Canto

 1     4|      long."~To good Rinaldo's sentence, with one will,~Deeming
 2     8|  would forbear~To execute his sentence suddenly;~But bade together
 3    18|     And month, and year, your sentence to delay.~ ~ III~Had Norandine
 4    18|    power~To speak the woman's sentence, mild or stern.~Harboured,
 5    20|    gain.~The dames all others sentence equally;~And temper but
 6    21|     right,~I should so hard a sentence undergo.~Let the world blame.
 7    23|       he had known in it,~The sentence he in verses had arrayed;~
 8    26|       far;~I will concede thy sentence would be clear,~Concluding
 9    27| monarch said,~And to obey his sentence both were fain;~That he
10    27|       Believed, when she past sentence on the case,~She must pronounce
11    27|     he arraigned~The damsel's sentence, of the faulchion, tied~
12    32|     Islandic dame,~Who of her sentence has a shrewd suspicion,~"
13    32|  flies,~Who dreads so stern a sentence to obey:~But generous Bradamant,
14    32|        And to impugn my equal sentence dare,~Behold my prompt,
15    43|   spied,~For which she by his sentence should have died.~ ~ LXX~"
16    45|     right;~Nor I to Charles's sentence will give way,~I know that
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