Canto

 1     2|        bottom of the cell,~The stout elm-bough so long her weight
 2    10|       swell,~Of many ships and stout, a squadron lay;~Which,
 3    14|    below, like valiant men and stout,~New files succeed to those
 4    15|       Andronica, with squadron stout,~And chaste Sophrosina,
 5    15|  either hand,~The banks, which stout Alcides cleft in two,~And
 6    16|        hindered by the warrior stout,~Who came from England with
 7    18|    king they rest,~Endured the stout and scaly serpent's hide,~
 8    19|      thin and dry,~Rather than stout and stubborn oak, appeared;~
 9    23|     Worthily dear; for sure so stout at need~And beauteous was
10    26| pursued my course,~Was none so stout of heart, if I should say~
11    26|       fragments broke,~But the stout pagan winced not for the
12    26|        And, as magnanimous and stout, for foe~Singled King Mandricardo
13    30|      right,~So good a king, so stout a cavalier~For he should
14    31|    stranger knight, so passing stout;~That not alone him bravely
15    31|   summer and to winter sky:~So stout each warrior is, so good
16    31|  broken are alike their lances stout;~Which shivering in their
17    32|     receive~And give to one so stout, that best among~All others
18    32|    arms few warriors were more stout;~But she besure will be
19    36|      that king accompanied;~So stout she many paladins had quelled;~
20    39|    untried,~Against a Gaul, so stout and famed in fight,~Your
21    42|     between the plain,~And his stout courser jammed, the limb
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