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  1     I|    Baldwin next he spied another thought,~Whom spirits proud to vain
  2     I|          scope was of our former thought, --~Of Sion's fort to scale
  3     I|        power to sundry given,~In thought, opinion, worth, estate,
  4     I|        idea wandered through his thought,~Her shape, her gesture,
  5     I|         at least to all of wiser thought,~Their hearts were fertile
  6     I|      wrath revived with this new thought,~With age and years that
  7     I|     sacrifice."~ ~ LXXXVIII~Thus thought the tyrant in his traitorous
  8    II|     Christians, whom he faulters thought;~All ruth, compassion, mercy
  9    II|       not alter his well-settled thought;~O miracle! O strife of
 10    II|         silly women use,~Another thought her nobler humor fed,~Her
 11    II|        fault supposed,~Her noble thought cast how she might them
 12    II|         pity he never framed his thought,~Yet, for the king admired
 13    II|      store-house of his princely thought,~And prays he may in long
 14    II|   protect,~Pray him from us that thought aside to lay,~Nor us forbid
 15    II|          have his fill of war,~I thought my wisdom should thy fury '
 16    II|         foe, in act, in word, in thought,~The law of nations or the
 17    II|      brought:~Yet his fell heart thought long that little way,~Grieved
 18   III|   pleased so the secret of their thought~A deep repentance did forthwith
 19   III|         construed all amiss,~And thought she wished to kill, who
 20   III|      depart;~Not strong Argantes thought his life was sure,~He could
 21   III|       stayed,~And for in vain he thought the labor spent,~To assail
 22    IV|          resolving in his damned thought~To find some let to stop
 23    IV|        dwelt within your haughty thought,~When, armed with shining
 24    IV|          tell.~ ~ XXI~And yet he thought, -- Oh, vain conceit of
 25    IV|   springtime gold,~Love-piercing thought so through her mantle drave,~
 26    IV|         tender eild;~For well he thought, if mortal men have faith,~
 27    IV|      escaped the treasons of his thought,~The rage increased in the
 28    IV|       the kindness of his gentle thought,~Ready to comfort each distressed
 29    IV|        thou gather in thy gentle thought,~So fair a princess should
 30    IV|         and good proceeding,~She thought to strike the iron that
 31     V|    errors of deceitful love,~And thought, besides the champions promised,~
 32     V|        aid to move,~In Godfrey's thought a strong contention bred~
 33     V|          and change this forward thought~For death unsent for, danger
 34     V|            XIII~But in his noble thought revolved he oft~Dudon's
 35     V|          prince, who only vainly thought~That bliss in wealth and
 36     V|    audacious speech;~All that he thought blameworthy in the man,~
 37     V|      still had rife~All words he thought could vengeance move or
 38     V|    faults, you know, are greater thought or less,~As is the person'
 39     V|       true witness of the secret thought,~For that some men so subtle
 40     V|          gentle nature gainst my thought~To rigor, lest our laws
 41     V|        LXII~To change his modest thought the dame procureth,~And
 42     V|    entered.~ ~ LXIV~The dame who thought that one blink of her eye~
 43     V|      erst you heard it told,~She thought, ere truth-revealing time
 44     V| Artemidore,~Doubtless the county thought his bread well baken;~Next
 45    VI|       elsewhere employed was his thought,~Nor that to just, though
 46    VI|       disgraced quite~Himself he thought, another played his game;~
 47    VI|       shrink who on their combat thought:~Much speech was of the
 48    VI|         of his praise,~And every thought a scalding sigh did raise.~ ~
 49    VI|       the secret of her troubled thought,~A doubtful combat, love
 50    VI|       their hearts one will, one thought was found;~Nor aught she
 51    VI|   Sitting one day upon her heavy thought,~Devising by what means,
 52    VI|   princess stout,~Who would have thought on horseback to have seen~
 53    VI|         now seemed than erst she thought.~ ~ XCVIII~Armed to ride
 54    VI|           Yet would she not, she thought, herself disclose,~Until
 55    VI|          left him tossing in his thought~A thousand doubts, and turned
 56    VI|         it my heart, my soul, my thought?~Through heaven's fair face
 57    VI|        spies,~The championess he thought he saw and knew;~Upon his
 58    VI|       thirst.~ ~ CX~So she, that thought to rest her weary sprite,~
 59   VII|     plaints and tears with every thought revived,~She heard and saw
 60   VII|      such dissension;~After much thought reformed was her will,~Within
 61   VII|        hath me sent:"~The prince thought this his uncle's man should
 62   VII|          that shining ray:"~Then thought he on his proud Circassian
 63   VII|        web of that rich sword he thought,~Was broke through hardness
 64   VII|          County's shield;~And so thought Raymond, who discovered
 65   VII|       When in his heart a better thought arose,~How for Christ's
 66  VIII|         of cowardice reproved he thought,~And him to stay that counsels
 67  VIII|          face, in gesture, or in thought.~ ~ XV~"But said, `A crown
 68  VIII|         wounded so that each one thought me dead,~Nor what our foes
 69  VIII|          perplex thy unbelieving thought?~Each one of us a living
 70  VIII|         took no rest,~For to his thought the fiend herself presented,~
