Canto

 1     1|        And his thinned squadrons fled in disarray;~Namus, with
 2     1|        woods and dark the damsel fled,~By rude unharboured heath
 3     2|          the following peer,~But fled before his cherished lord,
 4     2|         marked the damsel as she fled,~His saddle lightened of
 5     5|         stood amazed, her colour fled,~And, at the fearful tale,
 6     6|        him to the city whence he fled.~"That will I never, while
 7     8|     assured more clearly that he fled,~Within himself to stop
 8    10|         Rogero much, that he had fled~In time from false Alcina,
 9    12|       the giant and the dame who fled,~He from the wood had issued
10    12|      which the fair Angelica had fled.~Angelica, this while, has
11    12|      path than that by which she fled.~ ~ LXXXVI~Through wood
12    13|       house, disarmed and naked, fled,~And some were slain; while
13    14|     masterless, without a banner fled,~Of Arragon, Castile, or
14    14|      what was his the vanquished fled,~The cruel paynim, cheated
15    15|        turned back, and homeward fled outright.~ ~ LIV~Astolpho
16    15|          forest with the plunder fled,~Leapt quickly into his
17    16|  falchion missed the rider as he fled,~But reached the horse's
18    17|    through the house, pale women fled,~Who wept, afflicted sore,
19    17|           to his retreat Martano fled.~Gryphon remained, and sullied
20    18|    Zumara and Canaries' islesmen fled.~ ~ XLIX~But faster than
21    18|    Dardinello valour did instil,~Fled here and there, dismayed
22    19|          as that to which Aeneas fled~With Dido, when the tempest
23    20|          of that appalling bugle fled.~ ~ XC~Above, below, and
24    20|        one the mountain-top,~One fled the hide herself in forest
25    21|         told how she from prison fled;~But suffered from his wound
26    22|       copse, backed Rabican, and fled~With the good courser of
27    22|         tightening now the rein,~Fled at a gallop or a steady
28    22|          roar~ ~ XXII~The warder fled; with him his prisoned train,~
29    22|          many steeds as well are fled and gone;~(These more than
30    22|       his cruel pains.~ ~ XLI~"I fled, not to behold such cruelty,~
31    22|       damsel, through the forest fled.~ ~ LXXV~Pale and dismayed
32    23|      laid dead,~Scarce one alive fled thither, to proclaim~The
33    23|    betrayed:~Who like a she-wolf fled, which, as she hies,~At
34    23|       peace by night and day:~He fled from town, in forest harbouring,~
35    24|       band of rustics turned and fled;~But they, in their disorder,
36    24|        no other sign of him that fled;~At length return to where
37    25| Screaming, the dissipated rabble fled;~The most with cloven limbs
38    25|         numberless were they who fled in fear.~Meanwhile the damsel
39    25|       Fortune to King Charles is fled,~Has with that conquering
40    26|       arms remained for them who fled~Than the sharp goads which
41    27|        Angelica was with Orlando fled;~And hence with jealousy,
42    27|       When from Atlantes' palace fled the two)~Together to unite
43    27|          menace this or that who fled,~And many fugitives, upon
44    27|      beneath his better shoulder fled~The first, that other with
45    27|        charger broke astray,~Who fled before his lord till evening
46    28|        remains (his beauty so is fled)~Enough to warrant what
47    29|      sees him chase his love who fled,~His courser spurs, and
48    30|        it the impetuous wrath is fled,~Which moved his ready tongue
49    31|          thousand of the paynims fled.~ ~ LXXXV~Those whom Rinaldo,
50    31|          from the field in panic fled.~ ~ LXXXVIII~Their king
51    33|         swiftly from the monster fled.~ ~  LXXXVIII~Baiardo to
52    35|          with wings, his courser fled.~The damsel flew his charger
53    36|       own age, he out of Phrygia fled.~Who, after long and wide
54    37|         with the meaner sort are fled,~And whosoever can, the
55    37|       from that lordship had she fled,~Where she in safety hoped
56    39|            XVII~Marsilius too is fled into the town:~So has that
57    39|         Biserta from the carnage fled.~A prisoner valiant Bucifar
58    39|        Of the sacred host, which fled in disarray,~Before the
59    39|       was not even for them that fled:~Since Agramant, a sure
60    40|          while, and with Sobrino fled,~Wept over his Biserta when
61    40|      night~(Saving some few that fled) were all conveyed~Safe
62    42|       his face.~Dismaid, Rinaldo fled the field, and prest~With
63    44|       the Greeks, from whom they fled,~Was borne along, beheld
64    44|          The Grecian troops that fled from them whilere.~Lost
65    44|      they~With all their banners fled in disarray.~ ~ LXXXIX~Leo
66    45|      when his host at Santalbino fled,~Left in his clutch by whom
67    45|       ado had from his faulchion fled.~ ~ VII~He to Ungiardo hastens
68    45|         damsel hope was none,~He fled, perchance, so hoping to
69    46|     repair,~The indignant spirit fled, blaspheming loud;~Erewhile
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