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Ludovico Ariosto Orlando enraged Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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1001 3| the land~His worth shall class; such fame his actions bring;~ 1002 20| gladly entertained, and classed as one~Haply among their 1003 16| hears the tumult wide,~And clatter of church-bells, ere he 1004 14| sir Dionysius, Hugh,~And Claud, pour forth their ghosts 1005 8| who can read)~With such a clause was kept by that foul crew~ 1006 43| deadly chill;~My tongue clave to my throat: The witch 1007 18| penetrate.~From both Medoro cleanly lopt the head.~Oh! blessed 1008 32| cry,~Where due atonement cleanses not the heart;~Beware lest 1009 34| clothes,~He sought some cleansing stream, long sought in vain;~ 1010 3| and rare.~The flame of a clear-burning lamp ascended~Before the 1011 30| to the bosom should have cleaved;~But from that youth, yet 1012 41| perish in the swell.~ ~ XLVII~Cleaving the flood with nimble hands 1013 12| an old~Saracen, Manilardo clept, obeyed;~King of Noritia, 1014 23| head.~ ~ LXV~From quickly clipping her in his embrace,~Him 1015 22| first blossoms, while he clips~The gentle damsel, gathers 1016 41| warrior should be drest,~And cloak his courser's croup and 1017 9| push is slain,~Since the clogged weapon can no more contain.~ ~ 1018 14| soon as he has past the cloister's pale.~Here Silence is 1019 14| That SILENCE, where the cloistered brethren swell~Their anthems, 1020 36| day,~And seek the darksome cloisters it behoves."~Here ceased 1021 6| pine.~ ~ XXIV~And there, close-by where rose a bubbling fount,~ 1022 14| to the encounter prest,~Close-grappled by the collar, hair, or 1023 36| a cypress-stock,~In such close-serried ranks the saplings rise,~ 1024 15| nose, the severed head,~Close-sheared it all, behind and eke before.~ 1025 33| to Brescia lay,~And the close-straitened city storm and take;~Felsina 1026 18| XIV~As when within the closely-fastened cage~Of an old lioness, 1027 39| The sapling, shorn of two cloth-yards and more,~So vigorous was 1028 10| preserve their stile,~Or Clotho had been moved to cut her 1029 4| clomb a summit, which in cloudless sky~Discovers France and 1030 25| rabble fled;~The most with cloven limbs or broken head.~ ~ 1031 1| bewildered and astonished clown~Who held the plough (the 1032 10| nourish hearts they never cloy.~ ~ XLVI~"Her shall you, 1033 23| s right,~Armed with two clubs, maintain a cruel fight.~ ~ 1034 43| answer cried,~Within that clump a passing ancient snake,~ 1035 14| crimsoning pole~With the ripe clusters charged, -- heaven's concave 1036 26| That if he had believed he clutched the knight~Faster than nimble 1037 20| peers,~Who was of cruel Clytemnestra born;~Like lily fresh (he 1038 24| be,~And Sir Almonio, his co-mate; the pair~Charged, under 1039 9| sound,~Descend where nitre, coal, and sulphur lie,~Stored 1040 33| beyond the Nile.~Between Coallee and Dobada sped,~Bound for 1041 37| three ungowned,~-- Their coats by some uncourteous varlet 1042 18| your place maintain;~Like cobweb-threads our cruel enemies~Will find 1043 15| double shore;~Makes distant Cochin, and with favouring wind~ 1044 33| As far, and farther than Cocytus' shore~Descending, till 1045 4| And with a new and better code replaced.~ ~ LXVI~"If like 1046 33| of old~In giving birth to Coelus' godlike heir;~If Thebes 1047 23| Then finding all the tokens coincide,~"Thou art the man I seek," 1048 26| are,~And all the winged college is at feud,~Mustering their 1049 6| Somedeal projecting from the colonnade,~In which is not a single 1050 33| wealthy pile surround,~Clear colonnades with crystal shafts upbear.~ 1051 8| or some mock~Resemblance, coloured in the living rock.~ ~ XXXIX~ 1052 20| wandering sun sheds light and colouring hue,~I by your beauty's 1053 26| assailed, the Tartar king.~So combating with Peleus' son, of yore,~ 1054 18| with them every leader good combines~To bring the routed host 1055 28| dame received,~Wife of the comeliest, of the curtiest wight,~ 1056 7| boast.~ ~ LV~Crisped into comely ringlets was his hair,~Wet 1057 4| the sky,~As if to witness comet or eclipse.~And there the 1058 37| thee,~If he reply, none cometh to your reign,~Without desert; 1059 10| were,~And every sort of comfit nicely dight;~Fast by, and 1060 7| best.~ ~ XXIII~And when of comfits and of cordial wine~A fitting 1061 39| naked warrior bore;~All comforting their friend, with grief 1062 26| quality,~Which can in great commander be combined,~-- Prudence 1063 43| puts to flight.