Canto

 1     2|        sun,~By horrid cliff, by bottom dark and drear;~And giddy
 2     2|       Worked smooth, and at the bottom was a door.~ ~ LXXI~A void
 3     2|          LXXI~A void was at the bottom, where a wide~Portal conducted
 4     2|    ascend;~And said that in its bottom he had seen~A gentle damsel
 5     2|    assayed;~For striking on the bottom of the cell,~The stout elm-bough
 6     4|      Often to rocky height, and bottom wet,~Among the rocks of
 7     6|  LXXVIII~"We soon shall reach a bottom which divides~The plain
 8     9|         the city go,~And at the bottom of a palace-stair,~Conducted
 9     9|     enginery,~Cast in Tartarean bottom, by the hand~Of Beelzebub,
10    10|        trout or grayling to the bottom goes~In stream, which mountaineer
11    11|         this had in the deepest bottom drowned,~That never more
12    11|    deepest main,~Scowers at the bottom, and stirs up the sand.~
13    11|       in his spite,~The eye its bottom through the waves might
14    12|          Heaven, and Oblivion's bottom: but since he~Had not, his
15    14|         if the fosse of certain bottom were.~He past, ran, -- rather
16    14|        hollow line,~Filling the bottom well-nigh to the brink;~
17    18|       his consent,~First in the bottom of a turret pent.~ ~ XCI~
18    22|          and bodily~Both to the bottom of the well are gone.~"Lie
19    22|     stopt they till they to the bottom fell,~By the light, liquid
20    23|   source;~Till, turbid from the bottom to the top,~Never again
21    24| outright,~And cleft from top to bottom equally;~Shearing the sleeve
22    24|     Into hell's deep and gloomy bottom; where~To think, thou wert
23    27|        and Mardricardo's lay~At bottom; whence the dame was deeply
24    29|   risqued his neck in that deep bottom, who~Rehearsed the tale
25    29|     shoulders hent.~He from the bottom climbed, thus loaded sore,~
26    31|      steed's feet the faithless bottom pound.~He, with his lord,
27    32|         obscure~Steams from the bottom of some marshy dale,~Which
28    33|         spirits of the infernal bottom quake.~The hall, whereof
29    37|     below,~And sink them to the bottom, if they might;~I say the
30    39|        That many vessels to the bottom went;~Then, taxing wits
31    41|   splits the shield, and to the bottom rends,~And on the shoulder
32    42|       careers,~Stretched at the bottom of the hills did lie;~But
33    44|  neighbouring peak,~Even to its bottom which the waters lave,~The
34    45|       Depose withal, and to the bottom bear!~Ah! turn to me, Rogero!
35    46|        kind;~And there in rushy bottom bays the boar:~Now on his
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