Canto

 1    16|         horse o'erturns and mawls,~Opprest the ponderous courser's
 2    17|       there,~Than, with deep sleep opprest, he closed his eye:~So heavily,
 3    18|           sail, -- by growing wind opprest;~So speedily Sir Rodomont
 4    18|        laid,~Their drooping heads, opprest with shame, decline,~Nor
 5    18|         visit Heatheness, that day opprest:~But that the wise and wary
 6    19|          stirred, the rather that, opprest~And livid with the blow
 7    19|    treasons, each with equal dread opprest.~ ~ XLVII~More spitefully
 8    19|            fed~Master and mariners opprest with dread.~ ~ LXIV~Like
 9    20|      French kin, I left with grief opprest.~ ~ VII~"But reached not
10    21|        wretched elder by his fears opprest?~Thus by the woman's suddenness
11    22|         placed her, yet with sleep opprest,~Before him, and, sore troubled,
12    23|        heat~Some deal might wince, opprest with plate and chain.~He
13    25|           warring thoughts at once opprest;~But neither fitted was
14    25|        laments herself, with grief opprest.~By this the waning day
15    28|            The dame disordered and opprest with gloom;~Having twice
16    28|     Ensuing, aye by heavy thoughts opprest;~Nor can he ever banish
17    28|        what a load of grief she is opprest,~Yet, in her faded cheek
18    29|       fruit, he every one by force opprest.~One by his hand was slain,
19    31|           brethren were) with love opprest,~His tenderness him wholly
20    31|         guard they find with sleep opprest:~They slaughter all, nor
21    32|           powers by stronger force opprest.~Thus borne from bad to
22    32|    suddenly~A woman's feeble sense opprest should be?~Why fence and
23    32|             is still afflicted and opprest.~For that suspicious fear,
24    33|      flourish in an age,~When most opprest the Roman empire lay,~That
25    33|            wound than that of Love opprest."~With that he vanished
26    33|        sore moreover by his fright opprest,~He feared to issue into
27    34|            woe, by smoke well-nigh opprest.~He mounts anew, and him
28    35|          And makes me wander thus, opprest with woe,~For love of Heaven;
29    36|            he died; by banded foes opprest,~Or at close barriers, was
30    39|            have well seven Africas opprest,~And recollecting 'twas
31    39|        tread,~Which, in the grass, opprest with slumber lies;~And,
32    39|         warrior, more than maimed, opprest the plain.~Above a hundred
33    39|           their friend, with grief opprest~For that delusion which
34    43|          wretched judge with grief opprest,~He of his wits well-nigh
35    45| Constantine's sister she, by grief opprest,~Fell down before him; and
36    45|           by fear should wholly be opprest.~ ~ XXXVII~"As every spark
37    46|       haply ne'er had Freedom been opprest.~ ~ VII~The consort of my
38    46|         Lest he, as undefended, be opprest,~And forfeit so without
39    46|          So with the load they lie opprest, with pain~A passage can
40    46|      prisoned spirit have:~No less opprest the doughty paynim lay,~
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