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Ludovico Ariosto Orlando enraged Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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3002 9| lie,~Stored up for use in magazine profound,~Which scarce has 3003 42| er; and prayed~That sage magicians to instruct him, where~He 3004 26| should overlay;~And, as magnanimous and stout, for foe~Singled 3005 23| speech returned, ere yet the maiden well~Had dried her cheeks 3006 30| bound their horses not to maim:~Without pact made, 'twas 3007 37| friends;~And, where the main-road branches, and one way~Towards 3008 46| and the Cittadino;~See the Mainardo, the Leoniceno,~Panizzato, 3009 36| vengeance in that blow was meant~Mainly at you, who being at Caesar' 3010 2| wary sort,~Haul down the mainsail, and attempt to wear;~And 3011 37| brighter fires,~Than Venus, Maja, or to star that glows~Alone, 3012 42| Whether her visage most majestic shew,~Or beam with genius 3013 14| that in Lisbon crowned;~Majorca was obedient to the third.~ 3014 38| strait from Indian main,~Mak'st Scythian's pale and Aethiop' 3015 7| Say, what has she, thou makest thy fancy's queen,~More 3016 43| much more~Perchance than maketh for her lord's repose;~Then 3017 15| monarch of the blessed isles;~Malabuferzo, he who fills the throne~ 3018 14| Agricaltes is Ammonia's guide.~Malabupherso rules o'er Fezzan's clan,~ 3019 14| the Saguntine lord.~Here, Malagur, in ready cunning wise,~ 3020 46| fear.~There I my kinsman Malaguzzo know;~And mighty hope from 3021 33| achieved at mighty cost,~At Malamocco, to bestride the brine,~ 3022 46| Which gilds the house of Malatesta so,~That never worthier 3023 33| evil plight;~-- Never more malcontent and vext in sprite.~ ~ XCI~ 3024 20| islands from him fly,~And Malea's fearful headland; fanned 3025 24| has told,~When bound the malefactor they behold.~ ~ XVIII~The 3026 14| in mail and plate,~Bold Malgarine and Balinverno stands;~Morgant 3027 41| cries.~Scathe upon scathe malicious Fortune sends,~And when 3028 9| Of Beelzebub, whose foul malignity~The ruin of this world through 3029 18| bourne shall go.~ ~ CLXXX~Malindo, with Andalico, he slew,~ 3030 14| The wild-swine of our own Mallea goes;~Who makes large day-light 3031 9| Ere he a vessel at St. Malo's found;~In which, embarking 3032 14| Balinverno stands;~Morgant and Malzarise, whom common fate~Had both 3033 46| their delight at my return.~Mamma, Ginevra, with the rest 3034 18| a league's distance from Mamuga, throws~Martano in the avenging 3035 17| they undo,~And from their manacles free either hand,~Than Gryphon 3036 43| on her, and signified~The mandate by her angry husband given;~ 3037 4| in mid air,~All shifts of manege, course and caracole;~He 3038 31| their mighty strength or manege-lore~Avails the steeds; for, 3039 33| two fierce battles slain,~Manfred and Conradine, and after 3040 10| the Catay, and there he Mangiane,~Passing the great Quinsay 3041 26| swoop amid that brood,~To mangle and devour, and kill, and 3042 24| s bough,)~From hence the maniac's horrid rage they view;~ 3043 18| high the specious tale,~As manifested plainly, 'twas a lie.~In 3044 15| trophy in his hand,~Which manifests of death the tokens true;~ 3045 23| sped,~To venge Alzirdo and Manilard, the two~Whom good Orlando' 3046 39| recovered,~Of wiser and of manlier mind than e'er,~From love 3047 29| Sweeter than nectar or than manna seemed:~He, quaffing largely, 3048 28| monarch led,~Who spied the mannikin of hideous show.~ (Lines 3049 33| living or of earlier day,~Mantegna, Leonardo, Gian Belline,~ 3050 38| Alzirdo, Martasine and Marbalust!~Whom I would here see gladly, 3051 17| endure one common fate,~And marbled column, slab, and gilded 3052 33| castellain displayed~One hight of Marca, of the Anjouites three.~ 3053 18| XXXIX~He these at Saint Marcellus' gate, where lay,~Outstretched 3054 33| seer,~To him, that of King Marcomir was heir:~Why hither sent, 3055 27| third;~Marphisa's lot and Mardricardo's lay~At bottom; whence 3056 11| tended~A numerous troop of mares, had made his won:~These, 3057 Int| Agramante, King of Africa and Marfisa ("Marphisa" in Rose), an 3058 16| LXV~Then Artalico and Margano knew~The force of Ariodantes' 3059 46| thee~Emilia Pia, and thee, Margherite,~Angela Borgia, Graziosa, 3060 42| the plants that on their margins grew.