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Ludovico Ariosto Orlando enraged Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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3504 46| Which pierced his thigh: he overtasked his might;~And on his kneepan 3505 17| Thyrsis was the pair;~Both overturned by Gryphon on the land.~ 3506 22| her champion Pinnabel,~Of overweening pride and little fame:~Him 3507 46| So moved him that they overweighed all harms~Inflicted on him 3508 19| course,~It would have been an overweight for four.~She, disembarking, 3509 19| might~On thee, whom weak and overwrought I read."~-- "Arms are not 3510 14| ranged. I wot not, I, if owl or crow,~Or other bird ill-omened, 3511 40| as 'tis said,~To Athens owls, and crocodiles the Nile.~ 3512 26| Because I know Rogero owns the steed,~More willingly 3513 39| farrier throws the struggling ox or horse.~ ~ LV~As soon 3514 24| scratch, and blow,~Horses and oxen slew, his helpless prey;~ 3515 10| Derby's a dog, a bear is Oxford's crest.~There, as his badge, 3516 31| If your demeanour more pacific were,~We ill should have 3517 34| our reign~He pleased, and pacify his fierce disdain.~ ~ 3518 32| Clodion strayed,~Puffing and pacing round his lofty tower,~As 3519 17| wretches of our train~He packed, nor empty left his lap 3520 17| There golden Hermus and Pactolus are,~Mygdonia and Lydia: 3521 23| the damsel mount upon a pad,~And put into her hand Frontino' 3522 37| overspread~With the rich dyes of Paestum's crimson rose,~When vernal 3523 15| wise beyond his years: from paganry~Converted by Orlando to 3524 10| hands with livid stain,~Thus painfully with griding fetters bound?"~ 3525 10| means with Moorish blood to paint it red."~ ~ XC~What time 3526 7| to feign the industrious painter knows,~With long and knotted 3527 33| famed whilere;~ ~ III~The painters we have seen, and others, 3528 17| whom her love so fitly pairs;~Whom Norandino gaily questioning.~ 3529 17| courtesies)~Obliged beneath his palace-roof to stay;~Where he let nought 3530 9| And at the bottom of a palace-stair,~Conducted by that elder, 3531 17| butchery~Beholds -- burnt palaces and ruined fanes --~And 3532 10| with which their fevered palates glow.~In this example which 3533 14| With Avila, Zamorra, and Palenza.~ ~ XV~The household-troops 3534 39| When, posting thither on a palfry light,~Is seen a damsel, 3535 18| their names effaced record.~Palidon of Moncalier next he speeds;~ 3536 46| of Torello, Bentivoglio,~Pallavigini's and Visconti's brood!~ 3537 44| all about with gorgeous palls.~Of herbs and flowers a 3538 41| fertile and fruit-bearing palm-trees blow,~Myrtle, and lowly 3539 7| is a wonder,~Unless 'tis palpable and plain to view:~Hence 3540 36| on the listed plain,~With palpitating heart, upon her side,~Waited 3541 41| host~To guard in Africa his paltriest post."~ ~ XLII~Thus Brandimart 3542 34| he had served.~ ~ XVIII~"Pamphylia, Caria, and Cilicia's reign,~ 3543 13| saw, of falling from the pan~Into the fire beneath, but 3544 19| What (whether dittany or pancy hight)~I know not; fraught 3545 43| Who will her paramour and pander be.~ ~ CXXX~"For remedy, 3546 46| Mainardo, the Leoniceno,~Panizzato, Celio, and Teocreno.~ ~ 3547 13| flourish many years before.~Pannonia's garland one of these shall 3548 46| work the golden vein~Within Pannonian or Iberian cave,~In unexpected 3549 46| Claude Ptolemy,~Trissino, Pansa, and Capilupi mine,~Latino 3550 22| cheated by this new illusion, pant~To slay the English baron, 3551 7| claws from tiger and from panther tear,~And tusks from living 3552 18| Cyprus to the right,~Makes Paphos' island next, and, anchoring,~ 3553 29| earthly ball~Haply affords few paragons, or none,~Let himself backwards 3554 23| Which in the world has not a parallel.~ ~ ~ I~Let each assist 3555 20| wanted to maintain~So many paramours, than shaft and bow;~And 3556 41| would not yield.~ ~ VI~"Pardi, sir, make we peace;" (he 3557 7| cunning leech will burn and pare~The flesh, and poisonous 3558 26| pause, each trusty helmet pared~With his good blade, or 3559 8| LXIX~This while round Paris-walls the leaguer lay~Of famed 3560 9| place~That had refused to parlay with the maid,~And give 3561 46| mind~The knight of whom she parlayed was that same,~Whom throughout 3562 41| tents the paynims rear;~And parleys, by this noble leader's 3563 45| justice tried,~And to his parliament the matter sends.