Canto

 1     1|       flushed visage kindles into flame.~ ~ LXXI~After the woeful
 2     1|           dear,~Whose charms such flame had kindled, meet his eye.~
 3     2|          deepest hate her amorous flame,~Now pines, himself, the
 4     2|          burning with as fierce a flame,~"A thief thyself, if Fame
 5     2|       piteous sighs which seem of flame;~And, if he joins Orlando --
 6     2|         he had heard, he nursed a flame.~ ~ XXI~For when Angelica,
 7     2|            From far it shone like flame, and seemed not dight~Of
 8     2|        full of pity, kindles into flame~As Pinabel his cruel durance
 9     3|      alabaster rich and rare.~The flame of a clear-burning lamp
10     3|          and lucid, and as red as flame.~So that although no sun-beam
11     3|       gyves, if stedfast were her flame.~"If thou wert Mars himself,
12     4|           desire, and if an equal flame~Move one and the other sex,
13     5|          my inmost bosom felt the flame;~And that he little loved,
14     5|         knight,~Ariodantes such a flame had lit~In the young damsel'
15     5|    quenched the haughty warrior's flame,~But the fond love, which
16     6|    New-severed, when it yields to flame and spark,~Sometime in vain
17     6|          delights; nor I a weaker flame~For her, within my burning
18     7|         above him, at the sight~A flame, like that of kindled sulphur,
19     8|          moved by wind, or rather flame.~ ~ VII~Nor will the falconer'
20     8|        Then blazes with devouring flame and heat,~Unquenchable,
21     8|         the day~(Now kindled into flame) had seemed at rest;~That
22     9|           it, ere the sky~Is in a flame, as well as burning ground,~
23    11|      cloud and comes to ground in flame,~Who, when he tempted Eve
24    11|        lights increase,~Until the flame is spread the country through,~
25    11|        well conclude,~Nor hid the flame that he within him bare.~
26    12|    distant flicker of a quivering flame.~Orlando to the rock approached,
27    12|           evermore;~But the clear flame betrayed the haunt by night.~
28    13|        And left no less an ardent flame than I.~Nor lacked there
29    13|          less on him did prey~The flame, that in his constant bosom
30    13|         on woman, since the ruddy flame~Has warmed, or water had
31    14|          paynims go,~And fire and flame in their encampment blow;~ ~
32    14|          keeps away~The advancing flame, the wretch his life defends.~
33    14|        crackling of the murderous flame.~No more of this, no more! --
34    15|         cross,~Them into dust the flame reduced, that room~Might
35    15|        and spent~By the devouring flame the Christians lit.~And
36    15|       close union of the wind and flame,~And, nourished not by hay
37    16|            yet cannot quench, his flame,~And of himself and worthless
38    16|        each Scot more fierce than flame.~The Moors believed that
39    17|         it now behoves his valour flame~More clear than light, or
40    18|         his courage brighten into flame.~All else he deems the courier
41    18|        Charles, was the consuming flame,~He ranged his troops anew:
42    18|        her with fierce and sudden flame had warmed.~ ~ LXXII~Aquilant
43    21|         store,~The former amorous flame was quickly turned~Into
44    21|           was with the venom in a flame~Wherewith her swelling bosom
45    22|          memory retrace the cruel flame~Which preyed upon his fair
46    23|         wends not, of the amorous flame~Which so consumes her, she
47    24|           In scaping Durindane, a flame in show~(He shifts so quickly)
48    25|       full, and bright with ruddy flame;~And, in the midst, is manifest
49    25| deep-wounded heart; with sighs of flame,~Breathed from her inmost
50    25|          been compelled the cruel flame to face:~There Flordespina
51    25|       view,~Straitway the ancient flame breaks forth anew.~ ~ L~"
52    26|           rage his heart was in a flame,~As well as that the horse
53    27|          scaped alive so fierce a flame.~Brandimart does his best,
54    29|           herself i' the midst of flame;~And ever on one thought
55    31|          strife were blown into a flame~Between Gradasso and the
56    32|           wings, again I soar;~To flame and fall, tormented evermore.~ ~
57    34|         next, and redder far~Than flame, to that fair chariot yokes
58    35|      below:~But, born of wind and flame, good Rabican~So dextrous
59    35|         paynim's fury to a mighty flame;~So that, without the power
60    36|      aside~More than one ravening flame, and oft was spent~The fire,
61    36|           wife with an incestuous flame;~ ~ LXXIV~And country, sire,
62    38|         burned in him the amorous flame.~ ~ II~If from her side
63    41|       burns, appears~To shine and flame more clearly to the sight,~
64    42|      conveyed~To swallow fire and flame i' the frozen lake:~For
65    43|          of light~From that first flame my gentle consort blew:~
66    43|          bright jewels flash like flame,~Her stubborn heart was
67    43|         Anselmo to the city, in a flame;~And to the farm despatched
68    44|       against Bradamant with fury flame,~And both alike, with sudden
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