~She 'gan commending my intent to be~Faithful 1064 17| their vicinage~And constant commerce with the Franks, possest~ 1065 8| in Paris pressed,~A broad commission to Rinaldo brave,~With letters 1066 18| the abbey gray,~Her task committing to another's hand;~-- Left 1067 41| receives the rising day;~Commodious is the fane and fair enow;~ 1068 31| warrior place,~And thence commodiously to Arles transport;~Whither 1069 30| I,~Alas! -- and such are commonest in war --~That none the 1070 4| chances sought,~To whom we may communicate our mind,~Keeping no watch 1071 14| Stygian demons rescued were,~Communicated in such fashions, all,~As 1072 21| least.~ ~ XIX~"To break communion with the cavalier,~To him -- 1073 23| greet,~As the enamoured maid compares in thought~These with the 1074 4| magician and his foes;~But the comparison holds good no more:~For, 1075 39| throng,~He meditates, and compasses, a way~The frantic paladin 1076 34| And of his crying cruelty complained,~Since foully by my father 1077 9| disembarks, not joined~By the complaining dame; whom to descend~He 1078 37| My sacrifice should be completed ill;~For could I do by thee 1079 26| with Rogero's earnest suit complies;~Who takes farewell of that 1080 10| nature did at first her work compose.~Not even a veil she had, 1081 9| sack Ebuda's isle; of all compress'd~By ocean's circling waves, 1082 8| that shore in-isled,~Her he compressed, and quitted great with 1083 27| either's loss or gain.~The compromise was liked on either side,~ 1084 9| a-day, you thus may well~Compute what wives and maids have 1085 35| said the apostle hoar,~Concealing nothing of its history,)~" 1086 16| But this the cruel sword concedes to few,~So brandished by 1087 32| footman, or unarmed, the maid conceives,~It is a courier from the 1088 33| XCII~In case, as erst concerted by the twain,~The king should 1089 46| wonder him the assembled conclave scan.~"What will he be" -- 1090 5| content.~ ~ XXXV~"Then so concludes -- `I stand upon this ground,~ 1091 26| sentence would be clear,~Concluding I am thine by right of war,~ 1092 45| that which felon spends, condemning to pay~Life's forfeit with 1093 21| work appay.~And yet he who condemns me may, when I~Am parted 1094 33| chased him, far and wide;~Conditioning whichever found the steed,~ 1095 12| gain, or I to his intent conduce."~So she, lamenting, took 1096 27| Marphisa has in care:~But their conductor journeys not so fast;~And 1097 34| conspiracies,~Which their conductors seemed so ill to hide."~ 1098 20| ring-doves flutter and as coneys fly,~Who hear some mighty 1099 13| that in him he had great confidence.~ ~ XXIV~"He that remained 1100 13| Melissa sage, in whom she so confides,~And thus, by fruitful field 1101 23| rears,~Amid rude hills, confining on Poictiers.~ ~ IV~Anselm 1102 5| avail,~Unless my very eyes confirm the tale.'~ ~ XLII~" `To 1103 8| his eyes, and stayed~The conflagration with a sudden rain,~Which 1104 33| Three strokes alone of such conflicting foes,~Passing all means 1105 45| steer,~His second thoughts confronting with his first,~Nor these 1106 43| word takes fire, and fire congeals.~ ~ CIII~" `Now here, prepared 1107 36| has in store.~Making his congees to the friendly twain,~To 1108 7| eye of things concealed~Conjecture safely, from the charms 1109 13| such fair arms, -- or you conjectured true, --~As well as of that 1110 24| sufferer, and her mouth conjoining~To her Zerbino's, languid 1111 7| observed by me,~Signs in conjunction, sacred fibres, bred;~With 1112 26| stop the passing sun;~The conjuration recollects and rite,~By 1113 20| did supplicate, entreat, conjure,~By men and gods, the truth 1114 7| the execution of her lore,~Conjures, that eve, a palfrey, by 1115 10| state didst wrest~Of our connection and of amity;~And quickly 1116 6| flight:~These, at their conquests made, rejoiced and gay:~ 1117 18| Next Gryll, Andropono and Conrad hight,~A Greek and German, 1118 33| battles slain,~Manfred and Conradine, and after see~His bands, 1119 38| we~Are bound by ties of consanguinity;~ ~ XVII~"And, for my father 1120 35| mid fane ascends;~There consecrates and fixes them so fast,~ 1121 5| might well succeed,~Were she consenting to the boon he prayed;~For 1122 Int| Charlemagne (fearing the consequences if his two best knights 1123 21| flee --~But bids him well consider first how ill~'Twould sound, 1124 8| speed.