Canto

 1     1| fight,~He led from Africa to swell his power;~That other when
 2     3|      illustrious race should swell.~Hence many sprites she
 3    10|   castle, safe from wind and swell,~Of many ships and stout,
 4    11|    noise return;~The billows swell, and, lo! the beast! who
 5    13|   the goodly race of princes swell,~Alphonso, Hyppolite, and
 6    14|    mead), proceeds, amid the swell~Of loud laments, Granada'
 7    14|      the cloistered brethren swell~Their anthems, where they
 8    14|      troubled waters highest swell)~Against the Mauritanian
 9    14|   With Oran's giant king, to swell the train:~Six cubits is
10    14|    who the list of slaughter swell.~Orghetto of Maganza, he
11    17|   power~(So plenteously they swell) to turn a mill;~And that
12    17|   breadth -- an inch -- will swell~His fault, and of that inch
13    18| Renown, throughout the city, swell,~Plying her ample wings,
14    18|  France the warriors' bosoms swell,~Which will not let them
15    18| believed less broken was the swell;~And turned his prow to
16    19|    ill resist the boisterous swell.~While aye more passing
17    20|      the sword.~ ~ XXXII~"To swell, and next to child, and
18    20|     been wrecked by wind and swell~Upon the rocky shallows
19    22|    not slow the noble act to swell,~But, wandering wide, the
20    23|    courteous, felt his bosom swell,~With pity at that cruel
21    23|     ship she quitted, by the swell~Of the wild sea and tempest
22    23|     neck is narrow and whose swell is wide;~What time, when
23    24|   and anger, and with hatred swell,~About to close; but that,
24    36|    even now,~That you should swell the squadrons of the Moor,~
25    37|     strown,~As may with envy swell the neighbouring stream.~
26    37|     with their praise should swell,~Nor ought beside would
27    37|      whose actions Fame doth swell,~Thirsts for man's blood,
28    41|  these to heaven above would swell;~Now, plunging with the
29    41|      tempest and the roaring swell.~ ~ XVII~Three times and
30    41|     let Rogero perish in the swell.~ ~ XLVII~Cleaving the flood
31    41|   noise, the sea was seen to swell,~At that loud noise, which
32    42|  overtook him on the highest swell;~Then placed himself beside
33    43|  their boat; and through the swell~And foaming waters in that
34    46|  these veins with life-blood swell~Canst thou with her legitimately
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