~Marphisa, 3564 27| levelled with the ground.~The Parmesan like circle does survey,~ 3565 26| Mark his example or his parragon."~ ~ XLVIII~So Malagigi 3566 33| horde.~ ~ ~ I~Timagoras, Parrhasius, Polygnote,~Protogenes, 3567 33| away the crown,~No palm or parsley wreath, but crown of gold;~ 3568 27| the field,~Throughout, if partially confused by thee;~Abandon 3569 9| As friend of both, the parties to accord:~By whom, so joined, 3570 12| with silk and gold;~Nor of partition aught is spied or wall:~ 3571 26| road delayed,~And so to partnership in arms laid claim~With 3572 14| find.~ ~ LXXXIII~Her by her party-coloured vest he knew.~Unequal strips 3573 28| will, three leaves or four pass-by,~Nor read a line; or let 3574 19| rede abide,~And all the passengers affrighted sore;~Save that 3575 14| rode, ere he descried~A passing-cruel spectacle and sore;~But 3576 16| deadly blow,~-- Who seems too passing-proud, and greater ill~Works there, 3577 27| Braced on her limbs the passing-valiant queen:~With helm on head, 3578 26| its bounds,~And save his pastures and expected crop,~Dams 3579 29| in his fear:~Him a moist patch of brambles, in his flight,~ 3580 17| not his own,~And letters patent, drawn in ample wise,~Wherein 3581 34| thither, he found company,~The patriarch Enoch, and the mighty seer~ 3582 42| his borrowed crest,~He saw Patroclus crimsoning the way,~Was 3583 1| bit,~And with the other pats his sides and chest:~While 3584 45| on the sounding farm-roof patter~Hailstones descending from 3585 3| Julius, leagued with Spain.~Paunch-deep in human blood shall steeds 3586 22| of day,~Repaired, their paunches with green forage fraught.~ 3587 42| whereof dry stalks of coral pave;~Most pleasant, cool, and 3588 23| Whose coming for his safety paves the way:~Orlando sees beneath 3589 31| He would with him in his pavillion stay.~The paynim king in 3590 38| lists; and near~The two pavillions, both, an altar rear.~ ~ 3591 35| that martial damsel's bugle pealed.~ ~ LXVI~To Agramant and 3592 18| dread flashes, and loud peals of thunder,~As Heaven, to 3593 27| thee,~As we the pippin, pear, and service can~Engraft 3594 41| Agramant and King Sobrine:~The pebbly beach resounds, and rolling 3595 7| undid his chamber door,~And peeped abroad, but still no better 3596 28| esteemed: he there,~As he was peeping, saw an uncouth fight;~A 3597 32| to please;~For cold and peevish blew the wintry gale,~And 3598 26| king.~So combating with Peleus' son, of yore,~Penthesilaea 3599 46| I will succour thee with pelf,~With friends, with following, 3600 41| encounter in mid field, pell-mell,~And to the sky flew every 3601 10| the Earl of Kent's; upon~Pembroke's a griffin; underneath 3602 16| exprest, I wiss.~ ~ ~ I~Love's penalties are manifold and dread:~ 3603 22| master to the Jew~For thirty pence, nor Peter wronged, nor 3604 3| spirit should invade,~A pentacle for more assurance tied.~ 3605 26| with Peleus' son, of yore,~Penthesilaea warred on Trojan shore.~ ~ 3606 34| brand,~Which charged with pepper or amomum wave;~And what 3607 12| through uncertain way,~-- Lest peradventure she be hidden there,~They 3608 13| after in the field espied,~Performing wondrous feats of chivalry,~ 3609 7| Had put some end to her perfumery,~The time now come she need 3610 10| costly fare,~Song, dance, and perfumes; as how fashioned best,~ 3611 20| windows and from lofty height,~Periling life and limb, when in surprise~ 3612 14| now immersed~In this, he perishes amid that slaughter;~And, 3613 14| poor wretches in extremity,~Perishing through their furious leader' 3614 24| pity, more than hate, as he perpends~How foully such a goodly 3615 21| race, to do~What he had perpetrated on the twain.~"Woman, while 3616 20| from them were born~None to perpetuate their empery,~The idle law 3617 7| possessed~Alone by us in perpetuity.~That flower, whose sweets 3618 44| Built between Carcasson and Perpignan,~On a commanding point upon 3619 27| wert thou not present to perplex.~So serpent creeps along 3620 35| he finds no end~To his perplexing thoughts, and cannot see~ 3621 27| sees no way through these perplexities;~And, that Marphisa thence 3622 3| But boldly tread the path perscribed by fate;~Nor let aught stay 3623 40| herds of horse),~Chaldaean, Perse, and many more, controlled~ 3624 41| approaching him, "Saul, Saul,~Why persecutest thou my faithful seed?"~ 3625 43| tried.