Canto

 1     1|          good master of Albano's hill~(As one within whose raging
 2     1|      from fruitful vale to naked hill:~And well it was the mail
 3     2|       the left side a cultivated hill~Excludes the fervors of
 4     4|       man the means to climb the hill.~The castle seemed the very
 5     4|       power:~She down the rugged hill descended slow,~Until she
 6     4|        steps by which the rugged hill to round;~And climb, till
 7     4|     breaks them; and at once the hill~To an inhospitable rock
 8     5|          Vesuvius, nor Sicilia's hill,~Nor Troy-town, ever, with
 9     6|      cultivated plain, delicious hill,~Moist meadow, shady bank,
10     6|        the gales which blow from hill or sea,~And, with a joyous
11     6|       Were passage, whether over hill or plain;~That he might
12     6|        dulcet style;~Others, the hill or tufted tree below,~In
13     7|          nigh directly, scaled a hill's ascent.~But, when arrived
14     7|       and ball.~Now underneath a hill by fountain cast,~They read
15     7|       past:~ ~ XXXII~Now by glad hill, or through the shady dale,~
16     7|         By farm and city, and by hill and plain;~But seeks her
17     7|     brook, which trickled from a hill,~Streaming towards a limpid
18     8|      wearying cry,~Which deafens hill and dale, and sea and sky.~ ~
19     9|        The boar in fury from the hill descending,~ ~ LXXIV~Who
20    10|   burning sunbeams play~Upon the hill and thence rebound; below~
21    11|       distant shore~And wood and hill rebound the deafening roar.~ ~
22    11|            LXXXIII~From plain to hill, from champaign flat to
23    12|      went,~Searching the forest, hill, and level land,~Field,
24    12|       like that, with which from hill repair,~Or from the champaign'
25    13|        footsteps pressed;~Only a hill, whose woody top is beat~
26    13|       town, hidden by the wooded hill,~And which not more than
27    13|        time they robbing aye, by hill and plain,~Scower fruitful
28    14|         envy, seeks the count by hill and plain:~Next joys himself
29    17|        shore, and seems a moving hill.~Tusks jutting out like
30    17|      forth his prisoned flock to hill and meads.~ ~ LV~"He held
31    18|         Rodomont arose,~Though a hill had been uprooted by the
32    18|     Scowered, here and there, by hill and plain, the land;~Hoping
33    18|         an easy rise, a pleasant hill;~Which myrtle, orange, cedar-tree,
34    18|          Seen in that gleam, and hill and plain's extent.~With
35    19|         extended~About it, and a hill behind ascended.~ ~ LXV~
36    20|         the magic tower upon the hill~Was razed, the dwelling
37    20|         climbing, nor descending hill, survey~Each other's face,
38    22|    forest, at the feet~Of a fair hill, arrived beside a font,~
39    22|          we have yet beyond that hill to hie,~And little time
40    23|   assistance stood in need.~At a hill's foot, with her avenging
41    23|     hearkens not, and climbs the hill:~ ~ XXXVIII~Whither the
42    23|     sight,~Who had halted on the hill above the plain:~And, after
43    23|        almost dead with fear,~By hill and dale, by straight and
44    24|        far the damsel pricked by hill and plain,~She reached the
45    25|    narrow way~Was to that rugged hill the stubborn key;~A town,
46    27|         tempest blow,~And of the hill or valley, in its way,~One
47    27|   hundred miles he roved, 'twist hill and plain,~Ere he came up
48    28|          bent,~Journey by many a hill and many a plain;~And find
49    29|          that for aye Parnassus' hill and well~Shall ring with
50    29|           At last he reached the hill whose boundary height~Arragonese
51    31|         foreign countries and by hill and plain;~Whom they returning
52    31|             Rose all about, that hill, dale, wood, and glade,~
53    32|       warrior meet;~And from the hill descends into the plain:~
54    32|       without squire, alone,~The hill descending by the nearest
55    32|         And seek another inn, by hill or dale.~In fine, that law
56    33|     evermore afoot would fare~Up hill or down, by mountain or
57    33|          a vent.~ ~ CX~Upon this hill which well-nigh kissed the
58    34|         Here other valley, other hill and plain,~With towns and
59    34|          swollen bladders here a hill did stand,~Whence he heard
60    35|        river's bank, they gain~A hill, and on that hill a hallowed
61    35|         gain~A hill, and on that hill a hallowed fane.~ ~ XVI~
62    35|      lovely nymph, that from the hill descends,~To the Lethean
63    37|      Parnassus and high Cynthus' hill~Resound your praise, and
64    37|         Sad Ulany shall tramp by hill and dale;~But seats her
65    37|        Lemnos' pleasant isle, by hill or plain,~Of manly visage
66    38|           in fury goes~To a high hill, the southern wind's abode;~
67    38|           in troops divide,~At a hill's foot, wherewith the plains
68    38|          his host and climbs the hill's ascent,~Like one that
69    38|      that from some neighbouring hill~The Arabs have poured down,
70    41|        slow;~And where the rocky hill slopes seaward most,~All
71    41|       that hallowed cell, on the hill's brow,~A little church
72    42| thorniest valley and by roughest hill,~And wheresoever darkest
73    42|          mount;~Or was it on the hill of Helicon?~'Tis Beatrice,
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License