~ ~ XXIV~`Nor like consideration would appear~Worthy to stop 1125 27| to peace or truce anew,~Considered how at least he might afford~ 1126 Int| he had defeated Argalia) considers Angelica his. It is at this 1127 41| that I love.~ ~ XL~"In this consists your welfare; counsel none~ 1128 13| would guide.~Orlando her consoles in courteous tone:~And thence, 1129 34| Of treaties and of those conspiracies,~Which their conductors 1130 42| flee.~He crost the Rhine at Constance, forward hied,~He traversed 1131 37| horse the prisoner sent~To Constance-town, like merchandise addrest;~ 1132 13| Biancas and Lucretias I~And Constances and more reserve; who found,~ 1133 34| Because a kindly lover's constancy~I, while I lived, repaid 1134 46| through mid air~To Paris from Constantinople bear.~ ~ LXXIX~From Constantine 1135 36| filled the throne;~And from Constantius and good Constantine,~Stretched 1136 14| comes behind,~By whom are Constatina's people led:~Since Agramant 1137 3| Or sign made under mystic constellation,~The blaze that came from 1138 34| words from me in my despite,~Constraining me to tell the things ye 1139 37| head,~At last, with kind constraint and suppliant cries;~And, 1140 17| overhead;~And kitchens there construct, and rustic stoves,~And 1141 40| stood on the dry shore,~Of a construction excellent and rare,~Wherein 1142 14| hands and bosom bore,~And consultation, and authority:~Weapons, 1143 7| Poictier's wood~The vocal tomb, containing Merlin's clay,~Concealed 1144 43| fallows till,~Could ne'er contaminate her honest will.~ ~ XCIII~" 1145 3| retreat~From that, through him contaminated door.~And, thence returning, 1146 6| much to none.~I evermore contemplated my treasure,~Nor France 1147 43| faithful evermore,~Should with contempt the beauty have eschewed~ 1148 21| perish, as is right.~If thou contendest for her, thou art slain;~ 1149 43| still has brought, and yet contentment brings.~From proof itself 1150 29| there,~That paragon of continence did heat~What simples she 1151 Int| Introduction~This work is a continuation of the "Orlando Innamorato" 1152 17| pastime to delay,~And to continue it till even-fall,~Descending 1153 26| Love trafficked in such contracts base,~And lover could his 1154 35| secret should expose? --~By contraries throughout the tale explain:~ 1155 17| peer.~Did you with him for contrast-sake combine,~That so your valour 1156 14| humbleness of heart and deep contrition;~And added other prayers 1157 3| And turned upon the rash contriver's head;~And so each stratagem 1158 18| these dogs, or lie at their control.~Since vain is every other 1159 7| eyed,~Who would not the controlling rein obey;~When, severed 1160 14| formed for show, than for conveniency;~And the young damsel and 1161 46| earth repair;~All lodged conveniently, to their content,~Beneath 1162 14| band,~When abbeys and when convent-cells were new;~And whilom in 1163 29| river pitch the knight.~She, conversant with Brava's cavalier,~The 1164 3| the cheat.~ ~ LXXIII~"Thy conversation with this man shall turn~ 1165 42| their margins grew.~ ~ XCVII~Conversing with his courteous host, 1166 43| vigorous as whilere.~At this conversion no less gladness fell~On 1167 1| glide,~Which amorous care convert to sudden hate;~The maid 1168 15| his years: from paganry~Converted by Orlando to the truth,~ 1169 13| our every reasonable will,~Converts, with woeful and disastrous 1170 36| what you tell,~Brother, convicts you of too foul a wrong,~ 1171 6| as they fly,~Secure the cony haunts, and timid hare,~ 1172 32| the sewer, with grief the cook takes heed,~How on the table 1173 32| takes heed,~How on the table cools the untasted fare.~Nay, 1174 27| That of Rogero, valiant's copious font,~Gradasso's, so renowned 1175 40| contest,~If wholly made of copper or of steel.~I rate the 1176 43| Rome's forum swallowed;~Cordus, so vaunted by the Grecian 1177 15| Chersonese;~Taprobana with Cori next, and sees~The frith 1178 17| to have the upper hand:~Corimbo named and Thyrsis was the 1179 20| which they in battle run.~Corinna and Sappho, famous for their 1180 34| and thin,~Which, save well corked, would from the vase have 1181 18| with arms and all,~As if by corks upborn, the cavalier.~Though 1182 32| towers and wall;~Then, like a cormorant, his journey done,~Into 1183 44| state -- the holy empire's corner-stone --~The nobles of his kingdom 1184 6| golden gate.