Canto

 1     1|       part;~Then, with no jealous eye my offering scan,~Nor scorn
 2     1|       flame had kindled, meet his eye.~But what ensued between
 3     2|       fair damsel saw, with timid eye,~Such ruin follow from the
 4     2|     marble or of brick; and in my eye~More wonderful the work,
 5     2|       what more is left me but to eye~Her prison on that cliff'
 6     3|          tis exposed, the dazzled eye;~And so invades each sense,
 7     3|           and land,~And her quick eye oft glances at his hand;~ ~
 8     4|        lady views, with wondering eye,~What she had scarce believed
 9     4|       from a peak of Apennine the eye~May Tuscan and Sclavonian
10     4|        seemed subdued in port and eye.~Nor many paces went the
11     5|      monarch, heard with tearless eye.~But, above all the rest,
12     5|       swelling bosom and exulting eye.~ ~ LXXXII~Rinaldo pierces
13     5|  Polinesso, called, with troubled eye,~Stood forth, but daringly
14     6|     Ariodantes, whom with tearful eye~His brother and Geneura
15     6|           light and comfort of my eye.~Her, right or wrong, I
16     6|        wall at distance meets his eye~Which girds a spacious town
17     6|        made.~Whether what met the eye was false or true,~Was never
18     7|        her advised, with downcast eye,~And full of shame forthwith
19     7|           knotted tresses; to the eye~Not yellow gold with brighter
20     7|           Yet might the observing eye of things concealed~Conjecture
21     7|          to revere;~And with that eye, which in his pupillage,~
22     7|           in earth, unseen of any eye.~ ~ LXVI~So speaking, to
23    10|     slumber would have closed her eye:~But fairies cannot at their
24    10|        and now westward turn your eye,~Where you shall thirty
25    11|       lashed it in his spite,~The eye its bottom through the waves
26    12|      unveiled to the Circassian's eye:~She thought to him alone;
27    13|   pleasant shore; from whence the eye~Might ocean and the hills
28    13|        look and dark, and but one eye,~The leader of the troop,
29    13|      sight where magic blears the eye.~Fix, ere with me you to
30    14|   standing in full many a widow's eye,~Who weeping and attired
31    14|      sought by faithful heart, an eye,~Full of compassion, raised;
32    15|        been his last assault. His eye~He turns, and when the wild-fires,
33    15|           damsel views with equal eye,~And for his prisoners'
34    16|        new disaster with his very eye.~Hence he the choicest of
35    17|     caused her woes, with pitying eye~Looks on, and pines, --
36    17|         might be his with fearful eye,~Into his craven nature
37    17|      sleep opprest, he closed his eye:~So heavily, no badgers
38    18|      storms, with horrid face and eye,~Which threat the elements
39    18|    Lurcanio next met Dardinello's eye;~He upon earth Dorchino
40    19|        directs it with so true an eye,~The feathered weapon bores
41    20|        XLII~"The gentle maid, her eye bedimmed with tear,~In pity
42    20|       crimson wore.~One dares not eye the other, and they stand~
43    20|        wind, sees vanish from the eye~The Greek Morea; rounding
44    21|       keeps on earth her downcast eye;~For ill the simple truth
45    22|         array,~The modest roll of eye and girlish strain,~With
46    22|          hidden is, but searching eye~In the long run the secret
47    22|         near,~With more attentive eye and front to front --~"This
48    23|          wizard old;~And made her eye and eyelid sorely strain,~
49    23|          drew near,~And with fixt eye examined every place;~Who
50    23|        hast scanned me with thine eye,~To that thine other wish
51    24|        surprise;~And keeps a wary eye, and smites and flies.~ ~
52    24|         on the watch, whose eager eye~Waits on his wit, wheels
53    24|            who on her his languid eye~Had fixt, as she bemoaned
54    25|      demand was made, before mine eye~Beneath the lymph engulphed
55    26|          each cavalier~Had but an eye to false Maganza's train.~
56    26|          Beast and hideous to the eye,~With teeth of wolf, an
57    27|      furious wildfire darts, that eye~Pursues the progress of
58    28|           fairest deemed in every eye,~Who must appear the foulest
59    28|      brighter ray:~There laid his eye, and saw, what he had slighted~
60    30|       shore; while from his level eye~Their hulls the tall and
61    31|       though undiscerned~Of human eye, we can support in peace.~
62    33|           was the winged pest;~An eye of fire it had, a cruel
63    33|        huge, and shapeless to the eye;~The talon crook'd; rapacious
64    34|           Elias, rapt from mortal eye.~ ~ LXIX~Four goodly coursers
65    36|      seemed Mars, Marphisa to the eye~Seemed an infernal Fury,
66    37|        could be craved by wishful eye:~For her Cylander felt such
67    37|         bridegroom, with a jocund eye,~Handed the draught, who
68    38|          found such favour in his eye,~That God from thee the
69    40|       time that sage foresaw with eye divine,~And told the woe
70    40|          to aid:~By him with evil eye King Pepin's son,~So strong
71    40|        where~The host beneath his eye their plunder share.~ ~
72    41|          signal little boots; the eye~Sees not amid the dim and
73    41|  Foreseeing the assault with wary eye,~Prepared, and at close
74    41|     himself, the County turns his eye~And sees his Brandimart
75    42|         colours rare~Cheating the eye, in mixt mosaic strove,~
76    42| inscription there which meets the eye~Recites at length Lucretia
77    43|          to be unseen of watchful eye.~ ~ XXXIX~"Me my wife's
78    43|        silent; both with downcast eye.~So feeble is my tongue,
79    43|           the dome with wondering eye,~Anselmo thought his intellects
80    43|     Rimini~Rinaldo rode that very eye, nor stayed~In Montefiore
81    43|           for more~Than one short eye, with them to make abode;~
82    44|           and stage-play meet the eye;~And, writ with truth, above,
83    44|        regard her with a mother's eye:~Let her refuse and keep
84    45|         every credence, from mine eye~Concealed (and woe is me),
85    46|            unless dazzled is mine eye~By those fair faces, is
86    46|           he told so movingly, no eye~Remained, amid those martial
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