Canto

 1     1|        charms had wrought,~And for past ills to furnish glad amends~
 2     1|            Whom, some short season past, he had not viewed.~For
 3     2|    Traversed a wood, and that wood past, a mountain;~And stopt at
 4     2|         grow;~And, yonder mountain past, (save I mistake)~A tower
 5     3|           Since this has still the past and future taught~To every
 6     5|           To which, for friendship past, you would pretend~From
 7     5|               LVII~"But eight days past or more, to Scotland's court~
 8     7|           the amorous lays of ages past:~ ~ XXXII~Now by glad hill,
 9     7|            tedious pain and labour past?~ ~ LVII~"The marrow of
10     8|            the west,~Green Ireland past, an isle is situate.~Ebuda
11     8|          Lay thinking on his folly past in vain:~"My heart," he
12     9|          XVI~Breac and Landriglier past on the left hand,~Orlando'
13    10|           and smooth to sight:~For past, as soon as bred, their
14    10|          The gentle damsel had not past fourteen,~Was beautiful
15    11|         cruel art among all people past:~And these the bronze in
16    12|            seemed to Roland little past fifteen,~As far as at first
17    13|            crave.~Eight months are past, the ninth arrived, since,
18    13|      knight.~ ~ XLVI~The time long past, she, lying in that place,~
19    13|            which no sooner has she past the door,~Than she is cheated
20    14|          XVIII~Marmonda's men next past the royal Moor,~Who left
21    14|         surmise,~As soon as he has past the cloister's pale.~Here
22    14|            certain bottom were.~He past, ran, -- rather flew across
23    15|             Since by that road had past a cavalier.~ ~ LII~Towards
24    15|       Thence to the river's outlet past, and spied~The sturdy castle
25    15|        influence of the skies were past.~ ~ XC~When to the castellan
26    16|           here was ill to ford.~He past his army, broke the bridges
27    16|            were the foes,~For this past on, and that the champaigne
28    17|     iniquity,~Whenever crimes have past remission's bound,~That
29    17|            strand,~And, three days past, arrived on Syrian land.~ ~
30    17|       strowed,~A prey to whosoever past the road.~ ~ LXXXIV~Of this
31    17|            thence upon his journey past.~ ~ CXXIX~His ready wit
32    18|         flowed~Below the isle, and past without the walls.~In daring
33    18|         leader of Zumara's crew~So past, his visage losing all its
34    18|          gored,~Who in the air had past large part of night~With
35    20|          found, and by consent was past~A pardon to their women;
36    20|            two thousand years nigh past away~This usage have maintained,
37    20|      Concealed until his wrath was past away.~ ~ CXIX~Zerbino laughed
38    21|   miscreant's share!~ ~ LXIV~"This past and done, the leech would
39    22|            into mist and smoke all past from view.~ ~ XXIV~There
40    22|           cavalier~Did, three days past, a shameful law devise;~
41    23|         woman chanced to hear,~Who past in rage the tyger or the
42    23|    cavalier;~But the chill quickly past, and he, instead,~Was flushed
43    23|            a lover of the maid;~So past from pain to pain; and little
44    23|    pressure of such cruel pain,~It past into the wretched sufferer'
45    24|        misdeed~To him appeared, it past all other woes;~Though he
46    25|         maid to hunt with her, and past~With her alone into that
47    25|           in a female robe arraid,~Past her on all beholders for
48    25|       harboured her, and all~Which past, till she revisited her
49    25|     tidings to the Spanish monarch past.~Thou that whilere preserved'
50    26|        grow;~And till much time be past will grow alway:~Was never
51    27| slaughtered men on all sides as he past.~ ~ XXII~Where the small
52    27|          amiss)~Believed, when she past sentence on the case,~She
53    29|        Extinguished by a puff, she past from sight.~ ~  LXV~Was
54    30|            he at that part in fury past~Whence Mandricardo had his
55    30|         wherein a month or more he past~In doubt of death; so deeply
56    31|          knights no further parley past:~Without more question,
57    31|        taken.~ ~ XLV~"Few days are past, since I in shameful wise~
58    32|         Fair Bradamant of one that past beside~Demanded who the
59    33|            these signs, unlike the past, was read~A better promise
60    33|                XCVII~To Arragon he past out of Navarre,~-- They
61    36|         memory rose,~In summing up past times, more sure they hold~
62    37|          it repented of its errors past,~Repealed the statute Marganor
63    38|         Who for his parents' every past offence~Had made Rogero
64    38|          plains of powdery sand he past,~Nor dreaded danger from
65    39|          gone.~From France had she past hither -- given to know --~
66    40|        weep; and acts and speeches past,~Upon the banquet's close,
67    40|         back, and bids record~What past 'twixt him and Clermont'
68    41|        horseback all;~Short parley past the puissant foes between.~
69    41|           should wend;~Wherein his past and future life, reviewed,~
70    42|          his rear,~And reached and past the Po, with swift career.~ ~
71    43|           warlike towns in triumph past:~The foremost he to breast
72    43|         the right;~Then the Bodeno past. Already shows~Faintly the
73    43|         Gaurus and Metaurus, wends~Past Apennine, no longer on his
74    43|          CLXXVII~A hundred men had past before the rest,~All taken
75    43|         cathedral, where the array~Past on its road, were no dry
76    44|          discern;~Though years had past, and this was yet to learn.~ ~
77    44|      placed~From bank to bank, and past the stream in haste.~ ~
78    44|     Recrost the bridge by which he past whilere.~ ~ XCV~Into the
79    45|        years will not repair,~Here past the day and was to pass
80    45|       sooner drive,~Than Fears are past and gone, and Hopes return.~
81    45|          for fight.~ ~ LXIV~Rogero past the night before the day~
82    45|        those many ladies that have past~For light, I am not, I,
83    46|            day was yet unworn~They past, the morrow, and succeeding
84    46|            wholly o'er,~And wholly past was the succeeding day,~
85    46|        from his ground,~And, as he past, the paynim's bridle took~
86    46|        engirdled round.~At once he past his better leg before~Rodomont'
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