 71  VIII|      Argillan, -- who would have thought it? -- shook~For fear and
 72    IX|        him as he could best have thought,~Glad in his heart, and
 73    IX|         adventures ran his hardy thought,~But naught assured, he
 74    IX|       cried, "O thou which in my thought~Increased hast my rage and
 75    IX|       duke knew well before,~Yet thought he not they had the hardiment~
 76    IX|          wit, our reason and our thought,~Where persons three, with
 77    IX|        to the wind,~And swift as thought away the angel flew,~He
 78    IX|       Bewitched so his unadvised thought,~Gainst every band his childish
 79    IX|      they went, and to recomfort thought~And stay their troops from
 80    IX|       stand,~And in his troubled thought this question tossed,~If
 81     X|        revolving in his troubled thought~What course to take, and
 82     X|        griefs of his distempered thought,~But little ease could so
 83     X|          closet of man's private thought,~If in thy skilful heart
 84     X|     shedding blood, and conquest thought,~Too little is this city
 85     X|        change I felt my will and thought,~I longed to change my life,
 86     X|        exploits, exceeding human thought,~Met us, and all at once
 87     X|       smiled uneath.~In his wise thought such care and heed was placed.~
 88    XI|         By his attire his secret thought he guessed,~"Where is,"
 89    XI|        towers which to assail he thought,~In battles twain his strength
 90    XI|        rode, but rode not, as he thought, unseen.~ ~ LVII~When Godfrey
 91   XII|    rested not Clorinda's working thought,~Which thirsted still for
 92   XII|        secret cell unknow?"~Thus thought, thus mused, thus devised
 93   XII|          purposed in her fearful thought~To hide thee from the king,
 94   XII|      none her marked at last she thought it good,~To save her life,
 95  XIII| solemnize, thus the vain Parians thought.~ ~ V~No twist, no twig,
 96  XIII|      world is strange or fearful thought.~ ~ XXV~He shook his head,
 97  XIII|        on this uncouth writ,~Him thought he heard the softly whistling
 98  XIII|     knight, yet he both knew and thought~All were illusions false
 99  XIII|         went:~Wounded he saw, he thought, for pain and smart,~His
100  XIII|        strife in his contentious thought,~He thought, what if himself
101  XIII|          contentious thought,~He thought, what if himself in perzon
102  XIII|          LI~"Leave off thy hardy thought, another's hands~Of these
103  XIII|        voice's sound,~Godfredo's thought to other acts incline,~His
104  XIII|        meek, and humble would be thought,~Yet never cared in what
105   XIV|    likewise, and in his troubled thought,~With wonder, pleasure;
106   XIV|      infused that new and sudden thought,~His pleasing words thus
107   XIV|         To that whereon he never thought tell now,~"How can my heart,"
108   XIV|        deep the marvels in their thought,~That not one word they
109   XIV|          cunning, wise, myself I thought,~That I supposed my wit
110   XIV|       she wished so the soldiers thought~By Godfrey's practice that
111   XIV|       not your coming evils with thought and care,~Regard no blazing
112    XV|      might.~ ~ VIII~Swifter than thought the friendly wind forth
113    XV|          men as some have vainly thought,~But peopled well, and wonned
114  XVII|       satisfy her cruel will and thought,~She gives herself to him
115  XVII|   Wherein to war I bent my noble thought,~But for the surety of thy
116  XVII|        heart with high and noble thought,~That thou to heavenward
117  XVII|       deeds which filled aye his thought,~Towns won, forts taken,
118  XVII|         and pleasure,~The secret thought of his posterity~Of his
119 XVIII|          XIII~Thus to himself he thought, how many bright~And splendent
120 XVIII|     warlike stoure,~Till as they thought no sleight or force of Mart~
121 XVIII|       great things tossed in his thought,~Said, "To Godfredo's counsel,
122 XVIII|           Both people would have thought him; forth he rides~On a
123 XVIII|        unworthy him this service thought,~If mongst the common sort
124 XVIII|    sustain the assault awhile he thought.~ ~ CV~The conquerors at
125   XIX|        heard, he said within his thought,~Hither all Asia is, all
126   XIX|           and those that saw him thought~To mend the breach that
127   XIX|      lips, and grieved in secret thought.~ ~ LXXII~To Tisipherne
128   XIX|          that troop much talk he thought would pass,~Each great assembly
129   XIX|       Alas, he robbed me when he thought he gave,~Free was Erminia,
130   XIX|       thee ever.~ ~ CVI~"I never thought that to mine eyes, my dear,~
131    XX|  encompassed round,~And, as some thought, foreshowed he should be
132    XX|        Perchance, if man's proud thought or saucy tongue~Have leave
133    XX|        love?~But she that gentle thought did straight repent,~Wrath,
134    XX|         burnt with fury hot,~And thought he scorned her power, and
135    XX|    distressed the goddess of his thought,~To aid her ran, nay flew,
136    XX|       the Soldan, for the man he thought~Was slain, or easily might
137    XX|         divided were, in diverse thought,~Despair made some run headlong
138    XX|       comes and goes as swift as thought~And of his coming swift
139    XX|        on fear or base retire he thought.~ ~ CVII~While unresolved
140    XX|      dead, fled, and overthrown,~Thought, now her field lay waste,
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