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  1     I|       wont in feasts to spend the night,~And pass cold days in baths
  2    II|       inclined fast to west,~That night there would their chieftain
  3    II|           day, but let me walk by night,~Go thou to Egypt, I at
  4    II|               XCVI~Now spread the night her spangled canopy,~And
  5   III|         bloody reeking blade~Last night was given me by your noble
  6   III|      preserve his resting camp by night,~Lest from the city while
  7   III|           the sable shade~Ycleped night, had thick enveloped~The
  8   III|     brought complaint to bed:~All night the wary duke devising laid~
  9    IV|        careless spend the day and night,~Without regard what haps,
 10    IV|        warlike equipage,~Of their night ambling dame the Syrians
 11    IV|        visions break any sleep by night,~Grief, horror, fear my
 12    IV|         Through ways unknown, all night, all day we haste,~At last,
 13    IV|    subjection tied,~And that each night I slept -- O foul untruth! --~
 14    IV|         hunt all day, and lose at night the hare.~ ~ XCVI~These
 15     V|          of glory never yet found night.~ ~ XI~"Yet mayest thou
 16     V|     follow fair Armida when 'twas night.~ ~ LXXVII~To follow her,
 17     V|          LXXVII~To follow her, by night or else by day,~And in her
 18     V|      wanton guide,~Who parts that night; such haste had she to ride.~ ~
 19     V|        pierced deep.~But when the night her drowsy mantle spread,~
 20     V|      could forbear,~Till friendly night might hide his haste and
 21     V|      would his journey frame,~All night he wandered and he wist
 22     V|           Where she and they that night had made abode.~ ~ LXXXI~
 23     V|      sighed all day, and wept all night.~ ~ LXXXVI~A messenger,
 24     V|          outlaws them assailed by night,~When least they feared,
 25    VI|          win the praise and palm, night ends the fray:~Erminia hopes
 26    VI|           the city armed rides by night.~ ~ ~ I~But better hopes
 27    VI|        were they victualled,~When night obscured the earth with
 28    VI|        sweet molest,~The days and night likewise they bring to end,~
 29    VI|         the favor of the friendly night~To victual us, and with
 30    VI|      woods and mountains wild, by night,~On savage beasts employ
 31    VI|          than power to wound;~But Night her gentle daughter Darkness,
 32    VI|          so we deem it best,~Give night her due, and grant your
 33    VI|        with the sun,~But with the night, all creatures draw to sleep,~
 34    VI|       name?~That thou will gad by night in giglot wise,~Amid thine
 35    VI|          but I would both day and night,~In pitched field, or private
 36    VI|       escape out of the town this night.~ ~ LXXXVIII~"I know the
 37    VI|        errands from her side,~And night her stealths brought to
 38    VI|      brought to their wished end,~Night, patroness of thieves, and
 39    VI|        and feared, in the darkest night.~ ~ XCV~Erminia, though
 40    VI|           in her starry veil, the night~In her kind arms embraced
 41    VI|           Should make her ride by night among her foes:~What Godfrey
 42   VII|       Through thick and thin, all night, all day, she drived,~Withouten
 43   VII|         was her diet that unhappy night:~But sleep, that sweet repose
 44   VII|           rest~His weary limbs in night's untroubled nest.~ ~ XXIX~
 45   VII|       This said, the day to sable night was turned,~That scant one
 46   VII|           day to fight.~ ~ LI~The night which that expected day
 47   VII|        eyes to sleep,~He told how night her sliding hours spent,~
 48   VII|           were followed hot,~When night were come their fight to
 49   VII|          pillow, and presumes the night~Again may shield him from
 50  VIII|        the stillness of the quiet night~Drowned all the world in
 51  VIII|       with darkness overgone,~The night her mantle black upon its
 52  VIII|        sky,~But when her lamp had night's thick darkness cleared,~
 53  VIII|     opened first mine eyes again,~Night's curtain black upon the
 54  VIII|           member pinched was~With night's sharp air, heaven's frost
 55  VIII|           when the purple morning night bereaves~Of late usurped
 56  VIII|        youth.~ ~ LVII~But now the night dispread her lazy wings~
 57  VIII|      blood, and robberies day and night~Until to Asia's wars at
 58  VIII|       herein we be beguiled,~This night I saw his murdered sprite
 59    IX|        great Solyman doth move~By night the Christians in their
 60    IX|          thou my guide~When sable night the azure skies shall hide."~ ~
 61    IX|       time, when first the rising night~Her sparkling diamonds poureth
 62    IX|           his redoubted foes,~The night was more than half consumed
 63    IX|         on through silence of the night.~ ~  XX~The sentinel by
 64    IX|         weapons keen,~And forward night, in evils and mischiefs
 65    IX|        XXXVI~He wept not, for the night her curtain spread~Between
 66    IX|         the ruth, they dwell.~The night their acts her black veil
 67    IX|        hides, your bulwark is the night,~Now she is gone, how will
 68     X|         Sion brings the Prince by night~Where the sad king sits