~ ~ LXXI~Above, a cornice round the gateway goes,~ 1185 18| And cleaves, the head of Cornish Aramon.~ ~ LIII~Down fell 1186 42| seen;~For if thou wearest Cornwall's lofty crest,~No drop of 1187 14| lies heavy Sleep,~Ease, corpulent and gross, upon this side,~ 1188 35| above or Earth below,~Must correspond, though with a different 1189 21| and ungenerous will,~And corresponded not with chivalry,~That 1190 46| your soul's nobility,~And corresponding with your fair outside~Your 1191 37| With envy and with hate corroded so,~That oft they hide the 1192 37| Waxed, in a moment, rank, corrupt and naught.~ ~ XLVIII~"It 1193 34| sainted three~Have seen corruption, but in garden, clear~Of 1194 11| too pursued,~Who sent the corsairs fell, which her had born~ 1195 27| plenteous fare~Is heaped, and Corsic wine and Grecian flows;~ 1196 15| supply.~I mark Hernando Cortez bring, 'mid these,~New cities 1197 14| bestowed on Rhimedont,~And Cosca comes in charge of Balinfront.~ ~ 1198 14| Morocco's king and he of Cosco go~With these, that men 1199 43| payment of a prize which costeth nought.~ ~ CXIII~"Argia 1200 43| be laid~In sepulchre of costlier matter made:~ ~ CLXXXII~ 1201 39| fatal hour,~Fearing the costs will fall upon his Spain,~ 1202 23| From the near shepherd's cot had wont to stray~The beauteous 1203 41| argent bears Sir Olivier,~Couchant, and with the leash upon 1204 7| possessed~Of the seer's councils, would pursue the best.~ ~ 1205 41| good or ill,~Uncalled a counsellor's duty to fulfil;~ ~ XLIII~" 1206 21| homeward speed,~That he, to counteract the pest he bore~Within 1207 44| Nor friendship, unless counterfeit, is spied.~ ~ II~Hence it 1208 23| the thing had planned,~Had counterfeited passing well her hand.~ ~ 1209 25| undrest,~With kindled torches, counterfeiting day;~`Marvel not, lady,' ( 1210 42| wight;~Yet wonted daring counterfeits and feigns,~And with a trembling 1211 8| of Wales addressed,~And countersigns had given, dispatched to 1212 3| drawn line~Shall marquises, counts, dukes and Caesers shine.~ ~ 1213 26| Christian king,~By those two couples of whose worth I sing.~ ~ 1214 11| Will oft suffice to stop courageous horse;~'Tis seldom Reason' 1215 39| Scowering the field in separate courses, made~Huge havock of the 1216 7| queen,~More than what other courtezans possess?~Who of so many 1217 46| Behold! the mother, sisters, cousinhood;~Them of Torello, Bentivoglio,~ 1218 25| by the way~One who might covertly that writ convey.~ ~ XCIII~ 1219 20| XXI~"They, who are covetous of spoil and gain,~And ill-bested 1220 33| air; then swoops amain~The covey well nigh in that instant, 1221 25| satisfied.~Pasiphae the wooden cow did fill:~Others, in other 1222 17| who, worthily,~By name was cowardly Martano hight,~Thinking, 1223 18| s enormous horns unused,~Cower at a distance, timid and 1224 17| Harnessed to which two sluggish cows are seen,~Weary and weak, 1225 44| Speak not, except some cozening tale to tell;~Yet if together 1226 14| by the north-wind fanned.~Crackle and snap, and through the 1227 14| to agree~With the fierce crackling of the murderous flame.~ 1228 35| But that is may his worthy cradle be,~Whereof I speak, shall 1229 16| subtlety~(Worse than a fox in crafty hardihood)~Pursues, and 1230 39| generous pards, that from some crag~Together dart, and stretch 1231 29| he hopes, if once those crags among,~To keep him from 1232 38| swelled rich Croesus' or rich Crassus' hoard,~I too should deem 1233 11| show,~Fresh-taken from its crate of rushes green;~The space 1234 25| And she said well: for cravenhood it were~Befitting man of 1235 43| length, upon the ground to crawl;~Equal to this here is no 1236 16| horse, and thence for safety crawls;~But he with little boot 1237 23| The fire about my heart, creates this gale.~Love, by what 1238 15| To seek new lands and new creations run.~ ~ XXIII~"The imperial 1239 31| had these believed:~But credited fair Flordelice's word,~ 1240 21| castle but to ascertain~If credulous Morando, who to ride~Thither 1241 20| the most part plain;~With creek and port, where stranger 1242 20| would go aboard,~The unhappy Cretan women more complain,~And 1243 20| leader's age.~ ~ XIV~"The Cretans, who had banished in that 1244 12| Forth-streaming from a crevice in the mount,~Within whose 1245 37| pains and sorrow to requite,~Crimsons the wretch's body, here 1246 18| fairer or more jocund face.~Crisp hair he had of gold, and 1247 7| sumptuous India boast.~ ~ LV~Crisped into comely ringlets was 1248 15| locks, no hair~Straiter or crisper than the rest was seen.