~ ~ LXXXV~"With such persuasions, and with many more~Anselm 3626 39| bestows;~And whatsoe'er pertains to land or sea,~Bestirs 3627 20| lot endure.~The hard and pertinacious crone replied,~"Nought shalt 3628 33| lingering train,~'Twould seem; perusing oft what they behold~Inscribed 3629 17| And secret wood, scarce pervious to the tread,~Seeking red 3630 3| his brother Azo heir~Of Pesaro and fair Ancona's reign,~ 3631 39| far and nigh,~The Moors so pestilently gall and smite,~Agramant 3632 17| his fields with blood. To pests like these~Our Italy was 3633 20| but plies~Here, in her petulance, with laugh and jeer.~Marphisa 3634 14| mantle sheared;~As though of pewter, not of iron beat,~Or rather 3635 46| that follows in his train!~Phaedro, Cappella, Maddalen', Portio,~ 3636 16| behind him led,~In one deep phalanx. At the mighty sound~Alone, 3637 16| those, I will not, I~Call phalanxes or squadrons, but a mere~ 3638 23| mean."~Feeding on such like phantasies, beside~The real truth, 3639 15| duke pursues;~In which King Pharaoh and his host were lost:~ 3640 33| fires that rage,~Even to the Pharo, flaming far and near,~Then, 3641 38| which treasured in the phial lies,~Wherewith Astolpho, 3642 11| grain,~And members seem of Phidias' turnery,~Or work of better 3643 11| noble dame.~ ~ XII~Then Phillis' and Neaera's praise forbear,~ 3644 32| to love or to caress,~The philtre, drunk erewhile, allows 3645 34| genial board.~As they king Phineus from those fowls released,~ 3646 18| land, with nimble wing,~Phoenicia and Palestine; till the 3647 36| Of his own age, he out of Phrygia fled.~Who, after long and 3648 11| ancient days before the Phrygian swain,~By how much heavenly 3649 11| that animal discreet~Which Phryxus bore, the sun illumed the 3650 6| above the water, sail~Ork, physeter, sea-serpent, shark, and 3651 30| s succour run~The king's physician in his art best read;~Who, 3652 46| cavern, I with thee~Emilia Pia, and thee, Margherite,~Angela 3653 16| Directly to, and from, the Picard sea;~That by St. Martin' 3654 3| And make the Umbri and Piceni sign~Their shame, and sack 3655 24| Abandoned in the fields pick, scythe, and plough,~And 3656 34| bellies so for victual crave,~Picks stones, and trees lays level 3657 46| tied~By love and blood, lo! Pico and Pio true;~He that approaches 3658 19| afterwards is told.~ ~ LXXVII~On pieballed horse Marphisa entered, -- 3659 21| He would have torn her piece-meal with his teeth.~ ~ LIII~" 3660 15| corslet's iron twist,~And piecemeal shares and maims the felon 3661 38| mane;~Two of his legs were pied, his forehead white~Fast 3662 46| forms, that swarm on either pier~Of the thick-crowded harbour, 3663 46| the Volterrane.~Blosio, Pierio, Vida, famed for flow~Of 3664 46| royalty~That scourge, divine Pietro Aretino.~I two Girolamos 3665 42| sovereign art had fashioned each pilaster.~Various they were in visage 3666 43| quarried slabs and rich pilasters;~Who, good Orlando being 3667 2| false felon, from that pilfer'd steed;~I am not wont to 3668 18| they encounter with the pilgrim-Greek,~Who of false Origilla gives 3669 18| where, with limbs outspread,~Pillowed on barrel, lay the wretched 3670 35| most fair;~Even thus below, pimps, flatterers, men of straw,~ 3671 19| straight at work or ready pin.~And there, without, in 3672 14| and staff of gold,~Once Pinador's, had given to him to hold.~ ~ 3673 5| shun the burning heat or pinching cold,~And Albany, unseen 3674 20| II~Women have reached the pinnacle of glory,~In every art by 3675 18| Anselm, Raymond and Sir Pinnamont~From London-town; though 3676 46| and blood, lo! Pico and Pio true;~He that approaches 3677 17| breath to the sonorous reeds,~Piped forth his prisoned flock 3678 17| elder's sound,~Upon whose pipes the wonted tune was played,~ 3679 27| the aid of thee,~As we the pippin, pear, and service can~Engraft 3680 44| cost such annoy~To bold Pirithous, as for her I've lost~My 3681 46| secretary, lo!~The learned Pistophilus, mine Angiar here,~And the 3682 32| stranger said,~To such a pitcher her smothered anguish grows,~ 3683 45| enter not the town; but nigh~Pitches his broad pavilions on the 3684 31| cavalier,~And through the pitchy darkness seeks the knight,~ 3685 24| trespass due,~This is a pitfall for his feet to shape,~Which 3686 35| But that they knew his pitiable plight.~ ~ LXXIV~The third 3687 36| pierce the Child intended,~Pitiless, and inflamed with furious 3688 38| ye know and I,~That -- pitted one to one in listed fight --~ 3689 29| sad at soul.