Canto

 1     1|          She from her saddle 'mid spring flowers descends~And takes
 2     1|           from which his troubles spring,~The sole occasion of his
 3     1|     brindled bulls or tawny lions spring~To forest warfare with such
 4     1|     different moods inspire.~Both spring in Arden, with rare virtue
 5     3|        womb a princely race shall spring,~Whose name through Italy
 6     3|      Captains and cavaliers shall spring from thee,~Who both by knightly
 7     3|       much as that from him shall spring a pair~Of brothers, leagued
 8     5|          should know, that in the spring~Of life, I to the palace
 9     5|          assay.~And, ready now to spring his secret snare,~He sought
10     7|     clothed in corporal rind;~The spring of thousand palms and festal
11     7|      remorse and shame within him spring,~When on his altered sense
12     8|       from his back to ground did spring,~And freed him from the
13     9|           Nor quits when gladsome spring returns anew.~ ~ VIII~As (
14    10|     Impossible) her own perpetual spring.~ ~ LXIV~That such a gentle
15    11|          such as sometimes in the spring~We see a doubtful sky, when
16    12|         LVII~Angelica, the sylvan spring beside,~Reposes, unsuspicious
17    14|     thence by many ladders try to spring~Upon the summit of the second
18    17|       wide throat he was about~To spring; so grief had reason overthrown,~
19    18|              XV~But if the mother spring at him, and hang,~Fixing
20    18|       scents that from the marish spring,~After short sojourn there,
21    20|         wear away life's glorious spring~In such effeminate and slothful
22    22|        forest which possessed~The spring wherein the virtuous shield
23    23|        Since nought but ill could spring from him; and one,~Moreover,
24    23|  marvelled at himself, how such a spring~Of water from his eyes could
25    26| ershadowing mountain.~ ~ XXX~This spring was one of those four fountains
26    26|         courser leapt with nimble spring;~And, right and left, she
27    28|         As yet, upon the bloom of spring, the maid~Was a fresh flower
28    31|         either steed would nimbly spring from ground,~As the spur
29    32|      augur, from their loins will spring a breed,~In little season,
30    33|           that good knight should spring, who, 'twould appear,~Guards
31    34|         air, will joy eternity~Of spring, till they angelic trumpets
32    35|          for I have now to make a spring~As far as 'tis from heaven
33    41|       shows that verdant were its spring tide leaves.~ ~ III~The
34    44|           blood below,~A race may spring, that brighter than the
35    46|         saw the blood most freely spring,~And where most wounded
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