~ ~ XCVII~Conversing 3061 46| Orologi one, and one Guarino:~Mario d' Olvito, and of royalty~ 3062 18| by thousands fill;~Thyme, marjoram, crocus, rose, and lily 3063 16| Granada guides,~And o'er Marjorca Baricond presides.~ ~ LXVIII~ 3064 6| ramble his in square or market-place!~Three thousand miles, without 3065 15| Lodging to those who in her markets meet;~-- And though the 3066 32| beheld him fall,~Beyond Marocco; and for her to run~To tree, 3067 45| deem that nought avails the marriage-tie.~For this not vainly in 3068 42| my judgment, should the married dame~Be from espial by her 3069 17| in the lists, vizier and marshal hight,~Who had the government 3070 33| the Anjouites three.~How "Marsi, Daunians, Salentines," ( 3071 40| to what pass, what evil mart~That lord is brought; how 3072 38| and in that crew,~Alzirdo, Martasine and Marbalust!~Whom I would 3073 14| Next they who weep their Martasino, slain~By the avenging sword 3074 13| delight;~And how, near Santa Martha, for our need,~A bark was 3075 16| Picard sea;~That by St. Martin's and St. Denys' gate,~They 3076 43| upon the sandy ground,~Martyred and crippled by his cruel 3077 37| better age.~ ~ VIII~Erewhile Marullo and Pontante for you~Declared, 3078 41| should receive,~If upon Mary's Son he would believe.~ ~ 3079 14| And white, bade celebrate mass-rite and prayer;~And those who 3080 14| plied alone,~But mighty masses and whole bulwarks fall,~ 3081 18| start~In the wild Nomade or Massilian chace,~Who, even in flying, 3082 19| bore;~Who poised a lance so massive in the course,~It would 3083 17| But he makes answer with a massy spear,~Out of ten others 3084 29| site,~For love or fear, he master-masons found;~And, making full 3085 4| But that he loved some master-stroke to see,~Achieved by lance 3086 14| band.~ ~ XXXVII~As wolf or mastiff-dog, who comes the last~Where 3087 39| who has seen a bull, by mastiffs chased~That gore his bleeding 3088 39| on either side:~Taper the masts; and, moored in the salt 3089 40| of armed knights to be,~Matching his foes, on Lampedosa's 3090 1| sooner this displace~From the maternal stem, where it was grown,~ 3091 3| page:~The next shall wed Matilda, chaste and sage.~ ~ XXX~" 3092 12| reel from spindle-staff the matted wool?"~ ~ XL~Then turning 3093 Int| Orlando Innamorato" of Matteo Maria Boiardo, which was 3094 18| false Ganellon,~And Mark and Matthew from St. Michael's plain,~ 3095 25| shrubs discerned,~Undelved by mattock and by share unturned.~ ~ 3096 27| Care, time and trouble to mature his end.~ ~ II~That seemed 3097 33| southward bear~For what imperial Maurice shall bestow.~"Behold him 3098 14| to whose care consigned,~Maurina's valiant horse and footmen 3099 14| highest swell)~Against the Mauritanian Atlas' feet;~Or watch at 3100 37| Renowned for love of her Mausolus, yea~By so much greater, 3101 17| served to fill~Their hungry maw, invite from foreign wood~ 3102 16| Thraso's horse o'erturns and mawls,~Opprest the ponderous courser' 3103 26| of France;~With Austrian Maximilian at his side:~In one, who 3104 17| imperial place and puissance, Maximine:~Hence Thebes to cruel Creon 3105 24| ghosts, which rove~Amid the mazes of the myrtle grove.~ ~ 3106 10| dropt.~ ~ LXXIV~Where he in meadows to the city nigh~Saw troops 3107 35| closes on a stormy day;~Who meagre, pale, and worn with hopeless 3108 27| longer are their fear;~The meanest Moor a hundred Franks defies;~ 3109 17| leave in simple cassock, meanly dight;~And, as to slaughter 3110 38| advanced each cavalier,~Measuring with cautious care his every 3111 15| three~Agnize Sir Sansonet of Mecca, who~Was, in youth's flower, 3112 20| wide,~Each woman is not a Medaea here~As thou wouldst make 3113 35| singing sweet,~Convey the medals safely to the fane,~So they 3114 4| flies so fast in air,~Nor meddle with my castle more; or 3115 29| churl and indiscreet,~Rash, meddling, saucy villain, stay thy 3116 40| Persian and Armenian, Arab, Mede,~If prayed, will all assist 3117 1| that damsel gay,~In India, Median, and Tartarian land,~Westward 3118 26| Of the Gonzagas' and the Medici,~Hunt and fatigue the monster 3119 Int| of the major families of Medieval and Renaissance Italy (it 3120 20| tears they pour,~Begin to meditate, amid their pains,~What 3121 39| Astolpho and his throng,~He meditates, and compasses, a way~The 3122 10| Zealand through the deep, with meery cheer.~ ~ XVI~Already Holland 3123 12| what appeared to her the meetest way,~Moody and ill-content 3124 15| brim.~ ~ LXXII~Two ladies, meetly clad in fair array,~One 3125 43| they Ferrara's city near.