Canto

 1     1|      the paynim king, extended straight,~Lay on his battered lord
 2     2|    kindly friar, that he~Would straight conduct her to some haven
 3     2|      wind, and soars amain.~So straight the necromancer's upward
 4     2|    fortunate account this day.~Straight wend me to the keep, sir
 5     5|        Mount Alban's lord,~And straight behind the peer the portal
 6     6| Denmark's land, to live a nun,~Straight from her native Scotland
 7     6|   pinions long had plied,~In a straight line, without one stoop
 8     6|        not their equal, he the straight~And spacious way deserts,
 9     7|        thither did her journey straight pursue,~Where she met Aymon'
10     8|   embarked the next array,~And straight to sea dispatched the warlike
11     8|      by the way most near~Went straight towards the foe: but what
12    10|       The passage lay across a straight, he came;~And there an ancient
13    11|       the strife attended:~And straight his wishes leant towards
14    12|     there who, in that unhappy straight,~Stops for his comrade,
15    13|      show.~Each crooked way or straight her feet explore~Within
16    15|      yonder path conducts thee straight to slaughter.~ ~ XLIII~"
17    16|        that street, which in a straight line leads~Up to St. Michael'
18    17|        nature be returned,~And straight began to think how he might
19    18|    games appointed were.~ ~ CV~Straight to the city ride the martial
20    18|   which I spoke suspended,~She straight agnized the harness she
21    19|       the stone,~The knife was straight at work or ready pin.~And
22    21| revenge to wreak,~Assailed him straight in a sequestered place.~
23    22|   first design,~Keeps the bark straight before the cresting brine.~ ~
24    22|   pride and haughty vaunt,~Who straight bethought him of the horn
25    22|        highroad, which is both straight and plain,~That we in time
26    23|  raised his haughty front,~And straight blasphemed the eternal Hierarchy,~
27    23|     witness to her lies;~Which straight the miserable father knew;~
28    23|     fear,~By hill and dale, by straight and crooked way,~By fosse
29    24| granted Isabella's prayer,~And straight to truce and peace disposed
30    24|  African with ready blade,~And straight with double force the stroke
31    26|    side,~He who well knew her, straight uprose and met,~And asked
32    26|     not far away,~And the road straight towards that fountain led,~
33    28|    better speed.~ ~ LXXXVII~He straight makes launch the vessel
34    28|          XCII~To pass to Afric straight, the cavalier~Kept to the
35    35|     and glorious name to bear,~Straight to the paynim's bridge resolves
36    35|     him evermore,~He bowns him straight her footsteps to pursue:~
37    37|        cannot venge the stain.~Straight spent in him, not simply
38    41| Sobrino thrown;~And bowned him straight to make the steed his own.~ ~
39    41|        he smote and flung;~But straight from earth that fierce old
40    41|      he withstood,~He shall be straight delivered from that pain:~
41    42|       the rising light:~He the straight road to Rhine and Basle
42    44|      time prevent his standing straight.~ ~ XXVIII~To honour those
43    45|      like Leo; and, that done,~Straight in despite would slay himself;
44    45|     now cuirass scatter,~While straight and back strokes, aimed
45    45| courser best.~ ~ LXXXVI~Now by straight way and now by crooked wound~
46    46|      with my present love have straight replaced.~ ~  XLI~"That
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