Canto

 1     3|     dame),~In various garb and guise the shadows came.~ ~ XXI~
 2     3| knowing his condition: In this guise~The couple stand together,
 3     4|        and promontory sinks in guise,~That he discerns not flat
 4     4|   through these woods in lowly guise.~Besides, the eternal trophy
 5     5|     peer resolved, but in such guise,~He should not be with vantage
 6     7|       maid remains, in piteous guise,~Hearing of him so far removed,
 7     7|     for false Alcina, found in guise~Which no new means of slippery
 8     8|        in shade;~She paused in guise, which in uncertainty~Might
 9     9|        discerned with pain;~In guise that skilful surgeon tries
10     9|     him alive, and in no other guise,~Would have, and lightly
11     9|   weapon flames in lightning's guise,~And vents the thunder from
12    11|    back, to which he wends,~In guise that, crawling up the sandy
13    11|   spake, she turned her in the guise~Of Dian, framed by artists,
14    12|     haughty front, and in such guise,~The God of war would less
15    12|      maid of pleasing look and guise;~Who seemed to Roland little
16    13|   Comes to my aid; but in such guise, that I~The homely saw,
17    15|     breast he swaddled in such guise,~He could not loose himself;
18    15| Assailing him together in this guise.~Him they dismembered often
19    15|       Astolpho had not in like guise~Borne off his heels, pursues
20    17|         and bears his snout~In guise of brach, who enters on
21    18|      one to smite and slay,~In guise, that for a record should
22    18|        spirit, and in mournful guise,~On having bid his men a
23    18|     sees them hurrying in such guise,~Is certain that the twain
24    19|     above a month, in tranquil guise,~The happy lovers rested
25    19|  aboard kneeled down in humble guise,~And Heaven for peace and
26    19|       south, a safe resort)~In guise of theatre the town extended~
27    19|      haughty show,~And arm, in guise of warriors, in the square.~
28    20|      to strip off the glorious guise~And ornaments wherewith
29    22|        a horrid larum, than in guise~Of pigeons at the musquet'
30    22|        find a champion of such guise~As keeps the sell, while
31    23|        a mountain~O'erhangs in guise of arch the crystal fountain.~ ~
32    24|  Roland, they but sin in other guise.~For, what proves folly
33    25|     and loose you see,~In many guise, and hers, with many a turn,~
34    25|        her ways, less fair her guise;~Nor yet the heart returned
35    25|     took me, and explained the guise~In which I might the long-sought
36    26|       a quarrel of such paltry guise,~Which offers hindrance
37    26|        to wander in too wide a guise.~And that she need not doubt
38    26|    leave their quarrel in such guise the two~Esteem foul scandal;
39    27|        not of a nature -- of a guise --~To be conceived, much
40    27|        Brunello bore~In such a guise, yet grieved the monarch
41    28|       for smiles; with altered guise,~He waxed ruddy, gay, and
42    28|     her pale face and troubled guise,~The sorrow of that dame
43    29|       words I spake, in random guise,~-- By that, which can the
44    31|        every side,~Who, in the guise of trophy, to a tree~Fastened
45    32|       skilled in arms of every guise,~Who loves Rogero and to
46    32| generous Bradamant, in prudent guise,~Who could not bear to see
47    33|        the hills, in tempest's guise,~Swoop the fierce Germans
48    35|      courts, and in far better guise~And better odour, than the
49    35|     like one astound, in idiot guise.~ ~ LI~Silent and sad, he
50    36|      on the champaigne in such guise,~Nigh half her helm was
51    37|    castle be conveyed~In other guise than borne upon a bier:~
52    37|    years her visage shows,)~In guise wherein some doleful criminal~
53    37|      and chain,~And shield, in guise of trophy fasten there;~
54    39|  stands, as one that in unwary guise,~Has chanced on fell and
55    39|     upon the beach in wondrous guise,~That, bound for France,
56    40|     roof, and turret there,~In guise of tempest on the Nubians
57    41|       who saw Gradasso in such guise,~As showed that to return
58    42|     open gallery or pavilion's guise;~Which from eight separate
59    43|        yet noble is the lady's guise.~With pleasing visage she
60    43|       visage of such loathsome guise:~Ill-favoured -- such was
61    43|       lay~With ruddy drops, in guise of pattering rain.~That
62    44|      than under roof of lordly guise,~Or in some royal court,
63    45|    declare,~And how he in this guise in prison pined,~To his
64    45|     LXXXIII~Twice in fraternal guise and oftener threw~Leo his
65    46|    dames and damsels troop, in guise~Of pigeons round the lists,
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