Canto

 1     1|           to his cost,~Sunk in the stream; and since he could not
 2     1|            the brink~Of that swift stream, and seeks the morion lost.~
 3     1|            With this he sounds the stream, and anxiously~Fathoms,
 4     1|            the warrior hight) that stream beside,~Thus his unknightly
 5     1|        whilom plight;~And from the stream departing heavily,~Was many
 6     1|          The tuft reflected in the stream which strays~Beside it,
 7     1|     sorrowing,~And pour'd into the stream so many tears,~I answer,
 8     1|            Who clears the bush and stream, with furious force~And
 9     2|        ford,~Dragging me where the stream is deep and fleet.~Her I
10     2|    Reposing, overhangs the crystal stream.~His horse beneath a spreading
11     2|          fix,~Case-hardened in the stream and fire of Styx.~ ~ XLIII~"
12     3|            are,~And green Isauro's stream, from mount to main;~With
13     6|           maintains, which there a stream bestrides,~Eriphila the
14     7|    Eriphila in guard~Of bridge and stream was seen, the passage barred.~ ~
15     9| flashing-spray:~And with impetuous stream had overtopt~Its brim, and
16     9|       petition~To put him o'er the stream; and she: "No knight~Passes
17     9|          on the right~Of that fair stream, descends upon the shore,~
18     9|           own~No further than this stream from Ocean's shore,~Designing
19    10|     grayling to the bottom goes~In stream, which mountaineer disturbs
20    12|             Field, valley, running stream, or water pent,~The land
21    12|           The Spanish cavalier the stream beside~Arrived, who had
22    12|           from Paris he to Arles's stream,~With part of Gascony, some
23    12|           from his wound so wide a stream:~Disordered, they the count
24    14|              XXXIX~Where this deep stream was fordable, he scanned~
25    14|         France, more justly say.~A stream flows into it, and forth
26    14|        divide,~Westward beyond the stream Troyano's son~Retired, from
27    15|         through air,~Whelms in the stream; but bootless is the throw:~
28    16|            the barbarous foes,~The stream no obstacle might interpose.~ ~
29    16|           Zerbino, marching by the stream, enjoys~The honour first
30    16|         less mortal than along~The stream, nor that the troops behind
31    18|                When now across the stream, without the wall,~He turned,
32    18|           nor rock, nor stone,~Nor stream: -- Nor length of way nor
33    18|            in Seine's neighbouring stream are drowned,~Agramant, who
34    19|           with tree o'ergrown,~Ran stream, or bubbling fountain's
35    19|            bore with it so swift a stream and strong~Of the vext waters,
36    19|            dawn broke from Ganges' stream anew;~And so remained the
37    23|         descending flow,~In a wide stream, and flood his troubled
38    23|          water from his eyes could stream away,~And breath was for
39    24|          His flagon at the cooling stream to fill,~Opposed him to
40    25|         Knights were reposing by a stream, one pair~Disarmed, another
41    25|         labour spent,~-- As by the stream she slept -- that huntress
42    26|        drop,~Hastening to shut the stream within its bounds,~And save
43    26|        right and left; yet him the stream confounds:~For, if he here
44    27|         out the greenwood-holt and stream most lone,~Or sands at distance
45    27|       water found,~And stemmed the stream and dragged the dame aground.~ ~
46    27|      CXXVIII~From bank to bank the stream was covered o'er~With boat
47    28|         And when that cavalier the stream was through,~The rising
48    28|            shore,~And lighted on a stream and hamlet, dear~To Ceres
49    29|            pile beside~Old Tyber's stream, by Adrian built; and nigh~
50    29|          wide,~He flung across the stream which rolled fast by.~Long,
51    29|      bridge, whose arch across the stream was dight;~But not that
52    29|        Into the deep and dangerous stream below.~ ~ XXXVII~The pagan
53    29|       course,~Head-first into that stream, where he must drain~Huge
54    29|            main to throw,~Into the stream each doughty champion tried.~"
55    29|            Together in the foaming stream they sank;~High flashed
56    29|        bank.~ ~ XLVIII~Quickly the stream asunder bore the pair.~Roland
57    29|          tell,~Who left behind him stream, bridge tower, and cell.~ ~
58    30|      reversed,~And from his head a stream of life-blood burst.~ ~
59    31|            his great peril, in the stream immersed.~ ~  LXIV~Brandimart,
60    31|            prone parforce into the stream below,~Securely to the fierce
61    31|           grassy bank.~So rang our stream, when from the heavenly
62    31|           in the soundings of that stream was read.~ ~ LXXII~He where '
63    31|           So by his courser in the stream immersed;~And largely drank,
64    31|            half exhausted from the stream he drew,~And prisoned with
65    33|  heretofore,~Whose memory down the stream of Time will float,~While
66    33|          command~He may divert the stream to other bed.~Hence, with
67    34|           He sought some cleansing stream, long sought in vain;~But
68    35|           this -- looking down~The stream of future years -- I recognize~
69    35|            the two~Issued upon the stream, whose waves appear~Turbid
70    35|          labour ended;~And in that stream, hight Lethe, next bestowed,~
71    35|       countless shoal, they in the stream subside;~Nor henceforth
72    35|       consumes.~Now swim about the stream those swans divine,~Now
73    35|         sun, those two~At the deep stream arrived and bridge of dread:~--
74    35|          Of falling into that deep stream below:~But, born of wind
75    36|           sinks in Ocean's western stream;~Whose years and beauty
76    37|        envy swell the neighbouring stream.~By Hercules Bentivoglio
77    39|            and, moored in the salt stream,~All in a thought transformed
78    40|            that rage wherewith the stream that reigns,~The king of
79    41|          from the warrior's head~A stream of life-blood dyes the shingle
80    42|           maid~In the other bitter stream her thirst did slake;~Which
81    42|           that fountain's chilling stream and clear~Extinguished love;
82    42|        their joint music shall the stream be stopt,~Whose trees erewhile
83    42|         And issued forth in many a stream, to lave~A mead of azure,
84    43|         city, pent~Within a limpid stream that forms a lake;~Which
85    43|             And all that night the stream in haste descends;~ ~ XLII~"
86    43|       Rinaldo lies,~While with the stream his frigate is conveyed;~
87    43|            Purposely lighting on a stream, whose tide~From Apennine
88    43|            with circling walls~And stream into whose bed Santerno
89    44|           bridge across that rapid stream the Greek~Would fling; the
90    44|        with pontoons to bridge the stream supplied;~And a bold semblance
91    44|         bank to bank, and past the stream in haste.~ ~ LXXXII~With
92    44|            crost~Upon his part the stream with all his host.~ ~ LXXXIII~
93    44|        pray that he would pass the stream anew;~Who, if the way was
94    46|           river-shore,~To ford the stream and make a foe of Rome,~
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