Canto

 1     1|      who before us flies,~And parts the wood with such impetuous
 2     2|  CANTO 2~ ~ ARGUMENT~A hermit parts, by means of hollow sprite,~
 3     4|      their mischief, in these parts are found.~Hence, whether
 4     4|      Scarped smooth upon four parts, the mountain bare~Seemed
 5     6|    divides~The plain into two parts: A cruel dame~A bridge maintains,
 6    10|       made~His envoy to these parts in search of aid.~ ~ LXXV~
 7    11|   from the lady's bosom fair,~Parts which are wont to be concealed
 8    11|       As well to you of other parts should I~Relate, which she
 9    14| spread,~Concealed her hideous parts; and evermore~Beneath the
10    14|   from the ditch on different parts would scale~The inner bulwark'
11    15|     fray,~Found only in those parts, and wont to won~Ashore
12    16| Agramant unites the rest,~And parts the troops who to the battle
13    17|        So shalt thou in those parts have wherewithal~To feed
14    17|       cleft and broke~In many parts, nor thrown away a stroke.~ ~
15    18|       s lord.~ ~ CLI~Upon all parts, a freezing fear goes through~
16    18|      Charles and Oliver their parts have done,~Turpin and Ogier,
17    19|     lord is little dear,~With parts reversed, would fill each
18    20|   this, they these to various parts convey,~And to the bearers
19    21|       return again into those parts.~But nought availed the
20    22|     away~Come lately to those parts: so many true~And valiant
21    22|      quest,~From neighbouring parts and distant; but unknown~
22    23|    green abodes,~In a hundred parts, their cyphered names are
23    24|       he has wounded in seven parts or eight,~And reft his shield
24    24|     they fare~Through wildest parts, for many and many a day;~
25    25|        who moves in fire,~And parts heaven, earth, and ocean
26    26|     the sell;~Whom into equal parts those strokes divide,~Half
27    27|      as his points and nimble parts, more near,~He, in this
28    27|  exhales his amorous rage:~So parts, constrained his lady to
29    29|    what wise.~ ~ XXXII~In all parts round about this chosen
30    31|      had known.~ ~ LXXVII~She parts, and has anew already planned~
31    31|       and glade,~From distant parts, the deafening din rebounded;~
32    33|   with rugged mound,~Apennine parts, and Alp and sea surround.~ ~
33    35|        as exprest.~ ~  LII~He parts; and save that in a caverned
34    37|      city rule,~Which Mincius parts, and moats with marshy pool.~ ~
35    37|   their gowns shall clip, and parts unveil~That decency and
36    39|    Save that a war of distant parts they try;~For there is none
37    39|      fight,~Though in unequal parts (for, of the slain,~By far
38    40|       before,~So that in many parts the ooze was spied.~Filled
39    42|       in the sky,~As the soul parts, are heard on every side;~
40    42|       rocky found,~In all its parts so mountainous and drear,~
41    42|    from those dark and gloomy parts to steer.~ ~ LIX~When him
42    43|     so these waste and watery parts?~ ~ LXI~"And that to city
43    43| Flordelice, arriving in those parts,~Raises the quarried slabs
44    46|         LXXXVII~He reverently parts from Hercules' side,~From
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