~Melara lies left of that river' 3126 11| not so fair,~Tityrus and Melibaeus, with your peace!~'Twas 3127 20| stower.~Here Argilon of Meliboea I~Slew with ten warriors 3128 11| posts away.~ ~ XLV~With Melicerta on her shoulders, weeping~ 3129 17| where on their way~Adda and Mella, Ronco and Tarro stray.~ ~ 3130 16| tone;~That at the dulcet melody relented~The hearer's heart, 3131 27| and woe,~King Agramant a mendicant should wend;~That through 3132 36| band~Of soldiers, who their mercenaries are.~Of those so many fires 3133 24| content:~For much Zerbino's mercies both offend,~Which thus 3134 26| his feats confound,~Not merely lost in wonder, but astoud.~ ~ 3135 18| cancelled by thy fame,~And merged, in truth, in glory thou 3136 14| guide~Or Serpentine, who Mericold supplied.~ ~ XIV~They of 3137 7| ungrateful heart,~And haply meriting severer pain.~And, as for 3138 6| And would you hear a mermaid sing so sweet,~That the 3139 44| different sports elsewhere~And merrimake and stage-play meet the 3140 34| prompt my cruelty to shend.)~Meseemed enough to drive him from 3141 15| who to break its weakest mesh had sought,~Would have bestowed 3142 33| retrieve --~That Ulany, the message-bearing dame,~(Whose style no longer 3143 43| courtesy bestow~Upon that messanger a mark of gold.~The dog 3144 43| sends in haste a band~Of messengers, with letters far and nigh.~ 3145 36| gained~Sicily's shore, and in Messina reigned.~ ~ LXXI~"Part of 3146 43| height,~Rifted by Gaurus and Metaurus, wends~Past Apennine, no 3147 38| and which we should not mete~By what I hear so many tongues 3148 44| any place should be;~Crost Meuse and Rhine, and pricked upon 3149 17| cruel Creon bent her knees,~Mezentius ruled the subject Agiline,~ 3150 44| about;~And scattered in mid-air, like such light gear,~Go 3151 31| each knight and charger in mid-course;~Whelmed in one fate, the 3152 25| s sore,~Cut short to the mid-ear her tresses bright,~Excepting 3153 17| Wounded the unhappy warrior in mid-face,~So that he slew him; mourned 3154 23| his belt unslung,~And in mid-field upon a sapling hung.~ ~ 3155 36| the enamoured warriors in mid-heart.~Unable at the Child to 3156 23| supplies;~They stopt when to mid-height scarce rose my pain.~The 3157 6| Detained upon that monster in mid-sea,~ ~ XLIII~"Till to this 3158 10| But ended not; arrested in mid-word,~By a loud noise which in 3159 15| pirates, on all sides, your midland deep.~ ~ XXXI~"Pompey, though 3160 31| seen or heard,~Into their midmost camp the squadron spurred.~ ~ 3161 19| different thoughts, below,~To midships make resort, with chart 3162 28| with the kindest mien and mildest tone~That he could fashion, 3163 16| enjoins you mutual aid,~Militant here upon one Church's side.~ 3164 36| bred,~And from her paps the milky mother fed.~ ~ LXIII~"Needing 3165 27| summoned to his aid:~No mill-wheel ever turns with swifter 3166 44| gold was spied~A pod, like millet, in embroidery done:~Constantine' 3167 5| tassels of vermillion round,~Mimicking fashions, which were only 3168 41| and manifest,~And his high mindedness shone more and more;~-- 3169 22| tower~Be forced to stop and mingle in the fray:~For grant that 3170 35| straw,~Buffoons, informers, minions, all who there~Flourish 3171 42| thither sped,~From those his ministers, to break the chain,~Fettered 3172 20| Who drew her origin from Minos' blood.~ ~ XXV~"Youngest 3173 14| go,~Who fills the valiant Mirabaldo's post:~Him Baliverso, whom 3174 26| Who, what might be for miracles received,~In future ages, 3175 18| Hubert, with the spear,~(Of Mirford he) and Elio did dismount,~ 3176 15| author has the father's name mis-said;~One for another (how I 3177 31| may for ever silence the mis-say.~Boldly, and in his heart 3178 13| XXXIX~I could not say what mischiefs these offend;~One dies, 3179 33| without arms, to punish their misdeeds,~These wend a-foot, those 3180 36| like the justs whilere,~Misdoubting some strange accident, in 3181 37| vain denies~That woman, who misdoubts the adventure's end,~And 3182 8| was of death-like dye.~"Misericord! father," when the friar 3183 8| When to torment him new misfortunes rise:~Fortune does seldom 3184 46| cannot she her some ill misgivings quell.~But upon those that 3185 18| sin: let counsels which misguide,~And my own little wit, 3186 22| the evil cause of that mishap.