~ ~ XXXI~That placated, or in some content,~The 3690 14| head,~Astorga, Salamanca, Placenza,~With Avila, Zamorra, and 3691 24| endurance Isabel inclined;~Placing, from ancient Testament 3692 46| Nor ever greater havoc plagued that reign.~ ~ CXIII~Bradamant' 3693 41| listed fight,~Then ye have plaid the embassador to-day,~In 3694 14| damsel showed, who sorely plained,~Such grief as women in 3695 19| bestirs himself, where'er~Planks opened by the beating sea 3696 30| blade,~Which on the saddle's plated pommel fell;~Nor yet its 3697 14| scale~The inner bulwark's platform) when they hear~The appointed 3698 6| with interwoven spray,~Pleached in mixed modes, all lovely, 3699 32| losing party has not room~To plead before the judge pronounces 3700 26| more due~Than either of the pleas maintained by you.~ ~ CVIII~" 3701 45| wouldst ever do~By me what pleaseth thee; for thou wilt ne'er~ 3702 14| courtesy,~That both were pleasured by his kindly cheer.~For 3703 38| contain.~ ~ LXXXVII~Rogero pledges first his knightly word,~ 3704 16| thou wast journeying to the plenar court)~To cheer me, -- left 3705 9| him there,~Nor prove less pliant than had been before~All 3706 9| kindred's utmost aid,~Doing or plotting, me from my retreat~Conveyed 3707 20| by~Cyprus and Rhodes, and ploughs the Aegean sea:~Beholds 3708 39| of such force the billows plow:~Nor would he have believed 3709 4| Seemed fashioned with the plumb, by builder's skill~Nor 3710 38| XXVI~Then made him that plumed beast again bestride,~Rogero' 3711 28| He waxed ruddy, gay, and plump in plight,~And seems a cherubim 3712 18| speed with which he on the plunderer prest.~ ~ XXXVI~So raging, 3713 17| Through all their quarters, plundering Turk and Moor:~But the unsparing 3714 34| warrior say)~"Satan and Pluto so will I confound,~And 3715 44| silk and gold was spied~A pod, like millet, in embroidery 3716 29| Which so adorns and points poetic lore!~And, as renowned should 3717 7| Directed thither, where in Poictier's wood~The vocal tomb, containing 3718 18| certainly~Wrongs Famagosta, poisoning, in such sort,~That city 3719 21| better knew what deadly poisons slay~Than he the force of 3720 10| Hungary~He had seen; and Polacks, Germans, and the rest~Should 3721 4| sun beholds not 'twixt the poles, a Child~So excellent as 3722 10| Hecuba, at view~Of murdered Polydore, her infant son;~Fixed on 3723 33| I~Timagoras, Parrhasius, Polygnote,~Protogenes, renowned Apollodore,~ 3724 36| bred~In Anthropophagus, in Polypheme;~Not thee; that art in wickedness 3725 10| Russ, Prussian, he and Pomeranian spied.~ ~ LXXII~Although 3726 28| love esteem?~ ~ XIX~"He pondered an excuse; then weened' 3727 2| guide,~Suspended there, and pondering on her doom:~And came upon 3728 36| force to part the two;~Their poniards snatched away, and on the 3729 37| VIII~Erewhile Marullo and Pontante for you~Declared, and -- 3730 3| good sword with blood of Pontier base;~The mighty wrong chastised, 3731 38| XXIII~In sacred stole, pontifical, arraid,~Her the archbishop 3732 44| were four to one,~And with pontoons to bridge the stream supplied;~ 3733 20| my race and strain.~Not Pontus, Aethiopia, Ind alone,~With 3734 41| That he for these left pools which Xanthus fills;~And 3735 30| load convey.~ ~ XIII~Nor poops nor prows does Roland more 3736 43| rest,~All taken from the poorest of the town;~And in one 3737 34| fleeces drew,~In the outer porch, a dame of hoary hair.~On 3738 43| the Count departs,~Till porphyries he procures and alabasters,~ 3739 42| Of serpentine and of hard porphyry are~The stones which form 3740 6| leap;~Thither the seal or porpus' wallowing herd~Troop at 3741 34| He marks mighty pool of porridge spilled,~And asks what in 3742 25| And power is mine to work portentous ends;~Nature and Elements 3743 37| XIX~If chaste Laodamia, Portia true,~Evadne, Argia, Arria, 3744 40| in fury poured;~Mosque, portico, and palace, went to ground;~ 3745 46| Phaedro, Cappella, Maddalen', Portio,~Surnamed the Bolognese, 3746 15| round.~Orrilo re-unites the portions missed,~Found on the champagne, 3747 43| those pages backed, the portly steeds~Went, sweeping wide 3748 20| we can find, to guard our ports and strand.~And, to discover 3749 18| of Andology,~The valiant Portuguese, and Stordilan.~He sends 3750 13| the sell,~Would'st thou posses him, and to follow me;~For 3751 19| and rude.