Canto

 1     1|       warrior pass, by whom were borne~A shield and crest of white;
 2     4|      ocean through;~Now westward borne, and now toward the Bears;~
 3     4|     trust in God, which has been borne too long."~To good Rinaldo'
 4     5|          Duke of Albany arrayed,~Borne on a puissant steed of noble
 5     7|    fortune knew, how freed;~Then borne to India by the griffin
 6     7|          such interval, he hied,~Borne through the perilous, unwonted
 7     9|        the county passed ashore,~Borne on a horse 'twixt brown
 8    10|          snare eschewed.~ ~  LXX~Borne hither, good Rogero, leaving
 9    10|   stirred~By fluttering wind, is borne towards the mount,~Which
10    12|         goddess' flight~Beholds, borne off in such afflicted cheer,~
11    12|    fierce Ferrau, who might have borne away~From all that ever
12    14|          to the Godhead's ear~So borne; which when the blessed
13    15|         they had these conveyed,~Borne to a distance from their
14    15|            But that the duke had borne his mouth away:~ ~ LXXXV~
15    15|   Astolpho had not in like guise~Borne off his heels, pursues with
16    15|       and bear her away,~Who had borne off his heart-core from
17    16|      side~No grief? -- and had I borne for thee to stay,~I know
18    17|        much disdain,~About to be borne off by foreign knight.~A
19    18|         verily Marphisa, who~Had borne away the arms in public
20    18| forthwith the Moorish ensigns be~Borne to the camp, which fosse
21    19|          to her by Count Orlando borne,~And which the damsel for
22    19|        fore-mast by the first is borne away,~The rudder by the
23    19|       And never had herself been borne to ground;~Yet quitted now
24    20|        singly round the world is borne.~Marphisa, for Gabrina's
25    20|        plunder, o'er the billows borne.~With him a hundred other
26    20|           on his foaming courser borne,~Lends louder breath to
27    20|      steed~Which her had thither borne, and -- bent to post~On
28    21|          Who could not thence be borne in other way.~ ~ LXVIII~
29    22|          son.~But Guido, who was borne on heavier steed,~Came at
30    23|    Pinnabel, the event~Of having borne himself so wickedly:~He
31    23|           This now, it seems, is borne by Brava's lord,~And hence
32    23|       done, to them in proof was borne~The gem, which, in reward
33    27|      never deemed they should be borne,~Where they would work the
34    27|     Agramant appealed,~As having borne too long, though sore offended,~
35    27|         beneath him had Brunello borne~Before Albracca, on the
36    27|      Rather to him some time had borne despite;~And often had to
37    29|     waters spin,~Orlando had not borne a dingier skin.~ ~ LX~Nigh
38    29|       thousand more from her had borne.~ ~ LXXIV~Would that of
39    30|          the prize and vaunt had borne away.~So, erred his Doralice,
40    31|           on horse of easy pace.~Borne to the sea by the securest
41    32|     stronger force opprest.~Thus borne from bad to worse, without
42    34|      heavens, wherein of old was borne~From Jewry's misty mountains
43    37|     conveyed~In other guise than borne upon a bier:~Her (so Tanacro
44    37|         lay, Drusilla's corse is borne;~Her with her lord they
45    38|       the flesh of man did take,~Borne for nine months within thy
46    41|      steed, with flowing bridle, borne.~Sobrino on the head he
47    43|       Rinaldo speaks, so swiftly borne~By the quick current flies
48    43|     Banners in front and banners borne in rear,~Whose fields with
49    43|     Christian warriors, homeward borne,~Sorrowing and afflicted
50    44|  Provence by that winged courser borne,~Him nevermore with saddle
51    44|         from whom they fled,~Was borne along, beheld that overthrow,~
52    44|        prince; and better had he borne~To lose as well a portion
53    44|          s fight, wherein (since borne~To ground the Bulgar king
54    46|         that day equipt a demon, borne~By him, in likeness of a
55    46|        not see my promised bride~Borne off by thee; in that Duke
56    46|      cavalier.~Marphisa, thither borne amid the band,~That crowded
57    46|         from Thracian strand had borne the witch.~The costly prize
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