Canto

 1     1|      race.~Of him, if thou wilt lend a willing ear,~The worth
 2     1|         little time~Postponing, lend thy leisure to my rhyme.~ ~
 3     3|     afford befitting words, and lend~Wings to my verse, to soar
 4     3|       beams,~Where genial stars lend warmth, or cold annoy,~Where
 5     3|        And his redoubted valour lend such light,~The willing
 6     6| jeopardy,~That none appeared to lend the damsel aid,~Because
 7     9|     Against the Frieslanders to lend him aid,~Who have their
 8    11|    XVIII~Yet not for this would lend the champion aid,~But to
 9    11|         were his lady there, to lend her aid.~ ~ LXXVII~To him,
10    12|         deem the suit discreet,~Lend him thine own; nor shall
11    13|       he Rogero seem, beware~To lend him faith, who will demand
12    20|         of such puissance as to lend thee aid;~And what thou
13    25|       Since I am yet in time to lend her aid."~ ~ XI~He drew
14    27|      few days together gone,~To lend him for to-day; since well
15    27|       and, Sir -- if pleased to lend an ear --~To their confusion
16    30|      Gradasso move the sword to lend,~'Till this, or till that,
17    34|         audience ye are wont to lend.~ ~ ~
18    37|        enow,~For many who would lend each other light.~Men do
19    38|         my strain~Kind audience lend -- I read it in your cheer --~
20    43|        foreign power its aid to lend;~And that Duke Hercules'
21    45|    Weary my love: at any call I lend~To thee myself and state;
22    46|        help and comfort quickly lend,~Is little distant from
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