~ ~ LXXXVIII~He quickly 3187 9| swore,~As one who evil deed misliked to hear,~And with impatience 3188 38| rests the spear,~Though I misrate not those of newer stamp,~ 3189 10| archers there.~By a hundred I misreckon not, or they,~The fighting 3190 22| bridge!" -- Nor did in this missay;~For thence a warrior pricked, 3191 11| and beside~(Unless I am mistaken) with the boat~Plunged, 3192 33| Having the courser, he mistakes me sore,~That thinks the 3193 15| another (how I know not, I)~Mistaking. Now this fearful strife 3194 19| The place he knew not, and mistook the way,~And hid himself 3195 17| who so unworthily~Had erst mistreated thus the goodly gear,~That 3196 31| thou, as matched with me mistrust thy force,~(And that thou 3197 18| having bid his men a knight misuse,~Whom all should worthily 3198 29| erspread.~At length the misused beast, with wear and tear~ 3199 44| high~Than these by sceptre, mitre, or by crown,~Nor save by 3200 8| and doom me to eternity."~Mixing his plaint with bitter tears 3201 18| CLXXXIII~The horrid mixture of the bodies there~Which 3202 19| cut, in her distress,~The mizenmast, to make her labour less.~ ~ 3203 37| shorn~By Marganor, amid her moaning crew.~Upon that felon knight, 3204 37| Which Mincius parts, and moats with marshy pool.~ ~ IX~ 3205 2| with laugh and jeer,~And mocking at your fierce and fruitless 3206 17| greater fear,~For, joined to mocks and mows, and words of shame,~ 3207 11| selected,~He from no other model need have wrought.~Since 3208 45| close,~Hurries and toils and moils without avail,~Till wearied 3209 33| his array,~Blind as the moldwarp, hence their lord convey.~ ~ 3210 8| able that fierce crew to mollify,~Who many days her cruel 3211 28| sceptre swayed,~Who was King Monacho, his brother's heir,~By 3212 39| been.~ ~ XXIII~Him under Monaco, upon the shore,~In his 3213 32| puissant peer.~All three are monarchy who the dame escort,~And 3214 18| effaced record.~Palidon of Moncalier next he speeds;~One who 3215 42| shall bear,~And Juba's and Moneses' kingdom hear,~And Spain 3216 26| train.~William, surnamed of Monferrato, view~'Mid those that have 3217 13| happiness.~ ~ XV~"Scarcely was Mongia by our galley doubled,~Ere 3218 23| ancient woman, figuring~Like monkey, rather say, like grandam 3219 14| here men take more~Than monkish tonsure at the warrior's 3220 35| keen goad,~Who sighed for Monodante's valiant heir,~Who at the 3221 43| very eye, nor stayed~In Montefiore till the night was done;~ 3222 32| to the valley wind;~And Montferrant's and Clermont's towers 3223 46| Molza, and Florian hight Montine;~With him, by whom through 3224 32| erthrown,~As serve to hide the monumental stone.~ ~ VI~Marphisa would 3225 1| wonderous waters different moods inspire.~Both spring in 3226 22| than twenty days~Both the Moravian and Bohemian line;~Threaded 3227 10| bristling wilderness.~Such Moray's flag, the savage squadron' 3228 20| vanish from the eye~The Greek Morea; rounding Sicily,~Into the 3229 14| Malgarine and Balinverno stands;~Morgant and Malzarise, whom common 3230 20| horizon and bedimmed the morning-light,~That he escaped Zerbino' 3231 34| never seen a saint more mortified.~Before my feet the doleful 3232 42| Cheating the eye, in mixt mosaic strove,~The quadrangle within 3233 14| from the wall Andropono and Moschine~He cast into the ditch: 3234 36| Or other follower of the Moslem faith,~Save sword in hand, 3235 17| From renegades? By Turkish Moslemite~Impure, why is Byzantium, 3236 33| ranged on either land,~Moslems and Christians watch, with 3237 1| XXXVIII~Within soft moss and herbage form a bed;~ 3238 42| love-chasing fountain's mossy urn,~To Angelica, that long 3239 43| pain allaid:~What was a mote is now a beam; so sore~It 3240 34| and the Hour,~Like wasting moth, in this our planet prey.~ 3241 37| She thrust him back, she motioned him away;~She seemed to 3242 18| he was gone, and by what motive swayed:~He followed Origille, 3243 23| plain~The damsel saw the motley troop arrayed,~She asked 3244 8| not the squalid snake of mottled stain,~Nor wild and whelpless 3245 41| leash upon his neck:~The motto; TILL HE COMES: In gilded 3246 2| a ray~That it defies the mouldering rust and rain:~The robber 3247 18| to man does injury,~But moulders iron, and here life is short;~-- 3248 45| He has a scanty mess of mouldy bread;~And sometimes is 3249 26| peasant, when a river saps its mounds,~And seeking vent the oozing 3250 23| fir upset,~And beech, and mountain-ash, and elm-tree hoar.