Canto

 1     6|         he despised such mean as vile,~And would prevail by valour,
 2     6|         meet his fate,~Ere by so vile a band be prisoner led;~
 3    13|       now am wretched, poor, and vile,~And in worse case, if any
 4    16|      Damascus city, with Martano vile.~Slaughtered the Saracens
 5    16|         Yielding so vilely to so vile a foe?~Behold the promised
 6    17| courteous lore.~ ~ LXXXVIII~When vile Martano from his place discerned~
 7    17|      that the scorn~Which on the vile Martano had been flung.~
 8    17|  laughter, through the ring.~The vile Martano, as a man who shares~
 9    18|          show,~His brother he in vile Martano spied.~For arms
10    20|        by death, alas! to fly~So vile a service, I desire to die."~ ~
11    21|         his mother and Aegysthus vile;~By vengeful furies for
12    26|        should be shown,~Mid that vile herd, on sinew, flesh and
13    26|          time she wends;~But the vile rabble and the crowd offends.~ ~
14    34|        And if the knight, when a vile woman sues,~His purpose
15    35|          river and around it fly~Vile crows and ravening vultures,
16    35|         bread and wine,~In their vile mouths awhile such names
17    37|        cruelty and other actions vile)~Flourished the courtesies
18    42|        lady, who~Now waited on a vile barbarian wight;~And was
19    43|         I~O Execrable avarice! O vile thirst~Of sordid gold! it
20    44|         be by any riches won:~So vile a price no gentle heart
21    46|       nought,~Had out of durance vile the knight conveyed;~And
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