Canto

 1   Int|           descendent of Alexander the Great and Hector, also falls in
 2     3|            shape and shadow forth the great design.~ ~ IV~Till when,
 3     3|              its fair fields; and two great chiefs this while~(One wears
 4     3|            XLV~"Lo! Lionel! lo! Borse great and kind!~First duke of
 5     3|              the renowned~Hippolitus, great cardinal of Rome;~Whose
 6     5|               be mine, and ever he~So great a benefit in mind would
 7     5|               The glorious meed of my great merit hear!~And say if woman
 8     6|              the southern sound~Where great Alcides fixed the sailor'
 9     7|               tell.~ ~ II~But this be great or small, I know not why~
10     7|       Atlantes, rendered blind~By the great love she to the stripling
11     8|              shaped her course~By the great sea which laves the Gascon
12     8|             And of Catay in India was great khan;~'Tis hence I am reduced
13     8|              this case relate:~In the great northern sea, towards the
14     8|               compressed, and quitted great with child.~ ~ LIII~This
15     8|             lance~The holy empire and great name of France.~ ~ LXX~To
16     8|               of aged Charlemagne~The great Creator turned his eyes,
17     8|          LXXIII~This in Orlando moved great grief, and he~Lay thinking
18     9|            view,~Of valiant heart and great ability~But more approved
19     9|          Flanders: these I sold,~And (great or small the produce set
20     9|              LXXVI~Whether it was his great desire to kill~That baron,
21    10|              ladies joyed the cool in great delight;~About them various
22    10|              he Mangiane,~Passing the great Quinsay beheld; in air~Above
23    10| flower-de-luces does unfold,~That our great captain to the wind expands,~
24    12|            nor to him replies,~On his great gain intent, his glorious
25    12|               sustained,~Pursuing the great good he never gained.~ ~
26    13|          hight,~Who to Zerbino seemed great faith to bear;~And as a
27    13|         thence,~As that in him he had great confidence.~ ~ XXIV~"He
28    13|               Ulysses placed.~ ~ LXI~"Great things and many thus I sum
29    13|               threads to clear~In the great web I labour evermore;~And
30    14|           Hector bore of old.~ ~ XLIV~Great is the Tartar monarch's
31    14|             and vowed~What fitted his great needs and high condition.~
32    15|               Thessaly, or Spain.~Nor great Octavius does more praise
33    15|         contained himself for joy, so great~His pleasure, when the duke
34    15|              his courser, not without great heed,~Lest he into the covert
35    15|          taken as she flew,~Where the great Aethiop river meets the
36    17|             Since there he tarried at great risk of life.~Nor could
37    17|            that day;~And knew, to his great sorrow, in the other~Origille'
38    18|             Sir Gryphon's name.~Here, great and little -- every one,
39    19|             lofty daughter of Catay's great khan.~ ~ XVIII~Angelica,
40    20|         learns news of Isabel.~ ~ ~ I~Great fears the women of antiquity~
41    20|             paid.~But none is here so great, sir cavalier,~Nor of such
42    20|              a knight~To fare in like great fellowship; that so~The
43    20|             as unvenged of one,~Who a great act of courtesy, which fain~
44    23|            bear,~A thousand years ago great Hector's were.~ ~ LXXIX~"
45    23|               s hand had made.~On the great pleasure he had known in
46    24|             found within it, small or great:~But here was homely food
47    25|           might compare,~Or haply the great devil -- not he of hell --~
48    25|                or heard at most~As we great talkers hear, who little
49    25|         Aldigier lent, and set by him great store;~ ~ LXXX~And at the
50    26|               have crost~To prove how great your prowess in the field;~
51    26|        hundred years be known,~To the great honour of a future age.~
52    26|        generous quality,~Which can in great commander be combined,~--
53    26|        revenge, and erred:~For at too great a distance was the foe.~
54    27|               above that level space.~Great was the throng, and round
55    30|                  CANTO 30~ ~ ARGUMENT~Great feats achieve Orlando by
56    30|           they marvel evermore~At the great feat which I performed that
57    31|          paynim fell reversed,~To his great peril, in the stream immersed.~ ~
58    32|              the board.~ ~ XCV~In the great hall that plenteous board
59    33|           Merlin painted were.~Hither Great Britain's monarch sent the
60    33|              of Gaul,~To war upon the great Viscontis, steers;~And seems
61    33|       glorious head in air,~When that great Marquis shall in her be
62    33|             and prime renown~For that great king captived and host o'
63    34|              the authority~With which great lords their delegates invest:~
64    35|            invest,~And rarely soul so great from realms divine~Has been,
65    35|               Heaven's will, that few~Great rulers should the paths
66    35|             so holy and benign~Was as great Virgil's trumpet sounds
67    35|               she worthily~May hope a great and glorious name to bear,~
68    36|              other war disturbs their great delight~Marphisa bold; but
69    36|           sons conveyed~Their mother, great with child, and six months
70    37|          maids and cavalier,~By their great goodness moved, from plate
71    37|         penance for his sins, pleased great and small.~ ~ CVII~Many,
72    38|               Senapus found.~ ~ XXVII~Great was the joy, and great was
73    38|          XXVII~Great was the joy, and great was the delight,~Wherewith
74    39|           waves.~Oh blessed souls! Oh great felicity!~O grace! which
75    39|              for few.~ ~ LXXII~Of the great multitude of either train,~
76    40|      discourse to you upon this head,~Great son of Hercules, were to
77    41|            many years~Of courtesy the great and lasting light,~Which
78    41|             Mandricardo lost.~ ~ XCII~Great vantage has he, on another
79    42|               diverged the two,~And a great palace fronting them descried:~
80    43|              belief, in every science great;~Who, when he closed his
81    43|           they scarcely drew.~ ~ CIX~"Great marvel in the dame, then
82    43|            Sansonet and Astolpho make great cheer;~Yet other mirth whose
83    44|              and of the following day~Great part, with that sage monk
84    44|             since above~All guidance, great or small, is mighty Love.~ ~
85    44|                  XCI~And, as a man of great and noble heart,~(Where
86    45|             head.~Nor long before the great Corvinus run~A yet more
87    46|               God above~Disposes, thy great courtesy, well tried~In
88    46|        oppress.~To me is thy distrust great cause of woe,~That since
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