~He did 3251 34| horrid sound;~Till at the mountain-cave his long career~He closed, 3252 12| finger pressed,)~Was in the mountain-cavern guided to~Whatever needed, 3253 14| Who since he in the wooded mountain-chain~(Nigh where Atlantes dwelt), 3254 17| the shades and gild the mountain-crest,~When Martan', fearing Gryphon 3255 44| to the valley foams the mountain-flood.~ ~ LXXXVIII~None that behold 3256 2| winged courser from his mountain-keep.'~And I to the approaching 3257 2| remains~But that I yonder mountain-passes show;~And sure 'tis little 3258 4| he discerns not flat from mountain-rise.~ ~ L~After the hippogryph 3259 2| cries.~I cannot reach the mountain-robber's den,~Compassed with cliffs, 3260 27| hoar.~Alp and Cevenne's mountain-solitude,~And Blois, and Arles, and 3261 18| high a wall to climb is mountain-steep,~The yawning sea a ditch 3262 20| sought the sea, and one the mountain-top,~One fled the hide herself 3263 10| bottom goes~In stream, which mountaineer disturbs with lime;~So the 3264 42| found,~In all its parts so mountainous and drear,~There is not ( 3265 33| Backwards shall sooner flow the mountainstream~Than I to other turn my 3266 38| LXXV~Whether Chance moved Mountalban's martial lord,~Or Malagigi, 3267 35| and wine,~In their vile mouths awhile such names convey,~ 3268 46| relieved;~And this he told so movingly, no eye~Remained, amid those 3269 37| there shows mercy unto none.~Mown are we with his impious 3270 17| For, joined to mocks and mows, and words of shame,~The 3271 18| down, of arms,~Of cry of Muezzins, on high exalted;~Of drums 3272 43| Mantled, say rather closely muffled, goes~Roland in sables next, 3273 37| deed report!~For sorely mulcted for the transgression were~ 3274 26| quarter steer,~And laden mules beneath their convoy go,~ 3275 26| was there footman left nor muleteer;~The Moor took this, Maganza 3276 6| salpouth, at her word,~And mullet hurry through the briny 3277 33| the bait, like poisoned mullets die.~ ~ XV~"Where Childibert 3278 43| so without restraint it multiplies,~And into rage and cruel 3279 44| His lords, mid tourney, mummery, mask and ball.~ ~ XXXV~ 3280 42| crimsoning the way,~Was with his murderer's slaughter ill content,~ 3281 1| Through this two clear and murmuring rivers stray:~Upon their 3282 14| beheld him leagued with Murther.~ ~ XC~"With coiners him 3283 16| with Rinaldo's thew~And muscle fortified, each Christian 3284 16| stripling he, who such sweet musick vented,~Accorded to the 3285 32| Bradamant, at large,~-- She musing on Rogero -- wends his way.~ 3286 33| were in Jewry grown,~The musk which we possess from thence 3287 22| guise~Of pigeons at the musquet's scaring sound,~The troop 3288 46| eloquence of exhaustless vein;~Mussuro, Lascari, and Navagero,~ 3289 26| winged college is at feud,~Mustering their swarms for mischief 3290 43| now, "'Tis my delight,"~(Mutters) "that I the proof would 3291 38| plain below,~Next, neck and muzzle, legs and belly show.~ ~ 3292 5| Sir cavalier,~In Thebes, Mycene, Argos, or upon~Other more 3293 17| Hermus and Pactolus are,~Mygdonia and Lydia: nor that country 3294 25| was Pasiphae's bull and Myrrha's sire;~But mine is madder 3295 26| untainted be;~And you in the mysterious sculptured trace~But little 3296 42| thousand quests had ne'er~Befal'n Rinaldo, here befel the 3297 15| Should coast, and by the Nabataean reign;~Content he, after 3298 35| tis famed; and mid the nameless swarm,~Thousands and thousands 3299 46| of old.~Melissa from his namesake this withdrew,~Its pole 3300 27| a nearer view, I see,~In naming her, she ill can act aright,~ 3301 13| Haply that I the story might narrate)~This I no little covet 3302 2| what the mournful Maganzese narrates;~And, at first mention of 3303 7| in truth and fondness her narration;~And still employs the choicest 3304 40| knights of mickle vaunt,~Nasamon's king a prisoner he desired,~ 3305 14| the men of Setta ride;~The Nasamonians troop with Pulian,~And Agricaltes 3306 40| offer made:~But brooked nat, that to Egypt's people, 3307 22| after some few days, in Natoly~Finds himself, and towards 3308 43| that praised which fair Nausicaa bore.~ ~ LVIII~He heard, 3309 46| vein;~Mussuro, Lascari, and Navagero,~And Andrew Maro, and the 3310 40| scaling-ladder, spear,~And naval stores, and every needful 3311 37| garb appeared:~For to the navel were those three ungowned,~-- 3312 40| fire and sword, the hostile navies viewed.