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 1     I|           The aged tyrant Juda's land that guides,~In fear and
 2     I|        Lords warraid the eastern land;~Nice by assault, and Antioch
 3     I|          this world beheld,~Each land, each city, country, town
 4     I|     native Duke of that renowned land,~Two bishops next their
 5     I|        XLI~Guelpho next them the land and place possest,~Whose
 6     I|      Twixt Rhene and Danubie the land contained~He ruled, where
 7     I|       came) he guies,~Champain a land where wealth, ease, pleasure,
 8     I|          forget Obizo of Tuscain land,~Well worthy praise for
 9     I|        well-attempted plate,~The land did like itself the people
10     I|        Their hearts were fertile land although unwrought.~ ~ LXV~
11     I|    Phaeton-like it fired sea and land,~The sparkles seemed up
12     I|         And led them through his land at ease and leisure,~To
13     I|    things fit~To service done by land that might belong,~And when
14    II|   forests wild, and unfrequented land~To chase the lion, boar,
15    II|      might,~And will defend this land, this town, and you,~All
16    II|          To whom the king, "What land so far remote~From Asia'
17    II|   stranger came he late to Egypt land,~And there advanced was
18    II|          your power 'gainst Juda land to prove,~He would, before
19    II|      fall lamented,~Forbear this land, Judea trouble not,~Things
20    II|          monarch of the Greekish land?~That reed will break; and
21    II|         camp then dies;~Of if by land the field you once forsake,~
22    II|        safe from hurt by sea and land.~ ~ LXXXIV~"This is the
23    II|          feed,~And make the seas land, if we passage need.~ ~
24   III|       sailors row~Some new-found land and country to descry,~Through
25   III|       And each to other show the land in haste,~Forgetting quite
26   III|         morn had forayed all the land;~The fierce virago would
27   III|     shade,~To shield the parched land from scorching beams,~Save
28    IV|    gentle garden of the Hebrews' land,~Quench out this spark,
29    IV|     about the world to gad,~Each land they filled, river, stream
30    IV|        was sunken underneath the land,~When she began her wanton
31    IV|       utmost border of my native land.~ ~ LVI~"The fort Arontes
32     V|        if forces come from Egypt land,~Or other nations that us
33    VI|        own, shall he defend your land?~ ~ XIII~"Perchance he comes
34    VI|          huge cantels flies,~The land was strewed all with plate
35    VI|        dames Latine,~In Italy, a land, as each one tells,~Where
36    VI|        by two brothers of Italia land,~Young Poliphern and Alicandro
37   VII|          But, father, since this land, these towns and towers~
38   VII|         sword wherewith in Saxon land,~The great Rubello battle
39   VII|   sometimes he smites this solid land,~And throws down towns and
40  VIII|           chief fortress of that land,~There the Greek monarch
41  VIII|        as he goes,~And sets each land free from intruding foes.~ ~
42  VIII|       sound I leaped up from the land.~Oh miracle, sweet, gentle,
43  VIII|       how false Baldwin him that land bereaves~Of virtue's harvest,
44  VIII|         Whose cities rich, whose land is fat and good,~Where kingdoms
45    IX|          to bring~To succor Juda land and Juda's king.~ ~  VI~
46    IX|        destroy and burn,~In Juda land he entered is so far,~That
47    IX|          a mountain or a cape of land~Assailed with storms and
48    IX|         threshold to our half of land,~And Argillano in this great
49    IX|       save his life, when on the land~Lay slain the pride of his
50     X|         or horses' feet upon the land~Had left no sign nor token
51     X|         aught but aid from Egypt land is left:~ ~ XXXVI~"And well
52     X|          and lime,~O'ergoes that land, erst sweet and redolent,~
53    XI|          faith to fight in every land,~To God even then a secret
54    XI|          his blood distained the land,~His holy blood shed by
55   XII|        offspring, and her native land;~Disguised she fireth Godfrey'
56   XII|        Macon whom we serve,~This land I see he keeps and will
57   XIV|      city by assault be won,~The land set free from servile yoke
58   XIV|      that globe and compass see,~Land, sea, spring, fountain,
59   XIV|           so both shall win this land:~The first is thine, the
60   XIV|        refuse no pains by sea or land,~To give the knight this
61   XIV|       strange of many an uncouth land,~And travelled over all
62   XIV| Imprisoned in a waste and desert land,~What soil remains by which
63    XV|          cast amid the steadfast land.~ ~ VII~They entered in,
64    XV|        shores and borders of the land~They found as full of armed
65    XV|         from Syria pass to Egypt land:~The sterile coasts of barren
66    XV|     removed of yore~Far from the land, now joined to the shore:~ ~
67    XV|        And parted Afric from the land of Spain,~Abila hence, thence
68    XV|     mountains near,~Fled was the land, and towns on land that
69    XV|       was the land, and towns on land that stood,~Heaven covered
70    XV|        wonned like your own;~The land is fertile ground, but scant
71    XV|     bless,~To view the place, on land awhile us set,~To know the
72    XV|          And how they shouldered land from land away:~In seven
73    XV|        they shouldered land from land away:~In seven of them the
74    XV|   mountain's top themselves they land,~Save that the ice, the
75   XVI|         that grew,~It seemed the land, the sea, and heaven above,~
76   XVI|         the witches of Thessalia land,~With lips unpure yet ever
77   XVI|          the west wind blew from land~Mongst the rich tresses
78   XVI|          the waves she cleft,~To land he looked, till land unseen
79   XVI|          To land he looked, till land unseen he left.~ ~ LXII~
80   XVI|        sole heir of all Damascus land,~For this revenge myself
81  XVII|          it now, whose worth the land amends,~And makes more famous,
82  XVII|       was lord chancellor of the land;~But marshal was the first,
83  XVII|      flow,~Then hardened to firm land the plough to bide,~So Egypt
84  XVII|         next brought from Zumara land.~Then he of Tripoli, for
85  XVII|      Arabian named,~Because that land rebellious he reclaimed.~ ~
86  XVII|          spoke their guide, "The land of Palestine~This is, here
87  XVII|         Of savage Goths into his land again,~ ~ LXVIII~And when
88  XVII|          Taurus cold,~Beyond the land where is perpetual spring,~
89 XVIII|          them burn sea, air, and land.~ ~  XIV~Thus as he mused,
90 XVIII|          tongue deliver~Of every land the language true and plain:~
91 XVIII|          Godfredo and his people land~Their lives to greater harms
92   XIX|         Queen of Judah's ancient land,~Now lost, now sacked, spoiled
93   XIX|        champion laid~Dead on the land, all soiled with blood and
94   XIX|           ere night obscured the land,~When lo, a troop of soldiers
95   XIX|       and drew,~They spoiled the land, drunk floods and fountains
96    XX|      then up leapt~To fight, the land between was vanished all,~
97    XX|        when night o'ershades the land,~That seem like faithful
98    XX|          in Meroe's hot sunburnt land,~He cut his neck in twain,
99    XX|          the king, the guiltless land he bit,~That now keeps him,
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