Canto

 1   Int|         and Ranaldo drink magic waters -- Angelica is filled with
 2   Int|   search of him. Again the same waters as before are drunk from,
 3     1|    lingered, where the troubled waters roll,~Breast-high, from
 4     1|        wrought,~Whose wonderous waters different moods inspire.~
 5     1|       with such secret bane the waters glide,~Which amorous care
 6     2|       topmast-high the flashing waters flew.~ ~ XXIX~The watchful
 7     8|       stood,~Till where Thames' waters, waxing bitter, meet~Salt
 8     8|      The wrath of Heaven, whose waters drenched the land,~That
 9    10|         then no breath upon the waters blew.~ ~ XXXVIII~They, who
10    10|        turned his back upon the waters blue,~Giving God thanks
11    13|         By ceaseless winds, the waters bathe its feet.~ ~ XX~"Here
12    14|          What time the troubled waters highest swell)~Against the
13    14|          But first, the passing waters, as they stray,~An island
14    15|       Ganges amid the whitening waters roar,~Nigh skirting now
15    15|  supplies,~Whether the circling waters boil or freeze:~But, since
16    15|        long degrees.~Across his waters, some one has supposed~A
17    17|           Tis said the perfumed waters are of power~(So plenteously
18    18|         by limpid fountain fed,~Waters, all round about, the fertile
19    18|       his following.~ ~ CLIV~As waters will sometime their course
20    19|   stream and strong~Of the vext waters, that it hurried through~
21    20|      this blood, where Danube's waters, through~Eight horns or
22    23|       from fuller vein the tear~Waters all cheeks, descending from
23    26|         seeking vent the oozing waters drop,~Hastening to shut
24    29|       hills, whence Nile's full waters spin,~Orlando had not borne
25    30|        vainly would he shun the waters green.~Bathed are knees,
26    30|      more than fair:~For if the waters yet a little rise,~Whelmed
27    31|      Does where Galesus' limpid waters well,~Or lion by the bearded
28    31|  Whelming them upside-down, the waters flow,~And plunge them in
29    32|         near,~Whence Dordogne's waters to the valley wind;~And
30    33|         the Red Sea's extremest waters lave.~A faith well nigh
31    36|         from so fair a font its waters drew:~Whence Clermont, whence
32    37|         whose profound~And miry waters Marganor lay drowned.~ ~
33    37|         and crop and field, the waters go:~Then comes a season
34    39|        of those leaves upon the waters flung!~ ~ XXVII~They wax
35    39|     sword,~And perished mid the waters, one who wrought~Faster
36    39|         to save his life i' the waters thought,~Or, at the worst,
37    40|       destroys, fires burn, and waters drown;~While he, that mighty
38    40|        that channel wide,~Whose waters were cut off the day before,~
39    40|        off, in his o'erwhelming waters drowned;~Over the elm's
40    41|      universal cry,~And roar of waters, which together fight.~Unheard
41    41|        with rage and scorn, the waters rise,~And in a moment wholly
42    41| captains led~Her, gazing on the waters, from the shore,~And to
43    41|         he fears; and, since in waters sweet~(When time and fair
44    41|         erwhelmed by those wild waters died.~Rogero, as to Providence
45    42|    herself immersed,~Upon whose waters she embarked to die.~She
46    43|     finds a vent.~Their way the waters from Benacus take.~Built
47    43|  extends,~Where the sea's briny waters come and go:~This yields
48    43| Brimming with Mincius' prisoned waters, pen.~ ~ LXXI~"I of Adonio
49    43|   through the swell~And foaming waters in that shallop made~For
50    44|      the lone rock, whereon the waters roared,~His farewell to
51    44|     Erewhile restored, in Afric waters ride~Sir Dudon's ships which
52    44|         to its bottom which the waters lave,~The Bulgar fronts
53    46|       through that wide roar~Of waters, where I feared, with troubled
54    46|       Ind and where the Moorish waters flow.~Behold Ginevra! that
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