~What outcries may 3313 9| fell island he~Resolved to navigate; nor yet the round~Of a 3314 11| XII~Then Phillis' and Neaera's praise forbear,~And ye 3315 34| himself, the champion knows,~Nebuchadnezzar whilom to such pain~God 3316 20| Egypt bring~Victual or other necessary thing.~ ~ XXVII~"For vengeance ( 3317 45| spear,~Nor that it was by necromancy made;~Excepting royal Galaphron 3318 3| foes,~And render vain each necromantic sleight,~Have here a speedy 3319 29| appeared divine,~Sweeter than nectar or than manna seemed:~He, 3320 25| wonderous sweet and full of nectarous dew,~To clack like a poor 3321 22| truncheons to withstand, well needed-were~A shield and cuirass of 3322 46| Constantine is made;~ ~ LXXII~Nor needeth he depart in haste, to guide~ 3323 18| dragon's hide) no more,~Than needle can the solid anvil score.~ ~ 3324 37| This with her teeth, with needles that, assails.~ ~ CX~As 3325 37| should so rebound,~Thou needst not crave a clearer trumpet' 3326 19| behind.~"Ah! how was I so negligent," (the Moor~Exclaimed) " 3327 7| Which fits one skilful in negociation,~And on the false Alcina 3328 15| Afric, and pursue~So far the negroes' burning shore, that they~ 3329 22| from the living stock,~In neighboring wood, and bade his followers 3330 40| should have Counsel in his neighbourhood."~ ~ LIV~Stricken in years, 3331 43| spite.~Be thy content thy neighbours' wide annoy,~Rather than 3332 34| vext so sore,~In Erymanth, Nemaea, Lerna, Thrace,~Aetolia, 3333 11| shoulders, weeping~Ino, and Nereids with dishevelled hair,~The 3334 33| appeared on earth.~ ~ XXVIII~"Nereus less fair, Achilles was 3335 17| were nursed,~Rome with two Neros and a Caius cursed;~ ~ II~ 3336 42| withal;~Whose flesh, bones, nerves, and sinews are a prey~To 3337 46| Adoardo hear,~That these my nest-notes shall by friendly wind~Be 3338 23| rock~And sharper than a nettle found its flock.~ ~ CXXIII~ 3339 23| lore,~By stubble, rush, and nettle-stalk; and broke,~Like these, 3340 | Nevertheless 3341 11| Cast on his shoulder, and new-cased in mail,~Left the sea-side, 3342 43| CXII~"So said, a gem, new-dropt, on her he prest,~And bade 3343 20| years)~Or blooming rose, new-gathered from the thorn.~He having 3344 14| horse and footmen tread.~The new-made king Libanio comes behind,~ 3345 11| Two rounding paps, like new-pressed milk in show,~Fresh-taken 3346 24| strand,~Except some steps, new-printed on the sand.~ ~ XXIII~"The 3347 6| sweated by the sapling-spray,~New-severed, when it yields to flame 3348 33| bands, who seem to vex the new-won reign~With many wrongs, 3349 11| work of better hand and nicer pain.~As well to you of 3350 32| loveliest fair,~Nature, so niggard of such courtesies.~With 3351 11| And more appears, when nigher her he sought:~Olympia she 3352 12| mountain came,~Whence (it was night-time) through a fissure glowed~ 3353 11| amid the rain.~And as the nightingale then loves to sing~From 3354 6| from the noontide hour.~And nightingales among those branches wing~ 3355 8| thought:~As when, from sun or nightly planet shed,~Clear water 3356 21| sift his brain.~Will he or nill he, in conclusion nought~ 3357 44| her evermore.~Willing or nilling, so must she forsake~Rogero, 3358 35| sought one of an otter's nimbleness,~By water and by land, a 3359 15| warriors thither sent,~Died nineteen thousand in the fiery pit;~ 3360 10| Salisbury;~Old Hermant Aberga'nny hold in fee,~That Edward 3361 13| more chaste and sage;~The noble-minded Isabel, who, where~It stands 3362 44| should not know, how little nobleness~Is valued without wealth; 3363 45| Cimmeria's caverned height~Nocturnus with his troops of shades 3364 46| the youthful lord~Twice nodded, opening legs and arms; 3365 46| grace and beauty most is noised by Fame;~ ~ VIII~Julia Gonzaga, 3366 31| So many drums and martial noises sounded;~So many steeds 3367 11| charge from the oppressive noon-tide sun;~Angelica, within, that 3368 10| LXXIX~"Upon the Duke of Norfolk's gonfalon~You see a lance 3369 15| sumptuous state,~Whence Norman bands their power in Puglia 3370 14| yielding,~And troops of Normandy and Aquitaine,~You, with 3371 33| sacred to Avernus' lake,~Or Norsine grot, throught subject Demons' 3372 19| enduring in such cruel wise.~North-wester or cross-wind no longer 3373 14| time they take, and by the north-wind fanned.~Crackle and snap, 3374 10| The Duke of Suffolk; and Northumbria's Earl~A garland does on 3375 15| His ready tiller, and more northward steers.