Canto

 1     3|     fewer cavaliers,~He homeward barks, and fifteen gallies steers.~ ~
 2     8|          roam,~And other sort of barks they range the sea,~And,
 3     9|        had weighed,~And with his barks put forth to bring us aid.~ ~
 4    15|          some upon~The shattered barks keep guard, and others go~
 5    15|      were stayed~Their wandering barks, which stern to shore were
 6    19|        town in sight,~With armed barks, and upon theirs lay hand,~
 7    19|       And with strong chains and barks the port enclosed;~Which
 8    20|          of the land;~And of all barks into their haven driven~
 9    36| protected seat,~Abandoning their barks, had made retreat.~ ~ VI~
10    39|         Are found as well as any barks afloat.~Nor lack there men
11    39|          that manned~Those ready barks of every sort and kind.~
12    39|        land unsafe, aboard~Their barks sought refuge, with a numerous
13    39|       forth to sea,~Leaving some barks in port -- his lightest
14    39|       sails for Africk bent:~His barks ill-armed and almost empty
15    39|          him who said,~A hundred barks had sprung from one small
16    39|       far, and wide,~Among those barks their grappling-irons threw,~
17    40|          with a thousand captive barks I spied.~ ~ V~He that those
18    40|       fought,~As his own Moorish barks, took other thought.~ ~
19    40|       For this, it was with many barks bested;~For all were placed
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