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  1     I|      forgive the thing,~If fictions light I mix with truth divine,~
  2     I|            zeal and faith, esteemed light~All worldly honor, empire,
  3     I|             asunder,~Blind with the light, and strucken dead with
  4     I|          then for travel strong and light,~Fierce to the combat, glad
  5     I|            wind waved their banners light,~Their standard royal toward
  6    II|             Christian's church from light of skies,~An hidden alter
  7    II|          shining glass,~Lets in the light amid your temple's side,~
  8    II|           move~To lend thy lamps to light a tragedy?~Yet this contents
  9    II|            assays esteem I eath and light,~Great acts I reach to,
 10    II|         some secret rock unwares we light,~The sea of glory hath no
 11    II|         makes thee blessed peace so light to hold,~Like summer's flies
 12    II|           estate, if thou esteemest light~The proffered kindness of
 13    II|             our love and friendship light."~ ~ LXXXIX~This said, he
 14   III|         minds make heaviest burdens light.~But when the gliding sun
 15   III|            adjoined her noble head,~Light was the wound, but through
 16    IV|             Syrian folk would haply light.~ ~ XXII~But for he held
 17    IV|          people stand amazed at the light;~So wondered they and each
 18    IV|       mishaps that on me since have light,~Since that foul spirits
 19    IV|          death, made lesser dangers light:~So we concluded, when the
 20    IV|      blameless stood,~Hath lost the light wherewith it always shone:~
 21     V|          pleasant, gentle, meek and light.~ ~ V~"Go then or tarry,
 22     V|          the lamp of Cupid gave the light:~The rest perceive his guile,
 23     V|          honor haply thou esteemest light,~Whose day of glory never
 24     V|          Rinaldo weigh our rule too light,~And have the sacred lore
 25     V|          when the earth was once of light deprived,~And western seas
 26     V|          fellows and these fashions light;~Yet since by no advice
 27     V|           them every one apart,~How light, how trustless was the Pagan'
 28     V|         esteem such good assistance light."~Thus talked they on, and
 29     V|             upon his friends should light,~For which he sighed all
 30    VI|       fierce semblant they esteemed light,~For most not knew, or else
 31    VI|          not her shape, or beauty's light;~Her steps are not with
 32    VI|      thraldom easy, and his bondage light;~For fetters, mine embracements
 33    VI|  Cynthia-like for beauty's glorious light~The love-sick nymph threw
 34    VI|          grass~Her Pegasus with his light footsteps bent,~Her maiden'
 35   VII|             At last, there down she light, and down she laid.~ ~ IV~
 36   VII|   thunderbolts on highest mountains light,~And seld or never strike
 37   VII|           grave, my tomb, and ashes light,~My woful death his stubborn
 38   VII|           upon his steed he mounted light,~Which Aquilino for his
 39   VII|             you would have said~The light and subtile wind his father
 40   VII|        plagues that on poor sinners light;~The massy trident mayest
 41   VII|            heart esteemed the glory light,~At such advantage if he
 42   VII|         down trickled on the grass;~Light was the wound; the angel
 43   VII|          foreheads of our foes doth light,~And blinds their eyes,
 44  VIII|          the twinkling of a slender light.~ ~ XXVI~"Not so much force
 45  VIII|                XXVII~"But still the light approached near and near,~
 46  VIII|           heavens ward,~Mark yonder light that like the sun shines
 47  VIII|       Endymion's side,~Such was the light that well discern I could,~
 48  VIII|         until the morning ray~Shall light the world again, then take
 49  VIII|   unrevenged, wronged but unwroken,~Light griefs could not provoke
 50  VIII| fore-conceived griefs, and quarrels light,~The ire still nourished,
 51  VIII|      Illumine their dark souls with light divine,~Repress their rage,
 52    IX|         Great Solyman, when day his light hath lost,~These Christians
 53    IX|            Christians run away full light,~The Pagans, mingled with
 54    IX|              XXVI~With this strange light, the Soldan fierce appeared~
 55    IX|             greedy mates with labor light,~Amid the tents, a bloody
 56    IX|             To darken heaven's fair light, bid them refrain;~Bid them
 57    IX|           angel flew,~He passed the light, and shining fire assigned~
 58    IX|        bright.~ ~ LXX~Upon his neck light that unhappy blow,~And cut
 59    IX|           out her flowers, small or light;~The sweat spread on his
 60     X|          strange in sables dyed,~He light, and as he could his wounds
 61     X|             way at first, withouten light,~But further in, did further
 62     X|           beam in cast,~Dim was the light, and nothing clear the air;~
 63     X|          cork or leaves or feathers light,~Stones, iron, men, there
 64     X|         great,~As far as moon gives light or sun gives heat;~ ~ LXXVII~"
 65     X|         behold the truth and purest light,~And thunders down in Peter'