~ ~ XVII~Astolpho, 3376 32| Sweden rules, one Gothland, Norway one;~Surpast in martial 3377 43| door,~With blubber lip and nostril, he descries.~Nor will he 3378 14| about her, wait~Attorney, notary, and advocate.~ ~ LXXXV~ 3379 46| thither sent,~Ebbed at this notice in so full a tide,~Well 3380 26| them is by the servants notified.~This they had served about 3381 Int| Renaissance Italy (it is worth noting that the Estes where the 3382 33| efface~With vengeful deed Novara's late disgrace;~ ~ XLIII~" 3383 42| to see and hear strange novelties~By natural desire he still 3384 9| VII~Between October and November's moon,~In that dull season 3385 45| The Child is captive in Novogorood,~To Ungiardo, worst among 3386 25| and valour are,~As never now-a-days in warrior dwell;~Nor yet 3387 | nowhere 3388 41| splits the shield, and is in nowise stayed,~Though bound about 3389 3| lords shall seated be,~(Such Numa and Augustus were of yore),~ 3390 6| Denmark's land, to live a nun,~Straight from her native 3391 21| but obtained no fruit.~Nursing her blind desires, which 3392 39| taken flight,~And reared his nursling in THE SYLVAN FORT;~Then 3393 3| through the discipline such nurture yields,~Shall flourish as 3394 1| Beside it, overshadowing oaks enclose.~Hollow within, 3395 10| Upon the bank there rose an oakwood hoar,~Where Philomel for 3396 39| arms and feet, his passage oared~To other barque, already 3397 9| domain,~So I would soften my obdurate mood,~And be to wed with 3398 2| from his breast.~Yet, in obediance to the christian king,~Prepared 3399 4| the wizard's winged steed.~Obediant to the royal Charles's beck,~ 3400 46| in person came.~So that obeying her that would persuade~ 3401 44| Observant of her sire, obeys the rein:~Yet prison, death, 3402 42| levelled spears.~To whose objection thus I make reply:~Erewhile 3403 16| to save, a subject's vows oblige;~And a famed emperor, of 3404 43| Brightens the night, with smoke obscures the day.~The wind blows 3405 22| days that witchery~Had so obscurred her altered mind and eyes.~ 3406 8| spirits from below,~Nor observation of the stars is done:~But 3407 16| barbarous foes,~The stream no obstacle might interpose.~ ~ XXX~ 3408 38| Bradamant reluctance shown,~And obstinately interposed delays,~This, 3409 41| LXVII~On Azos, Alberts, Obysons, did dwell~That hermit hoar, 3410 5| fulfil:~And snatch at all occasions which present~A mode, his 3411 5| and all her heart,~Was the occassion I was still unheard;~Nor 3412 43| That seldom such a chance occurs below;~And makes her fix 3413 13| Shall gild the town, of Ocnus' mother hight,~With her 3414 42| rills, the water quits that octagon,~Two ladies are there, equal 3415 15| Thessaly, or Spain.~Nor great Octavius does more praise command,~ 3416 9| of Spain.~ ~ VII~Between October and November's moon,~In 3417 14| ghosts in reeking gore.~Odo, Ambaldo, Satallon ensue,~ 3418 29| unloosed,~Wherewith her hind off-foot the madman noosed.~ ~ LXXI~' 3419 27| while anew~Their yearly officers elected are,~She taking 3420 37| XII~New trophies he on Oglio's bank has shown;~For he, 3421 45| female train,~That were in olden days, or are in new!~Nor, 3422 16| hands.~ ~ LXVII~Forward Sir Oldrad pricks and Fieramont;~This 3423 14| true,~Anselmo, Prando, and Oldrado fell;~The narrow place and 3424 18| pursued~And put to death by Olivero's son;~Who at ten cuts or 3425 46| and one Guarino:~Mario d' Olvito, and of royalty~That scourge, 3426 16| severed in a griesly wound,~Olympio de la Serra fall to ground:~ ~ 3427 17| then a course with bold Ombruno run,~Wounded the unhappy 3428 36| Thither, my lord, where, under omens fell,~Your foes into a well 3429 28| mode~Shall I excuse for my omission find,~So that from this 3430 44| courser rein;~Nor aught omits that monarch which may do~ 3431 7| XXXI~No pleasure is omitted there; since they~Alike 3432 Int| synopsis of Boiardo's work, omitting most of the numerous digressions 3433 25| Remembers him of every once-seen rill:~So is the damsel's 3434 24| for another, to destroy oneself?~ ~ II~Various are love' 3435 | onto 3436 29| Seldom he stopt, and ever onward went.~ ~ LXXIII~As much, 3437 26| mounds,~And seeking vent the oozing waters drop,~Hastening to 3438 31| often floundering in its oozy bed,~Well in the soundings 3439 6| gambol, inly stirred,~And open-mouthed the cumbrous tunnies leap;~ 3440 3| Whether it be the native operation~O certain stones, to shine 3441 21| pregnant with least ill opines.