~ 1249 14| which from tower~Or tree croaks future evil, did foreshow~ 1250 40| said,~To Athens owls, and crocodiles the Nile.~In that, my lord, 1251 18| thousands fill;~Thyme, marjoram, crocus, rose, and lily gay~From 1252 38| have won~Than swelled rich Croesus' or rich Crassus' hoard,~ 1253 18| cruel Rodomont.~ ~ XX~At one cross-blow fifteen or twenty foes~He 1254 18| When at the meeting of cross-ways they view~A person, who, 1255 19| cruel wise.~North-wester or cross-wind no longer reigns;~But tyrant 1256 44| through their host put on~Of crossing to the river's further side.~ 1257 11| possest";~ ~ LXXI~Or in Crotona dwelt, where the divine~ 1258 10| repair~One and another, crowding to survey~His courser, single 1259 19| hundred paces deep; and crowning each~Horn of the circling 1260 34| thought.~These were old crowns of the Assyrian land~And 1261 46| and new~Places Strigonia's crozier in his hand.~Him ever at 1262 10| told above) on every hand~Cruized with their scattered fleet 1263 31| prostrate in the dust,~Crumbles each knight and charger 1264 27| the Christian squadrons crush.~ ~ XXV~Front and askance, 1265 24| Mandricardo, in security~Of crushing Rodomont in that affray,~ 1266 18| for the mob's delight;~The cubs, who see him cresting in 1267 25| dew,~To clack like a poor cuckow to the fair,~Hanging his 1268 30| more fierce than e'er:~A cuff he levels at that rustic' 1269 28| bed,~To deem the dame less culpable inclined:~Less of herself 1270 11| name.~ ~ XXV~This saker, culverine, or falcon hight,~I hear ( 1271 7| wight,~Than Hecuba or she in Cuma bred;~But thus by practice, 1272 25| Many lay dead upon the cumbered plain,~And numberless were 1273 6| stirred,~And open-mouthed the cumbrous tunnies leap;~Thither the 1274 19| LXVI~A dame, as the Cumean sybil gray,~Or Hector's 1275 17| fray.~One told, by colours cunningly allied,~His joy or sorrow 1276 29| censure deemed.~So fast their cups with that good wine they 1277 25| girdle drew~As knife cuts curd, divides their plate and 1278 30| leisure may'st thou have her cured," (he said)~"And of no other 1279 42| amorous fires;~And how nought cures the mischief caused by one~ 1280 2| every breast,~A restless curiosity to know~Of others' cares, 1281 7| two vales, which softly curl,~The mouth with vermeil 1282 3| at this inn~Of black and curly hair, the dwarfish wight!~ 1283 43| should be fain.~Those Decii; Curtius, in Rome's forum swallowed;~ 1284 11| the forehead's beauteous curve alone~Excellent, and her 1285 43| lordly work and no less fair,~Cushions were laid, with jewels shining 1286 20| LXXXVIII~As he was customed in extremity,~He to his 1287 43| Sobrino at the cure.~ ~ CXCIII~Sobrino, so diseased that 1288 43| baptism at his hands.~ ~ CXCIV~So him baptized the hermit; 1289 43| world loud Rumor blew,~ ~ CXCIX~All, for they know he is 1290 43| grace the warrior grew.~ ~ CXCV~Rogero from the day he swam 1291 43| heaven to fix their sight.~ ~ CXCVI~Roland on shipboard sends 1292 43| themselves discoursed;~ ~ CXCVII~And as in talk it often 1293 43| had proved in fight.~ ~ CXCVIII~Him well Sobrino recognized 1294 36| wickedness outdone~By any Cyclops, any Lestrigon.~ ~ X~I ween, 1295 37| makes Parnassus and high Cynthus' hill~Resound your praise, 1296 23| In a hundred parts, their cyphered names are dight;~Whose many 1297 19| ANGELICA were traced,~In divers cyphers quaintly interlaced.~ ~ 1298 36| faulchion swerves against a cypress-stock,~In such close-serried ranks 1299 36| on the ground,~Beneath a cypress-tree, the daggers threw.~When 1300 31| whose ground~With trunks of cypresses was broidered round.~ ~ 1301 42| As amid lesser fires the Cyprian star.~ ~ XCIV~None knows, 1302 33| hoar,~And skimmed above the Cyrenaean ground;~Passing the sandy 1303 6| burning lips he strains;~Now dabbles in the crystal wave, to 1304 34| dye.~O mighty wonder! O Daedalian sleight!~What fabric upon 1305 25| with all his skill,~Dan Daedalus had not the noose untied:~ 1306 26| bonnibel.~Her palfrey, with the Daemon for his guide,~After his 1307 14| XLI~He who for scorn had daffed the world aside,~Designs 1308 36| Beneath a cypress-tree, the daggers threw.~When they no weapons 1309 18| of joust the two~Might in Damascus-town set up their rest.~When 1310 26| pastures and expected crop,~Dams right and left; yet him 1311 43| sound;~His dog is up, and dances to the air.