~ ~ XL~She, not possessing wherewithal to pay~The kindly 3752 37| This without contest its possessors yield,~And the rich goods 3753 23| returned, and thought~How possibly the thing might be untrue:~ 3754 42| perpetual record says~Guy Posthumus -- about whose honoured 3755 4| What to another canto I postpone.~ ~ 3756 29| grace,~A real joy, to be postponed to none.~Of women everywhere 3757 1| graver cares some little time~Postponing, lend thy leisure to my 3758 29| from the fire does lift~The pot, wherein she cooked those 3759 37| woman went her ways, the potion made,~And to the palace 3760 4| where, underneath the sill,~Pots, with perpetual fire and 3761 29| prey,~Upon her would have pounced Orlando near;~Who would 3762 2| ascent~The wizard soars, then pounces from the sky,~And strikes 3763 33| Those cruel claws, which, pouncing from the sky,~To him such 3764 14| think foul scorn beneath the pounding stake~Strangely to die the 3765 46| the white unicorn was seen pourtraid.~ ~ XXVII~There thinking 3766 46| part of the storied walls pourtraied~That noble prince's gentle 3767 20| reign.~To arm a hand more powerful than your own~Is an ill 3768 13| claiming place,~And all praise-worthy excellence and grace.~ ~ 3769 42| and every study meet~In praising them, they on their shoulders 3770 17| and well-trapt coursers prance.~A fairer show remains; 3771 14| Spineloccio true,~Anselmo, Prando, and Oldrado fell;~The narrow 3772 4| rotted bark, long decayed."~"Prate as thou wilt, I shall restore 3773 29| side~He had removed the prating eremite,~With visage less 3774 14| girt with paladine~And preachers of the word, and barons 3775 20| speak, begun~With longer preamble: "Amid your train,~Sirs, 3776 27| Rodomont displaid~Than the precaution and the nimble sleight~Which 3777 3| following~Consigned, who now precedes us by few miles;~Brunello 3778 43| shall show?~ ~ CLV~The night preceding that ill-omened day~Flordelice 3779 3| the volume closed,~Whose precepts to her will the spirits 3780 2| dark and drear;~And giddy precipice, where path was none,~Nor 3781 2| sage~Had conscience more precise or passing pure.~Though 3782 21| is the night;~And, at a preconcerted signal made,~Be without 3783 7| posterity~Of what, was oft predicted, should ensue?~Alas! why 3784 21| XLV~" `To me such preface needs not (said anew~The 3785 23| grieving county flew,~And, prefacing her tale in likely wise,~ 3786 38| was intent,~To public good preferring private gain,~So spake in 3787 32| XVII~-- The period so prefixt o'erpast by one,~By two, 3788 10| chrystal rears~Bath's wealthy prelate, camped among the rest.~ 3789 7| Which bishops and which prelates wear at court.~ ~ V~The 3790 20| who shall without her be.~Premised, if loser, thou shalt be 3791 30| lots decide your right:~Premising, he whose lot is drawn before~ 3792 28| Conceit respecting women prepossest.~The malice which he bears 3793 33| Hereafter, these I will not now presage.~So spake that wizard, and 3794 38| think, save only God on high~Prescient of all which is to be below,~ 3795 16| And o'er Marjorca Baricond presides.~ ~ LXVIII~Well matched 3796 23| flock.~ ~ CXXIII~Amid the pressure of such cruel pain,~It past 3797 33| proclaim;~We Priest and Prester John the sovereign name.~ ~ 3798 26| To war on Heaven in his presumptuous thought.~ ~ CXXII~Discord, 3799 44| is weak or wise: --~But presuppose that, with his kindred crew~ 3800 5| for her displayed;~But so pretending love, he hoped to speed,~ 3801 9| younger brother, her, the duke pretends,~To be conjoined in wedlock, 3802 27| none to modesty~Could make pretension, whether rich or poor;~And 3803 8| embrace:~Him, kindling into pretty scorn, she smites~With one 3804 28| espied;~Abandoned by its priesthood, like the rest,~For war 3805 33| maintains,~Which man from his primaeval doom may save.~Here, save 3806 43| strain;~In memory that their primal race had grown~Erewhile 3807 43| with large hire engaged the primest masters.~Next Flordelice, 3808 25| that embarrassment.~The princess a prime jennet, as a token,~ 3809 27| of fair Castille~Queens, princesses, and dames of noble strain,~ 3810 Int| Gradasso of Sericana (whose principal reason for going to war 3811 17| XXXVIII~"When on the newly printed sand his eyes~Norandine 3812 2| for your gains~Will find a prison-house, and be it so!~Whate'er 3813 45| with the man that bore~The prison-keys a parley had, and said,~ 3814 21| stripling to remain,~And suffer prisonment's perpetual pain.