~ ~ LIV~"Reason demonstrates 3442 20| XXIII~"Some laying their opinions now before~The others, deem 3443 39| linked by chains, to their opponents clung,~When known for Moors 3444 18| cried:~"Not to be lost are opportunities.~This troop, by whom my 3445 43| The harlot nurse's evil oratory,~The prayer and presence 3446 25| western sun had hid his orbit sheen.~A happy man was he 3447 44| fairer show,~While in their orbits burn the heavenly fires:~ 3448 46| Her conquering lord from Orcus' dark repair,~And him in 3449 25| head to heel.~ ~ LV~"Then, ordering from her store a costly 3450 33| vessels, and a rain~Of noisome ordure on the board descends.~To 3451 21| afflicted in the style~Of vext Orestes, when he in his mood~Had 3452 25| plate and chain.~Falerina in Orgagna's garden made,~To deal Orlando 3453 14| list of slaughter swell.~Orghetto of Maganza, he from brow~ 3454 15| from Europe any one,~Our Oriental regions to explore;~Fain 3455 12| Spanish King Marsilius' oriflame,~Many of France did in his 3456 20| these upstood,~Who drew her origin from Minos' blood.~ ~ XXV~" 3457 6| backs above the water, sail~Ork, physeter, sea-serpent, 3458 Int| poem breaks off.~While the Orlando-Ranaldo-Angelica triangle is going on, the 3459 14| thinks; next speeds~Buraldo, Ormida, and Arganio tried,~Where 3460 46| Alexanders! of the tree~Of the Orologi one, and one Guarino:~Mario 3461 18| straightway for the wide Orontes steered,~And watched his 3462 42| pair~A very Linus and an Orpheus are.~ ~ LXXXIV~A statue 3463 37| brought,~That she retired in Ostericche lay,~He, with intent to 3464 43| Rome descends.~From Rome to Ostia goes Montalban's knight:~ 3465 14| with circling waves~Below Otricoli the Tyber laves.~ ~ XXXIX~ 3466 26| other, distanced be:~With Ottobon de Flisco, Sinibald~Chases 3467 29| the best,~Nor is in all an ounce of goodness found.~But it 3468 20| thrust so well,~She clean out-bore him senseless from the sell.~ ~ 3469 2| far have seen his heart out-torn,~Left my good squadrons 3470 43| it in fair mansions would outdo~That island which Tiberius 3471 6| rape;~Naked, or mantled in outlandish skin.~These doting sires, 3472 34| such wise~Endureth, nor outlasts it by a thought.~For Death 3473 18| And sees that foes all outlets barricade;~But, at the cost 3474 7| That flower, whose sweets outlive the fragile rest~Which quickens 3475 18| things requisite;~Visits his outposts and his guards alarms,~Nor 3476 32| they had the martial maid outrode)~Arrived before her at that 3477 43| then remains~Foiled and outscorned, for guerdon of his pains.~ ~ 3478 21| Thus each who spies~His outset, of his journey spreads 3479 18| prayer from parted cloud outshone~(Were it the work of faith 3480 18| warrior where, with limbs outspread,~Pillowed on barrel, lay 3481 32| wight who runs so free,~Outstripping my slow feet, or me install~ 3482 2| horse and maid, whose worth outstrips belief,~Were ill, methinks, 3483 35| fleece discerned that far outvied~Fine gold, whose wondrous 3484 41| No sign thereof should outwardly appear;~For where that evil 3485 32| with having made the peer~Outwatch the weary night in open 3486 46| he had like an anchoret outworn~A year and month and day 3487 5| And to the youth a station over-right~The balcony, to which he 3488 3| thrash the Romans' pride who overbear;~Shall from their hands 3489 39| abode;~Because a boisterous, overblowing, wind~Had driven his bark 3490 31| His tenderness him wholly overcame;~And touched with kind affection, 3491 46| Rogero's brain;~So wholly overclouded is his thought.~But him 3492 41| descend;~But in a thought so overcrowded are,~Through those so many 3493 39| To other barque, already overfraught:~But she repulsed the wretch 3494 2| flowers displayed,~Reposing, overhangs the crystal stream.~His 3495 40| a mile off the port, and overight~Biserta, now was anchored 3496 30| prison led.~The tidings, overjoyed, she hears repeat;~Yet blended 3497 26| that two one knight should overlay;~And, as magnanimous and 3498 32| cavaliers; his tale~Not overlikely was those kings to please;~ 3499 43| the good Mantuan landlord overnight~Took care with largest plenty 3500 33| armed with beak and talons, overran~Vessel and board, and preyed 3501 15| that, by ten good serjeants overseen,~Lest he by night get loose, 3502 1| which strays~Beside it, overshadowing oaks enclose.~Hollow within, 3503 39| liege, this is too foul an oversight,~A stripling boy in peril