Canto

 1     2|       And well with strong and stubborn steel inlaid:~Though passing
 2     3|        may avail,~To bring the stubborn labour to perfection.~Return
 3    19|      her conveyed,~So waxed in stubborn pride and haught disdain,~
 4    19|      they leave the care.~With stubborn plate and mail all over
 5    19|     dry,~Rather than stout and stubborn oak, appeared;~So splintered
 6    22|        gain,~Nor find her ever stubborn, bade the knight,~Her of
 7    22|       equal was each stick,~Of stubborn native oak, and two palms
 8    25|        to that rugged hill the stubborn key;~A town, called Agrismonte,
 9    26|     shows~Like paper, not like stubborn plate and shell.~To pieces
10    30|      made wide daylight in the stubborn mail,~That clothed the better
11    32| descend~From realms above, his stubborn heart to bend?~ ~ XIX~"Proud
12    33|       charmed by magic was the stubborn mail.~ ~ LXXXIII~Without
13    36|        foes;~And -- such their stubborn mood -- with shortened brand~
14    40|       good faulchion forged of stubborn grain;~And, at strange blindman'
15    41|      hinder much that sword of stubborn grain~From opening wide
16    43|   jewels flash like flame,~Her stubborn heart was softened, and
17    45|    Since broke by him alone is stubborn pain;~Nor saw, save Death,
18    45|       be;~And yet, in spite of stubborn Aymon's no,~Bradamant shall
19    46|         XXI~A prey to deep and stubborn grief, reclined~Mid gloomy
20    46|      Duke Aymon, not alone~The stubborn sire of Bradamant he swayed,~
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