Canto

 1     1|      charms,~(How often human judgment wanders wide)!~Whom in long
 2     8|    vaunt,~Sully his wholesome judgment and renown,~The beauty which
 3    10|    fallible and vain~Is human judgment, dimmed by clouds obscure!~
 4    13|  aright?~Why should I other's judgment deem more true~Than the
 5    16|  Yield me belief, and deem my judgment right.~ ~ II~I say, I said,
 6    18|      No easy faith your equal judgment blinds.~ ~ II~Often, to
 7    19|     sigh."~According to their judgment, all suggest~Their treasons,
 8    26|        And answered him: "Thy judgment wanders far;~I will concede
 9    27|   which it bears:~Then to the judgment of the king refer~Who first
10    27|       weak King Mandricardo's judgment ween;~But he, who oft was
11    31|      from it natural bent our judgment wrest:~Wound, which against
12    32|        whose worth~Is, in his judgment, fairest upon earth.~ ~
13    32|       Partial and unwise~Your judgment seems, as well all judgments
14    32| gainsayer's will,~To prove my judgment right, his judgment ill!"~ ~
15    32|  prove my judgment right, his judgment ill!"~ ~ CVII~Bradamant --
16    34|    feed,~So rich, that in his judgment 'twould appear,~In some
17    35|    ascent~Of heaven, to me my judgment to restore,~Which, since
18    35|          II~To have anew that judgment, through the skies,~I deem
19    35|      be~Blind and deprived of judgment, is God's doom;~Who makes
20    37|    Yet hatred blinded not her judgment so,~But what the dame could
21    42|     prove.~ ~ C~"Ne'er, in my judgment, should the married dame~
22    45|      thing that is not, in my judgment, right;~Nor I to Charles'
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