Canto

 1     1|       youthful rage and furious heat,~Who on king Charles', the
 2     1|      yon rising sun~This raging heat has kindled in thy breast.~
 3     1|        long flight and summer's heat.~She from her saddle 'mid
 4     1|         little less, in furious heat,~Ere the foiled Saracen
 5     2|      The goaded charger, in his heat of blood,~Forces whate'er
 6     5|        bed,~To shun the burning heat or pinching cold,~And Albany,
 7     5|         shall quench my amorous heat.'~ ~ XXVI~"So said the knight;
 8     5|     Eager to finish at a single heat.~Nor counter to his wish
 9     6|          to chase~The scorching heat which rages in his veins,~
10     6|       know not what; and in his heat~So made the myrtle shake
11     6|        loving and unloving at a heat:~Two months, I reigned not
12     8|     sand and air both boil with heat,~In mode that might have
13     8|         sea and sky.~ ~ XXI~The heat and thirst and labour which
14     8|        Rogero I abandon in this heat,~For Scotland; to pursue
15     8|       frozen marrow pierced the heat;~Who, after, when he saw
16     8|        with devouring flame and heat,~Unquenchable, and scarce
17     9|         hastes in his impatient heat,~Eager to reach that isle,
18    10|   hunter follows up the hare~In heat and cold, on shore, or mountain-height;~
19    10|       the sea below,~In furious heat, deserts his sure regale~
20    12|     they blinded by their angry heat.~ ~ LIV~But Ferrau, who
21    13|         a brand, which, full of heat~And smoke, was smouldering
22    14|     move their arms? for in his heat~King Rodomont exclaims,
23    18|        Michael gave command,~To heat to enmity and fierce affray~
24    19|       wrath refrain;~In furious heat, he springs upon Medore,~
25    20|       warrior more to sting and heat.~To him for promised convoy
26    22| overcome by feverish thirst and heat,~Lifted the weighty morion
27    23|     waxed so wroth that, in his heat of blood,~The Tartar little
28    23|       Orlando, well beneath the heat~Some deal might wince, opprest
29    23| sheperd-swain, who to allay the heat,~With which he saw his guest
30    24|          when his anger and his heat secede,~After short interval,
31    24|       all over fired with angry heat.~At him the Sarzan monarch
32    25|      Exposed to fierce Apollo's heat; in reach,~Nor myrtle-tree
33    26|       while no pain,~So him his heat of blood, disdain, and ire,~
34    29|        as new love the king did heat and goad,~He moved some
35    29|       paragon of continence did heat~What simples she had culled,
36    30|      When Reason, giving way to heat of blood,~Herself from hasty
37    33|         gan the champions' fury heat,~And fast and hard their
38    34|      rain and summers scorching heat.~ ~ VIII~In that dim cavern
39    34|   region of eternal fire;~Whose heat the saint by miracle suspends,~
40    35|     make them shake in fiercest heat.~Brandimart many deem the
41    36|       and inflamed with furious heat,~Has not the courage, when
42    36|         at being in that second heat~So easily reversed upon
43    37|      daring and through amorous heat,~He with too little thought
44    40|        days before,~To Rome, in heat and haste, some helpful
45    42|         Who sweats at once with heat and quakes with cold,~Nor
46    42|         liquid crystal flew,~By heat and thirst unto the river
47    43|    glorious gain,~Which neither heat nor cold can take, my woe~
48    44|       Leo, though Rogero in his heat~Slaughters his routed van
49    46|     maid, warmed with prophetic heat;~Who, 'mid long labour and '
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