~ ~ XXIX~" 3815 5| hoarded, she with careful privacy~Preserved whatever she esteemed 3816 37| dare.~-- In fine, man's privileges, whatsoe'er,~They swear, 3817 27| While Fortune, who would probe thee to the bone,~Has taken 3818 12| meeting plates were joined, probed steel with steel;~Nor was 3819 5| the fruit.~You of your own proceeding nothing hide,~And I will 3820 43| arrayed,~Behind in long procession took their way;~And they 3821 17| the sonorous metal blow,~Proclaiming him the conqueror of that 3822 4| unhappy daughter's name,~Proclaims by town and city, that the 3823 25| and clear,~Had laboured to procure by actions fair,~And having 3824 17| Garnished with what could be procured, of ore~And pearl, from 3825 43| departs,~Till porphyries he procures and alabasters,~And fair 3826 29| And by the road achieves prodigious deeds.~ ~ ~ I~O feeble and 3827 6| Unweeting of the wonderous prodigy~Of spirit, pent beneath 3828 33| thence we bear,~In fine those products from this clime are brought,~ 3829 43| well Anselmo to persuade,~Proffering, for his reward, the palace 3830 9| to wend,~United for such profitable end."~ ~ XIV~To hear the 3831 39| less pain,~(Since swimming profited the caitiff nought,~And 3832 35| that ancient, of his store profuse,~He all those names into 3833 23| whom such streams of blood profusely flow,~As were a cause for 3834 44| That from the two bright progenies, which none~Will equal in 3835 27| darts, that eye~Pursues the progress of the flash with pain;~ 3836 3| scarce to him more mild~Than Progue or Medea to her child.~ ~ 3837 27| avenging sabre rear,~This I prohibit thee, and, should it need,~ 3838 22| In all (who rather than prolong with blame~Their life, would 3839 20| they~All in their rage promiscuously slay.~ ~ XXXV~"Did ten 3840 27| sentence on the case,~She must pronounce what would ensure his bliss.~ 3841 43| Nature's causes, works, and properties;~What her beginnings, what 3842 Int| hopeless. Nevertheless, it is prophecised that they shall wed and 3843 7| XV~To all her arms a just proportion bear,~And a white hand is 3844 7| And made her limbs of a proportioned size;~And of the very measure 3845 27| inclose;~A square, of just proportions for that need,~With two 3846 10| more the way, as he before~Proposed, for compassing the whole 3847 9| XLVII~"Yet him a cruel proposition made,~Granting a year his 3848 6| gems of India overlaid.~Propp'd at four points, the portal 3849 9| stretched on earth, that propped upon his hand:~They sleep, 3850 10| firmament~Seemed to repose as props, so fair in show~Are lovely 3851 35| Vices, and the liberal arts proscribe.~ ~ XXIV~"Believe it, that 3852 35| harmonious line.~His foul proscription passes without blame.~That 3853 19| defer the fray, or leave,~Or prosecute by this or other light,~ 3854 44| that foul despite,~Done to Proserpina, cost such annoy~To bold 3855 10| he passes: such delight~Prospects to him of land and ocean 3856 15| no note.~ ~ XXVIII~"With Prospero Colonna, puissant peer,~ 3857 9| land~With a clear sky and prosperous wind to speed.~The county 3858 43| again,~She to some strong protector will have flown;~Who to 3859 6| here, and there a sound,~Protects the remnant from the invading 3860 21| pursuit~Made him with many protestations swear~To grant in every 3861 34| from his side;~Which, he protested, I parforce should take,~ 3862 33| Parrhasius, Polygnote,~Protogenes, renowned Apollodore,~Timanthes, 3863 3| Fair virgin, would too long protract thy stay;~And Phoebus, many 3864 20| augment thy pain.~And thee protracted death but more torment.'~` 3865 9| Rose from the sand with prouder might and main;~So when 3866 14| water.~ ~ CXXV~Lewis the Provencal is cleft in two;~Arnold 3867 23| lay~Dispersed about that province, foot and horse;~For the 3868 18| store~Was made there, for provisioning the place.~Charlemagne wisely 3869 11| another wrong~To Proteus, and provoke his ire again;~Make him 3870 20| still behoves us place the prowest wight~Whom we can find, 3871 8| for the stranger damsel prowl about,~Of her to make an 3872 10| parted climes divide,~Russ, Prussian, he and Pomeranian spied.~ ~ 3873 18| were,~From stock obscure in Ptolomita grown;~Of whom the story, 3874 33| bold,~Tripoli, Berniche, Ptolomitta viewed,~And into Asia's 3875 28| intent,~The daughter of a publican of Spain,~Of presence and 3876 45| rend and slay~Her prisoners publicly with shame and scorn,~Seems 3877 36| XVIII~Whether the maid would publish, in her pride,~That she 3878 46| served this band to steer~Has published tidings of the cavalier.