~The dame, that 1312 43| Brandimart; and Olivier,~Dangerously hurt and sore, sate woe-begone,~ 1313 15| hunter, mindful what his dangers were,~Aye fastens on his 1314 27| deserving as a fitting pain~To dangle from the gallows-tree in 1315 17| store;~And from the ceiling dangled many a fleece.~The dame 1316 34| by her barbarities.~Here Daphne learns how rashly she had 1317 38| some roan, and some of dapple stain.~The crowds that waiting 1318 24| sometimes goat or doe of dappled hue:~Often with bear and 1319 19| spread~Were circles dappling all about his hair, --~Of 1320 18| the damned would send Sir Dardinell;~But all access the circling 1321 5| troubled eye,~Stood forth, but daringly the tale denied.~To him 1322 8| went the desperate fay,~And darked by loosened sails the billows 1323 43| Illumined gloomy night and darkened day:~Yet never could she 1324 41| shoreless flood.~Upon the darkening of the day, the wind~Displays 1325 19| foot behind~And forehead, darker than was ever crow:~His 1326 31| They should not combat darkling, on the plain;~But should 1327 45| fair to see;~And so thy darling and thy wit pourtrayed,~ 1328 2| sound,~With rested lance, he darted from on high;~And while 1329 13| women thrives;~Nor of its daughters' honour more I tell~Than 1330 33| Anjouites three.~How "Marsi, Daunians, Salentines," (he said)~" 1331 41| As many deaths appear to daunt that rout,~As waves which 1332 12| Alzirdo was, and prized for dauntless mind;~Who bent to joust 1333 35| as here above, the raven, daw,~Vulture, and divers other 1334 22| day and till the new~Had dawned, when, while the twilight 1335 27| fair;~Nor, whether morning dawns or noontide glows,~-- Nor 1336 18| without some hope, that at day-break~The storm might lull, or 1337 40| might and main,~He often dazzles so the warrior's eyes,~That 1338 2| blinded by the clear and dazzling light.~I, too, that from 1339 Int| events of Ariosto's poem.~---DBK~ 1340 43| his bosom pluck his heart:~Dead-white with jealous fear his cheek 1341 8| Cicala's wearying cry,~Which deafens hill and dale, and sea and 1342 37| partly spoiled, and partly dealed~To Ulany and that attendant 1343 14| thundering car.~ ~ VI~This dear-bought victory brought more relief~ 1344 44| XIX~When of that bloody, dear-brought victory~The scarcely joyful 1345 1| beat him down,~Nigh his death-stricken cattle, wakes aghast,~And 1346 27| passing dear,~Whilom of such debates the fruitful seed;~And for 1347 37| could be said, is she, and debonnair.~ ~ LII~"No fairer was the 1348 7| how true~The tale) thou debtor for thy freedom art,~This 1349 26| kindly twain~Proffer, as ever debtors to the peer.~Marphisa to 1350 32| of my desert, against thy debts?~ ~ XXXVIII~"Wherefore, 1351 13| thither make resort, with like deceits.~ ~ L~Seeing the sage, all 1352 10| lovely members meet,~Proof to December-snow and July-heat.~ ~ XCVI~Her 1353 37| clip, and parts unveil~That decency and natural shame offend;~ 1354 14| pleasing mien, grave walk, and decent vest,~Fraud rolled her eye-balls 1355 Int| However, Bradamante (who has decided to follow her heart) is 1356 43| warriors should be fain.~Those Decii; Curtius, in Rome's forum 1357 24| this the sorrowing Isabel, declining~Her mournful face, which 1358 23| She in a streight and ill declivity,~Led by a dwarf, encountered 1359 33| XXII~And the French host, decoyed in cunning wise~Thither 1360 8| with tears,~And ever sees, decreasing to her sight,~The beach 1361 40| Wont them as very madmen to decry,~That more on others than 1362 16| and the band~Or virgins, dedicate to heavenly spouse,~Lest 1363 43| worthy of one death thou deemest me,~Worthy art thou a hundred 1364 28| XXVII~"His eye-balls seem deep-buried in his head,~His nose seems 1365 25| amorous wise,~Showed her deep-wounded heart; with sighs of flame,~ 1366 13| Corn -~Poppy beside the deeply-crimsoning rose,~Willow by laurel evergreen, 1367 46| As mastiff that below the deer-hound lies,~Fixed by the gullet 1368 10| whose flanks are torn by deerhounds two.~See there the Duke 1369 26| had so many smiling lands defaced,~The names unknown to them, 1370 33| as well foreknew.~Here of defeats to come and victories taught,~ 1371 18| anvil score.~ ~ XIII~All the defences, round, abandoned are,~The 1372 14| head,~Who find their first defense of small avail~Full well 1373 19| of the band,~Who little deference for his lord confest,~His 1374 26| In all its foulness and deformity.~ ~ XLII~"Dread desolation 1375 21| comrade true,~O'ertaken and defrauded of the meat;~So on ill gain 1376 26| worldly gear.