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  1     I|         wherewith he oft surveyed~Men's secret thoughts that most
  2     I|            Twixt God and souls of men that righteous been~Ambassador
  3     I|         got,~From thence approved men of passing might~He brought,
  4     I|      travels to have borne,~Stout men of arms and with their guide
  5     I|           five thousand lead,~The men he prest from Tours and
  6     I|          care provide~To save his men from ambush and from train,~
  7     I|         in every hold~Shut up his men, munition and his treasure,~
  8    II|        But let us work as valiant men behoves,~For boldest hearts
  9    II|        speed."~To do her will the men themselves prepare,~In their
 10    II|         is oft the stair by which men climb.~ ~ LIX~Argantes called
 11    II|       that half-cut tree~By which men take wild elephants in Inde,~
 12    II|      passage free,~Passage to all men free, by use and kind,~Fight
 13    II|        you all,~Better sit still, men say, than rise to fall."~ ~
 14   III|          the soul amiss~Of sinful men, behold this brutish flood,~
 15   III|     pierced the armed breast,~Her men the paths rode through made
 16   III|       Godfrey his carpenters, and men of skill~In all the camp,
 17    IV|            Two beacons seem, that men to arms assemble,~His feltered
 18    IV|         hand was Satan, ready ere men need,~If once they think,
 19    IV|           beauty hath much power, men say,~The stubborn hearts
 20    IV|         Godfrey's aid, such store men tell~Of virtuous ruth doth
 21    IV|        well he thought, if mortal men have faith,~In brother's
 22    IV|         back as fast,~So fare the men, that from the heaven's
 23    IV|        what boots it to complain?~Men's froward hearts are moved
 24    IV|          sojourn with these armed men,~O whither shall I fly,
 25    IV|          not~So far the shapes of men, as her eyes spreading~Altered
 26     V|       devised the knight,~To make men think the sun of honor shone~
 27     V|       praised his speech, for old men think~They ever wisest seem
 28     V|          he longer with these old men dwell,~But turned his horse
 29     V|     secret thought,~For that some men so subtle are, I trow,~That
 30     V|       Cilicia conquered I, as all men wot,~And there the glorious
 31     V|         are bent~Your liberty, as men of honor use:~To Antioch
 32     V|           to preach or prate~When men with swords their right
 33     V|     Avoids deceit, which heedless men betray'th;~His speeches
 34     V|   therefore some strong troops of men of war,~To force them hence,
 35    VI|           his sceptre broken,~The men of arms of Araby hath raised,~
 36    VI|          beheld~The forward young men manage spear and shield.~ ~
 37    VI|          hide,~Far from resort of men of worth and fame,~Or else
 38    VI|         proud before.~ ~ LI~These men their sceptres interpose,
 39    VI|        and charms~Wherewith false men increase their patients'
 40    VI|           bands to stray~Of armed men, for often had she seen~
 41    VI|              LXXXVIII~"I know the men that have the gate to ward,~
 42   VII|          lights adorned,~On which men play some pompous tragedy;~
 43   VII|        may to thy glory know,~Old men and babes thy foes can overthrow!"~ ~
 44   VII|        broke was their array,~And men and horse on heaps together
 45   VII|           new began,~Five hundred men, weaponed with sword and
 46   VII|       cried:~ ~ CXVIII~"You hardy men at arms behold," quoth she,~"
 47   VII|      stood to keep,~And saved his men within his trenches deep.~ ~
 48   VII|          home retired and all her men,~And thus she chased this
 49  VIII|       bold to fight,~That void of men he left that kingdom wide;~
 50  VIII|         memory,~To which the holy men of future age,~To view our
 51  VIII|           Our enemies were twenty men to one,~On every side the
 52  VIII|         my feeble eyes begun:~Two men behold in vestures long
 53  VIII|      breast was humbly laid,~That men might know, that while he
 54  VIII| broad-leaved treen,~Fit place for men to lie in wait unseen. ~ ~
 55    IX|          list to go,~Mountains of men by dint of sword down brought~
 56    IX|       where the Arabians keen~His men like silly sheep destroy
 57    IX|       pays.~ ~ XLVII~The duke his men fast flying did espy,~And
 58    IX|        outcasts of the world, you men of naught~What hath in you
 59     X|           Ah, with what grief his men, his friends he found;~And
 60     X|        upright walked at ease the men~Ere they had passed half
 61     X|           maintained the fray,~My men all murdered, I that run
 62     X|         speak of concord with yon men of pride,~By your good leave,
 63     X|     feathers light,~Stones, iron, men, there fleet and never drown;~
 64     X|           vain and foolish things men dream;~At last our shade
