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  1    II|     excuse, or pardon crave,~But stood prepared to die, yet help
  2    II|        his habitation:~Sophronia stood not grieved nor discontented,~
  3    II|          for her that speechless stood,~Her silence more prevailed
  4   III|         side,~Within the postern stood Argantes stout~To rescue
  5   III|       rage and ire,~Pursues, she stood and wondered on them both,~
  6   III|       shores, where Joppa whilom stood;~By north Samaria stands,
  7   III|          valley deep this forest stood,~To Christian eyes unseen,
  8    IV|     renown, which ever blameless stood,~Hath lost the light wherewith
  9    IV|          her eyes to ground,~And stood unmoved, though not unmarked,
 10     V|          Rinaldo heard him as he stood beside,~And as he could
 11    VI|          saw not where the Pagan stood, and stared,~As if with
 12    VI|        fortune trust?"~The other stood amazed, love stopped his
 13    VI|         rage, and trembled as he stood,~He blamed his fortune,
 14    VI|         Twixt hope and fear they stood long time amazed,~To see
 15    VI|         of the fight attend,~And stood as still, as life and sense
 16    VI|     mountains all,~And there she stood all the long day to spy,~
 17    VI|       Fortune's cruel spite,~She stood where Phoebe's splendent
 18   VII|      bridge's end, he stayed and stood,~Nor was entreated by the
 19   VII|          death upon his forehead stood;~Not one of all his squires
 20   VII|        And Germain princes great stood by to view,~In Conrad's
 21   VII|        by the Christian champion stood unseen.~ ~ LXXXIII~But now
 22   VII|         and ranked in good array stood still,~And to their champions
 23   VII|        thoughts amazed awhile he stood,~Wondering the Christian'
 24   VII|         fought~Unweaponed, still stood he in the field;~His noble
 25   VII|        with feigned speed,~Where stood the people all dismayed
 26   VII|          future gain, nor longer stood,~But from his quiver huge
 27   VII|     Himself the camp gate boldly stood to keep,~And saved his men
 28  VIII|          told,~On which I gazing stood, and often read~That epitaph
 29  VIII|    murdered body huge beside him stood,~Of head and right hand
 30  VIII|     fierce and furious look that stood,~And in his left hand had
 31    IX|        camp, and filled, as they stood,~Their tents with ruin,
 32    IX|    shrinked not,~Till where they stood their dearest blood they
 33    IX|       And from a bank whereon he stood, beheld~The doubtful hazard
 34     X|          threatening guise;~Dumb stood the knights, so dreadful
 35     X|        the folk around~Attentive stood, with trembling and with
 36    XI|         the Pagans old and young~Stood hushed and still, amated
 37    XI|        they heard his words that stood him nigh,~The rest far off
 38    XI|       fair plain doth run,~There stood the Soldan like a giant
 39    XI|     Soldan like a giant tall,~So stood at Rhodes the Coloss of
 40    XI|          shoot Latona's daughter stood~When Niobe she killed and
 41    XI|           Between them crossbows stood, and engines wrought~To
 42    XI|       behind.~ ~ XLIV~As Ademare stood to behold the fight~High
 43    XI|      hand.~ ~ XLV~While Palamede stood near the battlement,~Despising
 44    XI|         Good Sigiere and Baldwin stood between;~His other friends
 45    XI|       fell pain he swooned as he stood:~But the angel pure, that
 46    XI|     Pagan lords dismayed~But now stood bruised, broken, cracked
 47   XII|        else boast I can,~My self stood safe meanwhile within this
 48   XII|           VII~Argantes wondering stood, and felt the effect~Of
 49   XII|           As white as snow there stood a virgin bound,~Besides
 50   XII|          on some marvel great,~I stood this while amazed at the
 51   XII|     brook, the thieves behind me stood:~Thee to forsake I never
 52   XII|       said, he wept, she pensive stood and sad,~Because like dream
 53   XII|     gates were shut, and how she stood~Amid her foes, she held
 54   XII|         long beheld, and leaning stood~Upon their swords, whose
 55   XII|           they to their tackling stood,~And heaped wound on wound,
 56  XIII|    battlement~In loathsome forms stood to defend the place?~Their
 57  XIII|     fiery city high as heaven up stood.~ ~ XXXIV~The knight stepped
 58  XIII|         afraid the champion good~Stood still, but when the tempest