~ ~ 3879 30| either palm he rowed,~And puffed and blew the brine before; 3880 32| the moody Clodion strayed,~Puffing and pacing round his lofty 3881 39| his mouth, wherewith he puffs and blows.~For, save his 3882 25| Even Nature's self, the puissantest of things.'~ ~ XXXVIII~" 3883 29| Falconer by heron or by puller do;~Whose entrails he plucks 3884 27| eagle wont to strain~The pullet, in her talons circled round;~ 3885 19| Rendered, by whom the spouting pumps were plied.~This in the 3886 6| grappled from behind, now punched before,~He stands, and plies 3887 42| that band before, should punished be.~For after the unhappy 3888 24| carcase threw:~He diverse punishments awhile revolved,~And thus 3889 7| with that eye, which in his pupillage,~Beaming with wrath, he 3890 38| made repair,~With those ill purchasers of Spain to trade,~Found 3891 27| that, if one appeared of purer strain,~'Twas that she better 3892 22| Who with white flowers had purfled o'er his vest.~But moved 3893 14| people, who are they~That purged thy tomb from heathen hounds 3894 33| than with blood,~Tanarus purples wide Po's ample flood.~ ~ 3895 43| bye-roads and solitary goes;~Purposely lighting on a stream, whose 3896 7| The mode which she was purposing to employ,~From that effeminate, 3897 28| swelling lips and forehead pursed,~The ground that melancholy 3898 28| And servingmen meanwhile purveys and steeds;~And a provision 3899 15| Memphis renowned for pyramids; in sight,~He marks the 3900 29| Near Thoulouse, on the Pyrenaean Mount.~ ~ LI~Much country 3901 14| With sage Archytas and Pythagorus.~ ~ LXXXIX~"But those philosophers 3902 26| worse cause of woe.~That Python, oft the theme of ancient 3903 29| or than manna seemed:~He, quaffing largely, now of Ishmael' 3904 15| net as well; than which no quainter thing~Was ever by the file 3905 39| ride;~And of as diverse qualities appear,~As are the plants, 3906 43| had any strife; in fine~We quarrelled; and the fault, alas! was 3907 34| yellow, green and white.~The quavering rivulet and quiet lake~In 3908 20| had hoped to find upon the quay;~He turns and gazes round 3909 16| most cunning and audacious quean,~Although she quakes from 3910 27| the Queen of fair Castille~Queens, princesses, and dames of 3911 26| whilere was held.~ ~ XLVI~"In quelling it his honoured faulchion, 3912 42| Whereof one lights, one quenches amorous fires;~And how nought 3913 35| consume.~Besides that Song can quicken and set free~Him that is 3914 13| dome as well,~As taste is quickened by variety,~So it appears 3915 37| more will wearied be~With quickening in his verse your high renown;~ 3916 7| outlive the fragile rest~Which quickens man when he in earth is 3917 41| their life have care.~Who quickest can, into the skiff descend;~ 3918 45| and fell~Such force and quickness by the stripling shown;~ 3919 14| The angel him approaches quietly,~And, " 'Tis God's bidding" ( 3920 38| woe.~Each in repose and quietude designed~To pass what time 3921 4| supplied with plume and quill.~And here the damsel knows ' 3922 16| oak and some of skins,~And quilted vest and turban's twisted 3923 10| Mangiane,~Passing the great Quinsay beheld; in air~Above Imavus 3924 24| when thy father's land~Thou quittedst for my sake; and, if I may~ 3925 16| alone,~And loathed shield, quiver, helmet, sword and lance;~ 3926 31| unwonted course is gone.~Quivers the bridge beneath, as it 3927 28| who would their treasons quote."~ ~ LXXVI~Of sounder judgement, ' 3928 14| have viewed~Him anywhere," quoth Discord in reply;~"But oft 3929 18| little thins the gathering rabblery,~Staining the ground with 3930 7| the steed and light.~Him Rabicano those who know him name,~ 3931 33| the pinions they expand~Ragged, and huge, and shapeless 3932 24| found;~That, in a hundred rags, the champaign strew.~Zerbino 3933 28| from the multitude, not rail at all,~If otherwise your 3934 18| uprooted by the blows.~ ~ X~Rainier and Guido, Richard, Salomon,~ 3935 9| in less troops or more,~Rains under shed and tree had 3936 18| Never to be arrayed or rallied more,~But that Grandonio 3937 30| despite~Raged Mandricardo, rallying from that blow,~Which had 3938 40| and sow.~With battering ram, and other instrument,~To 3939 16| But to the left t'wards Ramah shaped his way,~By the most 3940 6| if the burden pains;~No ramble his in square or market-place!