Canto

 1     1| favoured bears away the fruit?~Bare words and looks scarce cheered
 2     4|       four parts, the mountain bare~Seemed fashioned with the
 3     4|    impose:~And as she sees him bare the wondrous shield,~Closes
 4     4|    upon that desert, bleak and bare.~And many at the freedom
 5     5|     the pommel of his falchion bare~I' the ground, its point
 6     7|        wood, or over champaign bare,~By farm and city, and by
 7     7|    drag him, by rough road and bare,~Towards true virtue, in
 8     8|         old Atlantes' work, to bare.~ ~ XI~He raised the crimson
 9     8|       south,~Deserted, barren, bare, and parched with drouth.~ ~
10    10|   spread,~"Now -- now, Rogero, bare the magic shield,~Or in
11    10|    Upon the sea-beat shore, as bare to view~As nature did at
12    11|    lovely visage of its helmet bare;~Towards whom, to deal her
13    11|       flame that he within him bare.~He strives to comfort her,
14    12|   brutish sot, as I behold, is bare,~If thy late words were
15    12|  warriors two, with faulchions bare,~Turning their ready steeds,
16    17|        Infinite gardens, never bare of flower,~Or stript of
17    17|      encounter left his saddle bare,~On the other Gryphon used
18    17| Beginning, upon Alpine regions bare,~To chase the shades and
19    17|       of cuirass and of helmet bare,~And leave in simple cassock,
20    18|          LXVI~And, lifting his bare hand, in sign affied,~From
21    18|  charge the mob outright:~Then bare their falchions, and, amid
22    19|    claws, and blood her tushes bare,~Would natural hate and
23    24|   eagerly,~And, kneeling, with bare head, the prince embrace,~
24    26| conquering troop their temples bare,~All see they have received
25    29|         and o'er the sea-beach bare~For many miles impels the
26    30|        people left the country bare,~Nor (such the ravage) could
27    31|    Guido am yclept) Constantia bare,~Conceived of the illustrious
28    35|      breaking on the sea-beach bare.~Almost without the suburbs,
29    36|      Rogero, hight the second, bare.~Whose brothers, having,
30    39|  Apennine his shaggy back lays bare,~Two turbid torrents with
31    40|     bulwarks was the town nigh bare;~For since Branzardo there
32    40|      habitations is that islet bare;~A pleasing solitude; and
33    40|    wonted might with faulchion bare;~And in a moment stretched
34    41|     gathered force anew.~Lo! a bare rock, ahead, appears in
35    41|    wreck on that rude rock and bare,~All to their private aims
36    43|     secretly to him a daughter bare;~ ~ XIV~"And to prevent
37    43|      hostile hand his side~Lay bare, and from his bosom pluck
38    44|    abode, mid paltry walls and bare,~Amid discomforts and calamities,~
39    44|      earth beneath his courser bare;~Whom at the prince's hest,
40    46|        spears, with faulchions bare~Return, to bandy fierce
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