Canto

 1     1|         And that dread night I singly stood for thee?~That night
 2     4|      joy overflows,~That he is singly fortunate and blest.~Thither,
 3     5|        So that he good Rinaldo singly graced.~ ~ XCI~And when,
 4    11|  behind, except his blade,~And singly for the rocky island made.~ ~
 5    12|     Seemed that which each had singly most at heart.~ ~ XXI~This
 6    15|     that ever stood.~But Doria singly will of the corsair~With
 7    17|        Of the scared burghers, singly cleared the court,~He with
 8    17|    ride~By twos and threes, or singly, to the fray.~One told,
 9    18|       he beheld Horatius keep,~Singly, the bridge against all
10    20|    town sets fire,~Then roving singly round the world is borne.~
11    20|        wholly vain.~If one can singly slay ten men in fight,~How
12    20| released from dungeon-den,~And singly with ten warriors matched
13    20|        perish by the knife,~Or singly with ten foes contend to
14    20|      not their trust, for ever singly go;~And lion, bear, and
15    20|       the lack~Of a companion, singly must she fare,~So then,
16    22|      so Gryphon. For the twain~Singly against a single foe would
17    26|   infinite, entreat~To let him singly with that damsel steer,~
18    26|       now there,~But could not singly such an ill repair.~ ~ CXI~
19    30|        truncheon overthrown,~I singly cleared the field, an armed
20    38|       mid many spears,~Matched singly with a host of martial peers.~ ~
21    46|   broke a thousand lances lay:~Singly to combat or in troops they
22    46|     had in Paris wrought,~When singly fire and sword the warrior
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