~ 3941 27| fiend who makes that palfrey ramp~Bears off the frighted Doralice 3942 26| er she touches, wall or rampire steep,~Goes to the ground' 3943 2| doubt, and his own native, rancorous mood,~That unawares he issued 3944 13| here and there my story ranges,~It will be found less tedious 3945 17| Into two troops, whom, ranked by blood and might,~The 3946 34| offends his nose and eyes.~Ranker than pitch and sulphur is 3947 23| ever ceased his wound~To rankle, till it marred his sober 3948 1| Which gnaws my heart and rankles at its root!~What's left 3949 12| Angelica had land and sea~Ransacked, and wood and field, and 3950 16| on, and gall~Their flying rants, which nowhere will abide:~ 3951 14| chastise~The hands which so rapaciously have preyed;~Who brethren, 3952 40| that bore the child away;~Rapes and a thousand evil things 3953 33| angel and divine,~Bastiano, Raphael, Titian, who (as they~Urbino 3954 34| the sky,~Sainted Elias, rapt from mortal eye.~ ~ LXIX~ 3955 6| single part but glows,~With rarest gems of India overlaid.~ 3956 27| creed.~ ~ CVII~They, after, ratify the king's award,~Between 3957 36| heard to bray;~And as their rattling notes the riders call,~Rousing 3958 18| loudly cursed them, and some raved behind,~While others shouted, " 3959 6| roused from lazy sleep;~Raven-fish, salmon, salpouth, at her 3960 14| XLII~"Thou needs art raving mad," replied in few~The 3961 8| examine all her witcheries;~To raze the seal, burn images, and 3962 15| since he scissors lacked and razor keen,~He wanting these, 3963 3| benign and sage,~Shall re-create on earth the golden age.~ ~ 3964 31| and the deafening sound~Re-echo vaulted skies and grassy 3965 26| retire,~She sees the others re-engage with ire.~ ~ CXIII~Marphisa, 3966 33| that takes his heir,~And re-establishes the papal chair.~ ~ XVII~ 3967 23| broken saddle at his ease re-pieced.~ ~ XCVI~He mounts his horse, 3968 15| think a dream to see him re-unite,~And but return more furious 3969 15| the felon round.~Orrilo re-unites the portions missed,~Found 3970 9| goes,~A river's side he reaches on a day;~Which to the neighbouring 3971 37| sex survives in part:~Yet reacheth not its pitch, nor such 3972 39| through love had lost, to reacquire~Was his whole study, was 3973 29| aground.~Whichever be the reading of this mystery,~Of him 3974 41| sinks outright, no more to reappear;~Some rise, and bounding 3975 35| king is gone --~As soon as reappears the dawning day,~Towards 3976 14| be;~Nor from his victory reaps other gain,~Than yielding 3977 27| sabre's blow:~Even on the rear-guard falls the vengeful stroke,~ 3978 18| Medoro this forbad.~ ~ CLXXXI~Rearing the insidious blade, the 3979 27| fathers' ancient seat might reascend:~And thus he might the fruit 3980 13| derange~And mar our every reasonable will,~Converts, with woeful 3981 39| regained;~And, in its glorious reasonings, yet more clear~And lucid 3982 1| purpose taxed his daring,~To reassume as wont her haughty bearing.~ ~ 3983 45| leaves his bed,~Vanish, and reassure the timid wight:~Without 3984 10| by that other's comfort reassured.~ ~ CI~Rogero overhand, 3985 40| the Nubians' reign,~Those reavers shall not in your land remain."~ ~ 3986 39| Aquamorta's strand~He from the reaving Saracen should wrest,~Made 3987 45| heavily with hammer, to rebate~Its edge, as well he on 3988 36| his love against her sire rebelled;~And was baptized, and was 3989 34| the Son~Of God with this rebuke St. Peter shent;~In saying, " 3990 45| But well my rashness is rebuked by Heaven:~Since I by one 3991 18| to sally, he to thought recals.~He comes at last to where 3992 43| roof and wall:~St. George recedes; recede from that swift 3993 | recently 3994 24| where parforce~Who enter its recess go astray;~And here and 3995 14| without dismay,~And little reck the proud barbarian's boast:~ 3996 1| gladdened by the tale.~He recks not what he says or does, 3997 43| air.~ ~ LIII~As soon as he reclines his weary head,~Asleep is 3998 29| effaced~In him all ancient recollections are,~How she by him was 3999 23| can but in my lays,~As recompence, for ever sing your praise.~ ~ 4000 32| so his tale~To Bradamant recounts that castle's lord,~The 4001 26| And, could that knight recover his own brand,~Which by 4002 44| collects, the Grecian cavalier~Recrost the bridge by which he past 4003 46| the unicorn~His vigour had recruited by the stay.~He, Leo, and