~Women in this degenerate age are rare,~To whom aught 1377 28| He made him on the Agnus Dei swear.~ ~ XLI~"He made him 1378 18| nor, before~Departing, deigns to his a word to say.~He 1379 16| wast gone to Syria; and dejected~By that ill tiding, suffered 1380 33| arms, and breast:~By Inigo del Guasto here withstood,~Derived 1381 34| which great lords their delegates invest:~Bellows filled every 1382 43| be~Upon my side, on thy delinquency.~The give against the take, 1383 33| Hercules and Bacchus bold,~If Delos boasted of her heavenly 1384 4| twain prepared the blade,~To deluge with that damsel's blood 1385 39| with grief opprest~For that delusion which had him possest.~ ~ 1386 19| following treat,~Condemned to delve their land or keep their 1387 29| Who sage reserve in her demeanor showed.~'Tis she that, of 1388 10| Two antlers of a stag, and demi-front;~The Duke of Clarence shows 1389 13| Rogero's chose~(A race of demigods) in prince and peer.~For 1390 16| XXVII~Though flames demolish all things far and wide,~ 1391 43| The servants wend to the demolished town,~There hide the bones 1392 4| inflicted open wrong;~And to demonstrate it a grievous ill,~I trust 1393 17| ill his strokes did deal,~Demosthenes his cause might well forego.~ 1394 45| what I to believe as yet demur;~That weakly to Rogero so 1395 2| and spake him feeble and demure,~At sight of the delighted 1396 5| to him the Scottish king demurred,~Virgin austerity she ever 1397 26| mount;~Nor can you make denial or excuse,~Since such the 1398 23| mighty gain~That should denounce by whom his son was slain.~ ~ 1399 20| loss she in the cavern more deplored,~Than being captive to the 1400 44| meanwhile, I hope, by me deposed~Shall Leo with his royal 1401 7| chance, where he the rich deposit made,~And wonders that the 1402 12| slight,~If him she would depress with altered cheer,~Or into 1403 10| yet by wrongful censure be depressed.~His form he in the lucid 1404 33| to upper air~Evoked from depths of nether hell I ween;~Which 1405 46| locks, the tapestry shows,~Deputed by Corvinus to desire~The 1406 38| for that duel dread,~When deputies from either hostile power,~ 1407 15| in the dome.~ ~ XCVII~As deputy, the sainted land he swayed,~ 1408 Int| African wizard who seeks to derail fate and keep Ruggiero from 1409 13| watches ever how he may derange~And mar our every reasonable 1410 10| sable he of Worcester wears:~Derby's a dog, a bear is Oxford' 1411 15| fruitless blow Orrilo does deride,~While the two baffled warriors 1412 21| Whose scorn and hatred hence derive new force.~Towards loud 1413 10| Lamenting, halcyons mournful descant sung;~When she, 'twixt sleep 1414 6| flight, and safely amorous descants sing.~ ~ XXII~Amid red 1415 7| pined~And wounds, thy good descendants shall restore~The fame and 1416 13| Which Merlin said of thy descendents' lives,~(Haply that I the 1417 23| Go," (says her lady, and describes the way)~And afterwards 1418 31| and her relation ends,~Describing how the paynim fell reversed,~ 1419 46| as a traitor to thy lord,~Deserv'st not any honour at this 1420 3| spilt.~ ~ XXV~"By him King Desiderius shall be pressed,~The valiant 1421 22| virgin might,~To solace her desiring lover's pain,~So that her 1422 10| world possest,~Would not desist from it, till Hungary~He 1423 26| And Spain and England's desolated strands,~Europe and Asia, 1424 26| deformity.~ ~ XLII~"Dread desolation shall it make; nor place~ 1425 43| a flame;~And to the farm despatched a follower true,~Charged 1426 12| When Ferrau and Orlando desperately~Closing in fight were seen, 1427 5| this, your foolish love despises:~And this to me the damsel 1428 5| in his bosom burned~Into despiteful rage and hatred turned.~ ~ 1429 30| On foe, who treats me so despiteously,~I could not be reduced 1430 22| Sir Pinnabel,~All ready to despoil the cavalier,~Who in the 1431 38| hence shall I ne'er,~Under despondence, lack for due support,~Nor 1432 4| knowing, canst not change his destinies:~For, if unknown an ill 1433 26| death will gore,~The foul destroyer of each country round:~Parforce 1434 6| Sport little loves, with desultory flight:~These, at their 1435 7| the cavalier~At length detached from his Alcina's side:~ 1436 2| himself foresees,~Were he detected as a Maganzese.~ ~ LXVII~ 1437 19| men.