Canto

 1     2| Maganzese,~Anselmo d'Altaripa's faithless son.~He, where the blood
 2     2|      Fair Bradamant pursued her faithless guide,~Suspended there,
 3     5|       brother dead,~Weening the faithless duke, whom she refused,~
 4     5|     certain signs betrayed,~The faithless knight his base deceit bewrayed.~ ~
 5    10|       there contented, with the faithless knight,~Supt, unsuspecting
 6    10|       sweeping ocean, bears~The faithless stripling's sail across
 7    13|        aye prompt to range,~And faithless to his every promise still,~
 8    14|      die:~ ~ LXXI~"And, for one faithless found, against thy sway~
 9    15|   thousand meets the sight:~But faithless, and of such an evil nature,~
10    16|         his heart does place~On faithless Origille, his vain delight:~
11    16|         with mickle pride;~With faithless Origille, in gorgeous gear,~
12    19|   seated;~Since he, by true and faithless friends, with show~Of equal
13    21|       Was there admitted by his faithless mate.~ ~ XXXIX~"Thus every
14    22|       for ill,~Leagued with the faithless Pinnabel, a wight~All evil
15    22|    recollect, upon his way,~The faithless Maganzese, with whom she
16    22|       this while, had staid~The faithless Pinnabel, and sorely prest;~
17    23|    returns again~Thither, where faithless Pinnabel was slain.~ ~ XXXIX~
18    24|   cavalier had told.~ ~ XXX~The faithless man alighted, and down fell~
19    24|  Zerbino doubted: the review~Of faithless Odorico's treachery~Moved
20    25|   messenger, to-day I read~That faithless Bertolagi of Bayonne,~With
21    27|      lost or gained;~And not by faithless woman's fickle thought,~
22    27|       power even so to fix your faithless mood,~That you at least
23    31|      While his steed's feet the faithless bottom pound.~He, with his
24    33|      said.~"Behold, deceived by faithless treaty, here,~Mid snares
25    33|         sold.~A prisoner by the faithless Switzer made,~He shows the
26    33|        behold~Is broken, by the faithless Swiss betrayed,~He, that
27    35|       him courtesy.~Who thus as faithless him should reprehend,~Or
28    42|        The first fruits of that faithless lady's love~In him such
29    43|        but first would kill the faithless dame;~And he with one destructive
30    44|        to their profit look the faithless throng.~ ~ III~Though little
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