Canto

 1     1|        hue,~And lovely form which broke upon his view.~ ~ LIV~He,
 2     4|         streaks of red and white,~Broke in the east, and cleared
 3     8|         He passed the bridge, and broke the palisade,~Some slain,
 4     8|       pass am I."~And told, still broke by sobs, in doleful tone,~
 5     9|      constrain;~Marking my grief, broke off the intended measure,~
 6     9|      sprung.~ ~ LXX~The lance now broke, his sword the warrior drew,~
 7    10|         So long upon the dame and broke her rest,~The finding herself
 8    10|           lance into three pieces broke;~The thunder on the Earl
 9    10|         none so beauteous: nature broke the mould~In which she cast
10    12|          of France;~ ~ LXXXIII~He broke it on the border of the
11    14|          red and yellow truncheon broke,~That we to you our festive
12    14|        slew,~Before his lance was broke upon the crew.~ ~ XLV~When
13    14|          XLV~When this he saw was broke, the truncheon sound~And
14    16|           ford.~He past his army, broke the bridges down,~And rank'
15    16|              XLIX~Rinaldo, having broke his rested spear,~So wheels
16    16|           Are scattered wide, and broke, and driven along.~ ~ LXXV~
17    17|           the sanguinary foe;~Who broke and hewed, and shook that
18    17|        while from golden dwelling broke the day.~And now, his flock
19    17|        the ensuing morning fairly broke,~To sounds of triumph and
20    17|       before,~And in three pieces broke it on the shield~Which bold
21    17|           foe's already cleft and broke~In many parts, nor thrown
22    18|         guided with his hand,~And broke his helmet's frontal with
23    18|      breast,~That rabble-rout had broke and overthrown,~Struck with
24    18|          band.~These bold Rinaldo broke and overthrew;~Nor troops
25    18|         when the opposing dyke is broke away,~Fall, and with mighty
26    19|        plank, and beam and timber broke:~And certain death to make
27    19|        the others drove at speed,~Broke them, and to the handle
28    19| combatants divided,~Till the dawn broke from Ganges' stream anew;~
29    21|        silence, as they rode,~Was broke, when Sol his hindmost wheels
30    22|         Rabican with the rest had broke his bands,~But that he fell
31    23|        suffered in the strife,~As broke his neck, and stretched
32    23|      Durindana laid his hand,~And broke into the thicket of the
33    23|          a breath~Above a hundred broke and put to death.~ ~ LXI~
34    23|         the shattered lances fly,~Broke in a thousand pieces, to
35    23|      neither spoiled himself, nor broke a bone:~ ~ XCI~Here stopt
36    23|          sun's retreat his sister broke.~Nor far the warrior had
37    23|       rush, and nettle-stalk; and broke,~Like these, old sturdy
38    25|          from her golden dwelling broke the day:~ ~ XCIV~And when
39    26|         other trumpet-strain;~Nor broke her lance in her impetuous
40    26|      truncheon flew, in fragments broke,~But the stout pagan winced
41    26|           so rudely thence Rogero broke,~But that he first with
42    27|       alone, but routed, beat and broke.~ ~ XIX~The Christian host
43    27|          he next a cross's handle broke;~Wherewith her back, and
44    27|          him his restless charger broke astray,~Who fled before
45    27|               CXXXIV~Then silence broke, and with a milder air,~
46    28|          paynim, stirred to fury, broke the rein~Of patience, and
47    30|         sky~Upwent the splinters, broke in the career;~For two or
48    30|        the quick the cruel weapon broke.~ ~ LIII~The assistants'
49    30|          stroke in wary wise,~And broke its force and vigour ere
50    30|         lit;~Its force and vigour broke: for he, below~The better
51    31|     buckler in the cruel shock is broke.~ ~ XI~His lance Guichardo
52    31|      rapid course:~The stranger's broke his spine and shoulder-blade;~
53    33|         burghers, by this monarch broke,~And rebel city stooping
54    33|       link the restless faulchion broke or bored.~If so impassive
55    36|           would blame,~For having broke their pact; and -- with
56    36|        upon its bird of snow,~Nor broke nor bruised the shield,
57    37|           breast;~I' the sixth he broke it, whom in flight he speared:~
58    39|     better certified shall be~Who broke the pact, established by
59    39|           seeing truce and treaty broke, among~The Moorish squadrons
60    39|          than 'tis by me exprest,~Broke with her sword four helms
61    39|    exhortation (so he trowed)~Had broke the treaty made in solemn
62    39|         in view,~Before that levy broke in panic dread:~Like sheep,
63    39|           Olivier, Orlando's kin,~Broke in some sort its force,
64    39|       shield, and in such thunder~Broke on the casque, that Dudon
65    40|         make for Arles,~Who first broke faith, King Agramant or
66    40|           near,~That Agramant had broke the promise plight:~He loves
67    40|       error light.~The Moors were broke and scattered (this whilere~
68    41|    wherein to plant his brand;~He broke the warrior's shield, his
69    41|           both sides his helm has broke:~Fallen is his shield, his
70    41|      round,~Two inches thick, was broke by that fell blow~And cleft;
71    43|          to die, than languish -- broke,~Battered, and crippled
72    45|      therein comfort found;~Since broke by him alone is stubborn
73    46|        was found dead,~The prison broke and prisoner away:~Of what
74    46|          here descried;~For daily broke a thousand lances lay:~Singly
75    46|       from the ground;~And having broke their spears, with faulchions
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