the stream to other bed.~Hence, with its district
79    34|      her less dear,~Rising from bed, Astolpho at his side~The
80    36|         and pole, 'twixt Indus' bed~And where he sinks in Ocean'
81    36|        every day had sought his bed,~Must of this truth the
82    37|      The widow that a husband's bed ascends,~Ere she approach
83    37|      dry-shod cross, its rugged bed.~ ~ CXI~So Marganor whilere
84    40|        reposing in her Tithon's bed~Aurora was, and dusky were
85    41|       palace drew, where on her bed~They left the lady, grieved
86    42|      have had the damsel in his bed;~And he himself, to move
87    43|         outrage to the marriage bed;~Though doing so she deem
88    43|         pleasure lie.~ ~ LI~For bed and bower, within, were
89    43|       lies left of that river's bed,~Sermide to the right; they
90    43|     walls~And stream into whose bed Santerno falls.~ ~  CXLVI~
91    44|       daughter he was seized in bed;~And how he had delivered
92    45|         danger, prisoner in his bed.~ ~ X~By his own shield
93    45|         rise until he seeks his bed;~And if he for that time
94    45|     shadows, when he leaves his bed,~Vanish, and reassure the
95    45|          pillars, in his watery bed,~When first she 'gan misdoubt
96    46|   prepared the genial, fruitful bed,~Under a broad pavilion;
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