Canto

 1     5|   appear,~If you are fain the history to hear.~ ~ ~
 2    13|    Renowned in Greek or Latin history;~Nor who so fortunate a
 3    15|       Will not omit him in my history.~ ~ X~'Tis time that I should
 4    15|      sovereign is so famed in history,~Of all whose goodly deeds
 5    15|    whole world has been their history.~Though the author has the
 6    16|           V~Resuming the fair history, I say,~Out of the city
 7    16|        and so well shapes her history,~She wholly throws the blame
 8    18| valiant cavalier~Has the true history vaunted, Sansonnet,~By Roland
 9    20|     how well thou shapest thy history,~Yet knowest it is false!
10    23|   place.~Turpin, by whom this history is told,~Here makes digression,
11    23|       each listener taught,~A history which many loved to hear,~
12    23|   have reached such point, my history,~If I o'erpass this bound,
13    26|       hear the upshot of this history!~Their way directly by that
14    27|      both from old and modern history,~And from his own, was ready
15    28|     little of that landlord's history,~As of a tale or fiction,
16    28|        To the relater of that history~He turned; and, "Many things
17    29|      speak no further in mine history.~ ~ VIII~Cruel King Rodomont,
18    31|  Rinaldo shews;~Form the true history removes the veil,~And cites
19    31|      of Buovo, who~Is of that history informed aright;~And now,
20    33|      beauteous Bradamant that history,~Says, having shown her
21    35|     Concealing nothing of its history,)~"Shall have existence
22    38|   Where I must needs defer my history.~In other canto shall the
23    43|    when he now had closed his history,~With pity touched, somewhile
24    46| Though not instructed in that history~Like gentle Bradamant, the
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