 66    XI|             labor, for day lost his light.~ ~ ~ I~The Christian army'
 67    XI|             candlesticks a hallowed light~At either end of virgin
 68    XI|            Such one as footmen use, light, easy, thin.~Scantly the
 69    XI|        other princes put on harness light,~As footmen use: but all
 70    XI|         back his bands on foot,~The light horse ride far off and serve
 71    XI|           the strokes thereon which light,~So weakness oft subdues
 72    XI|             shaft upon his forehead light,~His hand he lifted up to
 73    XI|         part the greatest slaughter light,~They had no shelter gainst
 74    XI|            this said, he went,~On a light steed he leaped, and o'er
 75    XI|       placed, with nimble skips and light,~He cleared the passage
 76   XII|           Among our foes behold the light and fire,~I will among them
 77   XII|            trembled at the dreadful light,~To arms in haste and fear
 78   XII|          and in shade debate,~Where light of sun and witness all we
 79   XII|          blood, whereso they hit or light,~And if weak life yet in
 80   XII|            accursed day the hateful light?~This spiteful ray which
 81   XII|            the wound, you gave them light to strike.~ ~ LXXXIII~"But
 82   XII|             in eternal joy, eternal light,~Thou shalt thy love enjoy,
 83  XIII|         uncertain, gloomy seems the light;~As when in evening, day
 84  XIII|          run o'er hills and valleys light,~A wicked troop, that with
 85  XIII|        feared nothing, yet a motion light,~That quickly vanished,
 86  XIII|         ghosts deprived of heavenly light,~With spirits dead why should
 87  XIII|             than both next morn her light outspreads.~ ~ LIV~When
 88  XIII|           Frenchmen let the penance light~Of Godfrey's folly, let
 89   XIV|           doth sway,~In his eternal light did watch and wake,~And
 90   XIV|          him, "Thy glorious shining light~Which in thine eyes his
 91   XIV|         vast and hollow deeps,~Such light they had as when through
 92   XIV|        splendent see,~With glorious light, though built in night and
 93   XIV|          glass therein his garments light,~And wanton soft attire,
 94    XV|             wind obeys,~All burdens light, benign is stream and tide:~
 95    XV|           fatigue little, swift and light,~That at his lowest ebb
 96    XV|             strong camels, coursers light,~With horned hoofs the sandy
 97    XV|        idleness, love, fancy, folly light;~When Phoebus shall his
 98    XV|             hot,~Dispread of golden light the eternal well,~"Up, up,"
 99   XVI|           Rinaldo when the glorious light~Of their bright harness
100   XVI|           firebrand gave a dreadful light,~Kindled in hell by Tisiphone
101   XVI|          vault, far from resort and light,~Where in sad thoughts a
102  XVII|        short, both ready, bold, and light.~ ~ XX~Two captains next
103  XVII|             Christ's true faith and light~To the blind lore of Paganism
104  XVII|             for all shafts that fly~Light not in vain; some work the
105  XVII|           fed on her sweet beauty's light,~"The gods forbid," quoth
106  XVII|             and marched against the light,~To see and find the thing
107  XVII|            forth rolled the chariot light,~He gave his coursers fleet
108  XVII|              unknown,~That ere this light they view, their fate and
109  XVII|             s glory and thy house's light.~ ~ XCI~"His younger age
110 XVIII|            and armors on whom so it light,~That life and soul it did
111 XVIII|            winds do reeds or rushes light,~Sometimes a tree, a rock,
112 XVIII|             late half a rock,~Which light so just upon the wizards
113 XVIII|          borne~Far from the joy and light celestial,~The furies plunged
114 XVIII|         well sustain~Their glorious light and view those angels plain.~ ~
115   XIX|      Tancred of body active was and light,~Quick, nimble, ready both
116   XIX|          prow to poop with turnings light;~Meanwhile the other doth
117   XIX|         which lift and bear,~Like a light lance that tree he shook
118   XIX|           they for vile cause or on light ground,~The life and freedom
119   XIX|         heads the loss at last will light,~For with good fortune proud
120   XIX|         brings their hid deceits to light,~"Eight knights," she says, "
121   XIX|            but thence began my woe:~Light was the loss of friends,
122   XIX|           an ambush I mischanced to light~Of cruel men, in armour
123    XX|             sudden fray or skirmish light~Of these new foes would
124    XX|          cloud heaven his redoubled light~Bent down to see this field,
125    XX|            horse some footmen armed light,~That archers were, used
126    XX|            seemed a lamp and golden light down came,~As from night'
127    XX|            wind waved their ensigns light,~Trembled the plumes that
128    XX|       accursed knife,~Of this sweet light and breath deprived lie;~
129    XX|          bold as she, so strong, so light,~When forth she run to meet
130    XX|             again upon his forehead light,~It was the fault and weakness
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