 65     X|        Christ and Christian faith men fight,~There forth she spreadeth
 66    XI|          great nor lite,~The aged men, and boys of tender age,~
 67    XI|         lances flew.~ ~ XXXII~His men at arms did back his bands
 68    XI|           XXXVIII~An hundred able men meanwhile let fall~The weights
 69    XI|   bulwarks best,~A turret full of men and weapons pent,~And yet
 70    XI|       weapons got, and fight like men they would,~Their gowns
 71    XI|      Guelpho's sudden fall in all men's sights,~Who tumbled headlong
 72    XI|           to health death-wounded men,~And make their names immortal
 73   XII|           blue mongst lilies pure men throw,~So paleness midst
 74   XII|           I nill deny,~As angels, men: as saints may wights on
 75   XII|           comforted he waked, and men discreet~In surgery to cure
 76   XII|        left entire.~ ~ CI~But all men's eyes were on Arsetes bent,~
 77   XII|            it otherwise fell out:~Men purpose, but high gods dispose
 78  XIII|      affray~And put to flight the men, whose labor would~To their
 79  XIII|           truly told;~As souls of men in bodies clothed be~So
 80  XIII|           torn,~And all his folk, men, women, children small,~
 81  XIII|       soldiers bold,~To guard the men and their faint arms provoke~
 82  XIII|           spirits dead why should men living fight?"~ ~ XL~This
 83  XIII|           quench their thirst the men sufficient think.~ ~ LX~
 84   XIV|   truthless guide~That leads vain men amiss and makes them stray;~
 85   XIV|        Had overcome and slain her men in fight.~ ~  LIII~"Rinaldo
 86   XIV|     praise, renown and fame,~That men's proud harts bewitch with
 87    XV|        Enter this boat, you happy men," she says,~"Wherein through
 88    XV|       They found as full of armed men as sand.~ ~ XI~The passengers
 89    XV|       other lands here be wherein men dwell."~ ~ XXV~"Great Hercules,"
 90    XV|          lie unknown,~Not void of men as some have vainly thought,~
 91    XV|         with his blood all sinful men hath bought,~His truth forever
 92    XV|        That makes frail hearts of men to bow and bend,~Within
 93    XV|        Were there, where souls of men in bliss remain.~ ~ XXXVII~
 94    XV|       songs interlaced;~"Oh happy men I that have the grace,"
 95   XVI|       pleased her will~To conquer men, and conquered so, to kill.~ ~
 96   XVI|     heavens, O gods! why do these men of shame,~Thus spoil your
 97  XVII|        stands~Of Juda's realm, as men to Egypt ride,~Built near
 98  XVII|         Their squadrons first the men of Egypt show,~In four troops,
 99  XVII|         feared and loved are:~His men were armed with helms and
100  XVII|        Tigranes, Rapold stem, the men that fare~By sea, that robbed
101  XVII|           host, his army, and his men,~He would commit, now in
102  XVII|          space~Infinite shapes of men there well expressed,~For
103  XVII|      Corrupted, poor, and bare of men of fame,~Better than he
104 XVIII|     gainst his heathen foes these men of naught~Hath chosen thee
105 XVIII|           Such monsters huge when men in dreams are laid~Oft in
106 XVIII|        seas moist empire won,~His men with all their stuff and
107 XVIII|     Though full of arms and armed men it was,~Yet with small pains
108 XVIII|          fast~With ropes which as men would the dormant tossed,~
109 XVIII|         his swift pulleys oft the men withdrew~The tree, and oft
110 XVIII|          arms, of weapons, and of men did sweep,~Wherewith the
111 XVIII|          dust and smoke blind all men's sight,~Where stones and
112   XIX|         closed place~Had been for men to fight or beasts to chase.~ ~
113   XIX|        where in warklike sort~The men that ample church had fortified.~
114   XIX|         such estate,~Cried to his men, "Within these bars," quoth
115   XIX|      found,~For none of Raymond's men forsook their lord,~But
116   XIX|          since," quoth she, "what men thee call,~And thine estate,
117   XIX|      mischanced to light~Of cruel men, in armour clothed round,~
118   XIX|           their friendly arms the men addressed~A seat whereon
119    XX|      There all his Lorrainers and men of might,~All his best armed
120    XX|           must encounter now,~Are men half naked, without strength
121    XX|   traitors cleft,~That those dead men had no dead bodies left.~ ~
122    XX|         nail the shield,~Some cut men's throats, and some their
123    XX|       force and courage stout~His men at arms assailed the bands
124    XX|          saw the country lie, his men o'erthrown,~Some beaten
125    XX|           was won, slain were the men that fled,~In courts, halls,
126    XX|       strange,~But so doth heaven men's hearts turn, alter, change.~ ~
127    XX|          when the sick or frantic men oft dream~In their unquiet
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