Canto

 1     2|    strange it seems, so passing Nature's law.~ ~ LV~"Well covered
 2     4|         so fair and bright,~All nature cannot match the wonderous
 3     5|   sinner, he appears~To outrage nature, and his God to dare,~Who
 4     5|         from too ill and foul a nature flow.~Now, that the truth
 5    10|          And he who would their nature read aright~Must thither
 6    10|     blossoms are;~Not that kind nature, in her government,~So nicely
 7    10| following~Is none so beauteous: nature broke the mould~In which
 8    10|     fine, increase~His host, by nature enemies to peace.~ ~ LXXXIX~"
 9    10|       shore, as bare to view~As nature did at first her work compose.~
10    11|      the impious enemy~Of human nature, taught the bolt to frame,~
11    11| cruellest appears~And worst, of nature's impious and malign,~Who
12    13|     rare,~And precious in their nature, gem and vest,~So I might
13    15|      dread~Of the last agony of nature wore;~And the headless body
14    15|  faithless, and of such an evil nature,~That thou mightst town
15    16|       both the lovers hid their nature base,~To others' cost, beneath
16    17|    fearful eye,~Into his craven nature be returned,~And straight
17    18|       The armour, I so well his nature know,~He freely would resign
18    18|         marsh the cause, -- and Nature certainly~Wrongs Famagosta,
19    19|     dance unmeet;~Secure, where nature had her aid denied,~The
20    20|        more your marvel; for by nature~The hare is evermore a timid
21    24|       Through weakness of their nature, sin and err.~One thing
22    25|        Then Love is not of evil nature still;~-- He can at times
23    25|    wreathed these strings;~Even Nature's self, the puissantest
24    25|        to work portentous ends;~Nature and Elements I force: thy
25    26|        be,~(Such was his gentle nature) at the view~Of Mandricardo,
26    27|        might,~Sir, was not of a nature -- of a guise --~To be conceived,
27    27|      are.~ ~ CXIX~"I think that nature and an angry God~Produced
28    27|      CXX~"Why has not bounteous Nature willed that man~Should be
29    27|       ill can act aright,~Since Nature is herself a female hight.~ ~
30    28|          his brother's heir,~By nature with such graces was purveyed,~
31    28|       to be drowned,~Nor he his nature changed by changing ground.~ ~
32    32|        with the loveliest fair,~Nature, so niggard of such courtesies.~
33    32|     Love should make a churlish nature kind,~And not transform
34    34|          And seen by heaven and nature with displeasure,~Was the
35    34|         payment which man owes,~Nature had been contented by the
36    34|        a thought.~For Death and Nature have their watchful eyes~
37    35|       excellent and rare,~Which Nature or which Study can bestow,~
38    36|  courtesy pursue;~For they from nature and from habit gain~What
39    36|        its evil kind will shew.~Nature inclines to ill, through
40    36|        range,~And use is second nature, hard to change.~ ~ II~Among
41    37|        other gift to gain,~(For Nature, without study, yieldeth
42    37|       the sight revealed,~Which Nature, as she could, 'twould seem,
43    38|        stones beyond the use of nature grew;~Which rolling to the
44    43|    heaven above us square,~Know Nature's causes, works, and properties;~
45    43|        my birth a wealthy boon,~Nature that went with graceful
46    43|       life for having done~What Nature prompted and a lover prayed;~
47    44|       XLIX~Of other goods which Nature's hand supplies,~Or which
48    45|      stied~Was he, reserved for nature's latest pain.~There round
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