~ ~ LXXIII~The knights determining by lot to try~Who in their 1438 14| foreign lands,~Who, when dethroned, had to Marsilius' court~( 1439 33| sage,~(Merlin, I say, the Devils mighty son,~Well versed 1440 43| Whereof with him he often wont devize;~And aye contemplating that 1441 10| valiant Raymond, Earl of Devon, bears~The hawk, which spreads 1442 18| had made lean and spare,~Devours and rends, and swallows, 1443 1| water flows,~And breeze and dewy dawn their sweets unlock:~ 1444 45| Rogero, at his ward, with dexterous care,~Defends himself, and 1445 14| not less, he cleared,~As dexterously as leaps the greyhound fleet,~ 1446 20| Hard were my heart than diamonds, if in me~All hardness did 1447 18| large part of night~With dice and goblet; blest it at 1448 10| Anrondica stand~Fronesia sage, Dicilla good, and chaste~Sofrosina, 1449 40| Captives for ever, if thou diest, are we;~Africk is tributary 1450 6| surprise.~Perhaps, as faces differ, and in art~And wit of man 1451 37| of his sons, a pair~That differed much from the paternal style,~( 1452 10| this her love from other differs; fear~And hope in other 1453 28| X~"And that a greater difficulty were~To tear Jocundo from 1454 35| despite,~And if my speech diffusive should appear.~Authors I 1455 44| thine.~Thou need'st not dig a ditch nor build a tower,~ 1456 21| stomach should the juice digest,~And its restoring power 1457 29| pity did remain;~Who, when digested was the maddening bowl,~ 1458 8| yet not expose~By this his dignity to stain or slight,~The 1459 Int| omitting most of the numerous digressions and incidental episodes 1460 11| this extends.~'Tis thus who digs the mine is wont to prop~ 1461 33| plain,~And Ammon's, now dilapidated, fane.~ ~ CI~To other Tremizen 1462 28| strain,~If I upon this theme dilated more:~So here I close, nor 1463 2| radiant face with eager joy dilates.~But, full of pity, kindles 1464 37| yieldeth nought)~With mighty diligence, and mickle pain,~Illustrious 1465 30| LXXIV~Agramant bids them diligently lay~The wounded warrior 1466 23| fennel, wall-wort-stem, or dill, up-tore;~And ilex, knotted 1467 28| own paternal dome;~Nor had diminished nor encreased the treasure,~ 1468 28| nor music's strain~One jot diminishes his ceaseless pain.~ ~ XXXII~" 1469 37| power, increase the ill,~Diminishing the good with all its art,~ 1470 43| others that would shine thou dimm'st the praise;~Whom other 1471 29| Orlando had not borne a dingier skin.~ ~ LX~Nigh buried 1472 1| And, unsuspecting, devious dingle thread.~Them, while four 1473 20| But that their ears are dinned. On every side~Astolpho, 1474 14| before;~Hubert of Tours, sir Dionysius, Hugh,~And Claud, pour forth 1475 29| neighbouring Frank divides.~Thither directing aye his course outright,~ 1476 3| hostage for his sire,~His dirge is heard: A stripling of 1477 14| daring, those~At such a disadvantage to assay,~He pricks, with 1478 14| Now was his supplication disallowed;~For his good genius hears 1479 3| reposed,~From the first cavern disappearing, went.~Then Bradamant her 1480 31| himself would have addrest~To disappoint the destined fight anew;~ 1481 12| his breast,~For such sore disappointment, with the thought~That he 1482 25| off my panoply of steel;~Disarming me herself from head to 1483 46| as christened, canst not disavow;~Nathless to make it yet 1484 39| Nor sees he King Sobrino; disavowed~By King Sobrino is the deed, 1485 34| be gratified,~Craves his discharge, and threatens he this slight~ 1486 35| Turbid with sand and of discoloured hue;~And found that ancient 1487 2| dye,~Throughout the world, discolours all things fair.~What I 1488 27| And fought by him, to his discomfit sore,~And how he lost his 1489 22| lord Sir Pinnabel,~By him discomfited like men of straw,~-- The 1490 44| paltry walls and bare,~Amid discomforts and calamities,~Often in 1491 24| Her Brandimart had left disconsolate~Without farewell, i' the 1492 35| choughs, and more, that with discordant cry~And deafening din their 1493 32| for he would that foul discourteousness~Of Clodion with a fit revenge 1494 23| hear-core pight.~He would discredit in a thousand modes,~That 1495 4| visage, stops the blow,~As if disdaining a revenge so base.~She sees 1496 19| overweight for four.~She, disembarking, as of greatest force,~The 1497 19| And every birth and cabin disencumber~Of merchandize, to feed 1498 12| loss to see,~From Roland disengaged himself, and cried,~"How 1499 12| mighty blow from Roland disengages~And loosens, breaks, or 1500 45| bear;~And (what the Child's disguisement well may stead)~Of equal