Book

 1     I|           move,~Now every passage plain and open lies:~What lets
 2     I|          no doubts where truth is plain and strong,~Your acts, I
 3     I|      hills, hills woo the valleys plain.~ ~ L~Two hundred Greeks
 4     I|       paths and make the highways plain,~They filled the pits, and
 5    II|           their fact and fortunes plain,~Their pardon gets and keeps
 6    II|           saw the one, the other 'plain,~The weaker body lodged
 7    II|          on the path, now made~So plain and easy, enter Fortune'
 8    II| inhabitants each pasture and each plain~Destroyed have, each field
 9    II|           passage easy, safe, and plain~That leads us to this venerable
10   III|           slaughter rageth in the plain at large.~Tancred and young
11   III|           the worthy on the dusty plain,~And lifted up his feeble
12    IV|         gestures made the residue plain,~Dumb eloquence, persuading
13     V|           and that knight did she plain and say,~What grief she
14     V|          why should you grudge or plain,~If I a champion, you an
15     V|           each country, field and plain;~Send therefore some strong
16    VI|         courser swift~Near to the plain, where proud Argantes stayed,~
17   VII|       that chased her through the plain,~And still pursued, but
18   VII|           the castle, in a meadow plain~Beside the bridge's end,
19   VII|      threatened blow he saw right plain~No tempered armor could
20   VII|        duke their fear discovered plain,~By their pale looks and
21   VII|        troop a large and spacious plain.~ ~ LXXXIV~Argantes looked
22  VIII|     rideth,~To Gaza-ward a little plain doth lie,~Itself among the
23    IX|         lived, pardie, he saw not plain~Their dying looks, although
24    IX|       with dust the visage on the plain;~The headless trunk, a woful
25    IX|         you see triumphant on the plain,~Drowning in blood him that
26     X|       foes triumphant through the plain~On naught but shedding blood,
27     X|        have so oft amid the dusty plain~Turks, Persians, Syrians
28     X|       strong foe I see the tokens plain;~No fort how strong soe'
29    XI|       Under whose basis that fair plain doth run,~There stood the
30    XI|         moat and even it with the plain.~ ~ XXXIV~With slime or
31    XI|          Thy surgeon is, for here plain tokens are~Of grace divine
32   XII|         man gainst my designments plain,~Dead is Clorinda fair,
33  XIII|         shamefacedness to Godfrey plain bewrays~His flight, so does
34  XIII|       spied,~Like calmest waters, plain, like velvet, soft,~Wherein
35  XIII|       That all bebled the verdant plain around,~His hair start up,
36  XIII|        shouts the soldiers on the plain,~These tokens bless of long-desired
37   XIV|         high, wide, large, ample, plain,~With goodly rooms, halls,
38   XIV|       hunted him through wood and plain,~Till on Orontes' flowery
39   XIV|      flowered through that wanton plain,~All platted fast, well
40   XIV|           exposed upon the grassy plain,~Nor those false damsels
41    XV|            that tender, soft, and plain,~About the dove's smooth
42    XV|       breathing air made even and plain~The azure face of heaven'
43    XV|         grass,~And so the passage plain, eath, open was.~ ~ L~A
44   XVI|          rest there flew,~That in plain speech sung love-lays loud
45   XVI|       lord was fled, then saw she plain,~Ah, woful sight! how from
46  XVII|     Alexandria's rich and fertile plain,~Along the western shore,
47  XVII|           there is sandy, dry and plain.~ ~ XXVI~Nor thee, great
48  XVII|          of things future~Can the plain truth revealed be and told,~
49 XVIII|         see,~A myrtle in an ample plain he spied,~And thither by
50 XVIII|          tower,~And fortified the plain and easy part,~To bide the
51 XVIII|        land the language true and plain:~In Tyre a born Phoenician,
52 XVIII|           in summer on the Indian plain,~Such vapors warm from scorching
53 XVIII|       light and view those angels plain.~ ~ XCIV~"Behold the souls
54 XVIII|        side saw signs of conquest plain,~For with Rinaldo gainst
55 XVIII|           town was entered on the plain below.~ ~ CIV~Which heard,
56   XIX|            the stroke fell on the plain.~With thine own weight o'
57   XIX|          beats down even with the plain,~My life is done, mine empire
58   XIX|       flocks drives from the open plain~To some thick grove or mountain'
59   XIX|        hast to know these secrets plain,~For I their treasons false,
60   XIX|          nor durst pronounce them plain.~The squire what she concealed
61   XIX|          helm, and saw his visage plain,~And cried, "Alas, here
62   XIX|      Tancred bore him through the plain.~Close by the virgin chaste
63   XIX|       none,~Who hath in charge in plain and pitched field,~To fight
64   XIX|           traitors shall be noted plain,~Command your guard to change
65    XX|         the French well knew, and plain espied,~For from the walls
66    XX|       person went~Down, where the plain was dangerous, broad and
67    XX|     squadrons trim~O'er the large plain, did Altamoro stand,~With
68    XX|       Whence neither silence, nor plain outcries flew:~There fury
69    XX|           ample field or spacious plain;~Against the rocks as sea-waves
70    XX|           Moors had open left and plain,~The Africans that should
71    XX|        met, nor gave them time to plain~Or pray, in murdering them
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