Canto

 1     1|    Ferrau, the Spaniard, in a forest glade.~A second oath the
 2     1|      more lightly through the forest hies~Than half-clothed churl
 3     1|      find.~He up and down the forest bore the dame,~Till to a
 4     1| dismayed,~Bounds, through the forest green in ceaseless fear~
 5     1|  Behold a warrior threads the forest hoar.~The stranger's mantle
 6     1|      or tawny lions spring~To forest warfare with such deadly
 7     1|  measures, pricking frith and forest through,~A mile, or little
 8     1|      of whom~Through the wide forest pricked the weary groom.~ ~
 9     1|    trample, far and near,~The forest seemed to tremble all around;~
10     2|    Whose stony peak above the forest stood;~The daughter of Dodona'
11     4|     he went~Through that wide forest; choosing now this way,~
12     4|    Pricked through the dismal forest dark and drear;~While they
13     4|    echoing through the gloomy forest round,~Loud lamentations
14     5|    matched with hers, through forest gray:~The lioness beside
15     5|    with me through the gloomy forest went,~The worthy guerdon
16     7|     the path, which through a forest lay,~Roughish and somedeal
17     8|      maimed; then t'wards the forest hied;~But on that road small
18     9|      watches for his prey,~In forest, with armed dogs and spear,
19    10|   Issued from cavern and from forest brown,~They sixteen thousand
20    11|      in his hold,~In the lone forest, and secure from sight?~
21    11|        and they~Piercing that forest, issued forth to view~On
22    11|   When a long cry, entering a forest hoar,~-- A load lamenting
23    12|   chariot went,~Searching the forest, hill, and level land,~Field,
24    12|       now here, now there,~In forest now, and now in other place.~
25    12|       haste, they through the forest, here and there,~So scorned
26    12|      where the way~Was in the forest lost, with wood o'ergrown,~
27    12|    After much country seen, a forest gray~She reached, where,
28    13|        ere with me you to the forest go,~To change not when the
29    13|    thus, by fruitful field or forest gray,~Her by forced journeys
30    14|    Beneath the shadow of this forest deep,~Into the rock there
31    15|      through many a field and forest blind,~By many a vale and
32    15|      retreat,~Who through the forest with the plunder fled,~Leapt
33    18|       CXCII~Of old an ancient forest clothed that lair,~Of trees
34    19|    The closest path, amid the forest gray,~To save himself, pursued
35    20|      fled the hide herself in forest hoar;~And this, who turned
36    20|    Without protection, in the forest drear,~Nor sought to make
37    21|      well if given in grot or forest hoar,~Remote from town and
38    21|      again.~All day he in the forest used to hide,~And, when
39    21|       cruel was than beast in forest hoar,~And, prisoned in a
40    22|           XI~And traversing a forest, at the feet~Of a fair hill,
41    22|    steady trot.~From the deep forest issued forth the twain,~
42    22|       view~Some hunter in the forest, or some hind,~To whom he
43    22|       the damsel, through the forest fled.~ ~ LXXV~Pale and dismayed
44    22|   unknown~To all remained the forest which possessed~The spring
45    22|        She from the conscious forest turned away~With that good
46    23|     So that when of the dingy forest clear,~Fair Bradamant her
47    23|       and hurries through the forest gray~That ancient woman,
48    23|    day:~He fled from town, in forest harbouring,~And in the open
49    23|     CXXIX~All night about the forest roved the count,~And, at
50    23|    here some there across the forest hie,~And hurry thither,
51    24|      way.~He is, as 'twere, a forest, where parforce~Who enter
52    24|   up-torn trees, and made the forest hoar~And hollow cave resound,
53    24|       steps I traced into the forest drear;~Nor far within the
54    24|       shed~His arms about the forest, tore his clothes,~Slew
55    24|      the ground now bends the forest green.~Now whirls the broken
56    25|      she wandered through the forest hoar.~ ~ XXVII~"Ranging,
57    26|       the dry wood to fire in forest yields.~ ~ XVII~If ever
58    26|       to appearance, from the forest prest~A cruel Beast and
59    27|    left their caverns in that forest hoar.~Alp and Cevenne's
60    27|    bear and ravening wolf the forest vex;~Wasp, fly, and gad-fly
61    31|   heavy spears, the growth of forest hoar,~Saplings rough-hewn,
62    33|   Baiardo to the neighbouring forest flies,~Seeking the closest
63    33|      view~New prints upon the forest greensward made:~By much
64    34|      spacious hold and lonely forest lay,~Where nymphs for ever
65    35|    limb,~That faster far than forest stag he wended.~With names
66    42|    still~Threaded the tangled forest here and there;~By thorniest
67    42|      loose horses through the forest fed;~And from their brows
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