Canto

 1     2|  descent.~Then, looking round, descried an elm-tree old,~Which furnished
 2     4|       fearing of the sun to be descried.~ ~ VII~"A castle on the
 3     5|    well known before, the king descried,~His thanks to God with
 4     6|       at something in the wood descried,~Scared by I know not what;
 5     7|       white hand is oftentimes descried,~Which narrow is, and somedeal
 6     7|       well, that, by the youth descried,~She might the sage Atlantes'
 7     7|       lofty virtues, as that I descried~Thee, listening to my lore
 8     9|     not till the bridegroom he descried,~Yet waited not till he
 9     9|      and that of Zealand, they descried,~One seen before, and one
10     9|       the deepest sea his bark descried,~So that no longer distant
11    10|       Are left astern, and now descried no more;~Since to shun Friesland
12    10|    stood sentry on the citadel~Descried the navy of the invading
13    10|         looking down, Angelica descried~In passing, to the rock
14    11|        finger placed,~Angelica descried, and which of yore~From
15    11|    soon as him the monster has descried,~And skiff at little interval,
16    12|        the damsel had sometime descried~This dread and direful combat,
17    13|       surprised by Love, ere I descried~That freedom in my Love,
18    14|      long was had rode, ere he descried~A passing-cruel spectacle
19    16|   Charles; who heard, and then descried~The new disaster with his
20    17|       things related I in part descried,~And from him, present at
21    17|      in place of Gryphon: when descried~Or Norandine, he rising
22    18|     him hurtling form his sell descried.~ ~  CLV~Letting the flyers
23    20|      laughed parforce, when he descried~That beldam's face, though
24    20|      the more beauty is in her descried,~The more that she is thine
25    22|     thrust and smite;~And none descried his fury to oppose;~For
26    24|      reposed short time ere he descried~An errant knight descend
27    27|    sought,~Nor here nor there, descried the long-sought prey.~To
28    28|     the rich bridge in Avignon descried.~For these and more, which '
29    29|       a bird in air which they descried.~The ass upon a mountain-summit
30    31|       lord Mount Alban's chief descried,~In warfare so renowned
31    32|     now the opened portals she descried,~And drawbridge dropt, and
32    33|      drawbridge clear they her descried;~ ~ LXIX~Not thinking, howsoe'
33    33|      Rinaldo and Gradasso, who descried~Baiardo's flight, the conqueror'
34    33|      The famous Balearic isles descried,~And Ivica, that in his
35    33|       armed cavalier should be descried.~And, for impossible appears
36    34|     than those which are below descried;~Here other valley, other
37    34|     coiners and of robbers, he descried;~Next broken bottles saw
38    34|        sense of many others he descried,~Who, he believed, no dram
39    36|        me (for I his open face descried).~Rinaldo's youthful brother
40    37|       Ulany, that in Bradamant descried,~-- Known both by voice
41    40|         nor gleam was anywhere descried,~When first the fleets in
42    40|      The things about them all descried so clear~That night was
43    40|    full sail approaching, they descried~A helmless barque, with
44    41|     finally he knew, and plain descried~Rogero scrupled to put forth
45    41|    Brandimart, that upon earth descried~The king Sobrine, assailed
46    41|    Gradasso, desperate when he descried~Himself all wet, and smeared
47    42|      sky disturbed he suddenly descried,~He saw the sun's dimmed
48    42|    Therein her master was well descried,~It might be said; she shook
49    42|     great palace fronting them descried:~Whence squires with blazing
50    44| Advanced before the others, he descried~A cavalier, in crimson vest,
51    46|      gloomy shades Rogero they descried;~Firm not to swallow food
52    46|     thy darksome dungeon drew,~Descried the truth, as this I now
53    46|     prudent king of Hungary is descried,~Who does due honour to
54    46|        in twain.~ ~ XCII~He is descried, amid a fair array~Of poets
55    46|        valiant knight, is here descried;~For daily broke a thousand
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