 69     X|           doth ride:~But when the night cast up her shade aloft~
 70     X|          ways as black as darkest night~He followed him that did
 71     X|      aided by the silence and the night~Safe in the city's walls
 72     X|       deeps of regions underneath~Night's veil arose, and sun's
 73    XI|       ease this evening, and this night,~And make you strong against
 74    XI| eveningtide;~Thus fared they till night their eyes did close,~Night
 75    XI|       night their eyes did close,~Night friend to gentle rest and
 76    XI|           the fray,~But that dark night, from her pavilion sad,~
 77    XI|         And what they wrought all night both saw and knew.~ ~
 78   XII|        swears.~ ~ ~ I~Now in dark night was all the world embarred;~
 79   XII|           if, as God forbid, this night thou fall,~Ah! who shall
 80   XII|       with him, only we stay till night~Bury in sleep our foes at
 81   XII|            Nor yet am unexpert in night alarms,~Take me with you:
 82   XII|       unseen, by help of friendly night,~To whom her eunuch, old
 83   XII|          up, and in my dream that night,~When buried was the world
 84   XII|         The fight, the press, the night, and darksome skies~Care
 85   XII|         view,~So favored with the night, with secret speed~Dissevered
 86   XII|          in dark bosom drown:~Yet night, consent that I their acts
 87   XII|      false nor feigned found,~The night, their rage would let them
 88   XII|        thousand eyes of blindfold night;~Tancred beheld his foe'
 89   XII|          accursed deed I did this night,~Ah, coward hand, afraid
 90   XII|    torment,~The ugly shades, dark night, and troubled air~In grisly
 91   XII|       food,~Ah, seely nymph! whom night and darksome shade~To beasts,
 92   XII|          down went,~And that dark night of sorrow somewhat cleared;~
 93   XII|        lord~Who this fair dame by night thus murdered hath,~Nor
 94  XIII|           shade, like everlasting night;~There when the sun spreads
 95  XIII|         chair in seas doth steep,~Night, horror, darkness thick
 96  XIII|        with their mates in silent night,~With dragons' wings some
 97  XIII|           with tresses hoar,~When night on all this earth spread
 98  XIII|           strange speeches, still night's splendent fires~Quenched
 99  XIII|      their stead the clouds black night did frame~And hideous storms
100  XIII|          or feared,~Then rain and night I found, but straight again~
101  XIII|        straight again~To day, the night, to sunshine turned the
102  XIII|         kingdoms flies,~A harmful night a hurtful day succeeds,~
103  XIII|        comfort brought the gloomy night,~In her thick shades was
104  XIII|           his comet stole away by night.~ ~ LXIX~His bad example
105  XIII|           away by thousands every night.~ ~ LXX~Godfredo this both
106   XIV|          her still mother, gentle night out flew,~The fleeting balm
107   XIV|       darkness there was day, the night was gone,~There sparkled,
108   XIV|   glorious light, though built in night and shade.~A Pagan was I
109    XV|           shades of sad and sable night,~Through vaults obscure
110    XV|         Bright fire breaks out by night, black smoke by day.~ ~
111    XV|           At the hill's foot that night the warriors dwell,~But
112   XVI|          blacker than the mirkest night,~Environed all the place
113   XVI|          Nor rested she by day or night one whit,~Till she came
114  XVII|   twinkling of an eye,~Uprose the night in whose deep blackness
115  XVII|           Which the dark folds of night's black mantle lined.~Forward
116  XVII|      There may we well arrive ere night doth end,~And through this
117  XVII|           While silent so through night's dark shade they fly,~The
118 XVIII|       passed the day, and sad the night;~And ere the silver morn
119 XVIII|           breaking day~Rebellious night yet strove, and still repined,~
120 XVIII|         about his eyes he twined,~Night's shadows hence, from thence
121 XVIII|          golden sun, her moon the night,~Her fixed and wandering
122 XVIII|      after, aided by the friendly night,~His greatest engine to
123   XIX|        once they fought, and when night stayed that fray,~New time
124   XIX|        the closed fold~Rangeth by night his hoped prey to get,~Enraged
125   XIX|         the duke would lodge that night,~And with the morn renew
126   XIX|       work is done, the rest this night delayed~Doth little labor
127   XIX|         murder spend they day and night,~In riot, drinking, lust
128   XIX|          waking lay~All that long night, nor slumbered once nor
129   XIX|      naught esteem.~ ~ XCII~"That night fatal to me and Antioch
130   XIX|          her guide~Talked day and night, and on their journey ride.~ ~
131   XIX|         he was,~When sun was set, night in the east upflew,~With
132   XIX|         bear~His master home, ere night obscured the land,~When
133    XX|         are slain, and in eternal night~A famous hand gives each
134    XX|          light down came,~As from night's azure mantle oft doth
135    XX|         The thievish wolves, when night o'ershades the land,~That
136    XX|          sun was set, the day was night,~Gainst the brave prince
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