 59  XIII|       walk no sprite or phantasm stood~That stopped his way or
 60  XIII|         words as in that grove I stood,~That mournful voice still,
 61  XIII|        cared in what distress we stood~If his vain honor were diminished
 62  XIII|  restored, in health and welfare stood,~As sound as erst, as fresh,
 63   XIV|      While here they stopped and stood, before them drew~An aged
 64   XIV|           Against the wall there stood a cupboard great~Of massive
 65    XV|       pointed out where sometime stood~Rome's stately rival whilom,
 66    XV|           and towns on land that stood,~Heaven covered sea, sea
 67    XV|     crags, cliffs, and mountains stood,~The Isles Fortunate these
 68    XV|      toying, sometimes wrestling stood,~Sometimes for speed and
 69   XVI|        heaven upheld; false Love stood by and smiled:~Armed with
 70   XVI|         navies great well ranged stood~Of warlike ships, fire from
 71   XVI|        Her feathered fellows all stood hush to hear,~Dumb was the
 72   XVI|      This said, the noble infant stood a space~Confused, speechless,
 73   XVI|         At this Rinaldo stopped, stood still, and stayed,~She came,
 74   XVI| Asphaltes' lake her chair,~Where stood her castle, there she ends
 75  XVII|           And in those times how stood the state of things,~What
 76  XVII|           XII~On either side him stood a noble lord,~Whereof the
 77  XVII|      About his throne his guards stood in a ring,~All richly armed
 78  XVII|        young prince, that silent stood and mute,~He turned his
 79  XVII|        west,~With laurel crowned stood the princes old,~Their wars
 80  XVII|        wan,~Ernesto, threatening stood with visage grim;~Before
 81  XVII|      that king on live:~Next him stood Otho with his children five.~ ~
 82  XVII|       Gainst him the second Azzo stood in rew,~With Berengarius
 83  XVII|         s bride.~Behind him Hugo stood with warfare long,~That
 84  XVII|         her dear,~Azzo the Fifth stood by her lovely side;~But
 85  XVII|           nor more on terms they stood:~For lo, the wizard sage
 86 XVIII|     where Godfrey to embrace him stood,~"My sovereign lord," Rinaldo
 87 XVIII|    Guelpho, Tancred and the rest~Stood, of the camp the greatest,
 88 XVIII|         left him to his ease, up stood~The hermit, and, fit time
 89 XVIII|           nor sign left where it stood,~And of a river calm became
 90 XVIII|        her top a turret small up stood,~Strong, surely armed, and
 91 XVIII|      feared,~How the great tower stood not where late it was,~And
 92 XVIII|          field;~Fornenst Camillo stood Argantes straight~Where
 93 XVIII|       the ladder held whereon he stood,~The other bare his targe
 94 XVIII|       tower, in such distress it stood;~For now they wrinkle, now
 95 XVIII|     those he guides~Half roasted stood before fierce Vulcan's face,~
 96   XIX|      scorn and shame,~Nor longer stood on points of fence and skill,~
 97   XIX|         that scant he stirred or stood,~Assuaged his anger, and
 98   XIX|         the breach that there he stood and wrought.~ ~ LXII~The
 99   XIX|         great within bare-headed stood,~His body armed and clad
100   XIX|         this heard Vafrine as he stood beside,~And having learned
101   XIX|         her he gazed, and silent stood this while,~Armida's sleights
102    XX| fortified~At his left hand which stood his army by,~Broad in the
103    XX|     strait uptied~His army ready stood the fight to try,~And to
104    XX|          that battle fair Armida stood.~ ~ XXIII~On the right quarter
105    XX|       XXIII~On the right quarter stood the Indian grim,~With Tisipherne
106    XX|        in each troop each knight~Stood prest to move, to fight,
107    XX|          head were in his sight,~Stood like a man new turned to
108    XX|         barbarous duke in person stood,~Twixt Tisiphernes and Adrastus
109    XX|            LVII~Small while they stood, with heart and hardy face,~
110    XX|         astonished and amazed he stood~Then burnt with wrath, and
111    XX|       drew, nor for more arms he stood~Or stayed, he needs no more
112    XX|     troop that durst so much now stood aghast,~For where sad fear
113    XX|       death the court and palace stood,~There did he triumphs lead,
114    XX|         CVII~While unresolved he stood, the victor knight~Arrived,
115    XX|      brave a troop but late,~Now stood she in her chariot all alone,~
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